TOOLS

Attention Boaters

Washington County

A construction project on the I-70 Bridge over Conococheague Creek between Clear Spring and Hagerstown has serverely limited vessel usage on Conococheague Creek making portage impossible. Please refrain from using this portion of Conococheague Creek. For more information contact Jeff Foreman of the Maryland State Highway Administration at 301-223-1680 (office) or 301-252-1270 (cell).


Talbot County

Knapps Narrows West Channel Shoaling: Safety Broadcast Notice to Mariners
MD - CHESAPEAKE BAY - CHOPTANK RIVER AND HERRING BAY - KNAPPS NARROWS WEST CHANNEL - SHOALING
1. HAZARD TO NAVIGATION-THERE HAS BEEN A REPORT OF SHOALING IN KNAPPS NARROWS WEST CHANNEL AT TILGHMAN ISLAND, MD, LOCATED WITHIN THE CHANNEL, BETWEEN KNAPPS NARROWS WEST CHANNEL DBN 2 (LLNR 25925) AND KNAPPS NARROWS WEST CHANNEL LT 4 (LLNR 25930), TO A DEPTH OF 3 TO 4 FT AT MLLW.

If you have any questions/comments, please contact me or CWO Paul Curtis.

V/r,
Ron Houck
U.S. Coast Guard Sector Baltimore
Waterways Management Division
410.576.2674 (o)
410.365.8125 (m)
410.576.2553 (f)


Maryland Weekly Fishing Report Overview | April 06, 2011

Boat yards have been a buzz and travel lifts are working overtime as fishermen finish up that last coat of bottom paint and get their boats berthed for further preparations. Those that trailer their boats can be seen in backyards and driveways throughout the region getting everything ship shape. The anticipation of the opening of the trophy Striped Bass Season next Saturday is bubbling over; it rivals the excitement of a 7-year old child the week before Christmas. Fishermen have been getting out on the bay to practice a little pre-season catch and release by either trolling or by light tackle jigging. The Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant (CCNPP) warm water discharge is just about the most popular and productive place to practice some catch and release light tackle jigging for striped bass and fishermen have been enjoying themselves while being very careful with the big fish. Water temperatures in the middle and lower bay are holding in the upper 40's so it's a natural that striped bass migrating up the bay take time for a little spell in what one might consider a dip in a hot tub for fish. Jay Fleming recently fished the CCNPP discharge with some friends and had a ball catching and releasing large striped bass while light tackle jigging. He sent us an angler's log with some amazing pictures such as the one below.


Photo Courtesy Jay Fleming


Shore based fishermen have been catching and releasing striped bass at prominent points on the bay and few are as popular as Sandy Point State Park. Stout surf fishing gear, circle hooks and bottom rigs baited with bloodworms or cut bait are the ticket to the fun. Fishermen are reminded though to come prepared with heavy tackle, rubber boots so one can meet the fish in shallow water for removing the hook. Dragging these pre-spawn fish up on the sand causes severe injury to the slime layer that is essential to their survival. Responsible fishermen already know that is illegal to target striped bass in the spawning reaches of the tidal rivers. The striped bass are already spawning now in the Choptank, Nanticoke and Patuxant Rivers so let them procreate to their fullest; a good reproductive year and a strong year class of young striped bass would be a fine thing indeed.

Water temperatures in the Susquehanna flats region are still at or below the 45-degree mark; a warm spell will help raise the temperature and the catch and release fishery there should improve soon. A few industrious fishermen have been trying their luck for the last week or so and a few large striped bass are beginning to be caught and released. When the water is this cold many fishermen start with circle hooks and fresh cut bait from gizzard shad or herring and drift through areas that may hold fish. Alan Knapp sent in an angler's log from an April 5th fishing trip there and reported that he and his fishing buddy caught and released 10 striped bass from 21lbs to 35lbs in 8-hours of fishing; be sure to check out his report and pictures.


Photo Courtesy Allen Knapp


Fisheries biologists that are surveying hickory shad report that they've found them holding in the Susquehanna; so all it takes is a warming trend and the fish will soon be entering Deer and Octoraro Creeks; providing some exciting catch and release action for fishermen. Word is that fishermen are beginning to catch them at Fletcher's on the Potomac this week. White perch continue to move slowly move down the tidal rivers after their spawning runs and fishermen are catching them by fishing with bottom rigs baited with grass shrimp from shore or small boats in the channel areas. Channel catfish are very active now and no doubt fishermen drifting cut bait on circle hooks in the Susquehanna Flats area will be catching them while targeting striped bass. The tidal rivers have plenty of them also and they can make a tasty shore side lunch when deep fried in your favorite batter with hush puppies; a real treat and a lasting memory when taking young anglers fishing.

The trout management areas continue to offer some wonderful fishing opportunities for fishermen whether your target is a trout dinner from one of the generously stocked put and take areas or just enjoying the fun of catching and releasing trout in the non- take management areas. Water levels are good and the weather looks promising through the weekend so get out there and enjoy. If you have a young angler, be sure to check the trout stocking website on the Fisheries Service Home page and take them to a youth only fishing area.

Fishing for largemouth bass continues to be good this week as warming water temperatures in the freshwater and tidal river areas causes the bass to be more active. They are in a pre-spawn feeding mode and are looking to build up body stores for the coming spawning time. Emerging grass edges and sunken wood are always good places to look for bass as are creek mouths. Small crankbaits, spinnerbaits work well along edges and dropping a whacky rigged plastic worm down through sunken wood is always a good bet.


Photo Courtesy John Mullican


The western region fisheries biologists report fishing for walleyes, large yellow perch and smallmouth bass has been very good at Deep Creek Lake. Grass edges and steep edges have been productive places to cast or troll crankbaits or drift live bait. John Mullican reports that the upper Potomac has calmed down and fishing has been good for a mix of walleyes and smallmouth bass. John happened to mention during a discussion of recent high water levels, that he couldn't help but notice the carcass of a deer hung up in the shore side tree branches about 8' over his head at a local boat ramp. At first glance one might not notice, but that is leaf debris from high water levels stuck in the tree branches above biologist Mark Toms in this picture from some recent walleye survey work on the upper Potomac.

Fishermen in the coastal areas near Ocean City are catching a few tautog in and around the Ocean City Inlet area. Water temperatures are still in the 44-degree range so the best tautog fishing is at the end of an ebb tide. Offshore the party boat fleet is finding tautog and a few cod fish on the wreck sites. The bite has tended to be a bit slow because of cold water temperatures but some impressive sized tautog are being caught. Surf fishing prospects tend focus around pesky skates and the hope of an undersized striped bass. It will be close to a month before the post-spawn striped bass coming out of the Chesapeake begin to make their way along Maryland beaches.

Take my friends and my home... as an outcast I'll roam: Take the money I have in the bank: It is just what I wish, but deprive me of fish, and my life would indeed be a blank. -Lewis Carroll 1832-1895

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Keith Lockwood has been writing the Fishing Report since 2003 and has had a long career as a fisheries research biologist since 1973. Over the course of his career he has studied estuarine fishery populations, ocean species, and over a decade long study of bioaccumulation of chemicals in aquatic species in New Jersey. Upon moving to Oxford on the eastern shore of Maryland; research endeavors focused on a variety of catch and release studies as well as other fisheries related research at the Cooperative Oxford Laboratory. Education and outreach to the fishing public has always been an important component to the mission of these studies. Keith is an avid outdoorsman enjoying hunting, fishing, bird dogs, family and life on the eastern shore of Maryland.



Latest Angler's Log Reports


Amanda Collins
Recreational Angler
Pasadena, MD
Total Reports:
1
Sent in on: June 19, 2013 Permalink

Kayak Fishing in Pasadena

Type: Freshwater
Region: Southern
Location: Pasadena Private Pond
Tags: Largemouth Bass, Chain Pickerel

I caught this 4 lb 6 oz Largemouth in a small private, catch and release pond in Pasadena. It was the largest one I hooked up on and had a blast bringing it in on my kayak. The other bass are from the same pond as well.

I also caught a few nice sized chain pickerel at Loch Raven a month or two ago.

 PHOTOS 

Alan Klotz
Fisheries Biologist
Total Reports:
52
Sent in on: June 19, 2013 Permalink

Fishing Report From The North Branch

Type: Freshwater
Region: Western
Location: North Branch Potomac River
Tags: Rainbow Trout, Brown Trout, Smallmouth Bass, Fallfish

Here are a few pictures of fish waiting to be caught in the North Branch Potomac River's Zero Creel Limit Trout Fishing Area and the overlapping Black Bass Catch and Return Fishing Area from the McCoole Fisheries Management Area downstream five miles to the Gary Yoder Fisheries Management Area at Black Oak, and then downstream another 9 miles to the Pinto Area. Both Rainbow Trout and Brown Trout were found in these sections of the river, however at lower abundance levels compared to upstream areas (Westernport to McCoole). Trout were found in the faster runs and the very deep pools. A lot of scrappy Smallmouth Bass averaging about 6 to 10 inches were collected, however we did not collect a lot of quality-sized bass. The abundance of the smaller bass should bode well for the future. We observed good numbers of Fallfish - a large minnow species, so anglers can expect to catch a bunch of these fish that fight just like a trout. There are public access sites at the McCoole Fisheries Management Area and downstream at the Gary Yoder Fisheries Management Area. The Pinto area currently has no public access, so permission from private property owners needs to be secured before accessing the river at this location. Also, there are some boulder-strewn runs - especially between McCoole and Black Oak, so canoeist should use caution in this section of the river.

Pictured is Fisheries Technician Jon Folk with 1) Smallmouth Bass 2) Brown Trout 3) Rainbow Trout 4) Fallfish

 PHOTOS 

Danny Villanueva
Recreational Angler
Total Reports:
5
Sent in on: June 19, 2013 Permalink

Good Action at Loch Raven

Type: Freshwater
Region: Central
Location: Loch Raven Reservoit
Tags: Crappie, Chain Pcikerel

The action was very good on Saturday afternoon at Loch Raven Resevoir. The Chain Pickerel and Crappies bit well for my sons Josh and Neil Villanueva. A small Bull Minnow on a Hildebrandt Spinner is always a favorite.

 PHOTOS