RED FISH
                    

                     
                                                                  
                                                                                                                                                            Destin Fishing Guide
RED DRUM
"Redfish" (Sciaenops ocellatus)
OTHER NAMES: Red Bass, Channel Bass, Drum
RANGE: All Florida coasts.
HABITAT: Most popular fishing areas are along shell bars and rocky or grassy shorelines and on
shallow flats, where they are usually fished by sight. Reds also forage in the surf of outside beaches
nearly everywhere on the Gulf Coast and along the upper half of the East Coast, especially in the fall.
Adults move offshore to spawn and are sometimes encountered in open water in large schools. They
roam into coastal rivers and creeks at any time of year, and in winter swarm into them, seeking warmer
water.
DESCRIPTION: Usually bronze or reddish with white underside, but sometimes quite pale all over.
Prominent ringed spot or several spots at base of tail fin; occasionally, without the spot. Silhouette is
similar to black drum and colors can sometimes be confusing in very large fish, but the redfish has no
chin barbels and the black drum never has the tail spot.
SIZE: Caught from less than a pound to 10 or 12 pounds; 30-pounders are not rare, and the potential
in Florida is about 60. World record 94 pounds, 2 ounces; Florida record 51 pounds, 8 ounces.
FOOD VALUE: Redfish up to around 10 pounds rank among the favorite fish of most anglers. Red
portions of flesh do not have objectionable taste when fresh. Large Redfish are protected at this
writing, and not the best of fare anyway.
GAME QUALITIES: Fine gamester. Strength, stamina and fairly long, bullish runs are its trademarks.
TACKLE AND BAITS: All kinds of casting tackle, including fly, are successfully used on Redfish of all
sizes. Surf rods and light-to-medium saltwater outfits are good for beach, bridge, pier and offshore
fishing. Redfish are ravenous feeders that will take live baitfish, crabs and shrimp, and also dead or cut
baits from the same sources. Live shrimp and minnows make the very best baits for shallow coastal
fishing; live Pinfish, small Mullet or similar baitfish for angling in deeper water. Most productive
artificials are weedless spoons, plastic-tail jigs and topwater plugs, but many swimming plugs also
work. Large streamers and poppers do the job for fly fishermen.
FISHING SYSTEMS: Casting; Drifting; Still Fishing.