Summer Speckled Trout Bite Fires Up in Cocodrie and Grand Isle
On this week’s episode of the Louisiana Delta Fishing Report, host Andre’ Savoie covers a strong early-summer trout bite across South Louisiana, with reports from Cocodrie, Grand Isle, Fouchon, Leeville, Bay Long, the beaches, rigs, reefs, wellheads, and the Gulf. The episode features Capt. Aaron Benfield [https://www.facebook.com/aaron.benfield.9] of AB Charters [https://www.bestcocodriefishing.com/] and Capt. Joey Lemoine [https://www.facebook.com/joey.lemoine.7] of Cast on the Other Side Charters, with reports focused on speckled trout, live bait, plastics, surf fishing, summer heat, and bonus species.
Capt. Aaron Benfield breaks down the Cocodrie report, where late June and early July have produced excellent speckled trout fishing after a windy stretch kept pressure down and a major shrimp push helped fire up the bite. Aaron explains how he has been targeting rigs, wellheads, and reefs in 6 to 30 feet of water, with trout moving deeper as the weather heats up. He says the bite has changed day to day, with double-rigged plastics working best on some trips, minnows saving the day on others, and croakers producing limits when the fish would not touch anything else. Aaron also talks about why he often avoids live shrimp this time of year because of catfish, ladyfish, and bait-care issues, and he covers bonus catches including white trout, pompano, Spanish mackerel, redfish, and sharks.
Capt. Joey Lemoine gives the Grand Isle report, where the trout bite has also been very strong, with many fish averaging 16 to 20 inches. Joey talks about catching trout along the beach and around the rocks, including a solid surf-fishing bite on plastics like Matrix Shad, along with boat trips into the bay, barrier areas, and as far as Bay Long when needed. He explains how he looks for smooth conditions, good moving water, cleaner water, and bait activity before setting up, and says plastics have been doing most of the work, though he still brings croakers and shrimp as backup. Joey also discusses how the summer heat is shortening fishing days, why early starts around 5:00 to 5:15 a.m. are important, and how anglers can still target redfish, snapper, mangrove snapper, and cobia depending on the trip.
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