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Bield:Fish
Single-region tide guide

Red Drum tide fishing at Alabama & Mississippi Sound.

Sciaenops ocellatusBest on Outgoing Tidediurnal · 12 ft

In Alabama & Mississippi Sound, red drum fish best on outgoing tide. The last two hours of outgoing tide concentrates redfish at marsh drains and creek mouths where flushing water delivers prey directly to ambush positions.

Regional note

Microtidal Alabama/Mississippi waters mute the tide-stage dynamic — wind setup and barometric pressure are typically more important than tide.

Top presentation: Soft plastic paddletail on jighead

Tide cycle

High waterLow waterLow SlackIncomingHigh SlackOutgoingLow SlackTidal cycle — semidiurnal (one full cycle ≈ 12.4 hr)

Stage-by-stage in Alabama & Mississippi Sound

Incoming Tide
good

Moves up onto oyster bars and grass flats as water rises, often tailing in skinny water with backs and tails breaking the surface.

Where: Shallow flats edges, oyster bar tops, marsh grass tongues newly under water.

Top presentations:
  • Weedless gold spoon
  • Soft plastic shrimp on light jighead
  • Live mullet under popping cork
High Slack
fair

Activity drops as current stops; fish rest on shell edges and oyster ledges, less actively feeding but not gone.

Where: Shell edges, deep oyster bars, mangrove root structure.

Top presentations:
  • Soaking cut mullet on bottom
  • Slow-fished soft plastic
Outgoing Tide
peak

Concentrates at creek mouths and flat drains as flushing water carries crabs, shrimp, and baitfish out of the marsh — aggressive feeding.

Where: Creek-mouth current seams, flat drainage cuts, points where marsh drains meet the main channel.

Top presentations:
  • Soft plastic paddletail on jighead
  • Live finger mullet free-lined
  • Topwater plug at first/last light
Low Slack
fair

Holds in deeper channels and holes adjacent to drained flats, conserving energy.

Where: Deep channel bends near drained flats, oyster bar holes, ICW sloughs.

Top presentations:
  • Cut bait on bottom
  • Slow-jigged soft plastic

Top water types in Alabama & Mississippi Sound

  • Grass Flats

    Reds tail on flooded flats only when tide brings water onto the grass — a non-flooding flat is empty water for redfish.

  • Oyster Bars & Shell Bottom

    Oyster bar tops only fish well when tide is over them. Best window is the rise just before flood and the fall just after — bait is most exposed.

  • Marsh Creeks & Drain Mouths

    The signature redfish water type. Outgoing tide at marsh drains is the iconic redfish scenario.

Live red drum tide alerts.

Bield: Fish reads NOAA tide tables for Alabama & Mississippi Sound and alerts you when the outgoing tide window is about to start at your home location.