Louisiana Delta Fishing Report

Cocodrie Trout, Venice Snapper, And A Red-Hot Spring Bite

25 min · 14. maj 2026
episode Cocodrie Trout, Venice Snapper, And A Red-Hot Spring Bite cover

Description

On this episode of the Louisiana Delta Fishing Report, host Andre’ Savoie covers two strong spring fishing reports from different parts of Southeast Louisiana. The episode features Capt. Aaron Benfield [https://www.facebook.com/aaron.benfield.9] of A B Charters Cocodrie [https://abcharterscocodrie.com/], who breaks down an excellent Cocodrie trout and redfish bite, followed by Capt. Jace Oulliber [https://www.facebook.com/jace.oulliber] of Off The Grid Charter Co. [https://www.offthegridcharterco.com/], who shares a Venice report focused on speckled trout, red snapper, redfish, and triple tail. Capt. Aaron Benfield of A B Charters Cocodrie explains why Cocodrie has been fishing so well this spring. He has been finding excellent speckled trout action around the outer bays, islands, beaches, and nearby rigs when the wind allows, with shorter runs than many Louisiana trout fisheries require. Aaron says the trout bite has been outstanding over the past month, especially compared to last year, and he expects the action to stay strong as calmer weather windows open up. He also talks about the improving redfish bite, bull red opportunities in the fall, and springtime surprises like sheepshead, mangroves, and even cobia around nearshore rigs. Capt. Jace Oulliber of Off The Grid Charter Co. checks in from Venice, where the speckled trout bite has been one of the better spring bites in the last few years. Jace has been fishing areas like the east side of the Mississippi River, Breton Island, and Breton Sound when the wind allows, and he says trout have been strong on both sides of the river. With Louisiana red snapper season now open, he is also adding snapper to the box when conditions are calm enough, especially around rigs in 40 feet of water or more early in the season. He also notes that redfish have been tougher recently because of the tide phase, but he expects that bite to improve soon, while triple tail are also starting to show up when the weather allows. Sponsors: EMS Endeck PVC Decking [https://pages.easternmetal.com/greatdays] AFTCO [https://www.aftco.com/] Hilton’s RealTime Navigator [https://hiltonsoffshore.com/] SlipSki Solutions [https://www.slipski.com/] Pure Flats [https://pureflats.com/]

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All episodes

23 episodes

episode Venice Mangrove Snapper and the Biloxi Marsh Tripletail Hunt artwork

Venice Mangrove Snapper and the Biloxi Marsh Tripletail Hunt

On this week’s episode of the Louisiana Delta Fishing Report, host Andre’ Savoie covers a strong midsummer bite from Venice to Lake Borgne and the Biloxi Marsh. The episode features Capt. Josh Edwards of Calcutta Gold Fishing [https://www.calcuttagoldfishing.com/] and Capt. Ben LaVergne with Bentup Fishing Charter L.L.C [https://bentupfishing.com/], with reports on mangrove snapper around the rigs, red snapper, yellowfin tuna, mahi, cobia, live-bait fishing, and the growing summertime tripletail fishery around crab trap floats. Capt. Josh Edwards breaks down the offshore report from Venice, where cleaner water has brought a strong mangrove snapper bite to rigs in roughly 40 to 150 feet of water. He explains how chumming with small or cut pogies can bring mangroves toward the surface and get them feeding aggressively enough to use heavier 60- to 80-pound fluorocarbon. Josh recommends 5000-class reels or larger with tight drag settings so anglers can turn fish before they reach the rig. He also covers the productive red snapper bite, cobia and mahi around grass lines, and the return of yellowfin tuna in the 60- to 120-pound range. Horn bellies and hardtails have been the primary tuna baits, with boats drifting across fish holding on the upcurrent side of offshore rigs. Capt. Ben LaVergne gives the Lake Borgne and Biloxi Marsh report, where he has been targeting tripletail around long stretches of crab trap floats. He explains why slack tide or a tide change can make tripletail easier to locate and catch, especially when light current keeps the floats from bouncing aggressively. Ben prefers freelining live shrimp or cocahoe minnows rather than fishing beneath a cork, since tripletail often attack the cork instead of the bait. He also discusses how salinity, recent freshwater runoff, storms, and water clarity affect the tripletail bite, why larger fish are often found farther east toward saltier water, and how tripletail fishing can be added to a summer trout trip when conditions line up. Sponsors: EMS Endeck PVC Decking [https://pages.easternmetal.com/greatdays] SlipSki Solutions [https://www.slipski.com/] Pure Flats [https://pureflats.com/] Sea Tow [https://seatow.com/greatdays/]

10. juli 202633 min
episode Summer Speckled Trout Bite Fires Up in Cocodrie and Grand Isle artwork

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. Sponsors: EMS Endeck PVC Decking [https://pages.easternmetal.com/greatdays] AFTCO [https://www.aftco.com/] Hilton’s RealTime Navigator [https://hiltonsoffshore.com/] SlipSki Solutions [https://www.slipski.com/] Pure Flats [https://pureflats.com/] Sea Tow [https://seatow.com/greatdays/]

3. juli 202623 min
episode Hot Trout, Dirty Water & Summer Patterns in the Louisiana Delta artwork

Hot Trout, Dirty Water & Summer Patterns in the Louisiana Delta

On this week’s episode of the Louisiana Delta Fishing Report, host Andre’ Savoie covers how late-June fishing is shaping up after a tropical system brought heavy rain, wind, dirty water, and changing salinity across South Louisiana. The episode features Capt. Danny Hunter of New Orleans Best Charters [https://neworleansbestcharters.com/] and Capt. Jimmy Corley of Waterfowl Specialist Guide Service [https://waterfowlspecialist.com/], with reports from Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Borgne, the Biloxi Marsh, Shell Beach, Breton Sound, Curlew, Freemason, and the eastern marsh. Capt. Danny Hunter breaks down the Northshore and Biloxi Marsh report, where high river water and east winds have pushed freshwater into parts of Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Borgne, moving many trout toward the marsh, rigs, oyster reefs, the Chandeleurs, and Breton Sound. He explains why Biloxi Marsh oyster reefs have been producing quality speckled trout, how Undertaker corks and Marker 54 shrimp-style plastics have been outperforming live bait, and why durable artificial baits can be a better option around catfish, gafftops, and small trout. Danny also talks about sight-fishing triple tail around floating debris, crab trap corks, and other structure in Lake Borgne and the Biloxi Marsh. Capt. Jimmy Corley gives the Shell Beach and Breton Sound report, where storm impacts were less about high water and more about wind, low water, and murky conditions inside the marsh. He says the cleanest water and best trout action have been farther out toward Breton Sound, Curlew, Freemason, and eastern structure, with quality trout coming on live croakers, live shrimp, Carolina rigs, sliding corks, and Marker 54 baits. Jimmy also explains how hot summer water temperatures are pushing trout deeper, why incoming tide and clean moving water are key, and how redfish are still available around marsh edges, ponds, and structure when conditions line up. Sponsors: EMS Endeck PVC Decking [https://pages.easternmetal.com/greatdays] AFTCO [https://www.aftco.com/] Hilton’s RealTime Navigator [https://hiltonsoffshore.com/] SlipSki Solutions [https://www.slipski.com/] Pure Flats [https://pureflats.com/] Sea Tow [https://seatow.com/greatdays/]

25. juni 202640 min
episode Saints Go Bowfishing, Swolefest Offshore Action, and Lafitte Trout Heat Up artwork

Saints Go Bowfishing, Swolefest Offshore Action, and Lafitte Trout Heat Up

On this week’s episode of the Louisiana Delta Fishing Report, host Andre’ Savoie covers early-summer fishing from Grand Isle and Hopedale to Lafitte and the Barataria Basin. The episode features Capt. Chris Faler of Southern Outdoor Bowfishing [https://southernoutdoorbowfishing.com/] and Capt. Ryan Vincent of Reel Cajun Fishing [https://www.reelcajunfishing.com/], with reports on Swolefest [https://www.swollfest.com/] offshore action, red snapper, vermilion snapper, Saints bowfishing, Lafitte trout, redfish, wind, and summer patterns. Capt. Chris Faler breaks down his Grand Isle Swolefest trip, where offshore crews found vermilion snapper and red snapper around rigs, wellheads, pipeline crossings, and deeper structure. He also shares the story of helping host the New Orleans Saints for a Hopedale bowfishing trip, where players, coaches, and staff shot garfish, catfish, and a few redfish during a competitive night in the marsh. Capt. Ryan Vincent gives the Lafitte and Barataria Basin report, where wind has made fishing tougher, but the trout bite is improving when boats can reach clean, moving water. He talks about finding trout around birds, bait, points, current lines, reefs, old wellhead shell pads, and deeper structure, while redfish and black drum are moving toward bigger bays, rock, cement walls, shorelines, and marsh edges. Sponsors: EMS Endeck PVC Decking [https://pages.easternmetal.com/greatdays] AFTCO [https://www.aftco.com/] Hilton’s RealTime Navigator [https://hiltonsoffshore.com/] SlipSki Solutions [https://www.slipski.com/] Pure Flats [https://pureflats.com/] Sea Tow [https://seatow.com/greatdays/]

18. juni 202635 min
episode Speckled Trout Bite Heats Up In Shell Beach And Lake Pontchartrain artwork

Speckled Trout Bite Heats Up In Shell Beach And Lake Pontchartrain

On this week’s episode of the Louisiana Delta Fishing Report, host Andre’ Savoie covers a strong early-summer trout bite across Southeast Louisiana, from the Northshore and Lake Pontchartrain estuary to Shell Beach, Breton Sound, Black Bay, and the Biloxi Marsh. The episode features Capt. Mike Gallo of Angling Adventures of Louisiana [https://aaofla.com/] and Capt. Rory Rorison of United Charters [https://www.unitedcharters.com/home.html], with reports focused on speckled trout, redfish, summer patterns, moving water, bait, wind adjustments, and mixed-bag fishing. Capt. Mike Gallo breaks down the Northshore and Lake Pontchartrain-area report, explaining how trout spawning, salinity, water temperature, moon phases, and oxygen levels shape the summer bite. He says anglers should focus on clean water, moving water, and baitfish, especially early and late in the day. Mike also talks about popping corks, live shrimp, shrimp and pogie imitations, Matrix Shad colors, oyster reefs, Biloxi Marsh trout, redfish options, and CCA STAR tagged redfish. Capt. Rory Rorison gives the Shell Beach report, where the trout bite has been excellent when boats can get outside into Breton Sound, Black Bay, rigs, wellheads, reefs, and islands. He talks about big trout, live shrimp, Carolina rigs, popping corks, redfish backup plans in the Biloxi Marsh, and mixed-bag action that includes flounder, Spanish mackerel, drum, sheephead, and triple tail. Rory says June should bring a more consistent summer pattern with calm mornings, hotter afternoons, and the need to start early before the heat and wind build. Sponsors: EMS Endeck PVC Decking [https://pages.easternmetal.com/greatdays] AFTCO [https://www.aftco.com/] Hilton’s RealTime Navigator [https://hiltonsoffshore.com/] SlipSki Solutions [https://www.slipski.com/] Pure Flats [https://pureflats.com/] Sea Tow [https://seatow.com/greatdays/]

12. juni 202641 min