I am heading to Neavitt Md, near St Michaels, to visit friends for the week of August 26th. I’ve convinced the wife to let me drag my Ride 115 from Kentucky, where I primarily fish for smallies and those green bass in local rivers, creeks and lakes. I have never fished the Chesapeake or Eastern Bay. I was actually in Neavitt last year as well, and paddled one of the kayaks at the house on Harris Creek where we stayed, but didn’t fish. I’ve been trying to research as much as I can to identify what I should be targeting, where to fish and how to fish. This site has been a wealth of information, which I thank you for.
I don't plan on bring the whole tackle box (I'd hate to try to explain why all of that stuff I never really use is taking up so much room in the back of the truck). 80% of my fishing is with soft plastics anyway. It looks like my best bet, based on how I primarily fish at home, would be to bring a bunch of white fluke style plastics and paddle tails (and chartreuse spike-it) to troll or jig over humps, ledges or deep holes in Harris and Balls Creeks at Neavitt, Poplar Narrows outside of Sherwood, and Tilghman Point at Claiborne. My hope would be to find stripers, speckled trout or redfish. Is that a plan, or am I out in left field based on where the fish generally are this time of year?
I also don’t have a fish finder on my Ride. I was planning to orient myself on the water based upon the buoy locations and looking at the charts, which I have been diligently studying. However, I may be dreaming about whether that can be effective when trying to follow the channels and ledges in, what to me, is big open water. Do I need to break down and do a quick depth finder install this weekend? Other than following birds or looking for "breakers"(?), in such big water, where it sounds like the fish may be scattered, is it more efficient to paddle until you find fish on the fish finder, or start fishing your planned area/route until you hopefully find fish?
This also may be a dumb question, but it looks like there are places where he bottom drops off from a couple of feet into a relatively deep channel in a short distance. Does anyone ever paddle out and walk the shallow edges to cast up and against the tide into the channel like you would wading upstream in a river? Is the bottom too soft, or are the drop offs actually too gradual to effectively cast into?
Finally, if anyone is planning on fishing near St Michaels between the 27th and Sept 1, and doesn’t mind a Bay kayak fishing novice tagging along, let me know.
Thanks in advance for the help.
Kyyaker
I don't plan on bring the whole tackle box (I'd hate to try to explain why all of that stuff I never really use is taking up so much room in the back of the truck). 80% of my fishing is with soft plastics anyway. It looks like my best bet, based on how I primarily fish at home, would be to bring a bunch of white fluke style plastics and paddle tails (and chartreuse spike-it) to troll or jig over humps, ledges or deep holes in Harris and Balls Creeks at Neavitt, Poplar Narrows outside of Sherwood, and Tilghman Point at Claiborne. My hope would be to find stripers, speckled trout or redfish. Is that a plan, or am I out in left field based on where the fish generally are this time of year?
I also don’t have a fish finder on my Ride. I was planning to orient myself on the water based upon the buoy locations and looking at the charts, which I have been diligently studying. However, I may be dreaming about whether that can be effective when trying to follow the channels and ledges in, what to me, is big open water. Do I need to break down and do a quick depth finder install this weekend? Other than following birds or looking for "breakers"(?), in such big water, where it sounds like the fish may be scattered, is it more efficient to paddle until you find fish on the fish finder, or start fishing your planned area/route until you hopefully find fish?
This also may be a dumb question, but it looks like there are places where he bottom drops off from a couple of feet into a relatively deep channel in a short distance. Does anyone ever paddle out and walk the shallow edges to cast up and against the tide into the channel like you would wading upstream in a river? Is the bottom too soft, or are the drop offs actually too gradual to effectively cast into?
Finally, if anyone is planning on fishing near St Michaels between the 27th and Sept 1, and doesn’t mind a Bay kayak fishing novice tagging along, let me know.
Thanks in advance for the help.
Kyyaker
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