Land-based Flukin’ Score from the Shore
- Nick Honachefsky
- Jul 4
- 6 min read
By Nick Honachefsky
Leave the boat tied up at dock, the shoreline is the place to score with flatties! During the past decade or longer, I think I’ve caught more keeper class fluke from the surf and land-based platforms than from a boat. Fishing by foot can mean less time expended to catch a limit, less money spent and more fish caught- who can lose? The key to fishing from the shoreline effectively means focusing on more than just your gear and tactics, but paying close attention to reading the water, currents, times and tides as you need walk and explore the proper ground. Good news is there’s no finer time than the summer to plant your feet down to find some flatties from the sands.Leave the boat tied up at dock, the shoreline is the place to score with flatties! During the past decade or longer, I think I’ve caught more keeper class fluke from the surf and land-based platforms than from a boat. Fishing by foot can mean less time expended to catch a limit, less money spent and more fish caught- who can lose? The key to fishing from the shoreline effectively means focusing on more than just your gear and tactics, but paying close attention to reading the water, currents, times and tides as you need walk and explore the proper ground. Good news is there’s no finer time than the summer to plant your feet down to find some flatties from the sands.

GEARING UP
Compared to fishing the oceanside, everything is scaled lighter when fishing fluke from the shoreline. An intimate connection is desired when using light lures and weights to impart a proper presentation. From the surf or sodbank, I utilize a St. Croix 7 foot Tidemaster TSMHF70 or Shimano Terramar TMSE70MB matched with a Shimano 5000 Sustain reel, spooled with 30-pound Power Pro to which I uni to uni knot a 48-inch section of 25-pound Seaguar or Yo-Zuri Fluorocarbon Leader. When hitting inlets and piers, you can amp up your gear. Stick with spinning outfits in the 7 to 7-1/2 foot range rated for medium heavy action to effectively bounce sinker weights to 3 ounces and drift strip baits. Conventional set ups like a Shimano Terramar matched with a Shimano Torium 12 or Penn Fathom can also be used if fishing more of an up and down approach from a pier or bridge setting.
SURFSIDE SLINGIN’
In the suds, hands down, the ultimate fluke-catching device is the simple roundhead bucktail, garnished with proper attractants. Generally a 3/8 to ½-ounce white bucktail is the all around top choice for clean clear waters, but you can mix up color patterns with yellows and chartreuse as well if waters are tingy or off color. You should have a 48-inch section of fluorocarbon leader already connected to your braid running line. On the tag end, tie on the bucktail with a loop knot and tip it with a strip of bluefish or 3 to 4-inch Berkley Gulp! Swimmin Minnow. The flailing action provided by the loop knot allows for the bucktail to really dance as you pop it. Roughly 16 inches up from the bucktail, tie a dropper loop and affix a size 3/0 Gamakatsu Octopus teaser hook and tip it with a 4-inch Berkley Gulp! Swimmin Minnow in white. Remember, you are fishing horizontally in the surf and not with the usual vertical approach of a boat, so the more action you can instill in the bucktail as you pop-twitch it as it bounces across the surf sands the better. Cast out and begin to twitch the tip of your rod, reeling in one or two cranks at a time to pick up the slack – the slower the better. A general cast should take you a good two minutes to reel in. Fluke are fickle, sometimes pouncing on the buck immediately, sometimes following it all the way literally right up to your feet. A good trick that has claimed plenty of fluke for me is when it gets in the undertow about six feet away from my feet, to dance it around in one spot as many times a fluke will strike at the very last opportunity as it comes up the undertow ledge. On clear days, you can witness their pursuit right up to your feet. Fluke hang in packs in the surf so when you do find a fish, work the area hard to pull on the rest of them.
Spot Check - Anywhere on the coast where you can find cuts, sloughs and holes is a good bet, but Sandy Hook and IBSP are two of my favorite haunts.
POUNDING PIERS AND INLETS
Swashing currents through inlets and piers consistently spark fluke to bite at these locales as both incoming and outgoing tides and moments of current allow flatfish to ambush prey as it ushers on by. Most times, you’ll catch larger model fluke up to 6 or 8 pounds as they tend to hang around inside inlets as currents rip through. Standard bottom rigs work well consisting of a three way swivel with sinker clip and appropriate sinker size of 3 to 5 ounces, a 24-inch section of 40-pound leader and a size 3/0 Octopus or Kahle hook on the end tipped with squid/spearing or sand eel. From an inlet wall, you want to be straight out in front of you to maybe a 30 degree angle for an effective presentation. When fishing off a pier, bucktails can once again be employed though you have to play the tide swing. Fancast with the bucktail, casting upcurrent and letting it sink while twitching the bucktail until it comes to a 2 o clock position, then reel up and fancast again. The strike zone exists in the 10 to 2 o clock position for a natural presentation.
Spot Check - Corson’s Inlet, Longport Pier, Manasquan Inlet, Barnegat Inlet, Mantoloking Pier
RIVERS AND SODBANKS
Many secret backwater sodbank and river access spots allow for you to hoof it and work bay channels. Fishing sodbanks is a combination of the surf and inlet tactics. Usually, bucktails are the way to go once again, but you have to play the tides of the backwaters, once again fancasting from 10 to 2 o clock position in that window in front of you, allowing the bucktail to drift naturally with the incoming or outgoing tides. Fluke are aggressive off the banks and inside rivers, and they will follow it tens of yards sometimes before committing. Many times you’ll get “hangers” on the bucktail or teaser where fluke sometimes overplay their hand and miss the strike and sit on top of the lure. Set the hook, and if you miss it, don’t reel in, but let the bucktail hit the bottom again and pop-twitch it without reeling in. Fluke will aggressively hit the lure again immediately.
Spot Check – LBI sodbanks, Barnegat sodbanks, Manasquan River
RECOGNIZING THE RIGHT TIME
Tides play an important role, but when in the surf, sodbank, inlets or piers, don’t just obey the typical mindset of finding dead high water to fish productively. Though high water is always best offering plenty of water for them to reside, many times fluke will feed aggressively during the low tide hours as they stage on the insides of sandbars in the surf to suck down morsels of food as they flow over the bar into the slough, especially on the incoming tides. Low tide waters also afford the opportunity to wade out to the sand bar and cast into the deep blue where many fluke retreat during skinny water situations. The key is to cover ground, making casts as you move down a sodbank, surf or pier. Once you find some flatties, there will be more hanging in a pack. Don’t leave that spot until you have made at least a dozen or more casts to insure you feel you’ve comfortably cleaned out the pack.
Luck has shined on me when surf fluking, topping out with an 8-pound best, and more times than not, I’ve scored a 3 fish limit at 18 inches in an hour’s time. Hoof it for flatties this summer, you’ll be pleasantly surprised with the results.GEARING UP
Compared to fishing the oceanside, everything is scaled lighter when fishing fluke from the shoreline. An intimate connection is desired when using light lures and weights to impart a proper presentation. From the surf or sodbank, I utilize a St. Croix 7 foot Tidemaster TSMHF70 or Shimano Terramar TMSE70MB matched with a Shimano 5000 Sustain reel, spooled with 30-pound Power Pro to which I uni to uni knot a 48-inch section of 25-pound Seaguar or Yo-Zuri Fluorocarbon Leader. When hitting inlets and piers, you can amp up your gear. Stick with spinning outfits in the 7 to 7-1/2 foot range rated for medium heavy action to effectively bounce sinker weights to 3 ounces and drift strip baits. Conventional set ups like a Shimano Terramar matched with a Shimano Torium 12 or Penn Fathom can also be used if fishing more of an up and down approach from a pier or bridge setting.