Recreational fishing west of Mississippi River begins to close, inshore waters remain open

Venice charter captains and marina owners hold press conference to get message out

Recreational fishing will end in offshore waters and on connected beaches between the Mississippi River’s South Pass and Point Au Fer beginning at 6 p.m. tonight (May 9), the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries announced.

The western-most boundary of the closure is at 91 degrees, 20 minutes, 44 seconds west longitude.

This new closure does not include inshore waters, and applies only to the front-side beaches along the coastline, LDWF’s Karen Foote said. That means anglers still can fish backside beaches such as Grand Isle and Grand Terre.

To this point, recreational fishing had been closed only east of South Pass, but the agency said LDWF Secretary Robert Barham announced the new closure (which includes all commercial fishing) today in response to the westerly movement of oil from the Deepwater Horizon leak.

Forecasts show large masses of oil moving toward the beaches between the river and Pointe Au Fer over the next two days, with Tuesday’s forecast predicting oil on beaches all along the coastline. See the related forecast images for details.

There has been no word of a similar closure in federal waters, although federal officials on Friday expanded a similar closure east of Southwest Pass. See map of the federal closure for closure parameters.

LouisianaSportsman.com will continue to follow the developments and post updates.