On the previous two days I fished at several Eastern Shore locations that have been spared the onslaught of floating debris. This morning I anticipated rain, but found sunny skies instead. I launched at about 10:15 into the Severn River. I was surprised and dismayed by the amount of floating logs, branches, and trash. I had to fight my way through large logs and branches just to get the kayak in the water.
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I paddled to a tidal pond and found at least one quarter of its surface to be covered by debris. Those areas were not fishable.
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I moved around looking for an open area that was in some shade. There was just one patch (no more than 15' wide by 100' long) that met those criteria. Although the water was brown colored, quite a few perch had congregated in that area. Over the next half hour I drifted back and forth along this zone and caught 15 perch -- all on my trusty Bignose spinner. This particular spinner has a small brass blade that has grown dark with oxidation. I probably should polish it again to make it shiny but the darn lure keeps catching the way it is.
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Most of the perch were at least 8" long. Fish #9 pulled a bit harder then dove under some floating branches and spit the hook. I was disappointed. I cast again and had an even stronger pull. This fish (#10) bent my ultralight rod and gave me quite a fight. It measured out at just under 13" (citation size). I might have been able to squeeze it and position it to show a full 13", but I wanted to get the fish back into the water. Whether it was 12.5", 12.75", or 13" does not matter. It was still my largest perch in the past 5 years and was an unexpected bonus in less than pristine waters.
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I fished for only an hour then came home.
20180801_100843_resized_1.jpg
I paddled to a tidal pond and found at least one quarter of its surface to be covered by debris. Those areas were not fishable.
20180801_101627_resized_1.jpg 20180801_101649_resized_1.jpg
I moved around looking for an open area that was in some shade. There was just one patch (no more than 15' wide by 100' long) that met those criteria. Although the water was brown colored, quite a few perch had congregated in that area. Over the next half hour I drifted back and forth along this zone and caught 15 perch -- all on my trusty Bignose spinner. This particular spinner has a small brass blade that has grown dark with oxidation. I probably should polish it again to make it shiny but the darn lure keeps catching the way it is.
bignose spinner.jpg
Most of the perch were at least 8" long. Fish #9 pulled a bit harder then dove under some floating branches and spit the hook. I was disappointed. I cast again and had an even stronger pull. This fish (#10) bent my ultralight rod and gave me quite a fight. It measured out at just under 13" (citation size). I might have been able to squeeze it and position it to show a full 13", but I wanted to get the fish back into the water. Whether it was 12.5", 12.75", or 13" does not matter. It was still my largest perch in the past 5 years and was an unexpected bonus in less than pristine waters.
20180801_104424_resized_2.jpg
I fished for only an hour then came home.
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