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The Pink Deceiver was my very best fly to use this fall off a float. It caught good numbers of albies. It was also deadly off the wooden egg float when fussy stripers were feeding on bay anchovies. It's an easy tie for most fly tyers.
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.
This is one of many stripers landed today in a wintering over location. |
Today was my first day of winter striper fishing. It was a beautiful blue bird day, and I was happy just to get out. I tried a number of spots that had produced for me in the past. I did find some fish, all schoolies in the 15 to 20 inch range, typical of what you generally find in the winter. Sometimes you might get lucky and even find a keeper or two. I landed most of my fish today on Zoom flukes fished off a 3/8 oz. jighead, but I also got one fish on a small Cocahoe.
With many fishermen having little to do with Covid all around us, fishing is still a safe bet. I'm guessing more will take to the backwaters this winter in search of wintering over stripers.
Here's a hefty 25 inch schoolie that I landed yesterday. The numbers of stripers along the oceanfront has dwindled in the last few days. |
It's at this time of year that many of us start looking in the backwaters for stripers that will winter over here in RI. I've already tested the waters in some of those spots and found a few fish. I'm still planning on fishing in the next couple of weeks, but it will not be along the high surf of the oceanfront unless I get a favorable report from some of my diehard friends.
Here is one of many schoolies that I landed yesterday in some rough water. Schoolie fishing remains hot along the RI oceanfront. |
Today my son Ben hit the shore in early morning before the family Thanksgiving festivities. Fishing some rough water, he landed big numbers of schoolies on Cocahoes with teasers fished ahead of the jig. The fishing overall has been better in the rough water than in calm water.
So, how long will all this last? I don't know. In most years, the consistency is gone by now. However, I'm guessing this warm weather and warmer than normal water temperatures (low 50's for the most part) are keeping the fish active and feeding. So long as the weather remains warm the fishing should remain good.
This hefty schoolie was landed yesterday on a bucktail jig. Jigs are your most effective lures in the daytime right now. |
I am finding fish in multiple places both in the daytime and at night. The common thread here is that most of them are small, running 12 to 20 inches on average. I had some hefty fish this week that went up around 25 inches, but no keepers, even when fishing after dark. Many of the larger schoolies came after dark.
Jigs continue to rule in the daytime with both bucktail jigs and Cocahoes on jigheads catching most of the fish. The clueless daytime crowd who are casting big plugs like big poppers, large swimmers and needlefish are catching nothing. At night is a different story with Slug-gos and slowly moving swimmers catching the larger fish.
This hot schoolie fishing shows no sign of slowing and with warm water and warm weather, we could see a couple of more weeks of solid action. Who knows? At this time of year it can be millions one day and totally gone the next.
I've got some good news and some bad news. The good news is that we are back in business with good numbers of stripers back along the RI coast. The bad news is that they are all small, I mean really small as these are the smallest fish I have seen all season.
I went down today in this really cold weather. I don't mind the cold since I will be spend all winter outside skiing starting in a couple of weeks regardless of the temperature. The advantage to fishing the cold is that you have the oceanfront to yourself, and that says it all about today. With wind chills in the 20's the beaches were empty except for a few hearty souls that showed up to make a few casts. I saw little activity. I saw a few gannets hitting the water way out, and at one point I saw a few gulls hitting the water in close and a few fish breaking for maybe 20 seconds. I saw no other bait close to shore. There was little activity to note. However, the fish were there, maybe just moving along the beaches in small schools.
Using a Cocahoe on a half ounce jighead, I landed good numbers of fish. I was hoping for a big one in the mix, but they were all 12 to 18 inches. These were some of the smallest fish I have seen this year along the oceanfront. But, in my mind, still better than staying home and listening to depressing news. If you are going to fish for these small ones, consider using single hook jigs. They are safer for catch-and-release fishing than treble hooked plugs.
Regardless of what happens in the coming days, I think we have less than two weeks left of consistent fishing. After Dec. 1, it becomes a crap shoot here in RI.
This is one of many schoolies landed today in this cold weather. Stripers are back along the oceanfront but most are on the small side. |
When I pulled into the parking lot at Charlestown Breachway on Veteran's Day this week I knew something was up. I was expecting a big crowd like I've seen there all fall. Instead, there were only a few cars, and I would later find out most of the owners of those cars were beach walkers. I saw exactly two fishermen fishing the beach and one lone caster off the rocks. That told me they weren't catching along here in the last few days. Heck, I was here anyway so I decided to give it a try. I fished for about an hour and came up with one small schoolie. One guy told me it was the only fish he had seen along here in the past six hours.
I moved around that day to several more locations, yet all I could get was three additional small ones. Along the way, I saw no bait, no birds working and no fishermen.
I would fish two more days this week in different locations and would come away with exactly one schoolie. It was not good. Same story.....no bait, no fish.
So, the big questions after this week of poor fishing are as folows. Are we in a lull or are we staring at the beginning of the end? I don't know but here are some things I do know. The month of October and early November saw massive numbers of stripers move through, maybe the most we have ever seen in October. It was daily blitzes along the south shore beachfront. In other recent years, that seemed to happen more in November. I also know the masses of bait that attracted all those October stripers is gone. Maybe more is on the way, maybe not.
On the positive side, I know the water is warm, mid fifties for the most part. I also feel it is way too early to be talking the end. My guess is that we are still about 10 days away from the end of consistent fishing based on past years. And, at this time of year, I always have my hopes that an ocean herring run will develop, and that would light up the fishing. Gannets have been around so maybe that is telling us something.
This week will tell us a lot. If the fishing continues to be poor, it will be a sign that the end is near. If it improves, expect a couple of more good weeks. I hope it is the latter.
This slot limit keeper was landed tonight on a jointed Bomber. While most of the fish around are schoolies, there are keepers to be had after dark. |
It's a subtle game these days. You have to get out and fish, plug a rocky shoreline, cast along the sandy beach and find the fish that are moving along the shoreline. The guys who fish with binoculars are not scoring. The guys who are not casting are thinking it's coming to an end. The guys riding the beach in their 4x4 vehicles are not finding them unless they get out and fish. Truth is there are still a lot of fish around.
In the last two days I found real good numbers of fish in both the daytime and at night. While the majority of the fish are schoolies that seem to be smaller than a few weeks ago, there are still hefty 24 and 25 inch fish in the mix. And, there is that occasional slot limit keeper that seems to come after dark. I got one of those tonight. In the daytime, I continue to catch most of my fish on jigs, either bucktail or Cocahoes on jigheads. After dark, most of my fish are falling for swimmers. I have landed fish on SP Minnows, jointed Red Fins and jointed Bombers.
The fish are still around but you have to put in the time and effort to catch them. It's just not as easy as it was last week as well as earlier in the fall.
I have fished every day for the last seven days. Just some observations about the past week:
Here's a good size schoolie landed after dark this week. Schoolies have been abundant at night with an occasional small keeper in the mix. |
*Still a glut of fish around the oceanfront. With this beautiful weather, it seems like there is no end in sight. It's been a very big week of fishing for me.
*So, so many schoolies around. Astounding numbers of 12 to 27 inch fish. It could just be the best "schoolie fall" I have ever seen.
* How many schoolies do you have to go through before you get a keeper to hit. From my numbers of the past week, I figure 1 fish in 200 is a keeper. I've landed several keepers in the last week and they often come as a surprise. One evening I was getting schoolie after schoolie and then suddenly I am onto a better fish of 28 inches. Most of those slot limit keepers are in the 28 to 30 inch range.
*Night fishing is still producing schoolies. I have fished a lot at night in the last week with the time change hoping I could find better size fish. I did land one small keeper after dark, but I continue to find a glut of schoolies in the darkness.
*I was treated to a real show this week as I saw a flock of gannets divebombing onto bait. They are usually after big bait and we see loads of them when the ocean herring start their migration in mid November. In the past I've seen them bombing onto ocean herring, but I've also seen them hitting large peanut bunker. I suspect that was the bait on this day.
*With no cold weather in sight, this could be one of those rare years that striper fishing holds up into December.
Jigs continue to be the hot ticket to catching fall schoolies. This one was fished off the float. |
I started out the day with low expectations, but I came away in awe of the numbers of fish I saw and caught. I fished three different locations before and after dark along the oceanfront. Every spot I fished was loaded. I landed big numbers of schoolies, many of them on the small side. But, I did manage to snare one small slot limit keeper after dark. I also had a few hickory shad in the mix. All the fish I caught were on jigs.
We just finished one of the best Octobers I have ever seen along the oceanfront in RI. I'm guessing November (at least the first half of the month) will be equally as good.
Yes, I did fish yesterday and today in the nasty and sloppy weather. No change in the fishing. Still loaded in many locations along the oceanfront.
Today was one of the wildest days I have seen this year weather-wise. I got down to the oceanfront about 2:00 in the afternoon. There was a very light, hardly noticeable east wind. No problem. But, by the hour the wind increased, the temperature dropped, and by 5:00 PM the wind had to be blowing northeast at least 30 miles per hour with gusts over that. In addition, it was pelting rain and the wind was driving it so hard it was stinging my eyes. This all charged up the water and with the charged up water, the fishing came to life. I saw no breaking but fish after fish were hitting my bucktail jig that was fished off the float in the charged up white water. Of course, there was not another fisherman in sight....just myself and my son Jon. I actually love fishing in nasty weather!
In the last two days, the fish seem to have gotten smaller. Those larger schoolies and small keepers that were around throughout the month were not abundant. Instead, these newer fish were in the 16 to 20 inch range for the most part with occasional 24 inch fish. I also saw lots of shad and some bluefish.
Sorry, but no photos. Just too nasty and wet to bring out the phone or camera today.
This is one of many schoolies landed today. The Cocahoe was a hot lure. |
The fish have switched their preferences from that pink Deceiver fly I was using last week to bucktails and Cocahoes this week. Yesterday I was using and catching with the float and bucktail jig. Today it was the 4-inch Cocahoe that was doing the most damage. Both lures are great for damage free catch-and-release.
Nearly all the fish this month have been schoolies in the 20 to 27 inch range. Occasionally, you might catch or see a small slot limit keeper of 28 to 30 inches, but I have to tell you those fish are not abundant. I saw hundreds of stripers landed today, and I did not see a single keeper. That's just the way things have been going this season, and it's not about to change.
Here's the formula for making the fly:
Hook: Mustad 34007 SS size 1/0
Thread: white
Tail: 4 pink saddle hackles
Body: Fine pink wool
Underwing: Sparse white bucktail
Overwing: Sparse white bucktail overlapped with blue bucktail
This slot limit keeper was landed on the float and fly. It was deadly all week for schoolies and small keepers that were feeding on bay anchovies. |
I have caught so, so many fish in the last three days on the float and fly. The blitzing stripers are fussy as they feed on masses of small bay anchovies. The float and fly is the killer artificial to lure these fussy fish into hitting. My float is a homemade wooden egg float and the fly is a homemade pink tailed Deceiver, similar to what I use for albies. Check it out on this Go Pro video!
Ben Pickering holds a schoolie landed after dark. The hot action continued into darkness. |
My son so Ben and I hit the RI beachfront this afternoon and we walked into a miles long blitz of stripers, some blues and hickory shad tearing through massive schools of bay anchovies that were being driven right onto the sand. At times, the water was boiling in front of us with breaking fish going nuts on small bait. At one point I was standing in knee deep water with feeding stripers all around me.
While most of the bass were schoolies, there were some small keepers in the mix. |
We weren't alone. No exaggeration, I saw hundred of guys that looked like a winding picket fence of casters all along the shoreline. And, it seemed like everyone was catching from kids to fly fishermen to serious well equipped diehards.
I will tell you these fish on small bait were fussy. I got some on bucktail jigs and some on Cocahoes on jigheads, but my best producer was a float and fly, the same setup I use for albies. The fly, a homemade pink Deceiver, was the silver bullet. It got me the most fish and the biggest. After dark, landed good numbers of fish on a white Slug-Go.
Most of the fish we landed were schoolies in the 22 to 26 inch range but I'm willing to bet we had a couple of 28 inch keepers in the mix. We lost count of the numbers of fish we caught.
Masses of stripers are feeding on huge schools of bay anchovies today. |
The float and bucktail jig has been a hot number this week. |
As expected, most of the stripers are hefty schoolies running 20 to 26 inches. But, there are some slot limit keepers in the mix. I've landed several of those small keepers this week in the 28 to 30 inch size range. I even met a guy who landed a 46 inch striper a couple of nights ago from shore. He showed me a photo and it was legit. There are also big numbers of hickory shad in places along with occasional bluefish.
The hot lures are jigs. Use them alone or off a float. The Cocahoe on a jighead has been a hot producer as have bucktail jigs tipped with curly tails or Fat Cow jig strips. Jigs also make for safe and easy catch-and-release.
Birds are hitting the water and stripers are busting on bay anchovies. This has gone on every day in the last week somewhere along the oceanfront or in multiple locations some days! |
We are in one of the hottest times of the year right now for fishing. The are blitzes of fish coming off in multiple spots along the oceanfront daily. Find the bait and you find the fish. In the last few days I hit some of the biggest blitzes of stripers that I have ever witnessed along the RI oceanfront. Today's action was pandemonium as the blitz I fished stretched out for about a mile at one point with thousands of birds hitting the water, black shorelines that were masses of bait and millions of stripers boiling on the surface. The stripers were all hefty schoolies for the most part but there was a smattering of slot limit keepers in the mix. In addition, the albie bite has been good this week in places and blues have been mixed with the abundant stripers in spots. Things are as hot as they get right now!
The albies are back. You'll have to do a lot of searching to find them. Stripers and blues are also around in good numbers. |
We got out in the boat today and landed some. My sense is that it is not loaded and you really have to look around to find them. We found some spots along the oceanfront with individual fish breaking here and there, which made for difficult fishing. Then, we found a small pile of them and for about fifteen minutes, we really had them. I was getting my fish on a pink albie Snax, an effective lure when the fish are close where you don't need a long cast. My brother Steve got his fish on a large plastic fluke fished on top. Surprisingly, my float and fly was not effective today.
In addition to the albies, we also landed good numbers of bluefish along with several stripers in other locations. We found areas where birds were diving and fish were breaking. There's a decent amount of small bait around right now, and it is attracting good numbers of fish, typical of October fishing.
Here's a near keeper landed on a bucktail jig fished off the float. Jigs have been hot all fall. They also allow for easy and safe catch-and-release. |
I'm really high on the Fat Cow jig strips (by the way can be bought on Amazon). They are far more durable than those Bass Pro curly tails which seem to be very flimsy and of poor quality these days. I find the Fat Cow strips to be equally effective enticers on jigs of all sizes and they are durable. I landed over 30 bass on the same strip in the last couple of days. I only use the color white.
The stripers these days are a mix of hefty schoolies and slot limit keepers. The schoolies are generally in the 20 to 27 inch range. The slot limit limit keepers are running 28 to 32 inches. Absent are the much larger fish over 35 inches, but no one should be surprised by that.
This near keeper hit a jig off an egg float. The jig has a Fat Cow jig strip added. Those strips have been very effective this fall |
Bait has also returned as the hurricane waves have calmed down. Schools of peanut bunker are fueling this improved fishing. Find the bait and you will most likely find the fish.
The hot lures for us this week along the oceanfront have been the float and jig, big bucktail jigs and light colored swimmers after dark like a Daiwa SP Minnow in a bone color. In the Bay we have scored well with spook type topwater plugs like the Yo-Zuri Hydro Pencil.
While the striper fishing has perked up, albies are still few and far between here in RI. I hate to say this but I believe the window is slowly closing on the albie season. It was short and sweet and great while it lasted.
It was impossible to fish in most places along the oceanfront today due to hurricane waves. |
1. Huge Waves- Just too much in many places as we are being battered by huge ocean waves from an offshore hurricane/tropical storm. Combine that with a big northeast wind and you have some dangerous conditions. Still, I fished today in a protected spot which tends to be very good under these conditions. I got just one schoolie.
2. Access Closures- Once again, the Town of Narragansett has closed off PUBLIC ACCESS to a couple of places that I know about. According to the barriers the police have set up, this is due to high, dangerous surf. Access to the shoreline at the ends of Hazard Ave. and Newton Ave. has been closed down. I can tell you that state areas and beaches were still open as of today.
3. Lack of Bait- The reason I did not find many fish around today was not because of the rough surf. It was due to a lack of bait along the oceanfront. That's the same reason I believe the albies have disappeared. There has been a bait drought in the month of September along the oceanfront and that has led to marginal fishing at best. Most of the bait is holed up in the backwater ponds and rivers along the oceanfront and in Narragansett Bay. And, it doesn't seem to be moving anytime soon.
The Town of Narraganset has closed down access to the shoreline at Hazard and Newton Avenues due to high surf. |
A striper on the fight takes an unexpected leap in the air and the camera was on it! For me, striper fishing was red hot all week.
Black sea bass saved the day for us today. Here are a couple of porkers. |
Today we went out in the boat. While it was rough, it was all big rollers. We searched a big piece of the oceanfront for albies, stripers or blues. NOTHING. We didn't see any albies breaking, we saw no bait out front, no birds working and there were no blues or stripers. It was one of the deadest September days we have ever seen. So, we decided to put plan B into effect. We started jigging the bottom for black sea bass, and those we found. We jigged in about 25 feet of water and landed many of them. While most were undersized, we did manage to land about a half dozen keepers with some chunky ones in the mix. All were caught vertical jigging Kastmaster XL's, a lure that has been hot for us in Buzzards Bay. It's also real good here.
I should mention that we did find a few stripers at the end of the day in the calmer backwaters. There was some bait there and quick hitting schoolies were on it. Jumpin' Minnows and other spook type plugs got all of them.
I had to really work for a few fish today. The albies were around in good numbers but they were super fussy. |
We went out in the boat today in search of these fish. And, we found a pile of them attacking tiny bait. Only problem was that they would not hit. At times, there were fish busting in front of us, on the side, and even in back of the boat. There was no shortage of fish to cast to. But, getting these sharp eyed speedsters to hit was a different ballgame.
We tried metal of different makes and sizes, the ole reliable float and fly and even small swimmers. Not even a sniff. Finally, we decided to move to a location where the water was a bit rougher and where there was slight current hoping the fish would be more active under these conditions. That did it.
I also snapped back on my float and fly combo with one of my pink Deceivers that I did so well on last year, and they started hitting. It was not a magic bullet and I had to really work for three fish, but I was getting better action. Albies can be tough at times to fool especially when fishing in calm, clear and shallow water and when they are feeding on micro bait.
Right now, the albies are your #1 gamefish along the RI oceanfront whether fishing from shore or boat. Stripers and blues seem to have departed. The albies are just about everywhere there is deep water and bait. You can even get them when nothing is showing
They have arrived. This is my first albie this year! |
I went out in the boat with my brother Steve today and we found them breaking in a wide expanse of the RI oceanfront. While there were lots of individual fish breaking, there were also groups of them exploding on the surface. I landed two of them and got several other hits. I got one of them on a Kastmaster XL and the other on a chartreuse Deceiver fished off a float. I know of many others that were taken from boats today as well as good numbers landed in one shore location.
The word quickly spread of their arrival as we saw lots of boaters trying for them as well as lots of people from shore casting for them. A fish pandemic has arrived. Albie fever has spread to RI waters!
Whatever you are after, the bait will lead you to the fish. Find birds diving and schools of peanut bunker and you will most likely find stripers, blues or bonito. |
Striped bass- The stripers have been a hit or miss deal at both the oceanfront and the Bay lately. Two conditions most likely will lead to lots of them. Either find big schools of peanut bunker or fish rough and clean water. The fish are under the bait right now. No bait, no fish. It's that simple. Best lures to use for the stripers....Jumpin' Minnows, float and jig, just jigs and Kastmasters. Swimmers and Slug-gos at night are also good bets. Most of the stripers are schoolies in the 20 to 26 inch range though some small keepers are in the mix.
Bluefish- Bigger numbers in the Bay than along the oceanfront. They, too, are under the bait and diving birds and breaking fish will give away their presence. Those fishing from the boats have the advantage because they can move around more easily. Topwater plugs such as poppers and Jumpin' Minnows are your bests. Most of the blues are in the 4 to 6 lb. range, though some bigger ones are around.
Bonito- I can tell you the first ones have been caught this week. My brother got 5 from the boat and I know of others from shore. Once again, advantage boaters who fish along the oceanfront. Look for breaking fish moving quickly like torpedoes through the water. Best bets are skinny metal, float and fly and Jumpin' Minnows. The bonito have been running bigger this year with 5 to 8 lbers. being average.
You've heard the saying, "if you don't like the weather in New England, just wait a few minutes." Well, the same thing can be said about saltwater fishing. After a week of lousy fishing, the weather delivered a stiff southeast wind, some very rough, moving water and lots of fish. Suddenly all is well, and we're back in the game.
Yesterday was one of the roughest days I have fished this summer along the oceanfront, comparable to that tropical storm back in July. But, it was just what I was looking for. I knew that if the water was clean I would find good numbers of fish. And, I did. Stripers were in and out along the white water surf where I was fishing and staged a big charge at the shore at dark. As has been the case all year, these were schoolies in the 20 to 26 inch range.
While I was catching in my location, I know of others who were hitting it big far to the south of me. Also, at the same time my son Jon was catching big time from the kayak in the Bay. Yesterday was a big day in a lot of places.
So, we are back in business. As long as the surf remains rough, the fishing will remain good. Goodbye and good riddance to the lull.
I have fished a lot in the last week, and I have been all over the place. The fishing has not been good. That fantastic August fishing has really cooled off. The massive schools of peanut bunker seem to have moved on, and the stripers and bluefish have moved with it.
I fished the oceanfront 3 times in the last week. I did not see the action that I found all month. I came away with two schoolies in three days. I fished multiple spots in the Bay twice in the last week and landed exactly two bluefish. There was some bait and blues there one day, none the next. Finally, in a desperate move, I went to that unmentionable spot to the north of us today that "always has fish". I came away with one schoolie that I caught on the very first cast. It was loaded with bait, but very few fish.
So, it's not good right now. Hey, that's fishing and we are reminded every so often that it is not always good. I guess that's what drives us to keep looking and trying.
Don't get excited. This photo is from a couple of years ago. No news of any bonito of albies along the RI oceanfront yet. |
Albies and bonito are pelagic species. That means they spend most of their lives way off shore in the depths of the ocean. In the fall they sometimes come close to shore to feed. Their movements are impossible to predict. Some years we see a lot of them; some years there are none.
In the past the bonito tended to show up in numbers (if they do show up) around the last week in August along the oceanfront, although last year they were pretty much around all of August. Albies are a September fish. Based on my logs of the last 50 years that time period from September 10 to September 15 should bring good numbers if they show. A few early arrivals might be caught in late August and early September. Note that fishermen are catching them right now in Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay, the first place they arrive in southern New England waters.
Last year was a big year for bonito, but albie fishing around here was a disappointment. What will happen this year is anyone's guess. But, I can guarantee, there will be a lot of fishermen looking and trying as albie fever is already here.
Here's a near keeper landed yesterday on a Spire Point bucktail jig. White bucktail jigs are great for catch-and- release striper fishing. |
Since this is all catch-and-release fishing, I have tried to use lures that will do the least amount of damage. That is why I have caught just about all my fish on jigs this month. The hot numbers in the last couple of weeks have been white bucktail jigs. When I need a long cast, I'll fish these off a wooden egg float. When the fish are in tight, I will just use the jig without a float. I have done well using homemade flathead jigs (half ounce) and homemade Spire Point jigs. I will always use a curly tail or a plastic strip on the end of the jig for added action.
Of those 300 fish I landed, I can tell you that there has not been a single bad hook-up. ALL of the fish were released in good shape thanks to the single hook jig.
EVER DAY there is a blitz or multiple blitzes going on somewhere along the RI oceanfront. This is all being fueled by massive numbers of peanut bunker that have been around for all of August. Some of these peanuts are micros under an inch long. Others are larger, one to two inch specimens. Whether small or large both stripers and bluefish are in hot pursuit wherever this bait gathers.Peanuts have collected in a tidal pool.
This striper was just caught on a Rebel
Jumpin' Minnow, the best topwater
plug to use when peanuts are around.
Back in the beginning of the month I did an article for The Fisherman magazine titled "Peanut Bunker Explosion." The article discussed how August, in recent years, has become a real hot month of fishing because of the early arrival of peanut bunker to our waters. This all used to happen in September, but like everything else that is changing, it now happens in August. The article goes on to outline approaches used to catch stripers and blues when they are feeding on peanuts.
Here are some ideas that have worked in the last three weeks:
1. Jigs- Jigs are hot when peanuts are around because they mimic the baitfish's movement and size. I like a flathead half ounce bucktail jig with a plastic curly tail. Use it alone in close or off a wooden egg float when a long cast is needed. Three inch Cocahoes will work the same way though not quite as effect as the bucktail.
2. Rebel Jumpin' Minnows- The best topwater plug when fish are on peanuts. Reel slowly with short pulls of the rod tip much the way you would work a pencil popper. Bone or white is your best color.
3. Kastmasters or other metal- Looks like a peanut moving through the water with its flash and will give you a long cast if needed.
The last couple of days have been rough, real rough, along the oceanfront. There was a big northeast
This small jig attached to a wooden egg float caught lots of fish yesterday in real rough conditions. The jig has a Fat Cow jig strip attached. |
When I fish this type of water, I will make many adjustments to the way I fish. Here are just some of my strategies:
Spots matter- I have several different places I like to fish in a strong northeast wind. These are places that are slightly protected and places where the wind tends to come from the side. You want a spot that has all of the advantages of white turbulent water, yet at the same time is safe. Clean water is also a key. If you take on a strong northeast wind in your face, you tend to get a lot of weed coming at you, making conditions unfishable. Note that the places I fish in a northeast wind are far different than the places I would choose in a southwest wind.
Bigger plugs- I tend to also beef up the plugs I use in a strong wind. It helps with the casting and a heavier plug tracks better in the wind. I had been getting a lot of fish earlier in the week in calm water with a Jumpin Minnow. Forget that plug in a northeast wind. Instead, I went with a Yo-Zuri Hydro Pencil, a plug that is similar to the Jumpin Minnow but almost twice the weight. It worked terrific in the last two days.
Jigs- Big jigs of an ounce or more are good bets to cut through the wind. These are best where you have deeper water. In shallow water with rocky bottoms, go with the float and jig. The float tracks well in turbulent water and this set up works wonders where fish are feeding on small bait.
Be safe- Rough conditions can be dangerous conditions. Proceed with caution in areas with deep water and slippery rocks. I always try to position myself on a dry rock in a safe spot in these conditions.
Things are not going well for commercial striped bass fishermen in MA these days. As of August 7, only 24% of the quota has been met. Is anyone surprised about that due to the lack of big fish (over 35 inches) around?
Right now commercial striped bass fishermen in MA can fish two days a week- Monday and Wednesday. Because of these low catch numbers, the MA Division of Marine Fisheries is proposing an in season adjustment to the fishing days which would double the days commericals can fish adding Tuesday and Thursday. This could take effect on Sept. 2. In addition, on October 2, the commercial days would be extended to 7 days a week. These same proposals came up last year and after written comments came in from fishermen, no action was taken by the Director.
I know a lot of people are very passionate about this topic on both sides of the aisle. If you would like to give your comments, pro or con, on the proposal, you can send an e-mail to Director Dan Mc Kiernan at marine.fish@mass.gov.
For more information and detail, check out On the Water's article at https://www.onthewater.com/news/2020/08/10/massachusetts-proposes-adding-commercial-striper-days .
The blues are back in good numbers in places. They are keying on schools of peanut bunker along the oceanfront and in the Bay. I got this one from shore two nights ago. |
In the beginning of the week, I concentrated on the oceanfront in the rough conditions. The wind and surf delivered big numbers of schoolies in the 20 to 27 inch range. At times, loads of fish were breaking on the surface feeding on the small bunker. I could also see big schools of chub and bullet mackerel tearing through schools of bait way out. Later in the week, I concentrated my efforts in the Bay from shore. There I found big schools of bait being attacked by schoolies in close and bluefish out far. For the first time since spring I saw roving schools of bluefish slashing on the surface through schools of bait.
The only thing lacking this week was larger stripers. The bigger fish I landed were just shy of keeper size. Shore guys have been complaining about the lack of bigger fish (fish over 35 inches) so far this year. I think that trend will continue and you will be lucky catch a striper over 35 inches from shore this year in RI . That's just the way things are.
Yes, my son
Jon and I did fish in that storm on Tuesday.
It was one of the most intense storms I have ever fished in along the RI
oceanfront. It featured everything “stormy”. There was wind with gusts up to
hurricane force. There was a driving, pelting
rain. And, the surf was kicked up as
angry as it gets with moving water. We were in safe spots casting from mostly
dry shoreline. I know full well that
stripers love these kinds of conditions, and they didn’t disappoint.
Upon
arriving at our spot in mid afternoon, the wind was brisk from the southeast
and the ocean was kicked up but not unmanageable. We found stripers whirling in the white water
feeding on small bait. The bucktail jig off the wooden egg float did the trick. If I casted into the white, moving water left
behind by a wave, I had a hit or a fish on just about every cast. These were 20 to 27 inch hefty schoolies with
the bigger fish just under keeper size.
After about
an hour or so of fishing and catching, the skies suddenly darkened and within
what seemed like minutes, everything took a turn for the worse. It started pelting rain and the wind picked
up dramatically with gusts that nearly knocked us over. The water also began to rise from the surge
of a pushing wind and waves or water. What should have been low tide looked
like high tide. I was getting worried a tornado was somewhere out in front of
us.
At that
point we decided to head back to the truck for a break. Just as fast as the
storm arrived, it began to let up and soon the skies were blue, but the wind
was still ferocious. We headed back out and found our spot now loaded with weed
pushed in by a wind that had turned south and in our faces.
We moved to
a new location that had cleaner water, but the abundant fish that were around
earlier in the day were now few and far between. We did manage about a dozen more fish before
dark but the easy pickings were gone.
It was a day
to remember…rough conditions, a charged up atmosphere and sea and lots of fish,
just what I was expecting.
The water was rough but clean and the fish were there. Stripers love to forage in rough water. |
I went down to the RI oceanfront last evening, the first time in weeks I had fished this area. I knew it would be good because I have seen this pattern play out over and over again in past years. We are in the doldrums of summer and suddenly a big storm comes along. It can be a north
A hefty schoolie comes ashore last evening on the float and jig. It was hot fishing in the rough water! |
When I arrived at my location, I just knew it would be good. The water was white and moving from the roughness and the wind. In ten minutes, I had ten hefty schoolies with my float and jig (Cocahoe or bucktail and curly tail) combinations. It continued like that on and off for the rest of the evening. I also saw dark patches of bait, some fish breaking and birds diving. If you didn’t know the date, you would think this was the middle of October.
If you get
out to fish in the coming days, proceed with caution. There is a fine line between rough and
dangerous and just right. Last evening
it was just right!
The egg float with a deceiver fly was the only thing that would catch the fussy schoolies in the last two days. |
This is one of several hefty schoolies landed on the float and fly today. |
This striper was feeding close to shore on small peanut bunker. The peanuts will light up the fishing from shore in the coming weeks. |