I met Mark at the Tucker St ramp about 7:30. Raptor joined us later in the morning. We started out casting to a few shoreline stretches in Weems, but I soon decided to target stripers via trolling. After all the rain, I expected the water to be muddy with lots of floating debris and leaves. But the water was clear with almost no debris. It was calm and a pleasant temperature this morning. The water level was higher than usual.
I trolled back and forth a bunch of times along a one-mile course in the main river. On the first pass, I tried different depths, but after catching several fish in shallow water, I stuck to 3' to 6' depths the rest of the morning. I trolled two medium rods with 5" paddletails and two light rods with smaller jigheads and Gulps. I ended up paddling for over 4 hours and covering 10 miles. I caught 12 stripers -- three were keeper size (19", 20.5", and the last larger one -- more later). They were scattered almost at random over the length of my course. The two lures that had chartreuse and red coloration got most of the fish.
Here is a photo of the 20.5" striper. Note the hole in its dorsal fin. I don't see that too often.
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I was delighted to catch another larger fish (estimated at 23" to 25") that I got to see up close and personal. I was paddling into the wind when it hit. Once I stopped paddling to reel in the fish, the kayak turned sideways and drifted downwind. The fish was strong enough tangle all four lines. I got the fish next to the kayak and grabbed the jighead to swing the fish into the kayak. At that moment the fish shook violently, and the barbless hook slid out of its mouth. The large striper dropped back into the water. I contemplated some choice language, but decided to get back to fishing instead.
I trolled back and forth a bunch of times along a one-mile course in the main river. On the first pass, I tried different depths, but after catching several fish in shallow water, I stuck to 3' to 6' depths the rest of the morning. I trolled two medium rods with 5" paddletails and two light rods with smaller jigheads and Gulps. I ended up paddling for over 4 hours and covering 10 miles. I caught 12 stripers -- three were keeper size (19", 20.5", and the last larger one -- more later). They were scattered almost at random over the length of my course. The two lures that had chartreuse and red coloration got most of the fish.
Here is a photo of the 20.5" striper. Note the hole in its dorsal fin. I don't see that too often.
001.jpg 002.jpg
I was delighted to catch another larger fish (estimated at 23" to 25") that I got to see up close and personal. I was paddling into the wind when it hit. Once I stopped paddling to reel in the fish, the kayak turned sideways and drifted downwind. The fish was strong enough tangle all four lines. I got the fish next to the kayak and grabbed the jighead to swing the fish into the kayak. At that moment the fish shook violently, and the barbless hook slid out of its mouth. The large striper dropped back into the water. I contemplated some choice language, but decided to get back to fishing instead.
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