One
of the most exciting fish on the flats is a barracuda.
Yet, many experienced anglers scorn them, and I really
don't know why. Admittedly, they aren't as powerful as
some other flats species, but nothing can jump as high or
as far, and their speed is unmatched. Best of all, most
tropical flats harbor enough cudas to give an interested
angler frequent chances at them. The
best shallow water fishing for barracudas occurs during
the cooler months, from December through March, in
Florida and through out the tropics. While some big cudas
range the flats throughout the year, it is during the
colder months that large numbers of them appear on the
flats.
One favorite haunt of a flats cuda is a white
sand hole surrounded by green grass. Some of the largest
barracudas I have ever seen on the flats of Florida, the
Bahamas and in Central America, have been fish lying over
a white sand hole. These holes will generally be several
feet deeper than the surrounding water. Ideal conditions
are a flat with three to five feet of water on it, with a
sand hole 7 to 10 feet deep. The big cudas lie perfectly
motionless, like a rocket on the pad. When any hapless
prey comes within striking distance, they streak through
the water and grab it.
Cudas also can be found near many wrecks and
almost any wreck in 10 to 60- feet of water that is
fished infrequently will hold them. Especially during the
cooler months, you can expect to find racks of cudas
hanging around a wreck. When we fished the wrecks off Key
West in the mid-1960's, we had no Loran, and so we ran
"By Guess and By God" to where we figured the
wrecks would be. Actually, it wasn't as difficult to
locate the wrecks as you might think. Once in the general
area, say within a quarter mile of the wreck, you would
begin to see fish, especially barracudas. And over the
wreck would be swarms of them.
Fly tackle for barracudas is pretty simple. If
you are fishing the flats, longer casts are sometimes
required. Here, I favor a
shooting head--using a floating line. A size 10 shooting
head on a rod that calls for a size 9 line will allow a
good caster to toss the fly at least 90 to 100 feet. I'll
get into technique for flats fishing, but for now, let me
say that a longer cast can often be advantageous.
Offshore fishing for barracudas is completely
different and a long cast may be only 30 feet. In such
cases a standard weight-forward size 9 or 10 floating fly
line is ideal.
Leaders can be short, and 6 feet is ample in
most cases. Barracudas are rarely leader shy. What is
important is that there be a wire trace between the fly
and monofilament leader. Either solid trolling wire or
braided wire can be used. You may occasionally lose a
good cuda if you use a wire leader of 5 inches or less,
but I recommend 4 to 5 inches of wire as ideal. A longer
wire trace has two liabilities. One - it is often
difficult on a longer cast to turn over the leader and
fly (especially into the wind). Two - cudas have
extremely good vision, and a leader longer than 5 inches
seems to tip many cudas that this is something they
shouldn't go after.
There was an old adage that to get a barracuda
to strike your fly, you had to make an incredibly fast
and long retrieve. It's certainly true that cudas tend to
follow a long distance - and then, at the last moment,
turn away. But I no longer tempt cudas into striking with
a fast retrieve. There are two techniques that work well
for me. A popping bug is often the best way to get a cuda
to strike. I use a popping bug that makes a good bit of
noise but is fairly easy to cast. The best are made from
Ethafoam, but you get one fish per bug. Balsa wood and
cork popping bug bodies work fine, too - but all poppers
have a short life when cudas grab them.
To get a cuda to hit a popping bug, make as
long a cast as possible off to the side of the cuda and
beyond it. Don't cast closer than 15 feet from the fish,
and throwing the fly often 20 to 30 feet away from and
beyond the cuda works better. Begin an instant retrieve.
You don't have to rush it, but ALWAYS keep the bug in
motion. The constant popping and gurgling seems to
trigger most cudas into striking.
The other method is the most effective for me
when you encounter a cuda in the shallows. Select a
streamer fly approximately four to six inches long that's
easy to cast. Two of the best
flies for this are simple patterns to tie. Use a long
shank size 2/0 hook and tie an under wing of yellow
bucktail with a red bucktail upper wing. Put a liberal
amount of copper or gold Falshabou between the two
colors. The other pattern I have had great success with
is a white under wing and chartreuse upper wing - with
the f lash material - the wing, of course is of bucktail.
One other fly that does well for me is a Lefty's Deceiver
in all white.
Locate a cuda on the flats and approach close
enough that you can cast and still make an easy backcast,
once the fly has hit the water. Throw the fly about 10
feet in front of the fish, and end the cast with the rod
low. As soon as the fly touches the water, raise the rod
in a sweeping motion. This will cause the fly to streak
through the water. Then at the end of the rod's sweep,
make a backcast. Come forward and drop the fly again in
approximately the same place. Make sure the fly drops at
least ten feet in front of the cuda - if it has changed
position. The cuda will become very excited and often
will chase the fly as it sweeps through the water. After
two or three such presentations, drop the fly ten feet in
front of the cuda and begin a fairly fast retrieve.
Usually, the cuda will rush the fly and grab it.
When fishing in deep water, especially if you
are near a shrimp boat or over a wreck, the procedure is
entirely different. Lure the cuda or cudas near the boat
by throwing overboard small dead fish, crabs and other
chum. The cudas will move in to within a few yards of the
boat and begin taking the offerings. Once you have them
feeding well, throw over some more chum and toss either a
popping bug or a streamer fly near the chum. Such a cast
need not be more than 10 to 15 feet from the boat. It is
very important that you do not move the fly. Let the
cudas think it is simply another piece of chum. If they
don't take the fly immediately, simply repeat the
operation. This method is near foolproof and can be very
exciting fishing.
You can also suspend a blue runner or other
tough baitfish on a stout rod at let it struggle on the
surface of the water. The struggling baitfish will really
turn on cudas (as well as many other wreck species).
Actually, this live bait teasing method is even more
exciting than the chumming technique, both work well,
If you have not been catching cudas on a fly,
you have been missing some of the most exciting fly
rodding in salt water.


Photos by Lefty Kreh
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