This is my first Weeks Creek report of the season.
I'm gonna get all cosmicy, it was an interesting day. I did get to see the pivoting bridge work today, very entertaining.
I found that two families of Sparrows had nested under the big, old 16 foot blue canoe that I use in tidal water. I was able to see and remove the first nest ( I have bird houses set up right next to the canoes), I didn't find the second until I started driving, got my windshield egged. Sparrow eggs = little splats.
Karma bit me in the butt, over what I did to the birds, as I loaded the canoe, I broke out the center tail light lens as I slid the canoe onto the roof. It is odd how much heavier the old canoe got over the winter!
It was a beautiful day with clear bluebird skies (another bird reference).
I severely limited my time on the water due to the sunburn factor. All the sun block in the world isn't going to stop sunburn on a day like today. Two and half hours was plenty. I'm not sure if my attention span can handle much more than that, anyhow.
You wait all winter and early spring for a day like this, and then you realize that it is too nice for good fishing-high barometric pressure is a turn off.
The water in Weems was extremely clear as well, once again a good news / bad news situation.
I had more 2 1/2 feet of underwater vision.
I could clearly see the huge shallow underwater weedbeds forming, that thick, stringy weed growth that will be a major pita in the next couple of weeks as it mats up and breaks loose. Any areas under 6 feet deep had growth all the way to the shore line.
There were hundreds of dish shaped sunfish nest clearly visible and tons of one inch baitfish running along the edge of the weeds. I seldom catch sunfish there but there are nests!
It was a good day for watching and observing.
It was high tide when I started fishing.
Oh, yeah, the fishing report:
It was pretty poor.
6 white perch in two plus hours, one was 7 inches, the others were 4-5. I caught them in random locations, the closest I found to a pattern was along the weed edges in 6 feet or more. The docks and downed wood produced nothing today. No pickerels, no yellows. Meh.
I used two 2 different spinner jigs and the color didn't matter as long as they were chartruese.
I'm gonna get all cosmicy, it was an interesting day. I did get to see the pivoting bridge work today, very entertaining.
I found that two families of Sparrows had nested under the big, old 16 foot blue canoe that I use in tidal water. I was able to see and remove the first nest ( I have bird houses set up right next to the canoes), I didn't find the second until I started driving, got my windshield egged. Sparrow eggs = little splats.
Karma bit me in the butt, over what I did to the birds, as I loaded the canoe, I broke out the center tail light lens as I slid the canoe onto the roof. It is odd how much heavier the old canoe got over the winter!
It was a beautiful day with clear bluebird skies (another bird reference).
I severely limited my time on the water due to the sunburn factor. All the sun block in the world isn't going to stop sunburn on a day like today. Two and half hours was plenty. I'm not sure if my attention span can handle much more than that, anyhow.
You wait all winter and early spring for a day like this, and then you realize that it is too nice for good fishing-high barometric pressure is a turn off.
The water in Weems was extremely clear as well, once again a good news / bad news situation.
I had more 2 1/2 feet of underwater vision.
I could clearly see the huge shallow underwater weedbeds forming, that thick, stringy weed growth that will be a major pita in the next couple of weeks as it mats up and breaks loose. Any areas under 6 feet deep had growth all the way to the shore line.
There were hundreds of dish shaped sunfish nest clearly visible and tons of one inch baitfish running along the edge of the weeds. I seldom catch sunfish there but there are nests!
It was a good day for watching and observing.
It was high tide when I started fishing.
Oh, yeah, the fishing report:
It was pretty poor.
6 white perch in two plus hours, one was 7 inches, the others were 4-5. I caught them in random locations, the closest I found to a pattern was along the weed edges in 6 feet or more. The docks and downed wood produced nothing today. No pickerels, no yellows. Meh.
I used two 2 different spinner jigs and the color didn't matter as long as they were chartruese.
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