When winter cold fronts clean up the Gulf and push clear water inside, Tampa Bay’s near-shore hard bottom turns into prime ground for hook-and-cook hogfish. These shell-crunchers roam sand patches around limestone ledges, rock piles, and old pipeline humps in 15 to 40 feet. Think stealth, scent, and a bait that stays pinned to the bottom.
Tackle is light and precise. I fish 2500 to 3000 size Okuma spinning reels with 10 to 15-pound braid on a 7’ to 7’6” medium-light rod. Add a 3 to 4-foot section of 20 to 25-pound fluorocarbon leader. For hooks, go small and sharp–#1 to 1/0 inline circles (reef-legal) or a short-shank J, if you’re fishing jigs. Keep drag smooth. Hogfish hit like a pecking chicken, then bulldog once hooked.
Two rigs do nearly all the work. The first is a “knocker rig”. Slide a ¼ to 1-ounce egg sinker onto the leader, so it rests against the hook. It keeps a live or fresh shrimp anchored where hogs feed, nose in the sand. The second is a hog-ball style jig (1/4 to ¾-ounce) in pink or orange with a short leader to a #1 to 1/0 hook. Both present low and subtle, exactly what finicky hogs want.
Bait is simple. Live shrimp, fresh-dead shrimp, or small fiddler crabs. Pin the shrimp lightly through the last joint of the tail or the horn, so it stays lively. Trim the tail for extra scent. I’ll crush a few shrimp and toss them overboard to make a slow chum, nothing heavy, just enough smell to keep them looking down…