Halfbeaks are the slim, surface-skipping baitfish with the distinctive extended lower jaw, the half of a beak that gives them their name. They are more a southern fish than a New England staple, but warm water pushes them north, and understanding them helps make sense of their far more famous relative, the ballyhoo.
What they are
Halfbeaks are long, thin, silvery baitfish that live right at the surface, skittering and skipping when chased. That elongated lower jaw is the family trademark, shared with ballyhoo. They travel in loose schools near the top of the water column, which is exactly where surface-feeding predators hunt them.
Where and when
For the Northeast, halfbeaks are a warm-water, warm-year presence, most likely in late summer along the nearshore and offshore edges. They are not something you plan around here, but when speedsters and pelagics are chasing surface bait, halfbeaks may be part of the mix.
Tip Surface baitfish get eaten on top, so when fish are chasing skipping bait, a fast, surface-skittering presentation, a stickbait or a skipped fly, mimics a fleeing halfbeak better than something worked deep.
The ballyhoo connection
The reason halfbeaks matter to most Northeast anglers is their cousin the ballyhoo, the same body shape and beak, and the number-one rigged trolling bait for offshore tuna and billfish. See the ballyhoo profile for how that surface-bait shape becomes the backbone of an offshore spread.