Texas fishing regulation changes approved




Expansion into the Texas coastal bend of special harvest regulations on
spotted seatrout, and harvest modifications to the state’s only year-round
freshwater trout fishery have been approved by the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Commission.

As part of the 2014-15 Statewide Recreational and Commercial Fishing
Proclamation, the Commission adopted rules to extend a 5-fish bag limit
currently in effect in the Lower Laguna Madre up the coast through the Highway
457 bridge near Sargent with a five-year sunset date. The Commission modified
the original proposal to set the possession limit on spotted seatrout for the
area from the Lower Laguna Madre to the Highway 457 bridge twice the daily bag
limit (10 fish in possession).

The Commission also approved a temporary 2-year closure of oyster harvest at a
54-acre oyster restoration site on Half-Moon Reef in Matagorda Bay, and a 2-year
temporary closure of seven restoration sites in East Galveston Bay.

In other changes to saltwater fishing regulations, the Commission extended the
two flounder per day bag limit restrictions currently in effect for the month of
November into the first two weeks of December. During these first two weeks of
December, however, harvest would be allowed by any legal means.

For freshwater, the Commission approved changes to the rainbow and brown trout
fishery along a section of the Guadalupe River below Canyon Reservoir
establishing a 12- to 18-inch slot length limit with a five-fish daily bag
limit, harvest by artificial lures only, and only one trout over 18 inches
could be retained. The new regulation zone would begin 800 yards downstream from
the Canyon Dam release and extend downstream to the easternmost Highway 306
bridge crossing.

The Commission also granted authority for Texas Parks and Wildlife Department’s
Executive Director to impose temporary prohibition of alligator gar fishing in
specified areas to provide additional protection during spawning activity.
Closures would be invoked in a selected area, limited to no more than 30 days,
and occur only in areas having an active moderate flood event with water
temperatures within an optimum range for alligator gar spawning.

In other freshwater fishing regulation changes, the Commission adopted the
following:

Texas/Louisiana Border Waters (Toledo Bend Reservoir, Caddo Lake, and the Lower
Sabine River in Newton and Orange Counties): regulations for blue and channel
catfish changed to no minimum length limit and a 50-fish daily bag limit in any
combination, of which no more than five blue or channel catfish 30 inches or
longer could be retained.
Tradinghouse Creek Reservoir: the special limits for freshwater lakes where red
drum have been stocked are removed and regulations revert to statewide length
limits (20-inch minimum length limit, 28-inch maximum length limit, and harvest
of up to two red drum 28 inches or longer per year with trophy drum tag). Bag
limit remains at three.
Lake Kyle: regulations changed to catch and release (no harvest) of channel and
blue catfish, largemouth bass, or any sunfish species.
Canyon Lake Project #6: Harvest regulation for channel and blue catfish changed
to no minimum length limit and a five-fish daily bag and anglers restricted to
only two poles.
North Concho River from O. C. Fisher Dam to Bell Street Dam and the South Concho
River from Lone Wolf Dam to Bell Street Dam: Anglers restricted to using two
poles.
Recreational anglers who fish with jug lines will be allowed to use floats of
any color except orange. Commercial anglers will continue to be restricted to
using orange-colored floats.

All changes take effect Sept. 1, 2014.

 




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Lake Fork

Fishing Report from TPWD (May 21)

GOOD. Water Stained; 73 degrees; 0.32 feet above pool. Bass are good in the early morning on points where the shad are spawning. Cast diesel chatterbaits, spinnerbaits and KVD sexy dawgs on the surface. Target grass and pond weed with frogs in 1-4 feet of water. Mid running crankbaits 2.5-3.5 inches are good on points in 5-7 feet of water. Carolina rigs are good offshore on points and high spots from 12-16 feet. Report by Marc Mitchell, Lake Fork Guide Service. Black bass are post spawn and the top water bite is on! Frog patterns are working in the shallow vegetation. The crappie are moving shallow, small clousers are producing well. Large bream have moved shallow, wooly buggers are producing good fish. Channel catfish are cruising 2-4 feet biting clousers. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. Crappie fishing on Lake Fork is a lot of fun right now. The lake has a tremendous population of black crappie and they are stacked up on all kinds of structures all over the lake in 12-28 feet. White crappie are also loading up on certain trees. You can find black crappie on some bridges, underwater bridges, roadbeds, brush piles, lay downs, tire reefs, points and the base of timber. I’ve seen some lay downs the past week that may have over 1000 crappie on them. The only problem is finding black crappie over 10 inches when you have so many fish on spots. It is a lot of fun to catch hundreds of crappie per day even if you cannot keep all of them. One of the hottest spots for numbers right now is the big reef in front of the 154 public ramp. Any electronics will find it straight out from the ramp just before the boat lane. It’s very large and easily visible on traditional electronics. The bottom is covered with structures of different kinds and crappie. You can fish minnows just off the bottom or swim small jigs just off the bottom to catch a lot of crappie. You may only see one out of ten fish that are 10 inches. Swimming jigs is a very productive method

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