|Home|Tips|Email News|Locations|Report|Reefs|Hot Specials|Products|Hot T's|Order Form|Kids|Drifting Easy|

Oyster Bay Tackle, Ocean City, MD - Fenwick Tackle, Fenwick Island, DE

Oyster Bay Fishing Tips
Fenwick Tackle Fishing Locations
Oyster Bay Tackle Fishing Report
Oyster Bay Tackle Fishing Reels
Oyster Bay Tackle Fishing Rods
Oyster Bay Tackle Rod and Reel Set-Ups
Oyster Bay Tackle Australian Gold Suntan Products
Oyster Bay Tackle MD Coastal Bays (Ocean City) Size Limits
Fenwick Tackle Hot Specials
Fenwick Tackle Online Shopping
Oyster Bay Tackle In-Store Products
Oyster Bay Got-cha Plugs
Oyster Bay Hot T's
Oyster Bay Tire Deflators
Fenwick Tackle Mail/Fax-Back Order
Fenwick Tackle Drifting Easy
Fenwick Tackle Drifting Easy Archive
Fenwick Tackle Ocean City Weather
Fenwick Tackle Live Web Cam
Fenwick Tackle email Newsletter
Oyster Bay Tackle Fish Talk
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Photo Gallery
Oyster Bay Feedback
OysterBay Bait & Tackle 2008 Tide Chart(pdf)
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Coastal Fisherman
OysterBay Bait & Tackle O.C. Reef Foundation
OysterBay Bait & Tackle MD DNR
OysterBay Bait & Tackle DE DNR
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Fishing For Kids-OC
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Buoy Report
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Coastal Marine Forecast
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Offshore Sea Temp
OysterBay Bait & Tackle A Day Aboard
The Morning Star
OysterBay Bait & Tackle Charter Boats
Become
a professional the easy way!
Become a professional the easy way!
Join RFA
Protect Our Right To Fish!

Drifting Easy fishing article by Sue Foster - Oyster Bay Tackle, Ocean City Maryland- Fenwick Tackle, Fenwick Island, Delaware
By Sue Foster
Oyster Bay Tackle - Ocean City, Maryland

Fenwick Tackle, Fenwick Island, Delaware

Sale!
Oyster Bay Tackle-Ocean City, Maryland- Fenwick Tackle Fenwick Island, DelawareDrifting Easy is a weekly updated fishing article written by Sue Foster, Proprietor of Oyster Bay Tackle and Fenwick Bait & Tackle.

Please enjoy reading the article below and check back in a week or so for more insightful tips, recommendations, and much, much more in the next article.  Thanks for visiting and Drift Easy!

Please visit my new Drifting Easy Archive!

 

Drifting Easy

“I want to catch a big flounder!”

It’s that time of year where there’s hundreds of little flounder that are 
“just short” and a few big “flatties” out there just waiting to hop on your 
hook. Sometimes an angler catches a big flounder because he was lucky or 
just in the right place at the right time. But if you specifically fish for 
the big ones, you are likely to catch some trophy fish.

The only problem with targeting “big” flounder is that you are not as likely 
to catch as MANY fish. You may miss out on some of those tasty “just legal” 
15 and a half-inch fish. Those small 10 to 14 inch fish tend to steer away 
from those larger live baits. So if you are entertaining kids or want to 
keep your wife from getting bored, fishing for big ones might not be for 
you.  You will also be eliminating “incidental catches” such as sea bass, 
spot, and croaker when you target the big ones.

“What kind of bait should I use?”

Big bait, big fish!  This is the first secret. It is the simple, elementary 
truth!  Anglers using a larger bait are much more likely to catch a 3 to 9 
pound flounder. The typical, everyday flounder bait is a live minnow with a 
strip of squid on the same hook or a frozen shiner with a strip of squid on 
the same hook.

To target big fish this time of year is easy because there are so many 
natural baits swimming around in the bay that you can catch. The first and 
foremost popular bait this time of year is live spot. Kids can catch them in 
any of the canals or marina basins with tiny hooks and little pieces of 
bloodworm or Fishbite Bloodworm Alternative.  You can also catch them around 
the Route 90 Bridge in around 4 foot of water. Stay away from the 8-foot 
hole, as the spot are too big there!

The best size spot to use for flounder bait is a spot around 3-inches. 
Larger spot are good for stripers but for flounder the slightly smaller ones 
are better. It’s hard to buy little ones so it is best if you catch them 
yourself.  When we go out in our boat, we go a couple hours before the good 
flounder tide and fish for spot up by the Rt. 90 Bridge or hang out in the 
marina and fish for spot. Tip: Smaller pieces of worm or Fishbites on the 
smallest hooks will catch you the smaller spot.

Keep the spot alive in a 5-gallon bucket with a battery operated aerator or 
put them in a live well. If you have them in a bucket you usually have to 
change the water in them a couple times as they will poop right away and 
make the water dirty! (That’s a nice way of putting it….)

THE RIG… The typical flounder rig of a top and bottom rig is out. Skip any 
beads or spinner blades and use a plain hook.  Make a single leadered rig 
out of a 30-inch piece of leader material or buy long leadered hooks already 
snelled.  I like to set up the hook with either a fish finder rig or an egg 
sinker.  With your sinker “free” on the line the spot wiggling around will 
not tangle up your line.

Every one seems to have a certain way they like to hook their spot. I like 
to insert the hook in its mouth and go up through the hard part of the roof 
of its mouth. (through the snout!) It seems to stay put and the spot does 
not accidentally fall off the hook. Some people hook them through the back. 
This is OK when the tide is slack (or almost slack) but when the tide is 
running it is best to hook the spot through the mouth, lips, or eyes.

(When you hook a spot through the back, and then try to check your bait, 
pulling it sideways through a running current can kill it after 2 or 3 bait 
checks.)

LET ‘EM EAT IT!

A live spot is much bigger than a live minnow. A flounder actually turns a 
bait around and swallows it “head first.”  You have to give the flounder a 
chance to turn it around and get it in its mouth. (About 10 seconds 
counting.)  If you jerk on the end of the line too soon, you’ll just pull it 
away from the flounder.  Remember, if the fish wants it, the fish will take 
it. Be patient. If the tide is running, give the fish a little line.  When 
you are ready to set the hook, pull your rod tip UP without cranking. When 
you feel the weight of the fish, THEN set the hook and start cranking right 
away. Never let any slack get in your line once you have the fish hooked. 
(A big mistake a beginner does is pull up on the rod to set the hook and 
then let the rod tip fall without cranking in the line. Slack gets in the 
line and the hook can come out because there is suddenly no tension on it.)

BIG BAIT, BIGGER HOOK!

Have you ever seriously looked at the size of a 4 pound flounder’s mouth? 
It’s big!  If you are using a larger live bait use a slightly larger hook. 
Anglers use a typical #1 or #1/0 when fishing with live minnows. Go up to a 
size #2/0 to #4/0.  If you tie your own hooks pick up a “laser sharp” hook. 
The sharper the hook the easier it is to hook a fish. An Octopus or Kayle 
style hook is what you want to use.

DEEP WATER!

Bigger flounder tend to hang out in the deepest holes. You may catch one in 
shallow water but I would bet that shallow water was real close to a deep 
hole. The deep hole next to the island in the Thorofare is a popular “big 
flounder” hole. The main east channel just north of the Rt. 50 Bridge is 
another “hot spot” for big flounder.  When the tide slacks up boaters get as 
close to the draw of the bridge as they can without blocking the boat 
traffic (a nice way of putting it….) and toss in their live spot. When the 
tide just starts going out, the flounder can “stack up” in here.

Another “hot spot” for big fluke is the whole east channel from 6th Street 
to 1st street close to the bulkhead. It is very snaggy in here and can be a 
little frustrating, but some really nice fish are caught in these waters. 
Closer to the bulkhead keeps your boat from moving too fast as well. What I 
do is use those inexpensive fish finder rigs so if my sinker gets hung up, 
the little plastic part breaks and I only lose my sinker and break the fish 
finder rig.  It also gets you quickly out of the snag so you can get your 
boat out of harm’s way.

The Inlet is also a good place to fish for big flounder. Drifting closer to 
the sea wall slows your drift a bit. The drift from the Route 50 Bridge 
towards the Coast Guard Station during a slowing tide can also be EXTREMELY 
good.

“What else can I use for bait?”

Little “peanut bunkers” or “finger mullet” you can catch with your cast net. 
You can fillet and scale a larger spot and put a big strip of meat on your 
hook. Frozen smelts, that look just like a big shiner are also excellent 
“big flounder” bait.  Offshore on the artificial wreck sites, a strip of 
fresh bluefish, or sea robin is also good. A whole small squid will also 
work wonders.

Big bait, deep water, patience, and a big hook on a single leadered hook 
will hopefully catch you that trophy flounder that will put your mug in the 
Coastal Fisherman!

Good fishing….




Need rigs and sinkers? Visit our  Online Mall!

Fill your Tackle Box - Shop on Line
Fill your Tackle Box Shop on Line
Subscribe to free Oyster Bay Fishing News by Sue Foster at: http://www.oysterbaytackle.com/listserv.asp
side_blu.gif (165 bytes)
 

Shop Online!
Products - Hot Specials! - Hot-Ts!


Your comments, suggestions, questions are welcome, simply Email Sue Foster

|Home|Tips|Newsletter|Locations|Fishing Report|Reefs|Shopping|Store Products|Hot T's|Order Form
|MAKO!|Kids|Drifting Easy|Size Limits | Hot Specials |


Thank you for visiting us on the WWW
You can also personally visit us at these locations.

Oyster Bay Tackle Shop
FENWICK TACKLE
OYSTER BAY TACKLE SHOP
Ocean City, Maryland
116th Street, bayside
In the Oyster Bay Shoppes,
Phone: 410-524-3433
Fax: 410-213-7642
FENWICK TACKLE
Rt. 1 & Maryland Ave. Ocean side
(Just over the MD/DE Line)
In Fenwick Island, DE 19944
(NO SALES TAX) 302/539-7766


 Assateague Mobile Sportfishermen's Association Return to Fishing Page At The Beach Guides to Lodging, Dining and Entertainment
Guides
Return to Ocean City Maryland
Maryland
Return to Coastal Delaware
Delaware
At The Beach, Ocean City MD

back to the beach! Internet Production, Hosting & Design by:
Copyright © 1995-2008 " At The Beach Enterprises, Inc." All Rights Reserved
Ocean City, Maryland