The wind today was strong, as it has been frequently this spring. Mark, J.Rentch, and I launched and fished in Weems Creek and were able to stay out of the wind most of the time. I had low expectations for this trip with the wind and the brown water (courtesy of last night's storms). But I started catching perch right away and continued catching them in many summer shoreline locations until I got tired of catching. I caught somewhere between 33 and 38 perch -- I lost count after a while. While there were no whoppers larger than 11", but there were plenty of strong 8-9" perch, along with many smaller ones.
This is the first trip of the spring in the Severn tributaries where I was able to find perch in many spots and pull several perch out of some of the holes. (By contrast, yesterday I fished in two other Severn tributaries for a comparable amount of time and caught only 3 perch.) Until today, all of my recent trips to the upper reaches of Weems were impeded by extensive aquatic plant growth that fouled my lure on most casts. The storms seemed to have moved the grass to confined areas, leaving other areas open.
The key today was determining what lure they wanted and figuring out what type of habitat they were sitting in. I started by throwing an old beat-up spinnerbait (I think it is a spinner sent to my by sparky1423 a while back) that has been on my rod for several trips. It is responsible for many pickerel and a few perch in recent weeks. The remaining hair on the spinner was down to two clusters.
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After catching the first dozen perch, the lure was so beat up that I decided to retire it. Mark took it home and offered to tie new hair on it.
I found a new model of Bignose spinner in my tackle box and tied it on. He used a heavier spinner blade than the dimpled silver one on the old spinner and painted one side chartreuse and the other side green with a chartreuse stripe.
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Stu sent me these new lures last winter -- I had not had a chance to try them out on perch until today. I can tell you that this lure was very attractive to the perch this morning. The larger blade had a greater thump to it -- it was just the ticket in the muddy water. I caught many perch on the new lure and left them biting.
Earlier in the trip I threw a few casts to a productive hole using a small jighead and 2" Gulp twister tail. I had no bites. As soon as I picked the spinner back up, I began catching again. After that I stuck with the spinnerbait.
Regarding where the fish were, I found three factors that contributed to good spots today:
1) Find an area that was free from the aquatic vegetation -- the wind had cleared up some broad zones allowing me to cast and retrieve freely.
2) Find a spot where the wind would not push me too fast. The wind swirls around in high-sided creeks like Weems. In certain spots, it can be oppressive, while in other spots it was dead calm.
3) Cast to shaded shoreline locations, often under overhanging trees. It took a while to figure this out, but I was getting steady bites in shaded spots and only occasional bites in comparable sunny areas. Cast so that your lure spends a maximum amount of time in shallow locations. If you get a bite on the retrieve, remember where the bite came, and work through the same area again.
I don't know if those perch will continue to bite as well as they did today -- I sure hope they do. John and Mark can add their own experiences from this morning.
This is the first trip of the spring in the Severn tributaries where I was able to find perch in many spots and pull several perch out of some of the holes. (By contrast, yesterday I fished in two other Severn tributaries for a comparable amount of time and caught only 3 perch.) Until today, all of my recent trips to the upper reaches of Weems were impeded by extensive aquatic plant growth that fouled my lure on most casts. The storms seemed to have moved the grass to confined areas, leaving other areas open.
The key today was determining what lure they wanted and figuring out what type of habitat they were sitting in. I started by throwing an old beat-up spinnerbait (I think it is a spinner sent to my by sparky1423 a while back) that has been on my rod for several trips. It is responsible for many pickerel and a few perch in recent weeks. The remaining hair on the spinner was down to two clusters.
C.jpg
After catching the first dozen perch, the lure was so beat up that I decided to retire it. Mark took it home and offered to tie new hair on it.
I found a new model of Bignose spinner in my tackle box and tied it on. He used a heavier spinner blade than the dimpled silver one on the old spinner and painted one side chartreuse and the other side green with a chartreuse stripe.
001.jpg 003.jpg
Stu sent me these new lures last winter -- I had not had a chance to try them out on perch until today. I can tell you that this lure was very attractive to the perch this morning. The larger blade had a greater thump to it -- it was just the ticket in the muddy water. I caught many perch on the new lure and left them biting.
Earlier in the trip I threw a few casts to a productive hole using a small jighead and 2" Gulp twister tail. I had no bites. As soon as I picked the spinner back up, I began catching again. After that I stuck with the spinnerbait.
Regarding where the fish were, I found three factors that contributed to good spots today:
1) Find an area that was free from the aquatic vegetation -- the wind had cleared up some broad zones allowing me to cast and retrieve freely.
2) Find a spot where the wind would not push me too fast. The wind swirls around in high-sided creeks like Weems. In certain spots, it can be oppressive, while in other spots it was dead calm.
3) Cast to shaded shoreline locations, often under overhanging trees. It took a while to figure this out, but I was getting steady bites in shaded spots and only occasional bites in comparable sunny areas. Cast so that your lure spends a maximum amount of time in shallow locations. If you get a bite on the retrieve, remember where the bite came, and work through the same area again.
I don't know if those perch will continue to bite as well as they did today -- I sure hope they do. John and Mark can add their own experiences from this morning.
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