January 2025 — Louisiana: Bull reds in Venice marshes, yellowfin tuna offshore. January is a winter month with water in the 55-65°F range — cold fronts; sheepshead spawn peaks; fish in deeper structure midday. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — January 2025
Primary targets this month: Redfish, Speckled Trout, Sheepshead, Black Drum.
Redfish
Winter reds in the Delacroix marsh, the Hopedale marsh, the Venice area (Pass-a-Loutre, Tiger Pass), Calcasieu Lake (sight-fishing trophy reds), and the Empire/Buras area — Louisiana is the world’s premier redfish fishery. Look for the warmest water — dark mud bottoms, deeper canals, creek mouths warming on afternoons. Gold spoons, scented soft plastics, live shrimp under a popping cork.
Speckled Trout
Trout holding in Calcasieu Lake (Big Lake), Lake Pontchartrain, the Delacroix marsh, Vermilion Bay, and Cocodrie — gator trout fishery (5+ lb fish common in Big Lake). Live shrimp under a popping cork, soft plastic jigs in natural colors (root beer, new penny, opening night).
Sheepshead
Sheepshead are stacked for the winter/early-spring spawn. Target the offshore platforms, the passes, the marsh dock pilings, and the inshore wrecks. Fresh fiddler crabs and live shrimp on a #1 or #1/0 octopus hook with minimal weight. Bites are subtle — set on the slightest tap. Vertical jigging tight to structure produces best.
Black Drum
Black drum (bull drum 30+ lb) on the marshes, the bayou edges, and the passes — schoolies in the marsh and bulls in the deeper passes. Cut blue crab, fresh shrimp, or peeler crab on a 5/0-7/0 circle hook with enough weight to hold bottom. Slow, deliberate fishery — set the rod and wait for the rod to bend.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 55-65°F. Cold fronts; sheepshead spawn peaks; fish in deeper structure midday. Louisiana’s marshes are heavily wind-driven; tide range is minimal but moving water still concentrates fish at marsh creek mouths and pass openings. Falling water on a falling tide is the prime redfish window. Offshore rigs fish all tides — current direction matters more than tide.
Check the NOAA marine forecast and tide charts before launching. Wind direction often matters more than wind speed for inshore fishing — clean water beats churned water nine times out of ten.
Tactics & Tackle for This Month
- Slow it down. Cold water means cold fish — work jigs, soft plastics, and live bait with patience. Bites are subtle.
- Fish the warmest water. Dark-bottom flats, deeper canals, and creek mouths warm fastest. Afternoons usually outproduce mornings in winter.
- Light fluorocarbon leader. 15-20 lb plenty for inshore — winter water is clear and fish are line-shy.
January Outlook
Cold-water patterns will continue through February, then transition begins late month into early March.
Regulations Reminder
Redfish: 18-27″ slot, one per angler per day (verify FWC zone-specific rules). Seatrout/Speckled Trout: FL: 15-19″ slot, 3 per day (verify zone). TX: 15-25″ slot, 3 per day. LA: 12″ minimum, 15 per day (verify current). Sheepshead: 12″ minimum, 8 per day (FL). Black Drum: 14-24″ slot or 16″ minimum depending on state; 1-5 per day. Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Sportsman’s Paradise (Cocodrie), Hopedale Marina (Hopedale), Venice Marina (Venice), Daly’s Bait & Tackle (Lake Charles), Frank’s Place (Buras).
Public Boat Ramps: Venice Marina (Mississippi River mouth), Delacroix public ramps, Hopedale Marina, Cypress Cove (Venice), Calcasieu Pass (Cameron), Cocodrie, Empire.
Charter Fishing: $500-$800 inshore (marsh redfish, trout); $700-$1,100 nearshore rigs; $1,400-$2,800 offshore (Venice yellowfin, deepwater).
More Louisiana Resources
Louisiana Fishing Guide · Louisiana Seasonal Calendar · All Louisiana reports →
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