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Dauphin Island Advice

Kevin

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I am going in October.

On our night to cook I wanna cook some fresh fish that I caught. Give me some advice. I'm not gonna get a charter, just fish from the surf.

What should I expect or how should I prepare?

Anyone ever done this that time a year?
 
headed to the island myself the 9th - 15th..always had more luck on the bay side throwing cut squid and shrimp. all the fellas I work with from Mobile pretty much say the same as rebel.
 
I grew up on Dauphin Island and supplemented my income while in college Floundering around the Island. Saltwater fishing is highly dependent on the tides. Dauphin Island Tides: http://www.tides4fishing.com/us/alabama/dauphin-island

Most of the time you will have the best luck when tides are pulling the hardest. Tides are "slack" around the High and low tide...strongest 3-4 hrs after peak high/low tide. An incoming tide has always been my favorite. If sunrise/sunset also corresponds with the stronger tides that is a plus. ...but primarily fish the tides.

If I were fishing the surf, I'd primarily be trying to catch a redfish for the Grill. Live shrimp or croakers are the best fished under a 4-5-inch cork with a 18inch 20lb mono-leader attached by a swivel and a small 1/4 oz egg sinker attached above the swivel. As for cooking a redfish, cut off the filet leaving the scales on. Salt, pepper, olive oil, maybe some Cajun seasoning. Cook it flesh down for a min or two to get some grill marks, then flip it scales side down and cook it until its done...the scales will char, but that's OK don't eat the scales.

October on the Gulf side is some of the best floundering of the year. Of course the weather has to cooperate. Buy a propane floundering light(or a couple of good flashlights -flashlights have made major advances since I last floundered) and take a gig and a stringer. If you have a calm night and the water is clear(it should be in October) wait till an hour or so after Low tide, walk in mid-ankle to maybe slightly over knee deep water. Most flounder will be facing into the current and/or facing up any slight inclines or toward the beach or up either side of a sandbar. They are waiting to ambush any baitfish carried over sandbars or by the tides. Gig them in the head and don't try to pick them up until you put the stringer through their gills and out the mouth. Careful they will bite. If you see one, look closely they tend to be in small schools. You can gig them in deeper water, but much over knee deep it gets much harder. I've gigged them with their backs nearly out of the water. They can be difficult to spot, but not that hard after you see one or two. Google "flounder in the sand"

If you want to grill a flounder, scale it, and keep it on aluminum foil. They are fantastic stuffed with crab and or Shrimp, but they are tricky to debone for stuffing. Probably easier to filet and just grill the fillets or wrap the fillets round your stuffing and secure with a toothpick.
 
Nothing wrong with bluefish. They are quite good but need to be eaten fresh. You need to get them on ice immediately after you catch them. When you filet the bluefish make sure to cut out the red meat. The easiest way is to split the filet down the lateral line and they trim the red meat off. Do not fry bluefish. They are an oily fish and are bested grilled, broiled or baked with your favorite seasonings.
 
BamaProud":ao7netx0 said:
Oh, don't try to eat a bluefish or a ladyfish. You are likely to catch more bluefish than anything else.
I fileted a bluefish once and it fell apart. Didn't mess with the rest of em cause we had lots of redfish.
Used the rest of the bluefish successfully for shark bait.
 
caught a few red fish, white fish and hard heads and about a 2 foot sand shark and this black tip.
 

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We got back Saturday.. didn't do any good on reds, but I caught a couple black fins as well. And a nice speck in the surf on a pop-r. Fun times.
 
bone_cave":2uppv5bd said:
caught a few red fish, white fish and hard heads and about a 2 foot sand shark and this black tip.

What where you using to catch the sharks? I was down there last week also. We caught mainly whiting, few small reds and pompano.
 
Cut mullet head is what I caught mine on.

I had no other luck to speak of with squid, cut bait mullet or shrimp.
 
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