Last week I fished in an eastern shore tidal river with two friends. We did pretty well at some spots, but not at others. I returned by myself this morning to focus on those spots that had produced last week. I had ideal conditions (low wind, outgoing tide all morning, and pleasant weather). I used my larger kayak -- a Native Watercraft Ultimate FX15 paddle kayak - and trolled three lines. The rods were 6'6" medium or med-light spinning rods. I trolled paddletails on jigheads from 3/16-oz to 3/8-oz from the kayak in water depths from 3' to 5' along marsh grass edges. I usually use 3" paddletails, but moved up to 4" and 6" paddletails today. These fish wanted bigger baits.
I was on the water for 4.5 hours and caught 65 rockfish. This ranks among my very best days ever for catching rockfish. All fish were fat and strong. Ten of them reached keeper size (two at 19”, two at 20”, four at 21”, one at 22”, and one at 23”) but were all released. The 23” and one of the 21” fish came at the same time as two rods went down. It was a challenge keeping things straight. I was hoping to find some specks, but caught only stripers.
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The fish were still biting well when I left. I was just too tired to wind them in any longer and still had a 2-mile paddle back to the launch point.
I was on the water for 4.5 hours and caught 65 rockfish. This ranks among my very best days ever for catching rockfish. All fish were fat and strong. Ten of them reached keeper size (two at 19”, two at 20”, four at 21”, one at 22”, and one at 23”) but were all released. The 23” and one of the 21” fish came at the same time as two rods went down. It was a challenge keeping things straight. I was hoping to find some specks, but caught only stripers.
2020-08-11-002.jpg
The fish were still biting well when I left. I was just too tired to wind them in any longer and still had a 2-mile paddle back to the launch point.
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