For the last couple of years I have become convinced that there are sheepshead fisheries in places where people don’t typically target them. After accidentally catching one in the surf on AI Virginia last spring and seeing multiple surprise ones caught around Chincoteague via Captain Steve’s FB page I did an exploratory kayak trip there last summer. I also made a single attempt in the lower Potomac last summer after seeing an online report that misidentified a huge sheepshead caught on the Point Lookout Pier as a black drum. No dice on either trip.
In planning for this year’s trips I kept circling back to sheepshead. Why is there a Sheepshead Bay in New York but no one catches them there? Why is there a Sheepshead Creek in Chincoteague, but even the commercial fisherman I talked to last summer said they never see them? I was nostalgia-watching some old “Saltwater Fishing with Dr. Jim” videos on YouTube when I came across a video where he caught a sheepshead in Virginia Beach back in the 90’s and said it was the first one he’d ever caught. Keep in mind that guy was one of the most successful and prolific fishermen back in the day and he’d never seen one but now they are common in that area? What is going on? Is it our shorter winters and warmer waters that keep pushing species north, similar to the recent appearance of greentail shrimp in the lower bay?
I set out to find any evidence of them in the mid-Bay, especially the lower Potomac. I pored over every Facebook page, every fishing app, spent hours wading through AI-generated garbage that has made search engines useless before I came across this gem. It answered everything in one fell swoop.
https://www.hsmcdigshistory.org/clue...arly-maryland/
I have never seen anything like this study, which used archeology in St. Mary’s County to identify what people were fishing for and what they caught all the way back to the 1600’s. It is full of fascinating information about how the types of fish being caught shifted as gear became more advanced and livestock finally took hold, shifting settlers away from seafood. There’s a whole section on tridents and nets and hooks that contains some thought-provoking stuff on why the species found on the site shifted over time.
But what I was most interested in was my sheepshead question. The answer of their disappearance and recent abundance isn’t warmer waters. It isn’t salinity or overfishing. It’s oysters. Period. These fish have to have vertical structure so they can feed on shellfish and crustaceans or they abandon the area. It’s why they orient to bridges in the absence of reefs. And as the oyster population has rebounded in the Tidewater area, so have they. With any luck, as the oyster population comes back further up the Chesapeake we may be lucky enough to see them all over the place.
Because in the past, they appear to have absolutely swarmed the area. From the article: “One historical document supports this assertion Thomas Glover, a traveler to Virginia in 1676, wrote that ‘A Planter may often take 12 or 14 [Sheepshead] in an hours time with hook and line.’ “
Let’s hope those days come again.
In planning for this year’s trips I kept circling back to sheepshead. Why is there a Sheepshead Bay in New York but no one catches them there? Why is there a Sheepshead Creek in Chincoteague, but even the commercial fisherman I talked to last summer said they never see them? I was nostalgia-watching some old “Saltwater Fishing with Dr. Jim” videos on YouTube when I came across a video where he caught a sheepshead in Virginia Beach back in the 90’s and said it was the first one he’d ever caught. Keep in mind that guy was one of the most successful and prolific fishermen back in the day and he’d never seen one but now they are common in that area? What is going on? Is it our shorter winters and warmer waters that keep pushing species north, similar to the recent appearance of greentail shrimp in the lower bay?
I set out to find any evidence of them in the mid-Bay, especially the lower Potomac. I pored over every Facebook page, every fishing app, spent hours wading through AI-generated garbage that has made search engines useless before I came across this gem. It answered everything in one fell swoop.
https://www.hsmcdigshistory.org/clue...arly-maryland/
I have never seen anything like this study, which used archeology in St. Mary’s County to identify what people were fishing for and what they caught all the way back to the 1600’s. It is full of fascinating information about how the types of fish being caught shifted as gear became more advanced and livestock finally took hold, shifting settlers away from seafood. There’s a whole section on tridents and nets and hooks that contains some thought-provoking stuff on why the species found on the site shifted over time.
But what I was most interested in was my sheepshead question. The answer of their disappearance and recent abundance isn’t warmer waters. It isn’t salinity or overfishing. It’s oysters. Period. These fish have to have vertical structure so they can feed on shellfish and crustaceans or they abandon the area. It’s why they orient to bridges in the absence of reefs. And as the oyster population has rebounded in the Tidewater area, so have they. With any luck, as the oyster population comes back further up the Chesapeake we may be lucky enough to see them all over the place.
Because in the past, they appear to have absolutely swarmed the area. From the article: “One historical document supports this assertion Thomas Glover, a traveler to Virginia in 1676, wrote that ‘A Planter may often take 12 or 14 [Sheepshead] in an hours time with hook and line.’ “
Let’s hope those days come again.
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