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I’m vacationing in August. What can I expect to catch? August is the month when the water is the warmest. In fact, sometimes the water in the bay gets so hot that some fishing can slow down. Every year is different and the wind can make a big difference in water temperatures as well. If we have a lot of breezes from the west the water temperatures stay cooler. If we have easterly breezes, the Gulf Stream comes in closer and the water becomes warmer.
Water temperatures are also warmer on an outgoing tide than on an incoming tide, so in August, it is important to try to catch the incoming water. It is also generally cleaner. This is VERY important if you want to fish the Inlet or just outside the inlet which can be a good place to fish this time of year.
Anglers in boats targeting flounder find that areas that were good in the spring such as Route 90 Bridge and the “flats” north of the Thorofare slow down in the heat of August. Boat anglers do better finding the deepest water where the water temperatures are cooler. The main east channel running from 28th Street to the concrete wall offshore of 1st Street always produces flounder catches in August. The drift in the main east channel from the draw of the Rt. 50 Bridge to the Inlet, and drifting the inlet itself is also good. (Slacking tides are easiest to fish as the current rushes hard close to the Bridge and Inlet.) If you have a larger boat, anglers do well drifting south of the South Jetty on nice days. (This is a good place to try when the tide is low and nothing is happening in the bay.)
If you have a larger boat and can go to any of the offshore Artificial Reef sites you will also find flounder in August. If the bay waters get too warm, flounder will move out into the ocean to find cooler water. The same baits work offshore as they do in the bay. Shiner and squid combinations or live minnow and squid combinations are the old tried and true baits for flounder. BUT, you will also find that bigger baits in deeper water will also catch some BIG ones. Smelts look like a huge shiner and are great flounder baits to try in deep water. Live alewives (peanut bunker) are readily available for anyone that can toss a cast net into a canal or marina basin first thing in the morning. Live spot are easily caught with little hooks and pieces of bloodworm or Fish Bite Bloodworm Alternative. Small live spot can be fished live and larger spot can be filleted and cut into strips. I find that out in the ocean, any kind of fresh fish scaled and cut into nice long strips catch flounder. Bunker, spot, mullet, bluefish, lizardfish, flounder belly, trout belly, etc…. all work well. Just remember that if you use a legal fish that has a size and creel limit, you are supposed to keep the carcass.
“What about striper fishing?”
Stripers are a cooler water fish and can slow down in the month of August. They ARE there, but you are more likely to catch them at daybreak, dusk, or after dark. Middle of the day fishing can be slow on stripers. Boat traffic is also a big issue with Inlet fishing in the heat of the day. Stripers will “sound” and not feed when too much is going on. Casting live sand fleas towards the rocks at the South Jetty or casting the same from the North Jetty can catch other types of fish in August. Warm water fish such as triggerfish and sheepshead can be a pleasant surprise. Tautog fishing is usually slower in August as the larger ones seem to head out to wreck areas. If you are entertaining the kids (or yourself) and don’t care about “keepers” small ones are usually hanging around the rocks all summer along with lots of throwback sea bass.
On some days, one can take the boat to the South side of the south jetty and fish for kingfish (whiting), spot, croaker, spike trout and blowfish using a combination bait of bloodworm or Fishbites Bag O’ Worms Bloodworm Alternative on top and bottom rigs with size #6 or #4 hooks. A light easterly breeze usually gives you clean water in this area. If the water is all brown and ugly looking, don’t bother to fish it! You can also do this at the Artificial Reef just offshore of 28th Street.
Croaker! In August croaker fishing can be unpredictable. Usually in the beginning of the month they are still in the bay. The Thorofare, the main East Channel, Buoy #5, just around the corner of the bay going back towards Assateague, and the Inlet area can see schools of croaker. Then poof! One day they are gone and you can only find them in the ocean! The Reef offshore of 28th Street, Little Gull Shoal, Big Gull Shoal, and areas just offshore of Assateague can see croaker catches into November sometimes. They love squid or a combination bait of squid and bloodworm or Fishbites artificial bloodworms on a top and bottom rig with size #4 hooks. When they are they just offshore, the half-day party boats will target them. It’s quite active and croakers really pull hard on the end of the line, making them a fun fish for the kids!
Surf fishing! The biggest mistake people make when surf fishing in August is to surf fish like they did in May or October. The heat of August gives us mostly pan fish (unless you are targeting sharks and big rays.) Kingfish (whiting), Norfolk spot, small snapper blues, spike sea trout, short stripers, croakers, blowfish, sand perch and an occasional pompano are the fare. Most of these fish are in close at high tide and bite small hooks baited with little strips of squid, spot, bunker, or mullet tipped with a short strip of Fishbites Bloodworm or a piece of real bloodworm.
A pre-made kingfish rig works best. Cast out, and then reel in slow along the bottom. The earlier in the morning you can get out there the better. Dusk and after dark will also give you some fish. Fishing in the middle of a hot sunny day is sometimes unproductive. You will also find that a light east wind is great for surf fishing but that a west wind makes it slower and brings out the biting flies.
Pier and Jetty fishing? Go at night and fish with lures for trout, blues, and stripers. Swimming shad lures, Zoom soft bodies on lead heads, spec rigs, and Gotcha Plugs all work at night on an incoming tide. Sometimes the croaker bite at night as well. They will hit lures but also strips of squid. You can also toss out live eels or live spot at night for the stripers when the tide is slacking.
Taking the kids fishing and crabbing?
August is the month to take the kids fishing because almost anywhere you go you can catch some small fish like spot, little sea bass, sand perch, or snapper bluefish. The pier behind the Recreational Center at 127th Street, the park off Route 90 at the Isle of Wight, the pier behind the Convention Hall at 41st Street, 9th Street Pier, the bulkhead along 2nd through 4th Streets, and the Oceanic Pier all have these little fish around. Bloodworms or little strips of Fishbites Bloodworm will catch spot anywhere in the upper reaches of the bay or in the lagoons and canals around Ocean City. If in doubt, use size no. 6 or no. 8 hooks tipped with worm and it will make a little rod tip shake!
Good fishing….
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