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Southern Flounder Caught in Mt Pleasant SC

Southern Flounder Fishing in Mt Pleasant - What to Expect

Southern flounder caught while fishing in Mt Pleasant SC

Fishing Charter by Captain Hal Gray in June

Hal Gray
Hal Gray
Meet your Captain Hal Gray
Charleston, SC
  • Charleston SC Inshore Fishing Charters
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Summary

Join Captain Hal Gray on a fishing charter in Mt Pleasant for an exciting opportunity to catch Southern flounder. This saltwater fishing experience combines local expertise with the productive waters around Charleston, making it a memorable day on the water for anglers of all skill levels.

Fishing Charter with Captain Hal Gray - Rates & Booking

Captain Hal Gray of Hal Gray Guide Service, LLC heads out on the water around Mt Pleasant to pursue one of the region's most popular game fish. On a Tuesday in June, you'll experience firsthand why Southern flounder are such a rewarding target for both seasoned anglers and those just getting started with saltwater fishing.

When you book a fishing charter with Captain Hal Gray, you're getting access to years of local knowledge around Charleston and Mt Pleasant waters. He knows where the flounder are holding, the best times to fish, and the techniques that consistently produce results. Every trip is tailored to help you succeed, whether you're looking for action-packed excitement or a more relaxed pace on the water.

Ready to book your charter? Contact Hal Gray Guide Service, LLC directly to reserve your spot and get details on rates, group size, and what to bring along. Booking online makes it easy to secure your preferred date and get all the information you need before heading out.

Highlights of Your Flounder Fishing Adventure

Southern flounder are known for their aggressive strikes and exciting fight, making them a blast to catch. The waters around Mt Pleasant offer excellent habitat for these bottom-dwelling fish, with flats, channels, and structure that hold quality fish throughout the season. You'll experience the thrill of feeling that characteristic hit when a flounder takes your bait or lure.

What makes fishing with Captain Hal Gray special is the combination of comfortable boats, productive fishing grounds, and a guide who genuinely enjoys helping clients catch fish. You're not just getting dropped off somewhere - you're getting active guidance from someone who fishes these waters regularly and knows what works.

Local Species Insights: Southern Flounder

Southern flounder are flatfish that spend most of their time on the bottom, camouflaged against sand and mud. They're ambush predators, meaning they wait for prey to come to them, then strike with speed and power. This behavior is what makes them so exciting to catch on a fishing charter - when a flounder hits, you know it.

These fish thrive in the coastal waters around Mt Pleasant and Charleston, where shallow flats and deeper channels create ideal habitat. They feed on small fish, shrimp, and crustaceans, which is why live bait and shrimp imitations work so well. The best flounder fishing typically happens during warmer months when they move into shallower water.

On your charter with Captain Hal Gray, you'll learn how to read the water, identify likely flounder habitat, and work your bait effectively to trigger strikes. Whether you're drifting over flats or working the edges of deeper channels, you'll be actively engaged in the process of locating and catching these fish. The experience goes beyond just the fish themselves - it's about understanding how these creatures live and hunt in their environment.

The Charleston area is known for producing solid numbers of flounder, with many fish in the keeper range. The combination of good habitat, proper timing, and local expertise means your odds of success are genuinely strong when you fish with an experienced guide like Captain Hal Gray.

Fishing in Charleston: Southern Flounder

Southern Flounder
Southern Flounder
Species Name: Southern Flounder
Species Family: Paralichthyidae
Species Order: Pleuronectiformes
Habitat: Onshore, Inshore, Channels, Rivers
Weight: 1 - 4 pounds
Length: 12" - 33"

Southern Flounder Overview

The Southern Flounder (Paralichthys lethostigma) is a fascinating member of the Paralichthyidae family within the order Pleuronectiformes. What makes this flatfish truly remarkable is its distinctive asymmetrical eye placement—both eyes positioned on the left side of its head—and its remarkable ability to camouflage itself against sandy and muddy bottoms. These bottom-dwelling ambush predators are native to coastal waters across the Atlantic seaboard and Gulf of Mexico, making them a favorite target for both recreational and commercial anglers. Unlike their close cousin the Summer Flounder, Southern Flounders display numerous light and dark blotches rather than the oscillating spot patterns found on other flounder species. Whether you're casting lines near coastal channels or exploring estuaries, encountering this skilled predator is a genuine thrill that keeps anglers coming back season after season.

Southern Flounder Habitat and Distribution

Southern Flounders thrive in shallow coastal marine environments spanning from the Atlantic seaboard down through the Gulf of Mexico. You'll find them inhabiting sandy, rocky, or muddy bottoms in bays, rivers, lakes, estuaries, and inshore channels where they can easily ambush unsuspecting prey. These fish prefer staying in water shallow enough to maintain their bottom-dwelling lifestyle, which makes them accessible to shore-based and small boat anglers alike. During winter months, most adult specimens migrate offshore to deeper, warmer waters, so timing your fishing trips accordingly can significantly impact your success rates. The species thrives in areas with strong tidal currents and rich prey populations, making river mouths and coastal channels particularly productive fishing zones.

Southern Flounder Size and Weight

Southern Flounders typically range from 12 to 18 inches in length, with exceptional specimens stretching up to 33 inches or more. The average catch weighs around 1 to 4 pounds, which makes for excellent table fare and enjoyable sport on light-to-medium tackle. However, the all-tackle weight record stands at an impressive 20 pounds 9 ounces, proving that genuine trophy-sized flounders do exist for patient and skilled anglers willing to pursue them. Size varies considerably depending on habitat quality, water temperature, and food availability, with offshore populations generally producing larger specimens than their inshore cousins.

Southern Flounder Diet and Behavior

These masterful hunters are ambush predators that spend much of their day buried beneath sand or mud on the seafloor, waiting for unsuspecting prey to swim overhead. Their primary diet consists of worms, shrimp, blue crabs, and smaller fish species including anchovies, menhaden, and mullets. What's truly impressive is their ability to change color and pattern to perfectly match their surrounding substrate, effectively becoming invisible to both prey and predators. This chameleon-like adaptation is one of nature's most effective hunting strategies. Southern Flounders exhibit anguilliform swimming patterns, using their bodies and caudal fin to move gracefully through water despite their flattened body shape. Behaviorally, they're most active during tidal movements when increased water flow brings more food opportunities within striking distance.

Southern Flounder Spawning and Seasonal Activity

Female Southern Flounders demonstrate remarkable reproductive capacity, capable of releasing up to 9,000 eggs during a single spawning event. Spawning typically occurs during late fall and winter months, with larvae drifting into estuaries and shallow bays as nursery grounds throughout spring and early summer. Juvenile flounders grow rapidly in these nutrient-rich nurseries before gradually moving to deeper offshore waters as they mature. Males exhibit notably shorter lifespans compared to females, typically living only three years maximum, while females can reach considerably older ages. This pronounced sexual dimorphism in lifespan makes protecting breeding populations especially important for long-term fishery sustainability.

Southern Flounder Techniques for Observation or Capture

Still Fishing and Drift Fishing: The most effective method involves still fishing or drift fishing directly over known flounder habitat on sandy or muddy bottoms. Position your boat in channels or along drop-offs where these fish congregate. Use a single-hooked slip lead or free-line rig with heads ranging from 1/4 to 3/8 inches. Light-to-medium rod and reel combinations spooled with 10-pound test line work perfectly. Cast your rig uptide and maintain bottom contact, feeling for the characteristic tap-tap-tap of a feeding flounder.

Live Bait Presentation: Bull minnows, mullets, and live shrimp represent the gold standard baits for Southern Flounders. Present these offerings on the bottom where flounders hunt, allowing natural movement to trigger strikes. Around coastal areas like the Louisiana bayous or North Carolina sounds, fresh live shrimp often outperforms all other baits, particularly during peak tidal movements.

Fly Fishing: For a more engaging challenge, try fly fishing with medium-weight lines and small streamer patterns that mimic baitfish. Cast along channel edges and drop-offs, then execute slow, pulsing retrieves near the bottom. This technique works particularly well in shallower estuarine waters where sight-casting is possible.

Southern Flounder Culinary and Utilization Notes

Southern Flounder ranks among the finest eating flatfish available to anglers, featuring delicate, mild white meat with excellent flavor and tender texture. The meat cooks beautifully whether pan-seared, baked, or deep-fried, making it a favorite at both family dinners and upscale restaurants. A single 2-3 pound flounder provides a satisfying meal for two people, while larger specimens offer enough fillets for family gatherings. The high-quality protein, low fat content, and absence of strong fishy flavors make this species appealing even to seafood skeptics. From a sustainability perspective, recreational harvest at reasonable levels remains sustainable in most regions, though always check local regulations and size limits before keeping your catch.

Southern Flounder Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the best bait for catching Southern Flounder?

A: Live bull minnows, mullets, and shrimp consistently outperform artificial offerings. Fresh live shrimp typically produces the highest success rates, particularly during moving tide periods when flounders actively feed. The key is presenting your bait directly on the bottom where these ambush predators hunt.

Q: How do I distinguish a Southern Flounder from a Summer Flounder?

A: The most reliable distinguishing feature is the spot pattern on the dark side. Southern Flounders display numerous light and dark blotches and irregular spots, while Summer Flounders exhibit more uniform, oscillating spot patterns. Additionally, Southern Flounders typically have less developed pectoral fins compared to their cousins.

Q: When is the best time to catch Southern Flounder?

A: Spring through early fall offers excellent opportunities as fish remain in shallower inshore waters. Winter months see most flounders migrating offshore to deeper refuge, making them harder to access from shore. Tidal movements create peak feeding windows, so fish moving tides whenever possible for maximum productivity.

Q: Are Southern Flounders good to eat?

A: Absolutely—they rank among the finest-tasting flatfish available. The delicate white meat offers mild flavor and tender texture, cooking beautifully through multiple preparation methods. A 2-3 pound flounder provides an excellent meal, while larger specimens offer abundant fillets for family dining.

Q: What fishing techniques work best for Southern Flounder?

A: Still fishing and drift fishing over bottom habitat produce the most consistent results. Position your boat in channels or along defined drop-offs, maintaining bottom contact with your rig. Light-to-medium tackle spooled with 10-pound test line provides excellent sensitivity for detecting the subtle takes these bottom feeders produce.

Q: Can I sight-cast to Southern Flounder in shallow water?

A: Yes, in clear shallow estuaries and bays you can occasionally spot feeding flounders and cast to them directly. However, their excellent camouflage makes spotting them challenging. Fly fishing with streamers works well in these situations, though traditional bottom-fishing techniques remain more consistently productive.

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