Many of us on this forum have complained about a poor striper bite this year. We keep hoping Rocktober will change the trend. I'm not convinced the year will improve.
A 19 inch Chesapeake Bay striper is typically 3 years old. I do not keep detailed personal catch statistics but I know for sure I've caught fewer legal stripers in 2018 from my kayak than in previous years. Some of that is because I've had less outings due to family obligations. The weather has also played a role with extremes of cold in the spring and heat in the summer keeping me off the water. However there are other possible reasons.
The 2016 Young-of-the-Year striped bass index was 2.2. The long-term average with data going back 60 years is close to 12. Based solely on that statistic, each of us are chasing far fewer fish in 2018 new to legal status than in an average year.
That said, the 2015 index was nearly twice the long-term average. So where are they? They should be 21 to 23 inches in their 4th year. Why am I not catching a lot of them? They have been largely absent from the western shore rivers I usually fish in the very areas where I've had success in the past. I've had much better quantitative days this year for stripers across the Bay Bridge but few keepers.
Is that due to weather, mortality? Possibly they change their habits at that age and size and leave the shallows that many kayak anglers fish for cooler more oxygenated waters. Maybe I've just done a bad job of fishing this year, not adapting to changes. Or maybe I've been unlucky, fishing areas with sparse legal striper counts. Even the best kayak angler is not going to catch many fish where few fish are swimming. Kayak fishing in particular due to limited range is like real estate -- location is everything.
I have not seen 2018's Young-of-the-Year striper index posted. If stripers favor cold water during their spawn, it may have been a good year because our spring was very chilly.
The good news is that the 2017 index was slightly above normal. Perhaps that accounts for the abundance of shorts I've caught this year. Maybe that bodes well for 2019.
There are many variables when it comes to catching stripers, but statistics clearly show that the 2016 Young-of-the-Year striper class was abnormally small. Perhaps that is the biggest reason that catching a legal striper has been a challenge for me and many other kayak anglers this year.
To those of you who have cracked the code this year, good for you.
Just wondering if any others can explain why 2018 has been such a challenge for so many.
A 19 inch Chesapeake Bay striper is typically 3 years old. I do not keep detailed personal catch statistics but I know for sure I've caught fewer legal stripers in 2018 from my kayak than in previous years. Some of that is because I've had less outings due to family obligations. The weather has also played a role with extremes of cold in the spring and heat in the summer keeping me off the water. However there are other possible reasons.
The 2016 Young-of-the-Year striped bass index was 2.2. The long-term average with data going back 60 years is close to 12. Based solely on that statistic, each of us are chasing far fewer fish in 2018 new to legal status than in an average year.
That said, the 2015 index was nearly twice the long-term average. So where are they? They should be 21 to 23 inches in their 4th year. Why am I not catching a lot of them? They have been largely absent from the western shore rivers I usually fish in the very areas where I've had success in the past. I've had much better quantitative days this year for stripers across the Bay Bridge but few keepers.
Is that due to weather, mortality? Possibly they change their habits at that age and size and leave the shallows that many kayak anglers fish for cooler more oxygenated waters. Maybe I've just done a bad job of fishing this year, not adapting to changes. Or maybe I've been unlucky, fishing areas with sparse legal striper counts. Even the best kayak angler is not going to catch many fish where few fish are swimming. Kayak fishing in particular due to limited range is like real estate -- location is everything.
I have not seen 2018's Young-of-the-Year striper index posted. If stripers favor cold water during their spawn, it may have been a good year because our spring was very chilly.
The good news is that the 2017 index was slightly above normal. Perhaps that accounts for the abundance of shorts I've caught this year. Maybe that bodes well for 2019.
There are many variables when it comes to catching stripers, but statistics clearly show that the 2016 Young-of-the-Year striper class was abnormally small. Perhaps that is the biggest reason that catching a legal striper has been a challenge for me and many other kayak anglers this year.
To those of you who have cracked the code this year, good for you.
Just wondering if any others can explain why 2018 has been such a challenge for so many.
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