Before the storms took them the piers from High Island to Gilchrist on the upper Texas coast were good for Red Fish, Black Drum, Rays, Sheepshead, Barracuda and Sharks on the large end: 5/0 & 6/0. For really big sharks using cut bait or live mullet double that. When we had Rollover Pass we used 1/0 or 2/0 and wade fishing. But the idiot pols filled Rollover in and it was the hottest spot on the Gulf Coast. You need big rigs/hooks on the Galveston jetties too---if you are willing to walk 2+ miles: some big Tigers have been caught there. Go out of Sabine Pass or Galveston for 4 hours for Red Snapper and everything else. I took a 10/0 rig loaded with dacron and hooked about a 15 foot Hammerhead out of Sabine: my brother & I fought him over 2 hours and finally cut the line. Or if you have a deep V fish the closer oil platforms: you need some strong line or monel because the barnacles will take a lot of fish. I eat benadryl like candy but if a storm catches you its for nothing. (You really know its trouble if you cast and the line wants to stay up in the air from the static electricity before the lightning starts.) Specs, sand trout, gaftops, flounder, pompano, reds, croaker and all the small stuff 1/0 or 2/0: but sometimes a ray will surprise you too. (I've see 100 lbs+ Sheepshead caught at the Causeway Bridge over Sabine Lake between Pt Arthur and Louisiana, and some fish you never see-they just go under the bridge and the line is cut. And the gar can be huge too.)
Sabine Pass at the time of the Civil War was 12,000. The
Neches River up from there to Pt Arthur & Beaumont was shallow and silted in. After the war the river was dug out into a deep ship channel and Sabine
died and the other towns became big ports. Today if 300 live there it would surprise me, and the only there is a hardware store, 2 bait shops, 2 places to eat and offshore services & boats + they park drilling
rigs in the channel. The old town is swamp grass and the channel is great hunting with Pieces of Eight & English/French coins too, and Civil War Items like T. Miller buttons & the rarest of the Whitworths the 32 pounders only found here. (You do know of Dick Dowling and the Davis Guards and the battle here?) And Fort Manhassett is 6 mile west and there are intact magazines in a salt marsh, and a VLF will not work.