If you are talking numbers of schoolies, this was the greatest fall of striper fishing I have ever seen here in RI. If you are talking big fish, it was downright poor.
Let's break down how this all played out. There were daily blitzes, sometimes massive, from September all the way through November along the RI south shore oceanfront. The area from Narragansett to Westerly was red hot. It was often a matter of just driving around and looking for the birds working and the fish breaking. It didn't seem to matter what the surf conditions were, what the tides were, or what the wind was. The fish were just around in astounding numbers chasing down massive schools of bait, mostly small bay anchovies.
Most of the fish were schoolies with an occasional slot limit fish. There were two distinct sizes of schoolies. The bigger ones were running 22 to 26 inches while the smaller ones were 15 to 20 inches. Most of the slot limit fish were smaller keepers in the 28 to 30 inch range, but they were few and far between.
My own fishing logs reveal massive numbers of fish in October and November. In those two months, I made exactly 42 trips to the oceanfront. I landed and released over 1,200 fish in just those two months. Just about all my fish were caught on single hooked lures- bucktail jigs, Cocahoes on jigheads and flies. I can't remember a single fish that was badly hooked and bleeding, the beauty of using single hooked lures for catch-and-release striper fishing.
As for larger fish, it was one of the poorest years ever. Of those 1,200 bass I landed, I had only 8 slot limit keepers that ran 28 to 30 inches. Think about this....Only one fish in 150 was a small keeper! Not very good odds of catching a good size fish. While I saw tens of thousands of fish landed from shore this fall, I only saw one fish above the slot limit and that fish was about 38 inches. I was fishing both day and night in most outings.
So, the fall of 2020 was one of the best for numbers of stripers here in RI. I guess that all bodes well for the future if we do our diligence and protect what we currently have.