I am doing a long weekend in Cape May with my wife and her relatives. I brought my Manta Ray 11 with me so I could get in some fishing. Yesterday I launched into a small tidal creek in Cape May and fished for 3 hours. Today I launched near the North Wildwood Inlet and fished for 4.5 hours. I used two rods with double-hook bottom rigs. One had flounder hooks and the other had very small thin-wire circle hooks (smaller than a dime). I used 3" and 4" Gulp swimming mullet as the bait. On both days, I caught 6 small black sea bass (on the circle hook rig) and 4 flounder (about half and half on the two rigs). Today, the off-white Gulps were hit more often than the chartreuse.
I was fishing blind (no FF/GPS) and had no fishing partners with local knowledge. I just drifted with the current and paid attention to where on the drift I got bites. Then I went back and visited those spots again. This morning the waters were much wider. The tidal currents moved fast. I found one interesting spot where the outgoing current rushed past a grassy point. However, on the back side of that point, there was an eddy that had current pushing in the opposite direction. I stayed in a 1/4-acre area for the last hour with just a few minor adjustments with the paddle to push me to the edge of the outgoing current, then caught the incoming counter-current to return to the starting point. I had lots of nibbles in that area and managed 1 flounder and 3 black sea bass before calling it a day.
I was fishing blind (no FF/GPS) and had no fishing partners with local knowledge. I just drifted with the current and paid attention to where on the drift I got bites. Then I went back and visited those spots again. This morning the waters were much wider. The tidal currents moved fast. I found one interesting spot where the outgoing current rushed past a grassy point. However, on the back side of that point, there was an eddy that had current pushing in the opposite direction. I stayed in a 1/4-acre area for the last hour with just a few minor adjustments with the paddle to push me to the edge of the outgoing current, then caught the incoming counter-current to return to the starting point. I had lots of nibbles in that area and managed 1 flounder and 3 black sea bass before calling it a day.
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