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  • South River surprise

    A few weeks ago, I reported on my paddle around the headwaters of the South River. I saw lots of yellow perch egg strands, but saw no evidence of active fish moving about.

    I know that the carp congregate in this area typically in early May. With the recent warm temperatures, I was curious to see if they had started way early. I launched at the Rt 450 bridge about 3:00 pm this afternoon. The water level was higher than it was on my previous visit, but was still pretty shallow -- I scraped bottom several times. I explored a variety of spots, including the broad open area just downstream of the Rt 50 bridge.

    The carp were not yet staged like they are in spawning season. I did see occasional swirls and even a few silvery 6"-10" fish jumping. They did not look like white perch, but had a more slender profile. I was unable to identify them. I did see two or three dead small carp floating on the surface. I slow trolled two ultralight rods with small lures looking for yellow or white perch -- a 1/8-oz jighead with a 2" chartreuse twister tail on one rod and a 3" silver and blue Rattletrap on the second line. Neither rod was touched. I was almost done for the day but decided to take a few casts with the jighead and twister tail.

    All of a sudden, the lure stopped -- I thought I had snagged a branch. Then the line took off in the opposite direction pulling hard against the drag. I tightened the drag a notch, but that did not slow down the fish. I kept pressure on the fish, and by palming the spool while raising the rod tip, I was able to gain back a few feet at a time. I expected that I had foul-hooked a carp. To my surprise, when the fish surfaced I realized that I had hooked a fat, energetic rockfish. I had no measuring devices onboard but estimate that it was in the 20" range and very beefy.

    I was able to get it in the boat and hold it still to remove the hook and get two photos. That fish not only kept the skunk at bay, but gave me a great thrill at the end of my trip. In retrospect, I realized that I had two other times a few minutes earlier when I hooked onto something that stopped my lure retrieve, but then let go. I had assumed that I had snagged something, but now I think I had hooked large fish those times too.

    By this time, I had exceeded my butt-tolerance time limit for my older kayak - OK Drifter. I tried a few more casts without any action, then paddled for the car.
    Attached Files
    John Veil
    Annapolis
    Native Watercraft Manta Ray 11, Falcon 11

    Author - "Fishing in the Comfort Zone" , "Fishing Road Trip - 2019", "My Fishing Life: Two Years to Remember", and "The Way I Like to Fish -- A Kayak Angler's Guide to Shallow Water, Light Tackle Fishing"

  • #2
    Awesome! Grats on your striper. Love that feeling when you're not sure if you just hooked a log or a fat pig. Love it more when it ends up being a fat pig.
    Ascend A10

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    • #3
      where were you fihsing in the river?also is there really yellow perch in the river. what about catfish or bass or other freshwater fihs??

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      • #4
        Nice job landing that fat striper on the ultralight. That is an excellent surprise indeed.
        Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
        Yellow Tarpon 120

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        • #5
          nice fish. looks healthy

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          • #6
            Nice surprise John! That fish looks fat, maybe spawning or getting ready to spawn?
            Hobie PA 12

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            • #7
              Nice job John. I have got to get my kayak registered this week. I have talked to guys at the store about their catching nice stripers off Thomas Point.

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              • #8
                Nice! What a great surprise. Same experience with the rockfish I caught last weekend. Each time I thought I was snagged. Strong, heavy fish in the 20" range. Is this unusual? Did they feed better than usuall during the warm winter? Or are spring rock always this hefty?
                Mike S.
                Hobie Outback
                Chesapeake Bay Kayak Anglers
                3D Printed Hobie Hatch Bucket

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                • #9
                  Let me guess: you caught it on the silver and blue rattletrap.

                  If so, that continues a trend that both Chex and I experienced on Sunday - that the stripers seem to like the raps with the color blue.

                  Great job getting that pig in the boat on the ultralight. What did you have 4 lb. test?

                  I'm very jealous.

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                  • #10
                    Those are always the best surprises! I'm going to start following you around so I can catch more fish

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                    • #11
                      Trolling the Rattle Trap

                      Due you troll with the floating or the regular rattle trap?

                      Charlie

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                      • #12
                        Looks like fun. Nice chunky suprise!

                        Meadeo
                        2012 135 Wilderness Systems Angler

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                        • #13
                          Two guys asked about the Rattletrap.

                          1. I did not catch the striper on the Rattletrap -- it hit the tiny jighead and twister tail.

                          2. I don't know if the Rattletrap was a standard or floating model -- since I could not see the lure moving through the water I suspect it was the standard one. I don't fish hard plastic baits often (but plan to experiment more this year). I rarely tie on that Rattletrap. It seemed like a good choice for the shallow areas I was paddling in. But nothing touched the Rattletrap when it was trolled or casted.
                          John Veil
                          Annapolis
                          Native Watercraft Manta Ray 11, Falcon 11

                          Author - "Fishing in the Comfort Zone" , "Fishing Road Trip - 2019", "My Fishing Life: Two Years to Remember", and "The Way I Like to Fish -- A Kayak Angler's Guide to Shallow Water, Light Tackle Fishing"

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Ahab View Post
                            Great job getting that pig in the boat on the ultralight. What did you have 4 lb. test?
                            The rod is my favorite perch and pickerel rod. It is a 6'0" Eagle Claw Featherlight X-stream rod. Over the years I have tried 4-lb and 6-lb mono, but now stick with 8-lb mono. For pickerel, I sometimes add a 20-lb fluorocarbon leader. The line had the same 1/8-oz jighead that I used on my last two pickerel outings (then it was tipped with a live minnow -- yesterday soft plastic). I got the striper to the side of the boat and grabbed the line a few inches above the jighead, and swung the fish onto my lap. Usually if you can get the fish moving in the same direction as the pull, even light line holds. However, if the fish lunges in the opposite direction, the line often parts. Timing is important.
                            John Veil
                            Annapolis
                            Native Watercraft Manta Ray 11, Falcon 11

                            Author - "Fishing in the Comfort Zone" , "Fishing Road Trip - 2019", "My Fishing Life: Two Years to Remember", and "The Way I Like to Fish -- A Kayak Angler's Guide to Shallow Water, Light Tackle Fishing"

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                            • #15
                              my problem with light test lines has always been knot fatigue. you can get a really good pull a lot of the time but if you don't retie once in awhile, you eventually break off a lure just casting too hard.

                              i ordered a new x-over perch/rock rod. going with a med light fast action st croix.

                              i think even if i don't like it for perch, it will be good for specs. but choosing a line has really been on my mind. i think the braid is very satisfyling feel but is more prone to line wraps around the rod tip and tangles at lures more if you're doing a bunch of casting. either that, or it's just me.

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