After reading all the reports of lousy water and debris in the main bay, I decided to leave my power boat in the garage and fish from my kayak this afternoon. I launched in Weems Creek about noon. The water was a light brown color, but was calm and there was no floating debris. I could see down at least a foot -- not much different from several other times this summer after regular rainstorms.
I had paddled less than 1/4 mile from the ramp when I started working a stretch of shoreline that has been productive for me on perch this summer. I used three ultralight rods each armed with a different lures. I first threw the safety pin style spinner bait that has been very effective on perch recently (hand made by TF member Jack Hart), but did not get even a nibble.
I switched over to throwing a bass fishing-style spinner bait in a small size (Strike King Micro-King in 1/16 oz size). After only a few casts, I hooked a strong fish that swam around for 20 seconds before getting it to the surface. It was a 16" pickerel, which thankfully did a boatside self-release (note to non-kayakers -- handling a writhing toothy creature near your private parts is not a fun thing to do ). Although I have caught pickerel in other Severn creeks this summer, this was my first Weems Creek pickerel in several years. Not bad for my first fish of the day.
Earlier this summer I fished mostly beetle spin type spinner arms with 3" plastic shad minnows.
Since July, however, these have not been as effective as the spinnerbait style lures, and I have not thrown them much. I decided to give that lure a try today. The shad was bright chartreuse in color -- it really stood out in the mocha-colored water. On the third cast, I hooked another strong swimmer. After bringing it alongside, I found it to be a 16" rockfish. As I tried to lift it into the boat for a photo, it gave a lunge and broke the line off at the lure. This fish was by far the largest striper I have ever caught in Weems.
So here I was, 15 minutes into my outing. I had expected to catch at least a few perch or maybe one of the 5" stripers that have been around this summer. Instead, I had no perch, but had notched two 16" fish of unexpected species. This was already a good day!
As I continued upstream into Weems, the water became less clear, and the fish were not biting particularly well. I threw all three types of lures at many different shorelines that often have hungry fish. I did pick up about 10 perch but none bigger than 10". No one lure out-caught the others. This was a surprise for me since the homemade safety pin style lure had been head and shoulders better than any other lures on the last few trips. The one place where it did work better than the others was when I tried ULTT (ultralight tackle trolling) along a stretch of shoreline. I set all three rods in rod holders and paddled very slowly. I caught three perch on the homemade lure but none on the other two types.
I was quite pleased to catch three species of fish this soon after the heavy rains. There are fish out there, guys. You just have to look in places where you can get safely.
I had paddled less than 1/4 mile from the ramp when I started working a stretch of shoreline that has been productive for me on perch this summer. I used three ultralight rods each armed with a different lures. I first threw the safety pin style spinner bait that has been very effective on perch recently (hand made by TF member Jack Hart), but did not get even a nibble.
I switched over to throwing a bass fishing-style spinner bait in a small size (Strike King Micro-King in 1/16 oz size). After only a few casts, I hooked a strong fish that swam around for 20 seconds before getting it to the surface. It was a 16" pickerel, which thankfully did a boatside self-release (note to non-kayakers -- handling a writhing toothy creature near your private parts is not a fun thing to do ). Although I have caught pickerel in other Severn creeks this summer, this was my first Weems Creek pickerel in several years. Not bad for my first fish of the day.
Earlier this summer I fished mostly beetle spin type spinner arms with 3" plastic shad minnows.
Since July, however, these have not been as effective as the spinnerbait style lures, and I have not thrown them much. I decided to give that lure a try today. The shad was bright chartreuse in color -- it really stood out in the mocha-colored water. On the third cast, I hooked another strong swimmer. After bringing it alongside, I found it to be a 16" rockfish. As I tried to lift it into the boat for a photo, it gave a lunge and broke the line off at the lure. This fish was by far the largest striper I have ever caught in Weems.
So here I was, 15 minutes into my outing. I had expected to catch at least a few perch or maybe one of the 5" stripers that have been around this summer. Instead, I had no perch, but had notched two 16" fish of unexpected species. This was already a good day!
As I continued upstream into Weems, the water became less clear, and the fish were not biting particularly well. I threw all three types of lures at many different shorelines that often have hungry fish. I did pick up about 10 perch but none bigger than 10". No one lure out-caught the others. This was a surprise for me since the homemade safety pin style lure had been head and shoulders better than any other lures on the last few trips. The one place where it did work better than the others was when I tried ULTT (ultralight tackle trolling) along a stretch of shoreline. I set all three rods in rod holders and paddled very slowly. I caught three perch on the homemade lure but none on the other two types.
I was quite pleased to catch three species of fish this soon after the heavy rains. There are fish out there, guys. You just have to look in places where you can get safely.
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