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Monday, December 4, 2017

End of the Striper Season

Even though there are still Stripers to be caught, December can be a fickle month.  So, rather than chance pulling the boat in 4-5 footers, and cleaning it in freezing temps, Captains DiPaola and Felker took the opportunity to pull the Mikey D last weekend and prep it for the upcoming season.


While the end of a season is kind of sad, all in all it was a great year for fishing ...  and catching.  Best of all, we got to enjoy it with family and friends.

Happy Holidays to all.  April is right around the corner.  In the meantime, the trout are still eating....

Tight Lines,
Mikey D Fishing

Sunday, October 22, 2017

Rock-tober

It was a little late in coming, but Rock-tober is finally here!  Less a function of the calendar than of water temperature, the fish have begun to school and feed in earnest.  Early in the month, with water temperatures in the low 70's, it took some work and patience to find stripers feeding on the surface.  Gulls acting as sirens were spotty and the schools they were working were short lived.  However, there were still some quality keepers to be had with plenty of fish in the 18 -20" class to keep the Mikey D Fishing crew occupied.  With Captain and Mary Felker in town, we were able to bring several fish to the boat using topwater plugs including a nice keeper, signalling that we were on the cusp of the best fishing of the year.



Following a brief shot of autumn temps on the backside of a cold front, the second week of October intensified the fishing.  Mikey D Fishing launched again on the morning of October 13th.  Turning the corner into Whitehall bay, Captain DiPaola and longtime friend Brett Schelenski saw several groups of birds working breaking stripers just minutes from homeport.  Water temperatures were 66 degrees and the fish were wasting no time gorging themselves on bay anchovies, alewife, and our plugs.




 The best fishing so far seems to be mid morning with birds indicating where bait and stripers congregate.  Evening fishing is a little more fickle with small boils serving as the best indication of action below.  Rachel DiPaola and friend Emily Taylor were able to take advantage of this setup to land their first keeper Rockfish on Oct 18th!




The Navy Tailgate crew including Bery and Clare Edmonston, and Dani Frac were able to get in on the act on October 22.  Catching the last of the hot topwater action before the afternoon lull, we were able to land at least a dozen fish with a couple of keepers in the box.  Most fish continue to be in the 17 - 23" range.  As always, Mikey D Fishing recommends easing up to breaking schools, working upwind of the fish when possible to stay on the breaking schools longer, and casting just outside of the main action to target the biggest fish. 

The fishing should only get better in the coming weeks!  Looking forward to sharing more great fishing with great clients, friends, and family aboard Mikey D Fishing!

Tight Lines,

Mike D Fishing









Monday, September 25, 2017

14-22 September Week in Review

It's amazing how a little temperature difference can make a big difference in the fishing.  When Captain Felker arrived in Annapolis on 13 September, fall seemed to be well on the way.  Water temps were down into the high 60s-low 70s, and the fish were starting to school up, providing several days of good jigging and top water action, as well as keeper Rockfish to the cooler, including a nice 27 incher.



Unfortunately, we were fooled by the faux fall weather, as summer reappeared the following week.  Although we enjoyed the company of Bery Edmonston and Russ Knaub on two outings, the fish generally returned to summer mode.  Bery demonstrated that persistence pays off, jigging up a few small Stripers on his outing, and almost tying into a 25-plus inch Striper, who inhaled an alewive that Bery snagged several times on the retrieve, and followed the unlucky live bait all the way to the boat.

We did have one brief period of schooled up Striper action with Russ in the boat on Friday afternoon.  Having chunked alewive and jigged with no success, we noticed birds and boats down at Thomas Point lighthouse, just south of the Severn River.  We got there just in time for the tail end of the feeding frenzy, and for about 45 minutes Russ got to experience Stripers slashing at top water plugs. Though no keepers, the action was hot, and a good many 18 and 19 inch fish made it to the boat.


Cooler temps are on the way, so hopefully we've seen the last of summer and look forward to the fish schooling up and fattening up before they escape the bay in the winter.

Tight Lines,
Mikey D Fishing

Friday, September 15, 2017

Indian River Inlet Multi Species Outing

Late Entry --- 3 SEP 17

Mikey D Fishing headed for saltier waters for the recent Labor Day holiday weekend.  Captain DiPaola was joined by brother Mike, Mike Carberry his son Joe, and Ed Condolon with his son Ed.  The weather offered mostly sunny skies, temperatures in the low to mid 70s, with light SSW winds. 

When fishing from shore, our preferred spot in lower, slower, Delaware is a seawall 1/4 mile east of the Indian River bridge.  Because of our military status, we are privileged and grateful to have access to the US Coast Guard station nearby.  It doesn't get much better there when it comes to fishing from the shore -- parking, heads, clean accessible seawall, a deep water basin where the USCG boats are docked, and unfettered access.  Compare that to the other side of the IR USCG station fence where you fish elbow to elbow while constantly re-rigging because of the rip-rap and other obstacles. 

Though there were some inexperienced anglers in the group, I was encouraged by the strong outgoing tide, nearby boats and terns along with seagulls active overhead.  Joe Carberry was one of the first to pull in a respectable but undersized flounder from the basin.  Brother Mike followed with a couple of 14" flounders.  The variety of fish caught added to the fun when Mike Carberry landed a toadfish, and young Ed Condolon (not pictured - should have caught a shot of that bluefish!) was able to bring a small snapper blue over the side.  The elder Ed landed a 14" flounder as well which was just a couple inches shy of the 16" limit. 





I'm not sure if Mikey D Fishing was able to evangelize the fishing message to convert the rookies into lifelong fishermen, but we had a great time.  Thanks again to the Indian River USCG station for the hospitality.

Tight Lines,

Mikey D Fishing

Sunday, September 3, 2017

Bananas in the Boat

Fishing is a fickle sport.  One can master all of the techniques, use all of the right equipment, spend hours on the water, and yet the outcome can only be probable; never assured.  The unpredictability and variance tends to breed superstitions and semi-compulsive behaviors.  Fishermen share these traits with baseball players who never step on a foul line or aviators who follow a strict preflight regimen.  Most fishermen accept the idiosyncrasies as a part of the passion we share.  Only when these unwritten, often unspoken rules are violated is the ire of an angler revealed. One of many of these superstitions is the belief that fishermen should NEVER bring bananas on a boat.  There are many legends as to why, including one involving banana boats and poisonous spiders, but it doesn't really matter. This Captain is humble enough to know not to challenge the rule.

Superstition, Karma, or the Fishing Gods were tested Sunday Aug 27 when Captain DiPaola was joined by Clare Edmonston and her son Jonathan for an afternoon in pursuit of rockfish.  We left the dock on the back end of an outgoing tide on a sunny afternoon with light winds.  Though there weren't any birds diving on bait, the lowrance was pretty active.

We chunked and jigged off of Hacketts Point near the Bay Bridge.  Thirty frustrating minutes later with a couple of bites and two lost fish, we decided to slowly cruise toward Thomas Point Lighthouse.  The hope was to mark larger groups of fish on the trek south.  Again we came up empty.  Feeling the pressure to produce for Clare and Jonathan, we headed back north to the Bay Bridge pilings where there are usually some nice fish.

(This dead sea turtle was an omen for the day)

Soon after setting the anchor and positioning between two sets of pilings that have been lucrative in the past, we noticed the encouraging tap, tap, tap of the rods.  The baitrunner reels were set to run and despite our best efforts, we lost three successive fish including one that got away due to a broken line.  Our next two hookups were to cow nosed rays.  After giving Jonathan a chance to fight his first ray, I cut the braided line.

It was at this point that Clare offered Jonathan a banana muffin and I could tell that as she uttered the words she knew from past fishing experience that she had committed a fishing venial sin.  Without hesitation, Jonathan dumped the muffins overboard.  Our sacrifice to the Fishing God's accepted, not more than 5 minutes later, Jonathan landed a schoolie striper.  The first striper of the day.  With the sun getting low on the horizon, it was time to head back with an empty cooler and superstitions validated!

Tight Lines,

Mikey D Fishing 



Thursday, August 31, 2017

NC Pennsylvania Fishing Report: The Lodge at Glendorn

Took the opportunity to celebrate Mary's birthday with a trip to the Lodge at Glendorn in Bradford, about an hour from the cabin.  The Orvis-endorsed lodge (www.glendorn.org), was first built as a private retreat in 1927, then opened to the public in 1995.  Sitting on 1500 acres adjacent to the Allegheny National Forest, the lodge provides the 5-star experience that you'd expect from an Orvis lodge.

We checked into the lodge on Tuesday.  After lunch, we set out to wet a line.  The resort has both stream and pond/lake fishing.  That afternoon we opted to fish Fuller Brook, a fairly narrow stream which runs through the resort.  With typical August flows, the stream was pretty low, with only a few spots holding fish.  On the up side,though, temps have been unseasonably cool the past few weeks, with highs only in the upper 60s-low 70s, and nigh time lows down into the low 50s.

The head guide directed us to the "42 Inch Hole," about a mile from the main lodge near the entrance to the resort.


As you can see, not a big hole.  But it held at least 18-20 trout, most of them 18 inches or better!  We spent a couple of hours throwing a variety of patterns; hoppers, hopper/droppers, ants, beetles, you name it.  Although stocked, the fish were somewhat picky, but we were able to land some pretty decent Rainbows.



With the fish tired of seeing our offerings, we headed downstream and fished another section that held some really big fish, as well as offering the chance for a little refreshment:



Returning to the lodge for cocktails, we chatted with the head guide, who revealed the reason why the bite was so slow.  He had had two clients there in the morning, and had hammered the trout (including a huge Brownie) in the sections that we had fished later on.  No matter; we'd had enough hookups and brought enough big fish to the net to make the cocktail hour and ensuing five course dinner all the more enjoyable.

Mary had a spa treatment on Wednesday morning, so instead of having strange people rub my body, I decided instead to light out for one of the catch and release ponds for a couple of hours.  The smallest, named Jill Pond, was about 150 yards across and about 80 years wide.  Again, hopper/dropper patterns did the trick, and I brought two 18-plus inch Rainbows to the net.  The one fish that I failed to land (or see for that matter) literally took my flies across the pond.  I'd never seen the backing on my 3-wt until then, and simply could not turn the fish before it spit out my fly.  Had to be a beast.

Knowing that the 42 Inch Hole hadn't been fished in the morning, Mary and I hustled out there after lunch to beat the guides and their clients.  Sure enough, the fish had no memory of the previous day's shenanigans, as we beat up the Rainbows, and even landed the big Brownie that had been caught the day before:


Figuring that we'd worn out the hole, as well as ourselves from fighting big trout, we headed back to Jill Pond.  Things were a bit slower than in the morning, with only one fish brought to the net.  By the late afternoon the fish started rising, but to what we simply couldn't tell.  Mary broke the code, tying on a 16 black mosquito and having several good takes, while I sat and watched and enjoyed the afternoon:



Then it was back to the lodge for another superb meal. The only down side was that Mary's birthday only comes once a year.  But I think that we might have to celebrate the next one early, especially since the hunting season on the resort opens up in October.


Tight lines,
Mikey D Fishing


Monday, August 21, 2017

Rockfish on Top and Bottom

Since the latest fishing reports indicated the bite was more akin to early summer rather than late, Captain DiPaola looked forward to an opportunity to fish for the first time this season with brother Mike, Mom (Nancy), and daughter Sarah.  Turning the corner from Mill Creek into Whitehall Bay, things looked promising.  Winds were out of the west at less than 5 knots, there was less than a 1 foot chop, and best of all, birds appeared in the main stem of the Chesapeake just south of the Bay Bridge. 

A large group of terns and gulls were diving on breaking fish that were quickly heading north. Captain DiPaola put the hammer down to get ahead of the school and approach with as little notice as possible.  Clearly all the weekend warriors going to and fro didn't read the previous Mikey D Fishing post regarding fishing etiquette around breaking stripers.   Several boats were cutting each other off to get into position.  Others were driving right up to the school at full speed, while some preferred to mindlessly cruise through the middle of the giant pod of fish.  Despite those frustrations Sarah was able to cast to the edge of the school, while Captain DiPaola worked a plug across the surface. 


Mom and Mike were witnesses to that special type of fishing where the stripers slap the plug out of the water.  By the second cast, Mike was on the reel hauling in a respectable 17" rockfish, caught on top.  A couple more followed.  Competition with other boats and cooler full of fresh alewife and soft crab led to a decision to head north between Sandy Point and Baltimore Light at the mouth of the Magothy to see if the anchored chumming fleet was enjoying any success.  While the crew did have a few good hits, the lowrance was only picking up scattered fish. 

After violating the old adage, "Never leave fish to find fish", Captain DiPaola headed back south.  Mikey D Fishing dropped anchor in 32' of water north and east of the green can near Hackett's Point.  The screen was covered from top to bottom with fish.  If they weren't coming up to the surface, why not see if we can entice a few by chunking?


Within minutes, rod tips were tapping and Mike hooked into his largest fish and first keeper measuring 22".  Who said that chumming and chunking is just for early season?  Sometimes the rules need to be challenged.  Active schoolies above, held keeper-sized stripers below and contributed to a brief but great day on the water catching them on top and on the bottom!

Tight Lines,

Mikey D Fishing


Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Fall Striper Tease

It is August and that usually means an angler's lull in the Chesapeake; but not for Mikey D Fishing!  Temperatures in the low 80s, a waning quarter moon for average tide sets, clear skies, and light winds left Captain Felker and Captain DiPaola with some decisions to make.   It came down to a choice between, late season chumming, live lining, or jigging.  Fresh off of an 18 hour flight from Africa, Captain Felker made the command decision to get on the water and use the lowrance to locate groups of stripers waiting to assault metal jigs and BKDs (Bass Kandy Delight - soft plastic lures).


Turning the corner from Whitehall Bay, the adrenaline began pumping as we spotted terns and gulls diving to fish on the surface.  Approaching a school of voracious stripers requires some common sense and etiquette.  We pushed the throttle to close in on the school.  Positioning ourselves in the approaching path of the school we eased back on the throttle making no wake within 200 yards.  The key is to not go full speed to the edge of the school and be courteous of other boats around the fish.  With some forethought and patience, you can get several casts to the stripers before they dive, scatter or move on. 


We got hits on metal jigs, BKDs, and Kastmasters almost immediately.  It was good enough that we were able to switch a rod to plug for top water and it yielded results on the first cast.  Most fish were between 16 - 18", which was beyond our expectations.  After the first school scattered, we were able to locate large groups of fish massing nearby with the trusty lowrance.  Captain Felker hooked into the first one in the pack and reported a "good pull"!  That pull gave way to a 20" keeper which was quickly followed by 3 more including one taken on top.  That short taste of autumn bite was a harbinger of the fishing sure to come in the weeks ahead.

The fillets were the perfect size for the recipe below originally created for Halibut but fresh rockfish worked nicely (Saltwater Sportsman - Sept 2017):

3 or 4 striper fillets
3 figs
3 cups fennel (shaved or sliced)
1/4 # butter
2 cloves garlic
1 cup white wine
1 cup chicken broth or stock
1 - 2 teaspoons of chili pods (seeds removed)

- Place fennel, garlic and chili in saucepan on medium heat
- Cook until fennel softens then add butter
- Deglaze pan with white wine and chicken broth / stock, bring to boil
- In a separate pan, sear rockfish on one side in olive oil
- Place fish in pan (brown side up) with oven safe saucepan with the fennel chicken broth mixture
- Place fish in oven at 350 for 5 minutes

Tight Lines,

Mikey D Fishing

Monday, August 7, 2017

Fresh Chesapeake Ceviche

Captain Felker and Captain DiPaola returned from the Cobia trip with every intent to launch the "Mikey D Fishing" on Sunday July 30 before Captain Felker headed back to the Northern Outpost.  Threatening skies dictated a change of plans.  That left putting the boat in the water to Captain DiPaola as a solo operation.  The newly cleaned and waxed boat slipped back into the Bay without a hitch.  Given the beautiful weather with temperatures in the upper 70s, light winds and a waxing quarter moon, it would be a travesty not to at least wet a line for a few minutes before heading to home port.

We have had considerable success well into July fishing the mouths of rivers feeding the Chesapeake north of the Bay Bridge.  A quick left turn put Capt DiPaola among several boats anchored between the Sandy Point and Baltimore light houses.  He dropped the anchor in 30 feet of water with the lowrance showing fish covering the screen at all depths.  One rod was baited with alewife and other with halved soft crab.  Within 35 minutes,  the limit was reached with 2 keepers (21" and 23") in the box!  While the speed with which Captain DiPaola limited out was noteworthy, the fact that we could still chunk or chum for keeper stripers this far into the summer was exceptional.

Captain DiPaola decided on a twist of a Caribbean favorite for dinner using the fresh striper fillets. Captain DiPaola's daughter Elizabeth provided her seal of approval to the Chesapeake Ceviche.  Prep time is less than 20 minutes with another 1 - 2 hours in the fridge to let the lime juice do its magic to "cook" the fish.  Delicious.  Mikey D Fishing recommends this recipe with any fresh caught light white fish and as many vegetables below as you gather from the garden.  Bon Appetit!




1 pound of striper fillet cut into 1/2 - 1 inch cubes
1 cup lime juice
1/2 cup mango cubed
1/2 red bell pepper
1/2 green bell pepper
1/2 red onion sliced
1 small jalapeno sliced
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/2 avocado cubed
1/4 cup cilantro
combine all ingredients except avocado and cilantro into bowl, cover and place in refrigerate for 1 - 2 hours.  Serve with tortilla chips

As a postscript, the Mikey D Fishing team with frequent client Mike Shina aboard went out in the same general vicinity on Sunday Aug 6.  Results were significantly different and more akin to typical August attempts to chum.  We fought and released 4 cow nosed rays and one channel catfish.  The crew did manage 1 undersized rockfish caught on alewife suspended below a float with 10' of fluorocarbon leader.  Time to start jigging, live lining, and plugging in earnest.  

Tight Lines,

Mikey D Fishing



Saturday, July 22, 2017

Eastern Seaboard Fishing Report, 15-21 July: A Tale of Two Guides

A trip to Hilton Head this week for a wedding set the stage for the Mikey D Fishing team to target several species of fish on the way.  The week began on home waters, with Captain DiPaola heading out solo on Sunday afternoon.  This time the fleet was anchored up at Podickery Point, outside the mouth of the Magothy River, a mile or so north of the Bay Bridge.  No sooner was the anchor set and lines were in the water when the bite began and stayed hot for the next hour and a half.  In all Captain DiPaola netted 6 fish, two of them keepers, the biggest a 29 incher that Joe had to net without losing the rod.  A problem, but a nice problem to have.



On Monday afternoon Captain Felker rolled in for the upcoming  trip south.  But with a few hours of daylight left there was no reason not to head back to Podickery to see if the fish were still hanging around.  Sure enough, the fleet was once again anchored up.  And once again, once the lines went in the water the action started hot and stayed that way for an hour or so until thunderstorms chased us back to the dock.  Three keepers made their way to the filet table; all around 28-29 inches.




Tuesday was a travel day.  After pulling the boat and giving it its mid-season cleaning, we headed down to Cape Charles, Virginia, to learn the ins and outs of sight fishing for Cobia.  On Wednesday morning we met up with Captain Kenny Louderback of Fish Freaks Guide Service.  Also joining us was First Lieutenant "Salt Life," who made the drive up from Camp Lejeune to get some fishing in before his upcoming deployment to Okinawa.

Kenny was flat out one of the best guides we've ever fished with.  He had all of the attributes you could ask for; friendly, knowledgeable, and enthusiastic.  In fact, he was so into getting our limit (three fish, minimum length of 40 inches) that he would have stayed out well after the normal 8 hours. But the most important attribute was his ability to find fish.  We got underway around 0845 and headed out into the Bay.  We spent the day no more than a few miles from Cape Charles, with seas relatively calm and winds less than 10 kts.  Those conditions were important to the fishing, as the Cobia are virtually on the surface this time of year.  So the calmer the water the easier it is to spot the fish and get up on them before they spook.  The technique to catch these fish is pretty uncomplicated.  Actually, the key to successful sight fishing is the fishing tower that sits about seven feet above the center console.  With a second set of controls up top, the guide can cruise around and see the fish out to 100 yards.  From there it's just a matter of the guide sighting a fish, getting up close enough to cast, and throwing a live eel in front of the fish.  More often than not the fish will turn and suck in the eel.  The guide then sets the hook and hands the rod down and the fight is on!  These fish are incredibly strong and will tail walk like a tarpon.  But they save their best once they see the net and take off like a torpedo, with nothing you can do but hold on until you have an opportunity to get the fish back to the boat, when it goes back into torpedo mode.  In all, we must have seen over 20 fish, one that easily went over 80 pounds according to Kenny.  Of the sighted fish we got five hook ups and brought four to the boat; three in the 30-33 inch range, and one monster that went 48 inches and almost 40 lbs and took a good 20 minutes to get in the boat.












The only down side of the trip was the one and a half gainer that Joe's Go Pro took off the upper platform and into the Bay (I think the Russian judge gave it a 7).  But we recovered, particularly that evening at dinner when I checked in with our guide for Friday's outing, and was told that he was planning on going for tarpon.  So on Thursday morning after picking up our Cobia fillets (Thanks Kenny!!!) we headed for Hilton Head.

So far it was a winning week: keeper Rockfish, big Cobia, cigars at JRs in North Carolina, and a stop at South of the Border to visit Pedro.  Unfortunately, the roll ended on Friday when we met up with our guide from Off the Hook Charters.  I sensed something was amiss when Nick didn't bother to come out of the boat to greet us.  In fact, I had to get on the boat to intro myself.  That kind of set the stage for the next hour ... yeah, I said hour.

This guy was the antithesis of Kenny; either he was too cool for school or didn't want to be out there in the first place.  To make matters worse, he decided that the water was too muddy from recent rains to look for tarpon, so we'd go after Spanish Mackerel instead.  That was fine, except he ought to have known that days before and not gotten our hopes up.  But Spanish are fun to catch, so we headed out for a 20 minute run to a spot where he had seen schooling fish earlier that morning.  On the way we literally had to pull information out of him.  He responded like he was being interrogated.  And then the coup d grace.  We get to the spot, the guide throws the cast net into a school of bait fish, throws them into his live well, and then discovers that the pump isn't working.  So for the next 20 minutes he farts around with the impeller to no avail, then decides that's it for the day.  No Plan B, nada.  So back to the landing we go.

There's only a few things that need to work on a fishing boat; the motor, the anchor, and ... if you need to use live bait ... THE LIVE WELL.  You'd think that would be something that gets checked before going out.  Or, perhaps have a spare pump just in case.  Or at least show some enthusiasm in the face of adversity.  Whatever.  Off the Hook Charters loses $475, and Nick loses his tip.

On the up side, Joe's 2/3 of the way to picking up a new Go Pro ... with floaties this time.

Tight lines,
Mikey D Fishing

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, 24-25 June: Find the Fleet, Find the Fish

A new moon and strong tidal coefficients pointed to great fishing this past weekend.  So on Saturday afternoon the Mikey D team headed out to put a few Stripers in the box.  Joining us was Captain DiPaola's daughter Rachel.  We got underway around 1130 and headed to our go to spot off Hacketts's Point.  Unfortunately, the forecast 10-15 knot winds were actually around 20 knots, which kicked up the Bay to a good 3 foot chop, making the fishing both uncomfortable and unproductive.  Adding to that was a definite lack of fish on the Lowrance, with the only hookup by Rachel on a Cow Nosed Ray.

On Sunday, however, the weather gods smiled, with the winds having died down considerably overnight.  The prognosis seemed good when we headed out for some morning crabbing with Joe's longtime friend Phil Weglein and his daughter Audrey.  Around 0730 we got underway and decided to first put the trot line in at Whitehall Bay, just  a few minutes from the dock.  The first run brought 5 large Blue Crabs to the basket.  At that pace we figured we'd have a bushel in short order.  Unfortunately, subsequent runs produced only a crab or two, or none at all.  So we made the command decision to pull the line and head to a productive spot in the Severn River close to the Naval Academy.  Again, though, we were frustrated by low numbers on the line.  Apparently, and for no known reason, there is a point in the season where the crabbing slows down.  That's the only reason we could come up with, as we were in the right place at the right depth. We only put a dozen or so crabs in the basket, although they were all larges, and would have fetched a good $100 at Cantler's.



While the morning charter was less than satisfactory, we picked up Mike "Gilligan" Shina around 1130 and headed back out for Stripers.  Figuring that Hacketts was dead, we decided to hit spots north of the Bay Bridge.  The winds had died to around 10 knots, temps were in the low 80s, with water temps hovering in the high 70s on an incoming tide, and the bay rolling but comfortable.  We drove up to the sewer pipe on the eastern shore, but the Lowrance showed no fish.  We then moved up to Podickery Point, on the western side, and picked up a small fish bottom bouncing soft crabs and Alewive, but again we just weren't marking enough fish to justify sticking around.  So we decided to head up to Love Point, about 4 miles or so north of the bridge on the eastern side of the bay.  As we neared Love Point we could see boats on the horizon, and as we continued to close it was obvious that "the fleet" was anchored at the point in about 30 feet of water.  So we maneuvered into a nice spot just up from a charter boat, anchored up, dropped the chum log, and put the lines in around 1445.
The Lowrance immediately lit up with fish, and it wasn't long until we had rods bending for about an hour and a half.  Five fish, ranging from 21 to 24 inches went into the cooler.  Only one more fish to make our limit, when Mike uttered a guarantee that we'd limit out, words that could only serve to tempt the fish gods.  Only having a banana in the boat could make the mojo any worse, and for the next 30 minutes or so we suffered through small fish, lost fish, and missed fish.

Having used all of the Alewive, we were literally down to a few soft crabs, and it was looking like the limit was not in the cards.  Or maybe Mike was just trying to channel the mojo his way.  In any event, Captain Joe and I turned to the stern where Mike had originally been sitting, to see him standing and reeling.  Normally having a fish on should elicit some excitement on the part of the angler.  In this case, though, "Cool Hand" Shina simply stood up and started reeling, prompting us to ask whether he had something on.  His nonchalant answer in the affirmative was followed by a 26 inch fish brought to the net and another limit for the Mikey D team!  Go figure....

Tight Lines,
Mikey D Fishing




Sunday, June 11, 2017

Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, 10-11 June

The Mikey D fishing team finally got together for a superb weekend of bay fishing.  Conditions were about as good as it gets.  Sunny skies, water temps in the 70s, winds and seas manageable, the moon phase favoring good tidal flows.

On Saturday we fished with longtime friends and frequent "pro bono" clients Mike "Gilligan" Shina and John Hupp.  Started at the number 1 can off of Hackett's point, about a mile out of Whitehall Bay.  Off the dock at 0800; lines in the water by 0830.  Although we set up bottom fishing cut Alewife, the  first fish was the best of the day; a 25-26 incher by Mike bottom bouncing a soft crab.  For the next couple of hours the bite was solid, and by 1100 we had 4 keepers in the box, with several 19 inch throwbacks.  From there it was off to the Kentmorr over on the eastern bay for soft crab sandwiches.  Around 1300 we dropped Mike off so he could clean his bathrooms, and headed back out.  We made a command decision to head to the "sewer pipe," literally an old sewer pipe a couple of hundred yards north of the eastern span of the Bay Bridge.  We set up the anchor, and within an hour and a half had two more keepers in the boat.  After that, the bite slowed, but we were able to learn some valuable info from a boat that virtually pulled alongside us after we netted out 5th keeper.  Ordinarily, that would be a point of annoyance.  But in this case we watched as the captain had his clients tied into a dozen keeper Rocks within about an hour.  The secret was that, during slack water, the big fish sit on the bottom.  So this captain was simply bottom bouncing small pieces of Alewive tied behind a 1 ounce in line sinker.  A valuable lesson that would be put into play the next day.

On Sunday we were joined by former squadron mate and long time friend Tom Cosgrove, and Capt. Jeff Macris and his son Joseph.  Jeff was a colleague of mine in the History department at USNA.  Since we left in the afternoon, we opted to go straight to the sewer pipe.  Conditions were similar to Saturday.  We started bottom bouncing soft crabs and Alewife around 1330, with some decent hits but no fish.  At about 1500, we decided to anchor up and wait for the incoming tide.  Turned out to be the right decision.  The tide began to come in around 1515, and at 1545 it was lights out action for about 45 minutes, which was enough time to put six keepers in the boat.  We boated fish both dead drifting (Jeff's son Joseph got the ball rolling with a keeper bottom bouncing a soft crab.  By the time the bite tailed off, everyone had caught at least one keeper, five over 24 inches, and one at 27.

I decided to make this post short for a reason.  I'm going to let the photos and video do all the talking:









Day two:







Tight Lines,
Mikey D Fishing