Most of my pickerel fishing over the past 15 years has been during the winter months. Pickerel are cold-blooded fish, meaning that their metabolism slows down when the water is cold. Winter pickerel bites are often gentle bumps followed by weight on the line. Once they realize they are hooked, they pull and swim around a bit.
Catching pickerel in warmer water is a different story. I have reported over the past year that pickerel had returned to Severn creeks and ponds. Last winter, most were young fish -- 10" to 13" hammer handles. I was happy to find them, but they did not pull very hard.
2003-08-01 00-00-12.jpg
Over the past two months, I have caught many pickerel in the Severn. Just this week, I had my two most productive outings. On Tues, I caught 12 pickerel in just over two hours of fishing. Yesterday was even better, when I caught 19 of them in just over two hours. And these fish were considerable larger than the little ones from last winter. Yesterday, nearly all the pickerel were mid to upper teens, with a few 20" to 22". The warm water and the inherent urge to fatten up for winter makes these predators quite aggressive at the moment. The bites are hard, and the fight is impressive.
2020-08-25-001.jpg
During previous winters, I usually fished for pickerel with a 6' ultralight rod. I tried that same rod this week, but found that I could not set the hook well enough with the ultralight rod. I have much better success with a 6'6" light rod that gives a firmer hookset. Yesterday, three of the pickerel I hooked went airborne -- leaping like little tarpon and thrashing their bodies. One of the pickerel jumped about 4 ft in the air right next to the kayak -- the fish was above my head.
During the recent pickerel trips, my most successful lure has been a 3/16-oz jighead and a 3" pearl or light chartreuse paddletail. Darker tails did not get much attention -- stick with a light color.
2019-09-12 12-22-04a.jpg
You can also use a twistertail. I caught a few of them on a Bignose spinner while I was casting for perch. Later in the season, I will throw small crankbaits with the treble hooks replaced with inline J hooks. Inline spinners and metal spoons also are effective on pickerel.
Pickerel like certain habitats and are not equally spaced around the edges of the tidal creeks and ponds. There is no substitute for trial and error to learn which shoreline stretches are likely to hold pickerel and which are not. Spending time on the water and remembering where you caught them before helps to build your knowledge base.
Pickerel remain one of our few local tidal fishing targets for the winter months. If you do target them, please handle them gently and get them back into the water as quickly as possible. Don't place your fingers in their gills.
Catching pickerel in warmer water is a different story. I have reported over the past year that pickerel had returned to Severn creeks and ponds. Last winter, most were young fish -- 10" to 13" hammer handles. I was happy to find them, but they did not pull very hard.
2003-08-01 00-00-12.jpg
Over the past two months, I have caught many pickerel in the Severn. Just this week, I had my two most productive outings. On Tues, I caught 12 pickerel in just over two hours of fishing. Yesterday was even better, when I caught 19 of them in just over two hours. And these fish were considerable larger than the little ones from last winter. Yesterday, nearly all the pickerel were mid to upper teens, with a few 20" to 22". The warm water and the inherent urge to fatten up for winter makes these predators quite aggressive at the moment. The bites are hard, and the fight is impressive.
2020-08-25-001.jpg
During previous winters, I usually fished for pickerel with a 6' ultralight rod. I tried that same rod this week, but found that I could not set the hook well enough with the ultralight rod. I have much better success with a 6'6" light rod that gives a firmer hookset. Yesterday, three of the pickerel I hooked went airborne -- leaping like little tarpon and thrashing their bodies. One of the pickerel jumped about 4 ft in the air right next to the kayak -- the fish was above my head.
During the recent pickerel trips, my most successful lure has been a 3/16-oz jighead and a 3" pearl or light chartreuse paddletail. Darker tails did not get much attention -- stick with a light color.
2019-09-12 12-22-04a.jpg
You can also use a twistertail. I caught a few of them on a Bignose spinner while I was casting for perch. Later in the season, I will throw small crankbaits with the treble hooks replaced with inline J hooks. Inline spinners and metal spoons also are effective on pickerel.
Pickerel like certain habitats and are not equally spaced around the edges of the tidal creeks and ponds. There is no substitute for trial and error to learn which shoreline stretches are likely to hold pickerel and which are not. Spending time on the water and remembering where you caught them before helps to build your knowledge base.
Pickerel remain one of our few local tidal fishing targets for the winter months. If you do target them, please handle them gently and get them back into the water as quickly as possible. Don't place your fingers in their gills.
Comment