In a surprising number of cases, if I catch a fish on the first cast (or even on the first few casts), it may lead to a slow catching day the rest of the trip. I call this malady "first cast-itis".
I fished this morning in a tidal pond. I made one cast, wound it in, and set the rod on the kayak deck, leaving a foot of line in the water. I lifted my hands to adjust my sunglasses. I heard a scraping noise and saw my rod being pulled off the kayak. Fortunately, I was able to grab the rod and wind in a 20" pickerel. Of course, the next thing that went through my mind was that maybe I had triggered a case of first cast-itis.
In most of the bodies of water that I fish frequently, I try to follow the same routes on every trip and fish the same series of spots. In this case, I worked my way to one end of the pond. 10 minutes later I had not had any more bites. By then, I had moved around to the same spot where I caught the first fish. I began casting there and caught 5 more pickerel on the next 10 casts -- all 18" to 21". The bite was red hot.
I moved off of that spot and kept going around the rest of the pond. I fished the shallow edges and the slightly deeper water in the center, but had no bites. After 45 minutes of lots of casts but no bites or follows, I returned to the first location and once again caught more fish. By the end of two hours, I had caught 11 pickerel from an area the size of a tennis court, but had no bites anywhere else in the 3-acre pond.
In my 15 years of experience fishing for pickerel in tidal creeks and ponds, they tend not to congregate in the same small location very often. They usually are scattered around shorelines. But today they were all packed in the same area. I don't have an explanation for what I observed, but was quite pleased to catch a bunch of fish today.
I fished this morning in a tidal pond. I made one cast, wound it in, and set the rod on the kayak deck, leaving a foot of line in the water. I lifted my hands to adjust my sunglasses. I heard a scraping noise and saw my rod being pulled off the kayak. Fortunately, I was able to grab the rod and wind in a 20" pickerel. Of course, the next thing that went through my mind was that maybe I had triggered a case of first cast-itis.
In most of the bodies of water that I fish frequently, I try to follow the same routes on every trip and fish the same series of spots. In this case, I worked my way to one end of the pond. 10 minutes later I had not had any more bites. By then, I had moved around to the same spot where I caught the first fish. I began casting there and caught 5 more pickerel on the next 10 casts -- all 18" to 21". The bite was red hot.
I moved off of that spot and kept going around the rest of the pond. I fished the shallow edges and the slightly deeper water in the center, but had no bites. After 45 minutes of lots of casts but no bites or follows, I returned to the first location and once again caught more fish. By the end of two hours, I had caught 11 pickerel from an area the size of a tennis court, but had no bites anywhere else in the 3-acre pond.
In my 15 years of experience fishing for pickerel in tidal creeks and ponds, they tend not to congregate in the same small location very often. They usually are scattered around shorelines. But today they were all packed in the same area. I don't have an explanation for what I observed, but was quite pleased to catch a bunch of fish today.
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