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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
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    2,857

    Default A skunk plus some cold feet

    I could not let this sunny Sunday go by without at least a try at catching an elusive Severn pickerel. For those of us without waterfront homes or community water privileges, shoreline points of access are few and far between. Over the years I have identified a few spots where I can drive, park, and walk to accessible shoreline and/or wadeable waters.

    Today I checked one of my Annapolis spots, but it was completely frozen in. I tried a Crownsville location and discovered some partially open water. The photos below give some idea of the ice conditions. I donned my chest waders (lightweight, not neoprene) and waded around the open water area. I was throwing my go-to winter bait - live minnows (Marty's had them yesterday) on a 1/8-oz jighead.

    I waded for an hour with absolutely no bites. The particular cove that I fished has produced pickerel and yellow perch before. However, in previous outings, the water was not ice-covered. I could wade up to my waist, then throw into the deeper water. Today, 3/4 of the cove was covered. I don't think I was getting to the sections where the fish were likely to be. I even tried moving out of the cove toward a larger body of water. The limited non-iced water did not hold any hungry, dumb fish today either.

    After an hour of working all corners of the open water and wadeable area, I called it quits. My feet were extremely cold. Nevertheless, it felt good to get out in the water and give my casting muscles some exercise.
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    John Veil
    Scout 162 Sportfish, Native Watercraft Manta 14, and Ocean Kayak Drifter

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
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    19,890

    Default

    Waist deep - what's that for you - 5 feet ?
    At least you gave it a shot - won't be much longer.
    What could be more mundane than dying of old age or of natural causes when there is death by misadventure to be pursued ? Skip

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    John,

    Way to get out there after them! I am sorry to say I had the same results in the main river. I dug my rowboat out and gave it a shot yesterday as well and couldn't muster a single bite in the 45 minutes I was out. I tried the pattern that caught the only 3 pickerel I have seen this year to no avail and pretty much threw everything I had in the tackle box at them. Iincluding a few SRRKC staples (Mr. Millenburg would be proud) but they had a bad case of lockjaw! The water is still really cold! Come on warm weather!

    Mark

  4. #4
    Virgil Poe's Avatar
    Virgil Poe is offline Tidal Fish Super Subscriber - I Support TidalFish.com!
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    Default

    Hey John, you definetly had the right combo for this time of the year. Most will be out in deeper water 7 - 8 ft on average, but I know just going is what you really needed most.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
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    Default

    The weather starts to look promising next week....sunny and upper-40s. In some ways, this touney is more intriguing than some past years when the fishing was easy.

    Virgil, with past harsh winters, do you find that the Pickerel go on a feeding binge once things get back to normal and the water warms up, as opposed to milder winters, where they might feed more regularly throughout the winter?
    Jeff

    "Modern Society will find no solution to the ecological problem unless it takes a serious look at its lifestyles." -- Pope John Paul II

  6. #6
    Virgil Poe's Avatar
    Virgil Poe is offline Tidal Fish Super Subscriber - I Support TidalFish.com!
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    Hi Jeff, in my opinion, no. I don't believe they'll feed any more or less come spring, as a result of what we may consider as having a harsh winter in our world. I believe their world is a little more constant/stable down below, and I believe that they do feed on a regular basis throughout the winter months, despite what's taking place above.



    This pickerel was caught through the ice of a Magothy cove in the middle of a harsh winter for these parts. While removing the hook we noticed the fin protruding from this fishes gullet. Obviously, there was no way the pickerel was going to swallow the minnow it had just grabbed below our tip-up, and this isn't the first time I've witnessed this concept. My opinion is based on personal interactions with the fish, nothing more.

  7. #7
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    Jun 2002
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    Thanks. Cool pic!

    I guess that makes sense....I know folks who get apparently very hungry Pickerel through the ice in upstate NY, and a harsh winter for us is still mild be their standards.
    Jeff

    "Modern Society will find no solution to the ecological problem unless it takes a serious look at its lifestyles." -- Pope John Paul II

  8. #8
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    Nov 2007
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    Virgil,

    Agreed - very cool picture! Do you think that pickerel would have just kept the minnow in his mouth until the other fish digested? I am sure that it is slim pickings this time of year for the pickerel so my guess is that they grab what they can when they can then sit on the bottom until they make room?

    Mark

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
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    Seen Rockfish do same thing in late fall.
    One baitfish half in their gullet yet they hit a lure.

    Perhaps a fish's stomach can expand to hold the other baitfish.
    I know in June the Rock are bloated looking - their stomach packed full of May worms.

    Fish still feed all winter - just not as often due to being cold blooded. I bet a small Perch or big minnow holds them a few days.
    What could be more mundane than dying of old age or of natural causes when there is death by misadventure to be pursued ? Skip

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
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    When I used to fish your rivers in the winter,Feb. was not the greatest month for numbers of Pickerel but usually bigger ones.BTW I know a guy that recently caught a 28in.Pickerel in an upper bay river on a small tube jig while fishing for perch.Sometimes there no justice in fishing.

    Fishing can be anything you want it to be
    UBBB MSSA NPYC MPNC CBF

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