After learning where the pickerel are hanging out in two Severn tributaries over the past 6 weeks, I decided to explore some other tributaries in the same section of the river to see if the pickerel were reasonably abundant there too. Yesterday I reported about my outing in Weems Creek. I was pleased that between Aesiegel and me, we caught 10 pickerel in 3 hours just by trial and error.
This morning I decided to try College Creek. I launched at Jonas Green park to very low water levels (blame the full moon I guess) and glassy calm conditions. I spent nearly an hour jigging the nearby bridge debris that has produced some nice rockfish recently. Today I did not get a single bite. I tried jigging a BKD, a metal jigging spoon, and a huge live minnow on a jighead. With no wind and no current, I stayed mainly in one position unless I paddled slowly. I hung up several times -- there is concrete debris down there plus loads of other terminal tackle and broken off lines that snag jigged lures effectively.
After realizing that the rockfish were not biting, I paddled across to College Creek. Most of the shoreline through the Naval Academy is concrete or rip rap. I bypassed that section and began fishing wooded shorelines over most of the middle and upper sections of the Creek. These are areas where I have caught white perch in the summer. The water level was very low this morning, exposing mud flats and making some of the shallows unfishable.
After two hours of constant casting throughout the creek, I had not had a single bite. I was about ready to give in to the skunk when I cast into an un-fishy look spot with trash and less than 1-ft depth. To my surprise, a spunky little pickerel hit the minnow. After getting him to boatside and removing the hook, I measured the fish. It was by far the smallest pickerel I have ever caught -- 9.25". That proved to be the only fish I could find in all of College Creek. That was disappointing.
Before finishing for the day, I stopped off in another tributary that I know has held pickerel. I wanted to make sure that the weather or low water was not the only cause of the poor bite. Sure enough, the second tributary had a good bite. I hooked 5 pickerel in 30 minutes. That leads me to believe that College Creek does not hold many pickerel this year (or the past several years either). The first year the SRRKC held a winter pickerel derby, I routinely caught lots of pickerel in College Creek casting from the shore. After that banner year, the pickerel weren't there any more.
Before ending the trip, I drifted across the bridge debris again. The drift was a decent speed this time. However, I snagged a new metal jigging spoon almost immediately. It took 10 minutes of pulling and back-paddling to retrieve the lure -- that was enough.
The entire trip last 4.5 hours -- my longest trip in the kayak in a while. I had no butt fatigue today. The body part that got sore first was my heels -- I guess there is no padding in the boot section of my waders.
This morning I decided to try College Creek. I launched at Jonas Green park to very low water levels (blame the full moon I guess) and glassy calm conditions. I spent nearly an hour jigging the nearby bridge debris that has produced some nice rockfish recently. Today I did not get a single bite. I tried jigging a BKD, a metal jigging spoon, and a huge live minnow on a jighead. With no wind and no current, I stayed mainly in one position unless I paddled slowly. I hung up several times -- there is concrete debris down there plus loads of other terminal tackle and broken off lines that snag jigged lures effectively.
After realizing that the rockfish were not biting, I paddled across to College Creek. Most of the shoreline through the Naval Academy is concrete or rip rap. I bypassed that section and began fishing wooded shorelines over most of the middle and upper sections of the Creek. These are areas where I have caught white perch in the summer. The water level was very low this morning, exposing mud flats and making some of the shallows unfishable.
After two hours of constant casting throughout the creek, I had not had a single bite. I was about ready to give in to the skunk when I cast into an un-fishy look spot with trash and less than 1-ft depth. To my surprise, a spunky little pickerel hit the minnow. After getting him to boatside and removing the hook, I measured the fish. It was by far the smallest pickerel I have ever caught -- 9.25". That proved to be the only fish I could find in all of College Creek. That was disappointing.
Before finishing for the day, I stopped off in another tributary that I know has held pickerel. I wanted to make sure that the weather or low water was not the only cause of the poor bite. Sure enough, the second tributary had a good bite. I hooked 5 pickerel in 30 minutes. That leads me to believe that College Creek does not hold many pickerel this year (or the past several years either). The first year the SRRKC held a winter pickerel derby, I routinely caught lots of pickerel in College Creek casting from the shore. After that banner year, the pickerel weren't there any more.
Before ending the trip, I drifted across the bridge debris again. The drift was a decent speed this time. However, I snagged a new metal jigging spoon almost immediately. It took 10 minutes of pulling and back-paddling to retrieve the lure -- that was enough.
The entire trip last 4.5 hours -- my longest trip in the kayak in a while. I had no butt fatigue today. The body part that got sore first was my heels -- I guess there is no padding in the boot section of my waders.
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