"I'd sure like to catch a cobia. I've been trying for several years, but I've only caught a few shorts."
I hear that several times each summer and I don't remember many folks going home without catching one. If folks want to target cobia, we generally catch them. In fact, it's an unusual day in the summer when we don't catch several, with at least half being legal whether we're targeting them exclusively or not. This doesn't mean cobia are accidental catches for Whopper Stopper though.
Cobia are, by far, the easiest to catch of all large fish on the Gulf coast. For the life of me, I can't see why more folks don't catch cobia almost every trip. Here are a few tips that should make you a better cobia fisherman.
Live bait works best, but I often catch them on a bonita fillet lying on the bottom while fishing for tarpon and sharks.
Wire leader is not necessary except when kingfish and big Spanish mackerel are around. Sharks are seldom enough trouble to make me use wire.
Where? Darn near anywhere from the rivers and flats to grass lines a hundred miles offshore.
A large percentage of grass flats cobia are accidentally hooked by trout fishermen on bait or artificial lures. Notice that I said "hooked" instead of caught. Fifty percent of folks who are fishing for trout will lose every cobia they hook because they are not prepared for a fish that can pull more than five pounds of drag. I have seen more than one person grab the spool to stop the fish when line started screaming off the reel. Not a good technique when you are fishing with eight-pound test! I'd venture to say that 25 percent of the boats out trout fishing on any given day don't have a gaff aboard and if they do, they don't have a clue how to use it!
Lots of decent-sized cobia are hooked on the flats but the larger ones are landed by guys who are prepared. For most shallow water cobia, eight-pound mono is entirely adequate as long as you have a smooth drag, set right. With a six-foot long 20-pound shock leader and a foot or so of 50-pound mono for a bite leader, I'll cast at any cobia that ever swam and feel pretty confident—as long as I have Rhett handling the boat. But in deep water, light tackle isn't a good idea because you can't apply enough pressure to lift a fish.
We catch more cobia while bottom fishing for grouper than any other time. Why? I make ten or more moves most days. Sooner or later we are going to drop a baitfish in front of a cobia and hook up. Move around enough and you should get lucky too. Cobia hang out on the same rocks that hold grouper.
OK, so you are too lazy to move around. Invite cobia to come to you. Enough fresh chum will pull cobia from long distances. Frozen ground chum works, but fresh is best every time. If you are going to stay in one spot and chum, pick a good spot. Large breaks, channel edges, especially channel bends and intersections, artificial reefs and wrecks are all great spots to chum. How you are anchored in relation to the spot you are fishing is also very important. I can't stress this enough. Try to anchor so that your chum disperses over as much of the structure as possible. Your baits should be deployed so that any fish that follows the scent trail of your chum will see them. Chumming on the grass flats and around deeper bars works fine too.
Last summer, I added a new fishing weapon to my arsenal, a Chum Churn. The Chum Churn is the best piece of equipment I've added to my boat in years. On tough fishing days in mid-summer, sooner or later you are going to call in a cobia. Most days it doesn't take long. The sound made by the Chum Churn may be as attractive to cobia as the scent and chopped bait trail it produces. I've seen cobia, spadefish and mangrove snapper come up long before they could have detected the chum.
Think about this. If your bait is sitting on the bottom, it may be hard for a cobia swimming a few feet off the bottom to see. I like to have one bait about six feet off the bottom and another right under the boat within three feet of the surface. Believe me, this shallow bait gets bit often and you better make sure that the drag isn't locked. A baitfish suspended about six feet under a float and about 30 feet behind the boat will also get hit by fish attracted by the chum.
I can't help but mention fishing channel markers. Everybody fishes channel markers and they catch cobia. Sometimes you need to stand in line or have a reservation to fish some of the gang markers. One Saturday last year I was chumming for Spanish mackerel and cobia along the edge of the Crystal River Coal Canal. A steady procession of boats stopped to fish marker 28. As soon as one boat left, another tied up (illegal) or anchored near the marker. This went on the entire tide. If there isn't a boat fishing a channel marker, I ride by close and look. If I see a cobia, I usually catch it.
Which bait? Most of the time it doesn't matter what live bait you use. Cobia will eat about anything from glass minnows to stingrays, crabs to filefish and seagulls to turtles. Live eels are a hot bait, but not always easy to obtain. For tournament fishing, I wouldn't enter unless I had several eels. Eels are a pain in the butt to handle because of the slime and a fresh-out-of-the-well eel will twist up into a ball and around your line. In my opinion, a 10- to 12-inch live squid is the best of all baits for almost any fish I fish for. I don't think anything turns down a squid. Unfortunately, the only time I get to use a squid is when I catch one at night.
From my point of view, the cobia is the best fish we have around here. It is great to eat, much more fun to catch than grouper and they average a heck of a lot bigger than most other fish. For many of my clients, the cobia they catch will be the biggest fish they have ever caught. Just try explaining to an elated client they have to release the biggest fish they have ever caught because it is only a 32-incher.
I have a couple of other sure-fire cobia fishing tips, but I gotta hang onto something.
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