Posts Tagged ‘big fish’

Choosing the Best Fishing Spot for Stripers

Stripers

Striped bass are a prized fish for anglers. Where can an angler find a fishing spot for this prime species? An angler needs to understand the behaviors of striped bass in order to establish a fishing spot. In doing so, an angler can work with the natural rhythms of strippers and thereby increase their fishing proficiency.

Striped bass, otherwise known as stripers, inhabit waters that run all along the East coast. An angler will benefit in knowing that stripers spend the majority of their lives in salt water and migrate to freshwater to spawn. Likewise, in the summer months, stripers have a tendency to move north and then, in turn, to migrate south in the fall. Finally, an angler should remember that the best time to catch a striper is to establishing a fishing spot during spawning season, in areas that provide fresh, clear water.

Spawning season for stripers usually occurs when the water is warm enough to permit it in the months between April and June. An angler should be aware that striped bass begin spawning when the water reaches approximately fifty degrees. Also, when not hunting the shorelines of freshwater, they will linger and move in water that is roughly forty to twenty feet deep. Thus, an angler can establish a prime fishing spot along the shores of river openings, bays, near shore waters, reefs, beaches, and estuaries in both deep and shallow waters.

Stripers primarily move in schools, with occasional solitary striper remaining in deeper waters. An angler should be aware that in catching one striper, another is not at all far behind. Also, watching scavenger birds circling in the sky will give a good indication as to where the stripers are feeding. Finally, stripers can be caught from May to December.

Stripers feed on alewives, clams, crab, eels, flounder, lobster, menhaden, mussels, herring, silversides, smelt and squid. Thus, when establishing a fishing spot, an angler may want to find areas that house such creatures naturally or bring along items like herring and squid for bait. Also, an angler will benefit in knowing that stripers feed primarily in the evening and early hours of the morning and that the best time to fish for them is during the hours of dusk through dawn.

An angler might want to consider establishing a fishing site along the shoreline, in a relatively safe area for evening fishing as stripers behavior leans toward nocturnal tendencies, especially in the middle of summer. Conversely, stripers will feed throughout the day and establishing a fishing spot during anytime can prove successful for an angler.

Finally, when establishing a fishing spot, an angler might want to keep in mind that stripers tend to stick close to shorelines where easy feeding is possible. Further, stripers like moving currents and will move in and out with the tide. Thus, the best time for an angler to establish a fishing spot is two hours prior and two hours after high tide.

September 13th, 2009 by admin

Choosing the Best Fishing Spot for Kingfish

Kingfish

The Kingfish seems elusive to an angler that doesn’t know where to look. In searching for a good fishing spot, it is imperative that an angler understands the feeding habits, migratory behaviors, and environmental preferences of the Kingfish. In learning about the common behaviors of Kingfish, an angler is immediately gifted with the ability to find an excellent fishing spot!

Kingfish are referred to by numerous names including: barb, king whitings, mackerel, mink fish, roundhead, sea mink, and sea mullet. An angler can find a fishing spot along the eastern coast spanning from Maine to Florida and in certain areas of the Gulf of Mexico. Also, an angler can find a fishing spot during the Kingfish’s spawning season in bays and estuaries along the eastern coastline.

An angler should be aware of the Kingfish’s diet, thereby increasing their chance of catching them. Kingfish feed on crabs, crustaceans, mollusks and shrimp. Additionally, an angler will find that Kingfish prefer worms, and other fish. Equally, an angler can use small pieces of clams and squid, in addition to lures to hook Kingfish.

An angler should know that Kingfish are migratory and they head north during spring and south during the fall. An angler should remember that Kingfish prefer warm water and rarely appear in water that is less than 70 degrees. Such information will prove invaluable to the angler looking for a fishing spot, as they can follow the migratory pattern of the Kingfish.

An angler looking for a fishing spot for Kingfish should find one that includes areas that are close to the shoreline, especially if fishing in July and August. What’s more, an angler can locate a good fishing spot in approximately fifteen feet of water in many east coast bays and estuaries during the spawning season: Kingfish spawn during the months of April through August.

An angler can also benefit from knowing that scavenger birds tend to follow Kingfish around. Such information can help an angler determine where the best fishing spot can be found. Scavenger birds fly around and wait for Kingfish to kill their prey and then scoop up any remains that may be left behind. Thus, an angler can benefit from looking to the skies when they are in the search for a good fishing spot.

Kingfish are extremely skittish, thus an angler with find a good fishing spot along the edge of the area where their schools are gathering. A good fishing spot to find Kingfish schools can be found in costal waters that are relatively shallow; especially if the waters possess a hard bottom floor. Further, the best time for an angler to fish for Kingfish are during the months of April to August while Kingfish are spawning or during the months of April to October when they haphazardly appear all along the eastern coastline. Thus, when looking for a good fishing spot for Kingfish, an angler would be wise to stick close to the coastal shores.

March 21st, 2009 by admin