Episode
Late Winter, Early Spring: Adapting to a Fishery in Transition
- Published
- Feb 25, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 5645
- Processing state
not_requested
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/alabama-saltwater-fishing-report-331836/episodes/late-winter-early-spring-adapting-to-a-fishery-in-transition/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/alabama-saltwater-fishing-report-331836/late-winter-early-spring-adapting-to-a-fishery-in-transition.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
This week's Alabama Saltwater Fishing Report covers a fishery that's in full transition mode. After wild swings in weather, from 80-degree afternoons to freezing mornings, Captain Patric Garmeson reports that the fishing has actually been better than you'd expect for late February. On warming trends, fish are sliding shallow and acting more like it's spring already, with redfish, trout, flounder, drum, and sheepshead all showing up in the mix. When conditions turn windy and cold, the rivers and protected water are still producing, especially around docks, rocks, and pilings. One of the biggest takeaways from the conversation is the importance of being reactionary. The fish are simply responding to water temperature, clarity, and pressure, so anglers need to do the same. Patric shares a tactic he picked up from the Lower Chesapeake Bay report that's made a real difference locally: downsizing tackle. By switching to lighter braid, lighter leaders, and small jig heads paired with subtle plastics like the Slick Junior and Little Slick, he's been able to get more bites in clear, pressured water. When trout are suspended in deeper systems like canals and the Mobile River, a slow-sinking presentation—whether it's a free-lined shrimp or a lightly weighted artificial—has been key. Bait-wise, live shrimp are still effective, but fresh dead shrimp have been surprisingly productive, especially for redfish, drum, and flounder. With flounder showing up consistently across multiple systems since January, there's growing optimism about what the spring flounder bite might look like. As sheepshead season ramps up, the conversation shifts toward conservation. Patric emphasizes the value of releasing fish over 20 inches, not just during the spawn but year-round. Those larger fish represen…