Many anglers use cut carp, shad or buffalo as bait, suspended below a float on a 5/0 bronzed treble hook. Gar have dozens of razor-sharp teeth, so you’ll want a steel leader to prevent bite-offs. You’ll need a stout rod with a heavy-duty baitcaster spooled with at least 100-pound line. If you can find schools of shad, odds are you’ll find gar nearby. Fish will often be near weed, rock, trees, or some type of cover that harbors baitfish. Try below dams, in shallow flats adjacent to deep water, in weedbeds, or slack backwaters. Look for them anywhere baitfish gather or are washed downstream. In clear water, you can often see gar congregating in schools just below the surface, feeding on schools of baitfish. The best gar fishing occurs on hot, clear, sunny days in summer. Angling with rod and reel is popular too, due to the incredible fight these powerful fish provide. It takes a powerful bow and a sharp arrow to penetrate a gar’s armor-like scales. If you’re in search of a trophy gator gar, the Trinity River may be your best bet, although you’ll also find good numbers of them in Sam Rayburn, Amistad, Choke Canyon, Toledo Bend, and Falcon reservoirs, along with their associated river systems.Īlthough bass and crappie anglers may hate them, in reality, gar eat mostly rough fish like carp, buffalo, and shad and have little impact on game fish populations.īow-fishing for alligator gar has really grown popular in recent years. Gar are prehistoric fish that have lived in Texas for millions of years, pretty much unchanged from the days they shared the planet with dinosaurs. Shortnose and spotted gar are much smaller. The world record longnose gar weighed 50.31 pounds and was caught in the Trinity River. The state record alligator gar weighed 279 pounds and was caught in the Rio Grande. The reason being is these fish grow to monstrous proportions: capable of measuring 8 feet long, weighing 300 pounds and living to be more than 70 years old. Texas is home to several species of gar: longnose, shortnose, spotted but it’s the giant alligator gar that attracts the most attention. Although most anglers think of bass, crappie, or catfish when they think of freshwater fishing in Texas, there is a small but dedicated following of gar anglers.
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