Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, October 2019

Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, October 25, 2019 Update:

Angler’s Sport Center let us know that the Spanish Mackerel have left for the season, and drum seem to have headed south, too. We had an awesome summer – the Spanish Mackerel run was better than anyone could have anticipated, and the Middle Bay was a hub of excellent fishing, drawing anglers from all over Delmarva. Although striper fishing has remained very active finding keepers has become spotty. Although the fishing around the channel edges and Thomas Point hasn’t been particularly steady, the upside is that keeper fish are being caught with some regularity. Alltackle in Annapolis reported a nice trolling bite on the edges and suggested keeping the fish finder on so that clusters of fish can be easily located. Pulling bucktails and hoses behind umbrellas has been popular, and larger lures have been enticing larger fish. Island Tackle Outfitters suggested using planers to keep rigs close to the bottom, where the bigger fish have been hanging around. At Thomas Point, they noted that liveliners are also doing well in deeper water beyond the lighthouse, but again, keeping your spot on the bottom has been the key to landing fish. Speaking of spot - yes, it's getting tougher to find them by the day. Those that remain in the area are generally deeper now, in 20 to 30 feet over shell bottom. Alltackle also let us know that a few bluefish are remaining, caught in boiling baitfish.

striper caught on a boat
Johnny O strikes again!

Casting a soft plastic through the mayhem under working birds is a good way to go, but Angler in Chief Lenny Rudow noted that this week the fish under birds in the mouth of the South and West rivers have been up and down very quickly, and bouncing a white plastic along bottom where birds were recently sighted is often producing more fish than retrieving at the surface. Fish in this zone are 10 to one throwbacks, but some up to 22-inches are mixed in. He also noted that the sunrise topwater bite in the rivers isn’t as good as one would hope for this time of year, and that this past week the afternoon bite has been best all around. There are some reports coming in of bigger stripers off the mouth of the Pax with fish up to 32-inches in the mix, though the majority of the fish in this area are small, too. Eastern Bay was mentioned as another area flush with mostly small fish and pockets of working birds coming and going from Parsons all the way up to the northwest of Poplar.

White perch continue to head into deeper water, but are still hanging around shoreline structure. Targeting the white perch with bloodworms on a bottom rig remains a great way of catching them. With lower surface temperatures, perch fishing has been getting better throughout the day.

Crabbing report: Trot-liners working deep (15 feet plus) are still managing to haul up some crabs, but moving very s-l-o-w is key as many are dropping off when they come close to the surface.


Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, October 18, 2019 Update:

With temps falling rapidly, our warm-weather species seem to be on the decline. Spanish mackerel do seem to have begun their move south (we had no photo evidence of any north of PLO this week, though a few blues were reported), but fortunately, solid striper fishing is consoling the post-mackerel woes. Redfish may also be on their way out; we had only one reader report of one north of PLO this week, though that’s also probably a function of the high winds, crazy tides, and limited fishing days recently – so there’s likely still a shot at ‘em this weekend, though it probably won’t last much longer.

big red drum caught on chesapeake bay
Joshua Cooper sent in this snap after a very exciting fall afternoon on the Middle Bay.

Thomas Point and the Patuxent have been great areas for stripers this week, and are providing ranging sizes of rockfish. Although schoolies are still the bulk of the catch, larger fish are being caught under working birds and along the channel edges of the Patuxent. Angler in Chief Lenny Rudow reported that while battling high winds and tides, he found fish over shallow open-Bay structure in seven to 10 feet of water, ready to eat white-skirted chartreuse and white BKDs and plastics on three-quarter-ounce leadheads. Thomas Point, the mouth of the West, and areas in between produced relatively slow but steady action most of the time, better action some of the time, and mostly fish between 16 and 22 inches. He also noted that the charters are now live-lining in deeper water off Thomas Point, and multiple flocks of birds from the ships to the mouth of Eastern Bay were basically a waste of time with hordes of 12- and 14-inch fish under them.

We had reader reports come in of mostly undersized fish but also a few nice ones (down deeper) from the birds at the mouth of Eastern Bay and the mouth of the Choptank. The Tackle Box reported that some nicer 28- to 32-inch stripers are being caught by anglers trolling or casting lures into and around breaking fish near the mouth of the Pax. They also reported that the past weekend saw acres of breaking fish off of Hog Point, and Fishing Point. Goose Creek has also been a great area, and one angler there this weekend reported non-stop bites while using a red and white “Poppa Dog” surface lure. Rattletraps are working well in this area too.

White perch continue to hold throughout the tidal rivers, although they are slowly making their way from shorelines to deeper water. The upside to this has been the extension of fishing hours from sunrise and sunset into later in the day, meaning that anglers no longer need to get up before the sun rises.

Boating Alert: The super-high tides last week dislodged a lot of flotsam from the shorelines, including large logs and limbs. Cruise with care, and keep a sharp eye out.


Late Breaking Update, October 11, 2019 (see below for full report):

Angler in Chief Lenny Rudow reports extremely difficult conditions this morning, thanks to the continued strong, gusty winds. Shallow water leeward areas in the river held some active throwbacks but shallow areas exposed to the wind are currently churned up. There were large numbers of birds working north of Thomas Point and also near the Green 1, but all were schools of diaper-stripers. It took a lot of looking to get keepers for the fishbox but they were found in eight to 10 feet of water over structure in areas deep enough that they weren't churned and off-color. White plastics on one-ounce heads did the trick.

Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, October 10, 2019 Update:

With action a bit sparse north of the Bridge, the Middle Bay has been a hotspot for anglers throughout surrounding regions – when, that is, the winds allow, which hasn’t been all that much this week. Bluefish, Spanish mackerel, and schoolie stripers are all still throughout the region and providing ample action. Most notably, the Spanish mackerel have decided to stick around through the fall’s initial cold front, and though their numbers have thinned, are still providing great days on the Bay for anglers trolling the channel edges with small Clark spoons, Drones, and Hard Head Bombers behind a number-one planer. The mackerel and the blues can also be found under the working birds that are popping up frequently to feed on schools of baitfish throughout the region. Tossing a metal lure into the mix and reeling quickly gives you a pretty good shot at landing them. Late last week they were still as far up as Thomas Point, but in the past week all the mackerel action we heard of came from the south side of Poplar, and down.

holding up a spanish mackerel
Steve Sadler nabbed this 31-inch mack on the Julie Beth.

Stripers are also in the mix, though many have been undersized. There are also schools of very small stripers scattered around through the Middle Bay so if you reel in one 12-incher after another, move on and look for a different school. Fish have been spotted busting water around the ships, off Tolly Point, in the mouth of Eastern Bay, the mouth of the Choptank, and all along the Western side from Calvert Cliffs down. Anglers focused on getting stripers to the dinner plate have been gathering around Thomas Point, where the livelining bite is still doing well. Although it has slowed down a bit from last week (possibly due to the tough conditions more so than a lack of fish), Alltackle in Annapolis reported that good numbers of keepers are still coming from the area. Plenty of little guys are mixed in, but overall the stripers at the lighthouse and on the shoal have typically been of a higher grade than the little guys feeding on bait fish in open water. There are also some keeper fish showing up in the tribs, including the Severn, South, Eastern Bay, the Choptank, and the Patuxent, for anglers working the piers and rip-rap with topwater at first/last light, and jigs in between.

There are also some redfish reports coming in from the Gas Docks south, and from Point No Point, still hanging under schools of breaking fish. They’ve been found under the blues and macks but packs of small stripers are usually a blind alley. Again, there were fewer reports this week but that could be because of wind, not necessarily the departure of the fish.

In the tribs, white perch are highly active and easy to locate. They’ve been hanging out in most local creeks and around shorelines. Tossing a bottom rig with bloodworms near structure has been a consistent tactic for getting them out of the water. Catfish are present in these areas as well, and provide a bit more excitement. Monster cats are still showing up for anglers keeping clam snouts, chicken breasts, or cut menhaden on bottom.


Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, October 4, 2019 Update:

Fishing in the Middle Bay continues to be exciting, and while the Spanish mackerel bite has become a bit more spotty than in recent weeks – aw shucks, it’s become just a good bite instead of a spectacular one - some larger bluefish have begun showing up in the mix. One and two pounders with an occasional larger fish are being caught by trollers towing spoons for a mixed bag, and are slicing the tails off of many jigged plastics. When you pull back a halfie, switch to metal or Zmans. Schools of breakers were spotted near the ships, the mouth of Eastern Bay, the south side of Poplar, and scattered from Calvert Cliffs down to the mouth of the Pax in the past week. The front moving through is likely to send the mackerel southward, so even though we had one reader report of Spanish at the Bay Bridge this week, expect it to become tougher and tougher to find them without heading south.

spanish mackerel in middle chesapeake
Kevin Hagner and his brother Brian got into the mackerel near the Bay Bridge this past week - there's still a good shot at 'em, folks!

These same areas – throughout most of the Middle Bay zone, actually, are also riddled with small pods of small breaking stripers. Contributor Eric Packard reported finding pods of breaking fish from Solomons up to off the gas docks, and landing tons of schoolies using one and two-ounce jig heads with bucktails and paddle tails. There are here-and-there keepers but massive numbers of 12- to 16-inch fish are throughout the area and the best tactic is to move on quickly, when encountering one small fish after another in any one given school.

Thomas Point has remained a hotspot for live-liners, who are still finding spot easily accessible in most of the tributaries. That will probably change in the near future as temperatures drop out, so if you enjoy live-line fishing, get in your last licks while you still can.

Perch anglers are catching plenty of fish in tributary creeks on bloodworms and small spinnerbaits like Perch Pounders or Beetle Spins, though Angler’s Sport Center is reporting that the fish are beginning to shift deeper at this point, which argues for bait methods if you want to load a cooler for dinner.

An alert for light tackle anglers willing to get up at dawn or fish until dark: the shallow water topwater bite in Eastern Bay, the Choptank, and the Western Shore tribs is kicking into gear. Rip-rapped points and rocky breakwater is the best bet.

Crabbing report: There are still plenty of jimmies to be scooped in the Middle Bay tribs, though the proportion of females is rising.