I trolled 4 lines again at the mouth of the Severn River this morning. With the forecast for stronger winds, I chose to use the larger Slayer Propel 13. Another advantage was the availability of my FF/GPS on that kayak. The FF part did not help with spotting fish -- I relied on it to tell me what depth I was in. More important was the GPS feature that allowed me to follow my trail and come back over productive spots time and again.
I found fish at the same two locations where I found them on Tues. The first spot was in 13-18 ft depth. The fish were in a compact area. Almost every time I trolled through a rod would go down with striper from 12" to 16". I was able to make fairly tight turns. The cluster of trails shown on the figure is about 1/4 mile long. I made all those passes in about an hour. Occasionally I would venture off in a different direction to see if I could find other fish. Those side-trips did not produce fish, so I focused on working the same small area.
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I crossed the river to work a shallow water spot. As soon as I got there, I caught 4 fish in 5 minutes. The bite remained decent for the next hour, but not at that fast pace. I managed 13 stripers there, with keepers of 19", 19", and 20" among them. Almost all the bites occurred as I moved in the same direction. Even if I passed through the same spots in the opposite directions, I had no bites. Once again, the fish all hit in the same 1/4-mile stretch. On the few occasions when I ventured off, I had no bites. I was fishing there during the last hour of incoming tide until just after high tide.
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I moved off to fish another deeper spot that had produced in the spring. I caught a single 18" striper there.
I ended up pedaling nonstop for over 4 hours covering 12 miles. I finished with 30 stripers, including 4 of keeper size. All but one fish were caught on 12 Fathoms 3" Fat Sam mullet paddletails. Two rods used small bucktails, the other two plain jigheads. I had no drama with lost or broken rods today.
I found fish at the same two locations where I found them on Tues. The first spot was in 13-18 ft depth. The fish were in a compact area. Almost every time I trolled through a rod would go down with striper from 12" to 16". I was able to make fairly tight turns. The cluster of trails shown on the figure is about 1/4 mile long. I made all those passes in about an hour. Occasionally I would venture off in a different direction to see if I could find other fish. Those side-trips did not produce fish, so I focused on working the same small area.
004.JPG
I crossed the river to work a shallow water spot. As soon as I got there, I caught 4 fish in 5 minutes. The bite remained decent for the next hour, but not at that fast pace. I managed 13 stripers there, with keepers of 19", 19", and 20" among them. Almost all the bites occurred as I moved in the same direction. Even if I passed through the same spots in the opposite directions, I had no bites. Once again, the fish all hit in the same 1/4-mile stretch. On the few occasions when I ventured off, I had no bites. I was fishing there during the last hour of incoming tide until just after high tide.
002.JPG
I moved off to fish another deeper spot that had produced in the spring. I caught a single 18" striper there.
I ended up pedaling nonstop for over 4 hours covering 12 miles. I finished with 30 stripers, including 4 of keeper size. All but one fish were caught on 12 Fathoms 3" Fat Sam mullet paddletails. Two rods used small bucktails, the other two plain jigheads. I had no drama with lost or broken rods today.
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