We launched on Rose St- public ramp, no fee.
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Johnson’s Pond- Salisbury
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Originally posted by tech11165 View PostWhat kind of lures and how did you work them for the Pickerel. I have been struggling of late to land one."Fish on a Dish" - 2017 Jackson Big Tuna
Jackson Cuda 12
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Originally posted by nhunter344 View PostI've had them hit a slowly worked perch spinner, but most of my luck has come from shad darts tipped with minnows.John Veil
Annapolis
Native Watercraft Manta Ray 11, Falcon 11
Author - "Fishing in the Comfort Zone" , "Fishing Road Trip - 2019", "My Fishing Life: Two Years to Remember", and "The Way I Like to Fish -- A Kayak Angler's Guide to Shallow Water, Light Tackle Fishing"
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tech11165,
I agree with nhunter and John Veil that a live minnow at this time of year is almost a sure bet to catch pickerel. I've been out-caught by John on many trips when he uses minnows and I use lures or flies.
In fact, one year ago today John and I fished Tuckahoe Creek. I caught this guy on a Clouser Minnow and intermediate line on a fly rod:
C.jpg
I file my photos by date. I recently looked at them to compare my winter outings last year to this year. As expected, 2018 has been a harsher winter. In 2017 I got out locally 7 times in January and February. This year my local trip count is zero.
But back to the subject at hand, my experience with winter pickerel suggests that they are more likely to be found in slightly deeper water than they are in spring. That is why I used intermediate line on the above catch (to get my fly deep) and I cast not to shore but to a pool of slow moving water many feet off the shoreline.
So a Clouser Minnow is a good choice in cold water. Pause it on the retrieve. They will not hit it hard. In fact you may feel no strike at all. But when you resume the retrieve you may feel a weight on the end of your line. When that happens soon you will be face-to-face with a pickerel.
Now in the spring, it's a different ballgame. They'll aggressively hit surface lures and flies. At that time of year I always cast near structure in shallow water, either near downed wood or spatterdock.
Good luck,Mark
Pasadena, MD
Slate Hobie Revolution 13
Hidden Oak Native Ultimate 12
Lizard Lick Native Ultimate FX Pro
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Originally posted by Hawg View PostMark, it looks like you caught a fish head with no body.Mark
Pasadena, MD
Slate Hobie Revolution 13
Hidden Oak Native Ultimate 12
Lizard Lick Native Ultimate FX Pro
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Johnson’s pond is always a great time. I lived in it for a year. I would get an early start and throw topwater along structure. As the sun gets higher you can switch to typical bass gear like spinners and chatter baits. Trolling a swimbait is also effective in the deeper water from the ramp to the Deers Head hospital. A minnow under a bobber also never fails. White perch and yellow perch will also fall to small spinner blades like a Mepp. There are also decent stripers in there that come in through the Wicomico river when they open the flood gates.
The water near the ramp is the deepest on the entire pond; maybe 12-15’. It gets progressively shallower as you head to the North (head) of the pond. It holds around 5’-8’ FOW from the hospital to the back. I can’t see a reason you’d need an anchore while freshwater pond fishing so you should be OK there.
Hope this helps. Good luck.___________________________
Hobie Fishing Team Member
Survival Products, Salisbury, MD
2017 Camo Hobie Outback
2015 Olive Hobie Outback
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Originally posted by gshappellThanks RavensDfense, I appreciate the in depth help! Sort of sounds like Lake Elkhorn (minus the striper and perch) so hopefully I should do ok. I'll let you know how it goes! Any other areas I should fish? Should I go on the Wicomico?
Sent from my LG-H931 using Tapatalk___________________________
Hobie Fishing Team Member
Survival Products, Salisbury, MD
2017 Camo Hobie Outback
2015 Olive Hobie Outback
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