Seven Snaggedline members (Mark, Raptor, J. Rentch, Yak67, NY Style, and me, plus Plastic Boat, whom I did not meet) launched from Goodhands Creek this morning looking for stripers. All of us had pedal-power kayaks -- 5 Hobies and 2 Natives. I started out trolling 3" Fat Sam mullet paddletails along grassy shorelines in 3-4 ft depth. This strategy worked well for me on Wed, but did not produce many fish today. I kept moving around and eventually found fish by trolling along structure edges either in current or in quiet pockets adjacent to a strong current. My first 45 mins was frustrating with just one small striper. Then I found a tightly packed batch of fish. I made several laps past a point jutting into current and hooked 9 fish in the next 10 minutes.
I worked another structure and found a zone that held a few keeper-sized fish. Over the next hour, I looped through that area many times and was able to catch two 22.5", one 22", and one 19" from this zone. Yak67 and I called it quits by 10:00. I ended with 19 stripers including the three keepers (all released). The color of the paddletails did not matter. I caught fish on white, off-white, pink/orange, blue/silver, and pale chartreuse.
One tip I can offer is to check your lures often to make sure the plastic is sitting straight on the jighead and it still has it's tail, and to look for snagged grass or seaweed. Trolling a lure that does not look realistic is a waste of time.
The other guys can add their reports as they get home and to the computer.
I worked another structure and found a zone that held a few keeper-sized fish. Over the next hour, I looped through that area many times and was able to catch two 22.5", one 22", and one 19" from this zone. Yak67 and I called it quits by 10:00. I ended with 19 stripers including the three keepers (all released). The color of the paddletails did not matter. I caught fish on white, off-white, pink/orange, blue/silver, and pale chartreuse.
One tip I can offer is to check your lures often to make sure the plastic is sitting straight on the jighead and it still has it's tail, and to look for snagged grass or seaweed. Trolling a lure that does not look realistic is a waste of time.
The other guys can add their reports as they get home and to the computer.
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