Welcome to another report folks! We hope everyone had a happy and safe Thanksgiving weekend full of family and friends. Fishing over the past week has been great for those who are braving the cooler weather. Grab some windproof cold weather gear and you’ll be able to stay out all day and catch plenty of fish!

Rockfish

This past week was a good week for catching Rockfish in the Chesapeake Bay. The better fishing was further south near the Point Lookout area but we saw fish being caught all over the place in a variety of ways.

Trolling

Trolling this week was strong along the channel edges outside the mouths of the rivers in the Middle Bay area. Anglers had success with deep tandem rigs in 35’+ of water. 6oz to 8oz tandems worked well with chartreuse or white shads. Bottom bouncing chartreuse or white 1oz. bucktails was also really productive this week. Some of the better areas were outside of the Magothy River, Love Point or the mouth of the Eastern Bay.

Dave Wolf got into some fish using frozen Spot. Nice work Dave!

Jigging

It seemed that Jigging was the most productive way to catch Stripers this week. 1oz-1.5oz jig heads with 6″ natural color trailers worked well especially in deeper water near the channel edges. The Bay Bridge produced quite a few fish however most of those were throwbacks. The best quality fish was found further south near Point Lookout and a few of those hit the 40″ mark. The best way to locate fish right now is by finding the bait. Look for birds diving on surface bait and stay back 100 yards from the action. Cut your engine and drift with the current over the school. You’ll want target the bottom of the school so let your lure hit bottom before you begin your retrieve. Snap jigging your lure off the bottom and letting it sink back down with a 1-3 second pause between snaps is a good cadence to start with. Find the pattern then replicate it!

Live/Cut Bait

Using Live/Cut bait is going to work for you pretty much year round. Some days are going to be better than others. This past week seemed like it was a live eel week. Many anglers had good success fishing live eels near deep structure like bridge pilings or sunken structure. Those of you who were lucky enough to grab some fresh LY from us had success fishing that on the bottom in 25’+ of water.

John (left – 28″) and Steven (right – 32″) caught some nice keepers live-lining eels near the Kent Narrows bridge!

Pickerel

The river dragons are out in full force! Water temps in the upper 40º range will have them attacking swim baits, spinners and even jigs with live bull minnows. Look to find them in tidal rivers and creeks in 2′-10′ of water near submerged structure. Several anglers reported Pickerel being caught in the Magothy and Severn Rivers as well as Tuckahoe Creek.

Pro Staffer Alex got into some Pickerel this past week. Here he shows off a nice one at 22″ caught with a little jig tipped with a minnow!

 

White Perch

Anglers are reporting White Perch catches in deeper water on hard bottom. Popular baits this week were bloodworms, razor clams and bull minnows on top & bottom rigs in 25’+ water. Look for areas with hard bottom like oyster beds, sunken structure or deep bridge pilings like the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

Yellow Perch

More and more “neds” are being found in the rivers and creeks around the area. With water temps dropping they’re pre-staging for their Spring spawn in these same areas. There are a variety of ways to catch these fish but bloodworms, razor clams and minnows have been the best so far. Utilizing the “Float-N-Fly” technique is a great way to catch these fish. The “Float-N-Fly” is a very simple and straight-forward technique. Essentially you’re fishing a 1/16th or 1/8th oz. jig head under a bobber using light line (4lb test). Some anglers scent the lure or tip it with live bait like a minnow. The depth of the jig under the bobber depends on the water depth and where the fish are. If the fish are suspended at 5′ in 10′ of water, you’ll want the jig 3-5′ under the bobber.

Show us what you caught!

We’d love to see your catches! Send your photos with some simple info (your name, location, bait/technique) and any other info you’d like to share to kevin@anglersannapolis.com. By sending your images you are giving us permission to use them online. If there are any children under 18 we need their parents permission before posting any images online!