Monday afternoon St Marks river
Posted: January 22nd, 2019, 10:59 pm
Just had a few hours to get out Monday afternoon, but I wanted to get out and run the Wahoo after some fuel line issues.
Launched at the fort and giddyupped down river. Found clumps of fish on the old fishfinder that looked like schools of trout beginning to clump up with the cold weather, but couldn't get a bite in the hour or two I had to fish (before and after high tide at 3 something pm).
Here's where I saw some good schools, mostly close to the bottom
-- up the deep channel that takes off at marker #14 half-way to the mouth of the East River (where the channel seems surrounded by oyster bars)
-- Mouth of Four Mile Creek by Marker #33 and on the opposite side of the river near the rocks around Marker 35
-- Just opposite the point at the Fort where the two rivers join, fish seemed more scattered in the center of the water column.
But I got just one bite, using live shrimp on a jig head on the bottom, and trying also a slow retrieve with a soft fluke.
So I know where to find 'em -- anybody have better ideas on how to catch 'em? Different bait, or different tide/time of day?
Launched at the fort and giddyupped down river. Found clumps of fish on the old fishfinder that looked like schools of trout beginning to clump up with the cold weather, but couldn't get a bite in the hour or two I had to fish (before and after high tide at 3 something pm).
Here's where I saw some good schools, mostly close to the bottom
-- up the deep channel that takes off at marker #14 half-way to the mouth of the East River (where the channel seems surrounded by oyster bars)
-- Mouth of Four Mile Creek by Marker #33 and on the opposite side of the river near the rocks around Marker 35
-- Just opposite the point at the Fort where the two rivers join, fish seemed more scattered in the center of the water column.
But I got just one bite, using live shrimp on a jig head on the bottom, and trying also a slow retrieve with a soft fluke.
So I know where to find 'em -- anybody have better ideas on how to catch 'em? Different bait, or different tide/time of day?