Tangier, Pocomoke, and Lower Shore Fishing Report, November 2020

Tangier, Pocomoke, and Lower Shore Fishing Report, November 27 Update:

Hi anglers, we hope you all enjoyed a fantastic Thanksgiving! Unfortunately, the bulk of the speckled trout appear to have moved out of the Sounds for the season, leaving the waters far quieter than they have been in months. While some straggler specks and reds are left, boats that have been targeting them are now sometimes coming up flat. If you’re reaaalllyy hoping for your final trout this year, sticking to a four-inch paddle tail and white is a great compromise between fishing for stripers and fishing for specks. You’ll still have the chance to entice a speck on your line if any are around, and stripers aren’t shy about hitting the paddle tails. White has been the hot color this November as well, upping your chances to get a fish in your cooler.

tangier sound fishing stripers
Adella caught this little striper while fishing for speckled trout in the Tangier.

A few anglers were able to locate stripers in deeper holes while they were hoping to land last-of-the-season trout, but many were undersized. Deeper waters have been holding the stripers, and it’s worth jigging the bottom on your long weekend if the chance arises. Another option: head up the tribs, where pickerel, perch, catfish, crappie, and bass will all still be willing to feed.


Tangier, Pocomoke, and Lower Shore Fishing Report, November 20 Update:

Quality. Fishing. Everywhere. Sea Hawk reports that the Sounds are totally packed with stripers. Trips this week resulted in multiple limits, with the opportunity to release fish and choose to keep a larger one. While most of the pack is schoolies in the 16- to 20-inch range, 21- to 23-inch fish were caught regularly enough to warrant being picky. We’re glad to hear that the striper fishing is so off the hook, because specks are becoming less common. Cold temps this week seem to have cleared some of ‘em out of the Sounds. There are still some around plus a redfish here and there but anglers who went searching for them often came up short compared to previous weeks, and switched to targeting stripers or white perch, which can now be found in deeper water. For those who are still interested in catching specks and reds before winter takes hold, they have for the most part moved into Virginia waters so heading south is a good move.

fishing for rock fish
While the weather is shifting in favor of fish that don't mind the chill, rods remain firmly bent throughout the zone.

If you’re hoping to bring home some perch, be sure to keep bloodworms or FishBites on board. Rig ‘em up on a bottom rig to get white perch on the end of your line, in big numbers. Some large schools have been forming over shell bottom in 20 to 30 feet of water and have given perch-lovers the opportunity to load the cooler.


Tangier, Pocomoke, and Lower Shore Fishing Report, November 13 Update:

Warm weather is benefiting anglers fishing the Sounds, big time. Sea Hawk Sports Center checked in to let us know that although the specks are beginning to thin out a bit, they’re still easy to locate throughout the Sounds. Casting four-to five-inch sparkly and bright paddle tails is getting them to bite. They’re close to shorelines still, hanging out in weeds and throughout coves. Anglers targeting them in these areas are finding that stripers aren’t biting as much. They’ve primarily moved into deeper holes, and specks can be picked up there too. Some reds are still in town, too, more so in the Pocomoke and points south than the Tangier. 

eastern shore fishing report
Seven-year-old Shane reeled up this 24-incher in the Honga. Woohoo!

We didn’t hear about as much open-water bird action this week, and the bite has shifted to a stronger jigging economy when it comes to finding bigger fish via the meter. The stripers hitting decks right now are a healthy mix of keepers and throwbacks with a good number of fish in the low- to mid-20s. 


Tangier, Pocomoke, and Lower Shore Fishing Report, November 6 Update:

The sounds and lower shore are still producing speckled trout even after the unsettled weather, and the recent warming trend may well buy us a bit more time to chase after ‘em. Although the bite wasn’t quite as good as last week and there are more undersized rock than there are trout around in total, white, pearl, and chartreuse four-inch plastics on half-ounce jigheads continue to fool plenty of sea trout off points and near drop-offs to three or four feet of water or more. A few very scattered puppy drum continue to be caught as well, but most of the pups seem to have started heading south for the season. We also had a reader report of rockfish breaking water under birds in the open water, but most of the fish were “dinks of 16 inches or less.”

speckled trout in the sounds
You may have had to bundle up a bit earlier this week, but hopefully the incoming warm blast will keep the specks biting for a while longer.