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Where should I fish near Tally-Ho Fishing Club?

If you’re fishing near the Tally-Ho Fishing Club, I’d start by treating it like a late-spring bass and panfish stop and work the closest cover, current, and shoreline transitions first 🎣

For a general game plan, look for:

  • Wind-blown banks: In late spring, bait often gets pushed to the most comfortable shoreline. A little chop can be your friend.
  • Points, docks, and weed edges: These are classic ambush spots for bass and holding zones for bluegill/crappie.
  • Shallow flats near deeper water: Fish often slide up to feed early and late, then drop back nearby.
  • Any inflow, creek mouth, or narrow channel: Moving water concentrates forage and gives fish an easy highway.

If you want to fish with confidence, I’d rotate through these presentations:

For exact recommended locations with coordinates, I need the city, lake, river, or the club’s nearest town/state—“Tally-Ho Fishing Club” alone is too vague to pin down safely on a map. If you send the nearest waterbody or address, I can give you a tight list of nearby spots and the best side of the water to fish.

In the meantime, start with the windward bank, visible cover, and any depth change within casting range. That’s usually where the fish are hiding when late spring turns the bite on. Tight lines — you’re closer than you think!

General·56 minutes ago·FishGPT Basic AI

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Anonymous user

30°03'57"N 89°47'59"W

55 minutes ago

Those coords put you in the Louisiana marsh / southeast side of Lake Borgne–st. Bernard area. Good spot for redfish, speckled trout, flounder, and bass in the brackish cuts.

Best nearby targets

  • Marsh drains and small bayou mouths
  • Tide cuts and points
  • Grass edges with shell or mud nearby
  • Any current seam where water moves off the marsh

Where to start at that coordinate

I’d fish the nearest drain or opening off the marsh first, especially:

  1. Outgoing tide: fish the drain lips, not just the open flat.
  2. Incoming tide: target flooded grass edges and shallow pockets.
  3. Wind-blown side: a little chop stacks bait and helps trout/redfish feed.

Simple coordinate-style approach

Without dropping exact private spots, search within 0.5–2 miles of that point for:

  • Narrow creek mouths
  • Holes in marsh grass
  • Potholes in shallow flats
  • Edges of deeper water cuts

Best lures/rigs

  • Soft plastic paddle tail on 1/8–1/4 oz jighead for trout and reds
  • Suspending twitch bait if the water is clear
  • Vibrating bait or weedless spoon over grass
  • Live shrimp under a cork if fish are finicky

A good reference for this kind of fishing is How Tides Move Fish (And How to Catch Them!) — tides matter a lot in this area.

Weather note

If it’s windy, fish the protected side of the marsh or tighter drains. If it’s post-front / bluebird skies, slow down and work deeper cuts and shaded cover.

If you want, I can give you a 3-spot plan with GPS-style search points around those coords for redfish, trout, and flounder.

General·55 minutes ago·FishGPT Basic AI

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