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Rat infestation @ PLO, 8/21

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  • Rat infestation @ PLO, 8/21

    The tide and currents looked good for an evening of speck hunting and striper topwater action. However, I couldn't swing a dead cat without catching a redfish. Here's a summary:

    Casting Gulp grubs for reds and specks = redfish from 9 to 15 inches
    Bottom fishing for croakers = 12" redfish
    Casting a spoon for blues, stripers, and macks = red fish from 10 to 14 inches
    Jigging said spoon = 12" redfish
    Trolling a Tony spoon for bluefish and stripers = 12" redfish
    Jigging for flounder = 14" redfish
    Casting an X-Rap for reds and specks = redfish from 12 to 15 inches

    I felt like Captain Kirk in "The Trouble with Tribbles." I even caught a redfish on a Redfish Magic. Until now, I've always thought that the magic was that it made redfish disappear. I stopped counting after catching the 13th one...

    I hit the water at about 4pm, which was just before high tide. Water temperature in Lake Conoy was 83-84* and 81-82* out in the river. Salinity was 16 according to the NOAA buoy.

    I worked my usual spots in Lake Conoy with a 4" Gulp grub on a 3/8oz head. White and chartreuse worked equally well. One of the first fish I caught was a 12-incher:


    It looked like it had been caught before because one of its eyes was damaged. It was a little skinny but appeared healthy otherwise. Several of the other reds I caught in Lake Conoy were skinny, too. I actually got a little sleigh ride when I foul-hooked a 15-incher under the chin:


    I think I hooked a nice flounder casting close to shore, but it got off after a few seconds on two different casts. I ended up landing a smaller flounder not far away:


    I actually didn't hook that fish. It held on to the grub's tail so tightly that I was able to get it into the boat. Even then, it didn't let go right away.

    I worked the riprap at the inlet and jigged for flounder. When I got tired of catching redfish and little croaker there, I headed out to some of the rock piles where Ron and I caught some nice croakers earlier this summer. More redfish, but no flounder or croakers. The current died at that point and all the action stopped.

    I saw some birds working by the PLO spit and spent some time chasing them. I was hoping to see some macks jumping, but it just seemed like there were smaller fish. There were tons of anchovies around, though. I landed a small striper and launched a small bluefish into the stratosphere when it hit a Redfish Magic and I set the hook bass pro style.

    I saw a bigger fish roll, and cast the Redfish Magic at it. Amazingly, it was a perfectly accurate cast, and the fish slammed it and ran. Then it stopped. I kept reeling, but I was just moving dead weight. It was very strange. I thought that I might have foul-hooked the fish in the side. It turns out it was skinny 22" striper that was recovering from a Myco infection. I could see where the sores were healing over. That was a bummer because it was the first legal striper I caught all year.

    As the sun went down, I worked my Stillwater Smack-It at the point and at the inlet but only had one small blow-up. That was the only technique that didn't catch a redfish that evening. I probably should've spent more time working the rock piles when the current picked up, but I was really hoping to see some macks jumping. There were so many anchovy schools around, I thought a mack appearance was going to be a sure thing. At any rate, I got a cool sequence of pics as the sun set behind some storms on the Virginia side:













    Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
    Yellow Tarpon 120

  • #2
    Great report as always! I never get tired of seeing cool sunset pictures.

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    • #3
      great as always bill, reds,reds everywhere! better than baby croakers. they wiil get bigger

      i wonder if they will migrate out like croakers, next month the croakers will be gone from the middle/upper bay

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      • #4
        Nice action, nice pics, nice sunset.....but what about the rats?
        2015 Hobie Outback (yellow)
        2011 Hobie Outback (yellow)
        2009 OK Prowler Trident 13 Angler (orange)

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        • #5
          I am envious. Been thinking of fishing for 10 days but......the job. I think PLO's ability to school bait makes it a good target for yakkers looking for breakers in the evening....let's hit it Bill!!
          14.5 ft Sand colored Malibu X-Factor "the promise"
          2010 Hobie Outback "the Gift Horse II"

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          • #6
            Dan--Catching a sunrise can be tough, but I'm almost always up to catch a sunset. The cool thing is, most boaters start heading in at that time, so you can have the entire area to yourself and not hear any noise that isn't made by nature. At least until a jet flies over.

            John--According to the what I've read and the old timers I've talked with, the reds don't head out until the water temp gets in the mid 50s. I've never caught one after the 3rd week of October. Accuweather is calling for a cold winter this year, but I hope they're wrong.

            Efren--Rats as in "rat reds". Though, these are getting a bit too big to be considered rats, I think. I'm dying to get a keeper, and I hope this will be my year.

            Kevin--I was about to call you, but I figured things would be crazy with the start of the school year. I kind of want to check out Piney Point and was thinking about Sunday evening. Gotta check with the missus, though.
            Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
            Yellow Tarpon 120

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            • #7
              I am MONEY sunday night. Call me for time. ....... missus permitting of course.
              14.5 ft Sand colored Malibu X-Factor "the promise"
              2010 Hobie Outback "the Gift Horse II"

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              • #8
                WTG Bill!
                We are heading to Delaware this weekend, come on and go..
                GB

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                • #9
                  Nice Bill! One of these days I'll be able to fish again, hopefully the reds are still there.

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                  • #10
                    Michael--That sounds like a blast, but my weekends are booked for a while.

                    John--If you ate fish, you could always sneak away for a "grocery run" and come back with some nice perch or bluefish fillets.
                    Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
                    Yellow Tarpon 120

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                    • #11
                      Bill -

                      After never seeing a redfish in Maryland waters until this summer, I can't imagine catching so many of them that you grew tired of it. That sounds like a wonderful problem to have.

                      P.S. My first ever redfish came on a Redfish Magic spinnerbait tipped with a root beer colored swimming minnow (regular plastic, not Gulp) in 2008 at Lynnhaven. They do work pretty well on the mid-sized reds. The ones I caught that day were 18 to 27".
                      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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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by ictalurus View Post

                        John--If you ate fish, you could always sneak away for a "grocery run" and come back with some nice perch or bluefish fillets.
                        I've tried that since my wife and son eat fish, didn't work My wife has this weird hangup with eating fish that aren't from the grocery store or a restaurant. She is such a "shop/eat local" kind of person I am quite surprised. She did just start eating fish in the last year or two and she has been a vegetarian for 25 years other than that.

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                        • #13
                          Actually, I'm glad the reds are so abundant this year. If not for them, my saltwater fishing record would be pretty dismal this year. Aside from a handful of croaker last month and two stripers back in May, I haven't caught much over 12" long this year. However, I don't think I've ever caught the same species on so many different lures as I did on this last trip, at least not in saltwater.

                          I'd love to hit Lynnhaven and Rudee for some bigger reds, but it's a long trip for me and scheduling never seems to work. I'll finally be able to take some vacations next year, I think, after going 10+ years without a real one. I'd like to spend a week down there next September, get a cabin at First Landing State Park, and fish my brains out while the missus hangs out on the beach.
                          Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
                          Yellow Tarpon 120

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