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Kiptopeake, Concrete (ships) & Kayak Kevin (Fishing 101)

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  • Kiptopeake, Concrete (ships) & Kayak Kevin (Fishing 101)

    I made the 4+ hour drive to Cape Charles to take 1 of 3 5-person excursions Kayak Kevin offered at Kiptopeke State Park this summer. Great guy. Had a great day.

    It was my first time there. To get there I had to cross the CBBT which is an incredible structure. It's an approximately 12 mile bridge-tunnel combination. The Park is about 5 miles for the base of the bridge. The Park has a nice beach, long fishing pier, and 9 grouped WWII concrete ships beached in 30 ft of water about a half-mile off the beach. There purpose of the ships is as a wave break to protect the pier and beach from erosion. For my purposes they are one big fishing structure. And I caught so many fish! 9 keeper croaker, 5 black sea bass, a huge spot, a pig fish and a very big flounder in 1 1/2 hours!

    The "fishing 101 course" was very basic, and 2 of the 5 in the group had never been in a kayak, but it didn't matter because it was a very short paddle to the ships. We used basic, inexpensive Diawi spinning rods with 12 pound test and 1/0 J hooks on mono double drop rig. Nothing fancy. We used squid as bait, and one guy used a white bucktail with a chartruese gulp mullet. His mullet got bitten in half all day and I didn't see him land a thing. One guy turtled in his Jackson Cuda that he brought with him because he didn't want to use the "faulty" Ocean Kayaks. LOL. Whatever!

    Basically, I learned to deal with current, proper positioning to fish structure, dropping bait in eddys and bait pools around current and structure, landing and dehooking fish in a kayak, and self-rescue. Overall is was probably too basic for many of you here, but it was worth it to me. I spent 8 hours in the car with Dad (lots of talk time), learned some skills, fished with the guy that got me into kayak fishing, and enjoyed a beautiful day on the water.

    I don't have a kayak camera yet but I'll post some pics when Kevin send them to me.
    Hobie Revo 13 (w/ graffiti removed)
    Ocean Kayak Trident 13

  • #2
    Welcome man!! You can never be "too basic" here. We all have been new at some point and you picked a great place and area to visit. I love it down there... I wish it were closer. That guy was probably getting bit off most times by toadfish... I caught my first flounder down there and went threw a million gulp in the process! Lol A lot of species reside in that area just about all year round.

    Its cool that you get to share something you love withn your Pops too! My Dad hates the water so I just tell him of my adventures and he helps me with my yak projects. Lol Next time you go if you guys are just hitting Kipto, look at going across the Bay Bridge then South. It'll allow you to avoid that beast of a toll going over tge CBBT.

    MYT

    Comment


    • #3
      Forgot the most important part

      Originally posted by 22Tango View Post
      I made the 4+ hour drive to Cape Charles to take 1 of 3 5-person excursions Kayak Kevin offered at Kiptopeke State Park this summer. Great guy. Had a great day.

      It was my first time there. To get there I had to cross the CBBT which is an incredible structure. It's an approximately 12 mile bridge-tunnel combination. The Park is about 5 miles for the base of the bridge. The Park has a nice beach, long fishing pier, and 9 grouped WWII concrete ships beached in 30 ft of water about a half-mile off the beach. There purpose of the ships is as a wave break to protect the pier and beach from erosion. For my purposes they are one big fishing structure. And I caught so many fish! 9 keeper croaker, 5 black sea bass, a huge spot, a pig fish and a very big flounder in 1 1/2 hours!

      The "fishing 101 course" was very basic, and 2 of the 5 in the group had never been in a kayak, but it didn't matter because it was a very short paddle to the ships. We used basic, inexpensive Diawi spinning rods with 12 pound test and 1/0 J hooks on mono double drop rig. Nothing fancy. We used squid as bait, and one guy used a white bucktail with a chartruese gulp mullet. His mullet got bitten in half all day and I didn't see him land a thing. One guy turtled in his Jackson Cuda that he brought with him because he didn't want to use the "faulty" Ocean Kayaks. LOL. Whatever!

      Basically, I learned to deal with current, proper positioning to fish structure, dropping bait in eddys and bait pools around current and structure, landing and dehooking fish in a kayak, and self-rescue. Overall is was probably too basic for many of you here, but it was worth it to me. I spent 8 hours in the car with Dad (lots of talk time), learned some skills, fished with the guy that got me into kayak fishing, and enjoyed a beautiful day on the water.

      I don't have a kayak camera yet but I'll post some pics when Kevin send them to me.
      I found out about this "course" on this site in a post entitled "Fishing 101" back in May. Kevin is doing one final tour in August. There is one more offered mid/ late August.
      Hobie Revo 13 (w/ graffiti removed)
      Ocean Kayak Trident 13

      Comment


      • #4
        Great write up guy .......... also ..... the bridge is 17 miles and although expensive, I love the ride .... always brings a smile to my face. I agree with Mytmouse ........ the ride to Kipto is nicer, less traffic, less delays less tolls and over 20 miles closer if you are leaving from @ Balto. ........ everytime I go the 95 route I end up in a traffic jam although the traffic @ Easton on a Sunday afternoon can be trying too.

        Anyway, glad you had a good time and learned something. Ya usually learn at least 1 new thing no matter how basic it is.

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        • #5
          thanks for the write up, look forward to the pics!
          sigpic

          Comment


          • #6
            Kayak Kevin was featured this week on Kayak Fishing (Jim Sammons) on WFN. They caught some taug around those concrete ships.
            HOBIE: 2012 PA-14 (Dune) & 2013 PA-14 (Yellow)

            Comment


            • #7
              No camera on my kayak yet, but here is a photo Kayak Kevin sent of one of those Kiptopeke flounder I caught last month. That's of the 9 concrete ships in the background. They make great cover for fish and they are only about 1/2 mile off shore!

              Kipto Flounder.jpg
              Hobie Revo 13 (w/ graffiti removed)
              Ocean Kayak Trident 13

              Comment

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