Thursday, December 29, 2011

Finding Large Stripers and Trolling for Striped Bass

By Captain Ryan John Collins


As soon as I've made certain I have remembered to bring my fishing equipment and bait, it's time to splash the Miss Loretta (my boat) and begin trolling for striped bass.

Locating a productive spot to troll for striped bass with the tube and worm is among the most difficult and vitally important aspects of tube and worm trolling. The top gear, most effective tubes and juiciest sandworms won't catch even one striper if there are no striped bass in the region you are fishing. For that reason it is important to build a strategy for finding prosperous areas, before setting the lines and trolling for striped bass.

Complete publications are actually authored concerning how to find striped bass. There is no question that moon phases, tides, weather patterns etc. all possess some sort of influence on exactly where stripers go. The fact is that, where I go fishing in Cape Cod Bay, inspite of my best attempts, I have by no means been able to adequately predict where the bass will be based on any type of variable. Certain tides and weather conditions make it more likely that bass will show up in certain areas. However finding fish is often a "best guess" proposition.



Consider what occurred to me earlier this week as an example. As I write this article, it's the middle of the summer and we now have had a full week of continual east breezes. This past Saturday the breeze died to the point that it was dead calm. We went out on the water, found fish in 23 ft of water inside Cape Cod Bay, and remained with them while they swam right up to the beach front. We were able to have a excellent day trolling for striped bass, as we landed more than 25 big striped bass up to as much as 42 pounds.

Two days afterwards an identical weather pattern developed. An onshore breeze died down as night approached. The weather was literally identical to the terrific excursion we had earlier in the week. Moon phases and tides were spot on, and I had high desires for a repeat of the earlier fishing excursion. We found bass inside the very same spot in 19 ft of water right off a well-liked swimming beach. However the fish disappeared, and didn't venture in shallow. I searched all over for three hours-all the while not marking a thing.



My point is that often despite the finest plan, log book, and technology, I'm often completely "bam-boozled" when it comes to trolling for striped bass. The moment I think I have the bass figured out, they pitch me on a loop and bring me down again to Earth. However it is possible to at least improve your chances of finding the striped bass biomass.

Fortunately we can improve our odds of finding bass by using a reliable search strategy. Using a dependable, correctly mounted, colour sonar device is undoubtedly an absolute must for the search strategy that I typically utilize. Typically there won't be any surface signs (breaking stripers, diving birds etc.) leading me towards bass, therefore I was required to develop a technique making use of my electronics that helped me to find the stripers that I knew were out there, someplace, in Cape Cod Bay.

I also needed a plan that could let me cover vast expanses of the Bay rapidly, thus it is crucial that my fish-finder read well at speeds of more than twenty knots.

Keeping all of this in mind, it is very doable to formulate a technique that should regularly give you a fantastic likelihood at finding stripers. With a stable game plan, you might not always find the fish, but you will certainly place yourself in an excellent position for creating an enjoyable fishing trip.

Be sure to check out more in-depth search strategy techniques at the striped bass fishing blog-myfishingcapecod.com.




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