Tuesday Tip: Chumming/catching sharks

Large circle hooks rigged on steel leaders are the most popular terminal tackle for bagging sharks. Sharks cannot only cut a line with their teeth but also with their skin, which is sharp in its own right. One quick slap of the tail can cut even heavy duty line with no problem. For targeting blacktips and spinners, my personal favorite chumming method involves bringing along a bucketful of small menhaden, grabbing a handful and squeezing.

Some of them will float, others will sink quickly and others slowly. This creates a feeding frenzy situation with sharks that can allow you to sight cast to them with cut bait. The ideal setup for this kind of fishing is having one bait on the bottom for species like bull sharks and Atlantic sharpnose and a couple of free lines to get the species that feed in the upper level of the water column.

What is your favorite method for bringing in sharks?

TF&G Staff

Recent Posts

Bury Your Deer Carcass Or Bring To Landfill?

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) is seeking public comment until May 22 on proposed…

1 hour ago

Officials Seek To Rebuild Lake Dunllap

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department’s (TPWD) Inland Fisheries Division Corpus Christi District recently launched…

1 day ago

What Do Great Whites Eat In the Gulf of Mexico?

What do great white sharks eat in the Gulf of Mexico? It's a question researchers…

1 day ago

TPWD Issues Impact of Flooding

Texas State Parks continues to recover from flood impacts and encourages visitors to check park…

1 day ago

The Seven Tails Of the Mother Lagoon

Seven tails. Seven beautiful bronze tails with a dot in the middle. That’s how many…

4 days ago

Is it Time for an Electric Outboard?

We hear more and more about electric boats, but would an electric outboard make sense…

1 week ago