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Chandeleur Fishing w/ Live Bait
Posted on 4/8/26 at 9:16 am
Posted on 4/8/26 at 9:16 am
I've got a 3 day trip mid May and was curious if anyone has fished the islands with live shrimp or croakers? My initial thoughts are that the catfish would be a nightmare with live shrimp but was wondering if anyone has experience trying it. I've kept shrimp alive for days with a bucket and aerator so I don't think that would be an issue, but I'm not so sure if it would be worth the extra hassle. I'm trying to gain any advantage I can to catch quality size fish.TIA
Posted on 4/8/26 at 9:56 am to Sea Hoss
People use croaker during the summer months around dropoffs and underwater structure.
You can always bring a castnet
Any palm size baitfish would work well (croaker, pinfish, mullet, menhaden)
I wouldnt fool with shrimp. Plastic shrimp under a popping cork or freelined would work just as well probably
You can always bring a castnet
Any palm size baitfish would work well (croaker, pinfish, mullet, menhaden)
I wouldnt fool with shrimp. Plastic shrimp under a popping cork or freelined would work just as well probably
Posted on 4/8/26 at 10:21 am to Sea Hoss
quote:Most catfish I have ever seen. Everything we wanted hit artificial. I cannot imagine having to deal with live down there.
My initial thoughts are that the catfish would be a nightmare with live shrimp
Posted on 4/8/26 at 10:40 am to Sea Hoss
Croakers can be worth the hassle if that’s what you want to use, but I wouldn’t waste my time with any shrimp.
Artificial is the way to go in my opinion, especially if you are going to hop out the boat and wade the flats (which is how you get after the big ones, in my experience )
Artificial is the way to go in my opinion, especially if you are going to hop out the boat and wade the flats (which is how you get after the big ones, in my experience )
Posted on 4/8/26 at 11:12 am to Bayou_Tiger_225
The biggest fish, by far, that we caught we in the little cuts in the islands by the jack up when water was moving.
Posted on 4/8/26 at 11:30 am to Sea Hoss
You are going to get hammered by trash fish with live shrimp, but if you can weed through them you will catch Trout, Reds, Flounder.
Artificial cuts way down on untargeted species
Artificial cuts way down on untargeted species
Posted on 4/8/26 at 11:56 am to The Torch
Side note I bought some shrimp walkers hooks. And I like em. If you have big shrimp stretch those rubber bands before using
Posted on 4/8/26 at 6:46 pm to Saskwatch
quote:
wouldnt fool with shrimp
Agreed. No need for live bait. If you're not catching on artificial, keep moving until you do.
Posted on 4/8/26 at 7:02 pm to Sea Hoss
I get bringing shrimp in a bucket for an afternoon of fishing, but you’d need like 600 shrimp a person if you wanted shrimp for a 3 day trip.
I would think a cast net would be more beneficial but I’ve never heard of people using them there.
ETA: I would think just bringing a couple extra large lures to target bigger fish maybe the best plan if anything. Don’t start big, make sure you catch first, then upsize maybe?
I would think a cast net would be more beneficial but I’ve never heard of people using them there.
ETA: I would think just bringing a couple extra large lures to target bigger fish maybe the best plan if anything. Don’t start big, make sure you catch first, then upsize maybe?
This post was edited on 4/8/26 at 7:04 pm
Posted on 4/8/26 at 8:52 pm to baldona
quote:
would think just bringing a couple extra large lures to target bigger fish
Can certainly hang into some beast jacks and reds with plus size baits
Im not a big believer in throwing super large lures for trout. Mirrodine XL and 5” straight tail soft plastics are the upper end of what I may throw.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 4:40 am to baldona
quote:This would be the biggest issue I think and would make it not worth it. Nothing worse than burning through live shrimp on a pile of trash fish
I get bringing shrimp in a bucket for an afternoon of fishing, but you’d need like 600 shrimp a person if you wanted shrimp for a 3 day trip.
With nowhere to restock when that inevitably happens I would pass on the live shrimp
This post was edited on 4/9/26 at 4:48 am
Posted on 4/9/26 at 7:16 am to Sea Hoss
Not fishing related but bring more bug spray than baits you bring.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:56 am to baldona
I was only thinking of getting 10 dozen or so just for me and maybe whoever ends up in the skiff with me. I will forgo the hassle and stick with artificials, just not popping corks and doa shrimp. I think you catch more fish that way but not the quality fish. I'll stick to coastal brews, z man ballerz, slick lures and I also have a plethora of marker 54, live target, nomad design and vudu shrimp.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:06 am to Sea Hoss
quote:
marker 54
quote:
nomad design
Would be my main two if I went back now. Probably only other bait I would throw would be a Corky. My two biggest of the trip came on those.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:48 am to KemoSabe65
Oh yeah, I've got plenty of one knockers, mirrordine, etc. I've got enough tackle to open a mom and pop tackle store 
Posted on 4/10/26 at 6:37 am to Sea Hoss
The only trip I made out there on a crew boat with the flat bottoms staying multiple nights, I brought a cast net and fished Carolina rigged with live bait. Pinfish were better than croakers. Reds, trout, and the biggest shark I’ve ever brought to the side of the boat. Hit in the surf, had to hop back into the flat to retrieve my line. 9 footer. Got a nice pic from a disposable underwater camera. When it came up on the side of that flat, I felt like I was in a kayak
Posted on 4/10/26 at 7:32 am to Sea Hoss
If you want to catch quality throw topwaters, jerk baits, and big fluke style baits. Leave the live bait.
Posted on 4/10/26 at 5:29 pm to Sea Hoss
Bone colored topwater and Norton pearl with chartreuse tail sand eel on a jighead.
Posted on 4/10/26 at 5:56 pm to KemoSabe65
Bring as many as you can afford to then go somewhere and buy some cheap shiny topwater to walk the dog. If the Spanish mackerel are there they will steal and destroy what you have. And if you use metal leaders or heavy fluorocarbon say goodbye to the trout.
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