View Full Version : Approach to Day surfcasting


american spirit
06-18-2008, 03:00 PM
I've seen some pictures and read some stories on this site about day fishing and people catching large during the day. Being exclusively a night fisherman with some dawn patrol, i'm wondering if your approach is different than night fishing.

no crowds, no boats, deep water vs. shallow water, ect. I don't know. I think this topic has been discussed before (night vs. day surfcasting). Curious why some of you guys choose to head out during the daytime.

Bishop169
06-18-2008, 03:10 PM
When I'm out during the day its more or less to kill time or take in the sites :heybaby:

Some times I find a keeper or two :lm:

For fishing I have a couple of spots that sometimes produce during the day. I find day fishing good for trying out new plugs and seeing what I can pull in chunking with some of my newbie friends that don’t want to sit in the dark all night....

I can honestly say day fishing hasn't worked so well for me for pulling in big striped ones but I've grabbed some fluke and a couple of blues...

Tagger
06-18-2008, 03:20 PM
I have been fishing nights mostly lately but usaully don't feel the need to fish nights until the first extended heat wave ,, coming soon ...

Back Beach
06-18-2008, 06:08 PM
Wooooooh, I love this topic but am running out of time right now. Will revisit this tomorrow.

Nebe
06-18-2008, 06:11 PM
i'll do a day trip once in a while in the summer- deep water and bait is my rule. squid or pogies.

Rob Rockcrawler
06-18-2008, 07:30 PM
I avoid bluebird days, overcast basically crappy weather is a lot more productive for me. I seek out the white water and stick with spook type plugs and recently white sluggos. For a couple years i had my PB on a bluebird day in august. About 90 degrees, and the bass hit not 10 feet from shore in bout 3 feet of white water. What was that fish thinkin.

RIJIMMY
06-18-2008, 07:40 PM
I only surfcasted in daylight to delay the long ride home

Grapenuts
06-18-2008, 07:46 PM
for the most part it is nite fishing if your shore bound, but not always...had places that were so public if you showed yourself hauling in bass during the day it would be elbow to elbow the next day....so you went under cover of darkness and late enough that most were headed to bed at that hour....now if you went during the day at those same places you made sure it was pee soup fog to the point you couldn't see your rod tip.....these places held fish 24 hours except at dead low tide.Now I don't worry about it if it's 12 midnite or 12 highnoon in the middle of august.....cause I boat fish ONE place that holds the fish 24 hours a day.

numbskull
06-18-2008, 07:56 PM
There are plenty of fish within reach of the surfcaster during the day. Fooling them is just harder.

ilovetwofish
06-18-2008, 09:18 PM
Mostly daytime because all my fishing friends are afraid of the dark and I would rather not be on the rocks by myself.

JFigliuolo
06-19-2008, 08:37 AM
Mostly daytime because all my fishing friends are afraid of the dark and I would rather not be on the rocks by myself.


Write this down in your "to-do" List.
1. get new friends.
2. get comfortable alone at night.

RIJIMMY
06-19-2008, 08:45 AM
Write this down in your "to-do" List.
1. get new friends.
2. get comfortable alone at night.

:laughs::laughs::laughs:

MAKAI
06-19-2008, 09:25 AM
YOU NEED 30 KNOTS IN YOUR FACE FOR STARTERS

tattoobob
06-19-2008, 02:56 PM
Big surf
White water
Sea Worms or Clams
Tins and small poppers
Overcast Skies

For me Day time fishing is either a fall deal
or from a boat

bloocrab
06-19-2008, 05:51 PM
I thought that kind of fishing was the kind done on the computer all day long ??? :bsod:




:jump:

doktorfaustus77
06-19-2008, 10:03 PM
I caught a 28" bass in shallow water yesterday. very bright conditions. that is not the norm for me though.

numbskull
06-29-2008, 03:05 PM
Daytime fishing has its plus sides. Today, high noon, low tide, gibbs pencil. The fish is only 31" but my sister wanted one to eat, the dog needed a walk, and the spectators were impressed....as well as impressive themselves. Lost a moderately better one when the swivel failed on a well worn Gibbs pencil. Nighttime is clearly better, but there a plenty of decent fish swimming around in the middle of the day........very close to shore.

7milebridge
06-29-2008, 05:17 PM
I tend to find that a lot of fish besides the great stiper bite during the day. I was at a local spot last year at noon with a nice high tide. I saw my brother get a hit, and I thought he was going to go water skiing. My brother is 25, and beefy. He fought the fish for a good 20minutes, and when we got it to the wall it was a gorgeous tuna. We also tend to get monk fish, sea bass, or flounder more during the day. If stripers are what your going for I would say fish more towards night, but for the rest of the fish the day time is a great time.