Update: The complete guide to catching sand fleas.......
Catching Sand Fleas with My Sand Flea Rake. Thought this sand flea saga would get me in the right mood to go surf fishing. I love catching sand fleas for surf fishing bait. However, I go to catch fish so get all the fleas fast is my goal so I can concentrate on fishing. Once you get the technique the fun really begins. Search for areas of ruffled sand in the surf wash. As the wave recedes there may be areas that appear “rough” or “alive” compared to the surrounding smooth sand. These patches of sand seem to vibrate as the fleas dig into the sand to
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I made my own 24” wide sand flea rake (see photo below) is important to use a screen with holes large enough to let the sand and small shell particles pass through but hold the fleas. For me about 3/8” holes work are prerfectly for New Smyrna Beach where I fish. My rake was made of steel horse fence (4” square) that was bent into a backbone. To that, using plastic cable ties, I attached the screen. It is used in walls (forgot what it is called) but cost $5 for a 30” by 8 foot piece (cheap). It does not rust. I welded on a broken rake handle (free from a friend) and it was finished. Total cost about $10 and 2 hours of work. Frozen sand fleas cost about $2 for about 30-40 fleas around here. The steel part will rust if not cleaned and maintained.
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I have made a new rake that has garden rake teeth on the bottom so it can dig into the sand. It really works well and can dig 4-6" easily. It is the one I use now. Maybe I can get a photo of it for tomorrow. Digging is important if it is cold or if it is low tide.
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