Pre-fishing went well for this duo, as they found some nice size fish and had a dangerous bite going on with several Lucky Craft baits including the
Gunfish 115 in Ghost Minnow and the
Fat CB BDS 1. They found two spots in practice – a very shallow marsh and a deep cut that ran through a shallow marsh and the
BDS 1 played an important role in those areas.
“We caught everything in practice on the BDS 1,” Jueckstock said. “We used several different colors, including MS MJ Herring, Aurora Gold and Aurora Black. I was working it around the edges of marshes in about three to four feet of water.”
Being that the BDS 1 is a freshwater bait and this is a saltwater tournament, Gritter and Jueckstock made a couple modifications to the popular freshwater lure.
“I changed the bait up a bit to be able to work it better for the saltwater fish,” Jueckstock explained. “I changed to a bigger O-ring and also changed out the hooks and used only one big hook on the back. With the front hook gone, I didn’t get hung up in the oysters when I hit the bottom. And when I bounced it off the oysters, if there were redfish in the area, they would come up and pounce on it. They were really going after it.”
When the tournament began, Gritter and Jueckstock opted out of the shallow marsh they had found in practice because they knew the wind was going to shift and the weather was going to switch up big time. They decided to stick with the deeper spot they had found in practice because, on the incoming tide, they had some really big fish coming in there.
“We felt we could win the tournament if we caught those fish,” Gritter said. “Ends up we did catch them and they were monster fish, weighing more than eight pounds a piece, but they were maybe a 1/6th of an inch over the line and we didn’t bring them in.”
Although the crankbait bite was phenomenal in practice, as the weather moved in and the low pressure found its way onshore, the bite changed and Gritter and Jueckstock had to find an alternative.
“It’s hard for me to believe too, but I was throwing a popping cork with a soft plastic on a jig head,” Gritter said. “And it worked. I went to the popping cork because, for some reason, the fish became really finicky in their eating habits.
“When the water was in, we were fishing in about four to six feet of water, but when the tide went out, we were in about eight inches. It was either falling or coming in all the time and it was very different fishing with a six-hour tide cycle. We actually had a very narrow window to catch fish. Right as the tide came in and right after high tide was when we would really get the bites. The rest of the time was blind casting and hoping for the best.”
Gritter and Jueckstock ended their week Saturday in 19th with a combined weight of 19.84 pounds. Making it to the championship was a success in itself, but according to Gritter, once you’re there, you want to win.
“We’re excited to have made the championship and be a part of this elite group,” Gritter said. “We felt like we had a reasonable game plan, but it didn’t work out. We worked hard and are proud of what we’ve accomplished this year, making the Championship and the All Stars.”
Jueckstock had the same sentiments; especially considering the fact this was the first year the two had fished together.
“I feel pretty good overall,” Jueckstock concluded. “We made it to both the championship and the All Star tournament, and that’s pretty good for a first year team. We’re starting to learn each other better and we’re going to work hard and improve for next year.”