Mark and I launched from Jonas Green at 8:00 am this morning. I had not been on the river in over a week, but had read several gloom and doom reports while I was away. I had a few shallow water perch spots to check out to see what was going on. We launched to very high water level at the beach with minimal wind. We paddled a while to get to a tributary where Mark had not fished previously. We each took a different shoreline of a cove. He got the skunk off of his kayak almost immediately, and I followed a moment later with my first fish. We continued fishing different stretches of shoreline for the next few hours. Some places I expected to produce did not, but we found fish in other spots where I had not expected them.
I will let Mark report his own catch. I managed 13 perch today -- all but one caught on a Bignose spinnerbait and an ultralight rod. The largest perch measured 11". This was much closer to what I expect for summertime perch fishing in the Severn. In addition to those 13 perch, I had quite a few other bites or nibbles that did not stay on the hook very long. My best single spot was a large tree whose branches overhung and touched the water surface. I flipped the spinnerbait through a gap in the branches into the shaded area and caught 4 perch in rapid succession from the same location.
The water in the tributaries was calm but was browner than I would have expected. The further into a tributary we paddled, the browner the water got. Other than the colored water, conditions looked good. The horned pondweed that had bedeviled me for the past month was not obvious today. We saw lots of baitfish in the tributaries -- minnows in shallow water and peanut bunker in small pods in open water.
As we returned to Jonas Green in late morning, we faced an onslaught of boat wakes that made crossing the channel an extra adventure.
Get out there and find some perch. If your usual spots are not producing, try some new spots. I do much better in grassy or wooded shorelines in the tributaries than I do in open water or in the mainstem of the river. Every fish I caught today was in shallow water less than 10 ft out from the shoreline. If you are fishing in mid-day or in strong sun, look for shaded areas. Get out a map before you leave home and try to identify some new spots that are within a reasonable paddling radius from your launch spot.
I will let Mark report his own catch. I managed 13 perch today -- all but one caught on a Bignose spinnerbait and an ultralight rod. The largest perch measured 11". This was much closer to what I expect for summertime perch fishing in the Severn. In addition to those 13 perch, I had quite a few other bites or nibbles that did not stay on the hook very long. My best single spot was a large tree whose branches overhung and touched the water surface. I flipped the spinnerbait through a gap in the branches into the shaded area and caught 4 perch in rapid succession from the same location.
The water in the tributaries was calm but was browner than I would have expected. The further into a tributary we paddled, the browner the water got. Other than the colored water, conditions looked good. The horned pondweed that had bedeviled me for the past month was not obvious today. We saw lots of baitfish in the tributaries -- minnows in shallow water and peanut bunker in small pods in open water.
As we returned to Jonas Green in late morning, we faced an onslaught of boat wakes that made crossing the channel an extra adventure.
Get out there and find some perch. If your usual spots are not producing, try some new spots. I do much better in grassy or wooded shorelines in the tributaries than I do in open water or in the mainstem of the river. Every fish I caught today was in shallow water less than 10 ft out from the shoreline. If you are fishing in mid-day or in strong sun, look for shaded areas. Get out a map before you leave home and try to identify some new spots that are within a reasonable paddling radius from your launch spot.
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