Book Menu
Introduction
Table of Contents

Texas Gulf Coast
An Overview
Fly Fishing the Flats
Upper Coast Flats
Middle Coast Flats
*East Matagorda Bay to the Upper Laguna Madre
East Matagorda Bay to the Upper Laguna Madre Part 2
*Matagorda Bay
*Palacios - Port Lavaca Area
*Port O’Connor Area
*Espiritu Santo Bay
*San Antonio Bay
*Aransas National Wildlife Refuge
*St. Charles Bay
*Mesquite And Carlos Bays
*Copano Bay
*San Jose Island
*Aransas Bay
*Redfish Bay
*Nueces Bay Area
*Upper Laguna Madre
Lower Coast Flats
Fly Fishing by Night
Deceivers in the Rocks
Fly Fishing the Surf
Offshore Fly Fishing
online favorites
ACTIVITIES
Fly Fishing the Texas Coast
Matagorda Bay: Port O'Connor Area
By Chuck Scates & Phil H. Shook

Pruett Publishing
Adapted from
Fly Fishing the Texas Coast
by Chuck Scates & Phil H. Shook

The Boggy Bayou and Little Boggy shorelines near Port O'Connor offer drive-up, walk-in wadefishing and sightcasting to tailing redfish. Fish this area at sunrise and leave when boat traffic picks up. To reach Boggy Bayou, take Texas 185 to Port O'Connor. At Seventh Street turn left and proceed until the road dead-ends, then turn right. This road will take you to the shorelines of Boggy Bayou and Little Boggy.

Matagorda Island (Northeast End)

Bayucos Flat is among a number of small islands, estuaries, and grass flats that are a short distance by boat from Port O'Connor and offer prime wadefishing and sightcasting opportunities. These shallow flats and shorelines are ideal even on crowded weekends because you can run up a reasonable distance, drop your anchor, and then get out and wade areas removed from boat traffic. Bayucos Flat holds redfish and is a good place to stalk tailing fish in the morning.

Nearby Whitacker's Flat, located at the end of Saluria Bayou and continuing west, is another shallow, wadable stretch with grass beds. The back side of Grass Island also offers wadable flats that hold redfish, trout, as well as flounder.

Anglers who travel by boat around the point south of Grass Island can access tidal creeks into an area called Big Pocket, with a wadable shoreline that extends from Lighthouse Cove well into Mule Slough. It is important for waders in the slough to stay near the shoreline, where the bottom is firm. Out in the middle, in water 3 to 4 feet deep, the bottom can get soft. There are all kinds of small tidal lakes, cuts, coves, and bayous behind the shoreline that hold redfish.

Mule Slough also can be reached via Saluria Bayou. Once you reach the"J Hook," a point on a small island that opens into a shallow water estuary, you come to the entrance of Fish Pond. Turn around here and go back to the first cut that goes through the grass. Here you can anchor and walk into Mule Slough where there is excellent wadefishing.

Mule Slough and other nearby coves, bayous, shorelines, and tidal lakes make the Port O'Connor area an ideal fly-fishing destination.


Return to *Top



Fly Fishing the Texas Coast
Fly Fishing the Texas Coast
is available from
the Adventurous Traveler Bookstore.
Click here to order!


Pruett Publishing
Click here to visit
Pruett


© Article copyright Pruett Publishing.

RELATED GORP LINKS
*GORP Fishing
*Texas Resources
*GORPtravel Fishing



Road Trip Guides

National Park Guides

Hiking Guides

Today's Gear Guy

Gear Guides
[from Outside magazine]