Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, April 11 Update:
Colder temperatures returned this week and brought us back to the reality of early springtime weather. The Angler in Chief reports that white perch have packed into the Middle Bay salt ponds where they run, and a short morning trip to Triton Beach produced steady action with about two dozen caught in a couple hours of fishing. Grass shrimp on a shad dart suspended two feet under a bobber drew all the bites, and he says that while the numbers were good, most of the fish were on the small side, with eight fish big enough to head for the frying pan but most in the six- to seven-inch range. He also says he saw at least three snakeheads rolling on the surface but couldn’t get any to hit despite throwing a Super Rooster for a while. FishTalk Production Manager Zach Ditmars went way up the Severn last weekend and said the pickerel were slow to bite and beaten up (as is often the case around spawning season) but a handful were willing to bite. The chain pickerel season for tidal waters is currently catch and release only. Anglers will be able to harvest them again starting May 1st with a minimum size of 14 inches and a creel limit of 10 per day.

The blue catfish are starting to show up in the northern areas of the Middle Bay, and we had a report from an angler fishing from shore at night in the Deale area who caught one blue catfish, a white catfish, and two accidental stripers while fishing with fresh gizzard shad. We also have reports from the local netters that a few blue cats are turning up in their nets. There have been good reports from just north of the Bay Bridge with a lot of fish roaming around Sandy Point in five to 15 feet of water. Based on the pattern from recent years, these fish will likely continue to make their way south and offer fun angling opportunities during the striper closure. Two readers checked in after fishing Mason Springs last weekend and enjoyed excellent action on shad. Each caught several dozen while casting dart/spoon tandems and one mentioned lime green was the color of the day. Contributor Eric Packard hit it after the rainfall this week and reported high water that was a bit muddy, but he said the fish were still biting, and he caught around 30.
Middle Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report, April 4 Update:
The end of spring striped bass catch and release brought mixed results for many anglers, with readers reporting a sporadic bite in several Middle Bay areas ranging from the Bay Bridge to the Chesapeake Beach and Eastern Bay providing a highlight. Last weekend and Monday most boats reported zero to two fish, but some did reel up multiple trophy fish of 40” and larger. FishTalk contributor David Rudow and Reports Editor Dillon Waters made it out last week and joined the fleet in Eastern Bay to get in on the last few days of catch and release action. Huge schools of bunker were scattered around from 30’ to 70’ of water with about half of them with stripers in chase. The abundance of bait in the area made for a very technical bite that required precise casts to get bites. Over the course of the day they landed around a dozen fish with between 22” and 42”. Most fish were in the mid 20’s. With the striped bass closure in place, anglers fishing Maryland waters of the Chesapeake Bay will not be allowed to target striped bass until May 16th. You can view the Maryland DNR striped bass regulation maps to see when and where anglers can target striped bass throughout the year.

Many readers, the Angler in Chief, and FishTalk’s Zach Ditmars all reported good shad action at Mason Springs, with fish hitting small spoons and darts but spoons producing more bites. Chartreuse was the hottest color and anglers fishing early in the day reported a much better bite than those fishing late. We also heard from an angler who had good success on them while casting crappie-sized plastics on jigheads. Some small yellow perch were mixed into the catch, and one reader reported a river herring as well. The good action should continue as more fish migrate north for their spawning run. Warmer temperatures should be bringing fish up the Patuxent soon if not already. The white perch on the Pax have pushed upriver and are being caught north of Waysons Corner and in the smaller creeks downriver. One angler fishing Western Branch said that there were schools of perch all the way up near the warm water discharge. Bloodworms have been working best, but they cost a pretty penny. Grass shrimp, minnows, and night crawlers are all great bait choices that also work for perch and are significantly cheaper.