I have been perch fishing in the Severn for the past few weeks. The pervasive mahogany tide started leaving a week ago, then came back again in force this week. I am finding a few perch here and there, but it takes a great deal of looking. The water color is not good, and there are many areas that are overloaded with SAVs, making casting difficult.
This morning I launched at the Homeport Farms launch into Church Creek on the South River. I spent 90 minutes trolling paddletails out to the river, into Crab Creek, and back to Church Creek. I caught five small stripers and two perch. Once back in Church Creek, I put the paddletail rods away and picked up a light rod with a Bignose spinner. I looked for shady shorelines, particularly those that had some fallen wood or overhanging trees. The perch were quite accommodating. I caught 23 of them in about half an hour, and often caught multiple perch from the same spot (not what I am seeing in the Severn). Many were good eating size and fat (although I do not keep perch myself). I had worked most of the way back to the launch when it started raining. I tucked in against a bulkhead with an overhanging tree and stayed mostly dry. After ten minutes, the rain had not stopped, and now I was hearing some thunder. I paddled quickly back to the launch, loaded up, and went home.
The water color in Church Creek was brown (a muddy brown, not the reddish brown I am seeing in the Severn). I did not have to contend with large areas of floating grasses either. The perch fishing was easy and productive. Hopefully the mahogany tide will vacate the Severn so I can have similar catching close to home without hauling my kayak up a big hill at the end of the trip (part of the Homeport workout program).
I will add a few words about the Bignose spinners that Snaggedline member Stu Sklar makes. I have been using them as my primary perch lure for a bunch of years. I tie on a Bignose spinner and leave it there until it breaks off or until some component wears out. The one I have been using for the past few weeks has caught more than 100 perch and has lost most of its hair and flash. Even in its nearly-bald state, it attracts perch. Whether you use a Bignose or some other variety of small safety-pin style spinner (small spinnerbait), they are very effective on perch.
This morning I launched at the Homeport Farms launch into Church Creek on the South River. I spent 90 minutes trolling paddletails out to the river, into Crab Creek, and back to Church Creek. I caught five small stripers and two perch. Once back in Church Creek, I put the paddletail rods away and picked up a light rod with a Bignose spinner. I looked for shady shorelines, particularly those that had some fallen wood or overhanging trees. The perch were quite accommodating. I caught 23 of them in about half an hour, and often caught multiple perch from the same spot (not what I am seeing in the Severn). Many were good eating size and fat (although I do not keep perch myself). I had worked most of the way back to the launch when it started raining. I tucked in against a bulkhead with an overhanging tree and stayed mostly dry. After ten minutes, the rain had not stopped, and now I was hearing some thunder. I paddled quickly back to the launch, loaded up, and went home.
The water color in Church Creek was brown (a muddy brown, not the reddish brown I am seeing in the Severn). I did not have to contend with large areas of floating grasses either. The perch fishing was easy and productive. Hopefully the mahogany tide will vacate the Severn so I can have similar catching close to home without hauling my kayak up a big hill at the end of the trip (part of the Homeport workout program).
I will add a few words about the Bignose spinners that Snaggedline member Stu Sklar makes. I have been using them as my primary perch lure for a bunch of years. I tie on a Bignose spinner and leave it there until it breaks off or until some component wears out. The one I have been using for the past few weeks has caught more than 100 perch and has lost most of its hair and flash. Even in its nearly-bald state, it attracts perch. Whether you use a Bignose or some other variety of small safety-pin style spinner (small spinnerbait), they are very effective on perch.
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