Dick
Pinney's
Fishing ReportComplements of The Kittery Trading Post
Activity for the last week of July, 2001
View Past Reports
July 30, 2001
The
mid-summer dog days haven't adversely
affected the inland fishing, especially in some of the northern Maine
areas. Water temperatures and levels in areas remain quite good, and
surface fishing continues for some of the cold water species,
especially during low-light periods. Saltwater news seems to get
better, especially concerning the offshore big-game fish.
Dave
Ganter at the Kittery Trading Post's Fishing Department, passed on
several bits of information relative to the local striper and bluefish
action. "One of our staff, Chad Woodward, had an incredible
outing with some friends on the Piscataqua River. They were fishing at
night near the outlet of one of the power plants. With chunk mackerel,
they caught several stripers up to forty inches long. The tide was
outgoing, with only a couple hours to go," Dave reports.
"Another
one of our staff, RJ Mere, had reports of bluefish from here all the
way to Kennebunkport. Several striper fishermen coming in have
complained about bluefish cutting off their baits while striper
fishing. There doesn't seem to be much consistency about where the
blues will be on any given day, but it's a good choice to try around
the ledges at the Isles of Shoals. Live bait floated on balloon
bobbers about 15 feet down always seem to be a good choice. You also
have a chance at landing one of the huge stripers occasional caught at
the 'Shoals," Dave suggests.
"We've
still got plenty of stripers here, mostly in the 24-34 inch range but
baitfish are getting scarce at times," reports Jim MacKenzie at
Suds-n-Soda in Greenland, NH. "If you want mackerel or pollock
for live bait, you'd better be on the water at daylight. You've got to
chum--the schools of baitfish are particularly skittish from bluefish
chasing them. They don't like to stay in one spot for too long. The
area around the #2KR (Kitts Rocks) Buoy off the mouth of the
Piscataqua is a good place to start. We've been using Sabiki bait rigs
with a mackerel jig on the bottom. Another good place to try is around
the West Sister's Ledge off Kittery Point. There's always pollock
there. If you can't catch them chumming and jigging, try trolling with
a pair of mackerel jigs, but you need to be cautious around the
ledge--it gets pretty shallow there, actually coming out of water at
low tide," he said.
Mac
suggests that when you're over a pod of baitfish that don't want to
hit your bait rig, if you cast out past the fish and let the rig
settle down into the school of fish, you'll get some to grab it. Chum
can be as simple as mixing dog food with some kind of vegetable or
fish oil. Believe it or not, Gravy Train dry dog food seems to be a
favorite, as it breaks down faster when wet and creates a great chum
slick.
Pepperell
Cover off Kittery Point remains the best spot for flounder. Jim said
that a couple that come each weekend pick up a good feed of flounder
every trip there.
"We're
still experiencing some wonderful offshore groundfishing, even though
it seems to have slowed down a bit on Jeffrey's Ledge," reported
Cal Robinson at Saco Bay Tackle. "Tanners ledge continues to be
very good, especially early in the morning and there's a good chance
of picking a few cod or haddock off of some of the other smaller
inshore ledges."
"Shark
fishing has started to heat up. All the boats out shark fishing last
week had some action, mostly on blue sharks, although we've had some
reports of mako sightings. Giant bluefin tuna fishing keeps getting
better, in fact, tomorrow, we're going to be able to go to a
two-fish-a-day limit, which hasn't been seen here in decades. At the
Bailey's Island Tuna Tourney, a fish just under 500 pounds won the
contest, caught out of a 20-foot boat. There's been a lot of big fish
caught out of small boats."
Cal also
noted that stripers remained steady in his area, but that the
bluefishing had been spotty, slowing down quite a bit from last week's
excellent fishing.
"Early
yesterday morning we had a striper and bluefish surface blitz, all the
way from Deer Island to Grave's Light," reported Pete Santini at
Fishing FINatics Bait and Tackle in Everett. "The birds
were working, the fish were breaking all over the place, and there
were about two dozen boats catching blues to 40 inches and stripers to
42 inches. A lot of them were calling me on their cell phones--it was
quite a show. Most of the fish were caught trolling with the Santini
Tube-n-Worm combo, but some of the guys that were casting to the fish
were hitting them on broken backed Rapala plugs. At 10am, the fish
went down and it was all over," Pete said.
"Stripers
were hitting off the Police Station at Revere Beach, and for the first
time in many years, flounders were being caught off the shore--at
Winthrop's Four Sisters Breakwater. Flounder had also returned in
force to the waters off Deer Island, where Chincoteaugue flounder rigs
and flounder spreader bars, both baited with sea worms, were working
the best. Codfish from 10-15 pounds were hitting well three miles past
the B Buoy. Jigs or clams were working the best for cod," Pete
explained.
Pete's
suggested method for tube-n-worm trolling is to use leadcore line.
"Let out two or three colors of leadcore, depending on the depth
of water you're fishing. You don't need to use a whole seaworm on the
hook, but you do need to use some natural bait or they just don't seem
to work. You can troll at various speeds, and go with, against, or
cross current, whatever the situation calls for. Actually, in a fast
current, some of the veteran tubers like to get up-tide of where they
suspect fish to be, and they actually back-troll their lures, dropping
them back onto the structure that's holding the fish. In deeper water,
this technique works especially well," Pete advised.
More and more fishermen also have had success tipping their
tubes with cut bait.
Kay
Moulton at Surfland Bait and Tackle on Plum Island, reported that
you'd better be out on the water early in the morning, especially if
you're a lure fisherman. "The striper guys fishing lures do well
until the sun gets up. They've been averaging a half dozen real nice
fish in the 26-28 inch range each morning. But as soon as the sun
comes up, it's all over. I don't know why, but the bait fishermen
continue to be able to pick away at the stripers all day long, but
nothing like that early morning bite. We had some bluefish along the
beaches here yesterday morning, but so far today we've had no reports.
Flounder are on and off, so unpredictable, but we have had our first
authenticated report of a few fluke that have moved into the Merrimack
River here, so they may be just starting. Last year was a pretty good
fluke year here. Mackerel are so skittish. Fishermen that usually
furnish us with a couple hundred for bait are showing up with about a
quarter of that amount. Breaking Rocks, about a mile offshore near the
New Hampshire border, has been about the steadiest place for
mackerel," Kay ended.
Maine's
bass fishing continues to be spectacular and under-utilized, reports
Dave Ganter at the Kittery Trading Post. "We had a chance to
float the Kennebec River downstream from Waterville, fishing for
smallmouth in kayaks. I was fishing with Harry Vanderweide, who was
doing some filming for an upcoming video he's producing. We had
spectacular fishing, using mostly white grubs and plastic crawfish
with chartreuse claws. We caught dozens upon dozens of smallies on
light spinning tackle, generally in the chunky two-pound range. It was
so nice. The solitude of being on a great stretch of river like that
with only one other boat seen the whole day. Harry said that this was
typical, but the fish are usually bigger!"
"The
Belgrade Lakes bass fishing has also been wonderful. Smallmouths are
gathering on the humps about 15 feet down. Carolina rigged plastic
lizards are producing very well. Closer to home here, Little Sebago
Lake has been good for topwater smallmouth action--even in the heat of
the day," Dave mentioned.
Wayne
Davis at Dave Garcia's Naples Bait, also reports the bass fishing has
been hot on nearby Long Lake and other local waters. "Probably my
picks for the best local bass ponds would be Little Sebago (Windham)
and Thompson Lake (Casco).
There's also been some great panfishing reported from those lakes, and
we've been hearing more and more about the wonderful black crappie
action over at Parker Pond, also in Casco. There's been some steady
brown trout and salmon fishing here on Long Lake and some really nice
browns coming from Middle Range Pond in Poland," Wayne offered.
Sebago
Lake Sage Carroll Cutting at Jordan's Store in East Sebago, reports
seeing a lot of people out having a good time with the bass. “And
the salmon die-hards are catching a surprising amount of fish without
having to go deep. Some of them are fishing with up to six colors of
leadcore, while a few have stuck to sinking fly lines and are even
using streamer flies, especially at daylight. Sewed-on baits are also
working well. The salmon being caught, although not huge, are in a lot
better shape than they were the first of the season. The best salmon
seem to be coming out of Tricky Pond in Naples.
Togue fishing on Sebago remains very good, with catches of a
dozen or more fish per boat each day being the case," Carroll
observed.
Jim
Pellorin, Assistant Regional Biologist in that area, said that one of
the district wardens reported some good native brookie fishing in
Oxford County--fish in the 6-10 inch size. "Many of our small
streams and beaver flowages maintain cooler water temperatures and
provide great action for trout all summer long. Catching these wild
brookies is generally not very difficult, but one needs to be willing
to beat the bushes and put up with biting insects," Jim allowed.
Jim also
notes that brown trout, which are able to tolerate warmer water
temperatures than brook trout, provide some fine mid-summer fishing.
He includes Upper and Middle Range Ponds (Poland), Little Sebago Lake
(Windham), Crystal Lake (Gray), and Mousam Lake (Acton). He also notes
that good stream fishing for brown trout can be expected during the
summer at the Little Androscoggin River (W. Paris to Auburn), Pleasant
River (Windham), Nezinscot River (Buckfield), Little River (Gorham to
Berwick), Great Works River (Berwick), Nonesuch River (Scarborough)
and the Cold River (Stowe).
Rusty
Harvey at River's Edge Sports in Oquossoc in the Rangeley area, still
is enthused about the way the trout and salmon fishing has been
holding out there. "We weighed a bunch of nice salmon this week
from Rangeley Lake--fish in the four pound, 22 inch size range.
Mooselookmeguntic Lake has really started to heat up again with salmon
in the three to four pound sizes. Fly fishermen are reporting good
action on the lower Magalloway River. Upper Dam continues to produce
some good action for both trout and salmon. The Kennebago River has
some fish, especially at the Steep Bank Pool, but they're stale and
are hard to get to come to a fly. They've had a lot of stuff thrown at
them. The best chance is to be the first in the morning to show them a
fly," Rusty instructed.
The
Granite State has been producing some very good action for warm water
species and trout and salmon. The Kittery Trading Post’s RJ Mere and
his party found a lot of rainbow trout rising to a hatch on the Ellis
River. They had a tough time matching the hatch, but when they did,
their success was worth it. "The flies that hatch are often hard
to describe and even harder to match at times, but that's the fun of
it. If I could have described those flies that were hatching that day,
it would lessened the sport for those that follow, and besides, things
probably have changed since then."
Tink
Nelson at Nute's Trading Post in Wakefield, says that bass are the big
thing there. "When you've got lakes like Wentworth and
Winnipesaukee in your backyard, you're living in smallmouth heaven.
This time of year we go searching for those rocky shallow ledges that
are usually marked with a black and white buoy. Fish off the edges, in
water at least 15 feet deep. Live crawfish are deadly, as are any
number of plastic baits. Rigging Carolina style gets your bait down to
the fish quicker. We've been using the Cortland Blackspot line on
spinning reels and have been able to fish with 35 lb. test line that
is about the same diameter as 10 lb. mono. Rigging this Carolina
style, the Blackspot signals the strikes so much better and has
absolutely no stretch. When you set the hook, it goes in
instantly," Tink reports.
"Summer
also can be incredible lake trout time around here. Great East Lake
(NH/ME border) and Silver Lake (Madison) have both been producing some
lakers. Spoons like you'd use in the spring--Mooselook Wobblers, Flash
Kings, and other flutter type spoons have been working well. We've
heard of fish over 15 pounds caught and released at Great East,"
Tink noted.
"Two
brothers came off the lake on Friday, and they'd caught three
landlocked salmon, two rainbow trout, two lakers and one bass,"
Bill Martel at Martel's Bait and Tackle in Laconia reported. "Our
Lake Winnisquam is getting to be like the good old days. We've got a
good population of smelt and it's starting to show with the quality of
the trout and salmon. The bass fishing has also been great. And it
looks like we're going to be a black crappie lake. We had a couple
come in here yesterday with a bunch of them they'd caught at the upper
end of the lake," Bill said.
George
Malloy at River's Edge General Store in Berlin, reported that
fishermen were now concentrating on bass on the stretch of the
Androscoggin River near his store. He'd taken his four year-old grand
daughter, Danielle Jubert, out in his boat for her first-ever fishing
trip. When the first of the four bass she caught came into the boat,
she went and hid behind her grandmother! But by the time she'd hauled
in her fourth bass, she was acting like it was old hat! Another
youngster, Kyle Hagar from Berlin, had a big thrill when he pulled in
a brook trout from the Androscoggin Valley Fish and Game Club's Little
People's Pond. Malloy weighed the trout--it was well over two pounds!
George said that again this week, Dummer Pond in Dummer was the best
local trout pond.
Past Fishing Reports
2001
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