SURF FISHING TIPS ~ (Ocean City, Maryland and Delaware Beaches and Assateague Island)
- --A light easterly breeze brings fish to the surf
- --If the surf is too rough to fish, cast fishing lures at the inlet,
or take your surf fishing gear to the Ocean Pier.
- -- Fish bite good right before a storm, weather change, or front!
(falling barometer)
- --To catch more fish always keep your fishing bait moving slightly across
the bottom so you can cover more territory and make your bait
look more life-like.
- --If you use squid for fishing bait, always cut it into an attractive tapered
strip and hook it only once so it dangles off the hook.
- --If you want to catch stripers, fish early in the morning,
dusk, or after dark. Use bloodworms or artificial lures such as
Atom's Plugs, Rattletraps, MirrOlures, Windcheaters or Swimming Shad Lures.
- --Some of your best surf fishing is early in the morning and
right before dark.
- --A hurricane type sinker holds better per ounce than the traditional
pyramid type. If it is extremely rough try a sputnik type surf
sinker.
- --The lighter the line, the further you can cast, and the less
sinker weight it takes to hold! (Most people surf fish 12 to 20
pound test line. Never go over 20# in the surf. If you throw fishing lures,
do not use over 16# test.) --Keep your fishing bait in a bucket or cooler,
or the sea gulls will steal it!
- --If you want to use a whole finger mullet, buy a "mullet
hook" rig so you can thread the whole finger mullet on the
hook.
- --Fish one rod out far with a whole finger mullet for blues
or stripers, then fish a shorter rod in close with strips of mullet
or pieces of bloodworm for kingfish, spot, and trout.
- --If you use bloodworms, keep your hook size down to a size
#6 or #8. (Unless you are after keeper sized stripers.)
- --If the crabs continuously steal your bait, go to a single,
surf- floater rig. This puts your bait further off the bottom
away from the crabs.
- --If there is an outer bar where you are fishing, fish the inside
slough at high tide. At low tide, walk out to the bar and cast
off.
- --Cast the deep side of jetties for good results.
- --Look for a point of land jutting out on the beach, then fish
either side of it.
- --It is possible to "over-cast" the fish, especially
at high tide and towards dusk.
- --Always use a sand spike, so your reel does not fall in the
sand when baiting up or taking a fish off the hook
- --Never wash your reel in the ocean! Wash it with fresh water
when you get home.
- --If you get a big fish on, use your drag, and let the wave
action help you bring the fish to the beach. Many fish are lost
right in the wash as the excited angler cranks too hard when the
wave is retreating.
- --Do not fish in a lightning storm with a graphite fishing rod!
(It ain't worth it!)
- --Assateague Island (off Rt. 611) and 3 R's Road- (Part of the Delaware State Park- just south of Indian River Inlet Bridge) have quick drop-offs. If it is a rough day, it's easier to hold bottom in these two places.
OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND, BAY FISHING TIPS
- --For flounder, hook live minnows through the lips, or shiners
through the eyes. Add a thin strip of tapered squid beside either
one of these baits for extra added attraction.
- --If you fish two hours before and two hours after high tide,
you'll usually catch some fish!
- --Flounder are bottom feeders. Always use enough weight to stay
on the bottom. If you are casting and retrieving, always retrieve
with your rod tip down, so your hooks will stay closer to the
bottom.
- --If you are in a boat, you can troll against the tide to slow
down your drift.
- --Flounder are sight feeders. If they can't see the bait, you
won't catch flounder. Use chartreuse or silver spinner blades
and white or chartreuse bucktailed hooks along with your bait
to help you catch more flounder.
- --If you fish at night on the piers or Rt. 50 Bridge, take some
lures. Spec rigs, Redfish rigs, bucktails with plastic worms,
MirrOlures, Got-cha plugs, Swimming Shad Lures, Windcheaters, or Rattletraps will never
steer you wrong for trout, blues, and stripers.
- --If you just want the kids to catch anything, set them up with
size #6 hooks on a top and bottom rig with a sinker and bait up
with bloodworms and little strips of squid.
- --If you want to catch legal-sized stripers, fish the Route
50 Bridge at night with bucktails and 6-inch white plastic worms,
use a 2-ounce lead head with an 8-inch white curl tail grub, use
8-inch Sassy Shads, two-ounce Got-cha Plugs, 5 or 6-inch Swimming Shad lures or live eels.
- --Invest in a bridge net if you plan to fish the bridge often.
- --If you tautog fish in the spring and fall, use sections of green crabs or sand fleas (mole crabs) on size #2/0 Octopus hook. Fish the Ocean City or Indian River Inlet, near the draw of the Route 50 Bridge, or along the bulkhead at 2nd, 3rd, and 4th Streets. The end of 6th Street is also good.
- --Use a pair of kitchen shears to cut the green crabs in half. Pull off their outer shell, cut off their legs, and insert the hook into the leg socket.
- --When tautog fishing, use a flat sinker so you do not get hung up in the rocks. Make your leader out of 40-pound test mono so you don't lose the fish to rock abrasion. Use a rubber band to hold on your sinker. That way, if you get a nice tautog on, but your sinker gets hung up in a rock, you can break the rubberband and get the fish!
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