Big Mike and Ron continue to post strong reports from Piney Point. Given the calm winds and mild temperatures, I wanted to give it a try. I thought about cancelling because the tidal coefficient (water movement due to tides) was rated low for today, but I went ahead and made the long drive. The ride down the back roads from Lexington Park was more challenging than usual due to heavy fog. I launched at 7:20, roughly an hour before high tide into low light and 100-yd visibility. I immediately caught a few schoolie stripers near the launch, but that was not my goal for the day.
I set out trolling to some areas suggested by Big Mike. Mike has been a welcoming host to southern MD waters on several other of my road trips this year, but today he could not join me there. I set out and soon caught a few more stripers, including my largest of the day at 22". (Ironically, that big striper bit at full slack tide -- go figure). I was really looking for specks and reds, so I kept moving. 15 mins later, I caught my first speck, and an hour later got the first red. I stayed on the water for nearly 5 hours and caught a Southern MD super slam (4 redfish to 17", 7 specks to 14", 8 stripers to 22", and 3 modest white perch). Those catches exceeded my expectations for the day. I had one other bite that was really hard. I struggled to get the rod out of the holder and pulled back hard. The fish barely moved, then Snap! -- the line broke.
The weather remained foggy for an hour or so, then became overcast. The water was flat calm the entire time. I pretty much had the place to myself -- I saw one other kayak angler several hundred yards away and only one fishing boat 1/4-mile away.
The hot lure today for stripers was a 3" Fat Sam mullet paddletail. The trout and reds liked either 4" Gulp swimming mullet or a 4.5" 12 Fathom Buzztail in a green speckled pattern. The perch liked the Gulp.
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I set out trolling to some areas suggested by Big Mike. Mike has been a welcoming host to southern MD waters on several other of my road trips this year, but today he could not join me there. I set out and soon caught a few more stripers, including my largest of the day at 22". (Ironically, that big striper bit at full slack tide -- go figure). I was really looking for specks and reds, so I kept moving. 15 mins later, I caught my first speck, and an hour later got the first red. I stayed on the water for nearly 5 hours and caught a Southern MD super slam (4 redfish to 17", 7 specks to 14", 8 stripers to 22", and 3 modest white perch). Those catches exceeded my expectations for the day. I had one other bite that was really hard. I struggled to get the rod out of the holder and pulled back hard. The fish barely moved, then Snap! -- the line broke.
The weather remained foggy for an hour or so, then became overcast. The water was flat calm the entire time. I pretty much had the place to myself -- I saw one other kayak angler several hundred yards away and only one fishing boat 1/4-mile away.
The hot lure today for stripers was a 3" Fat Sam mullet paddletail. The trout and reds liked either 4" Gulp swimming mullet or a 4.5" 12 Fathom Buzztail in a green speckled pattern. The perch liked the Gulp.
2020-08-11-004.jpg 2020-08-11-002.jpg2020-08-11-001.jpg 2020-08-11-003.jpg
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