"Pod Casting", Downeast Style...

Roccus7

Moderator
Staff member
With the exception of listening to, and participating in George's excellent podcasts, I have little interest in listening to self-proclaimed "experts" ranting over the internet on topics of marginal to zero importance. However come late June, I love to Pod Cast, that is casting to pods of breaking bass chasing the little "Brits" in the harbor. It makes me feel patriotic especially on July 4, :p :p:p.

Well this morning was the first day of this summer ritual, as the pods showed up in the harbor. Managed to get a dozen fish to 25". The omen's were favorable in that this morning was the first one in over a week with zero wind and no fog. I sashayed down to the dock in the pre-dawn twilight and took my ritual three casts to see if there were any fish by the dock with no results. I then flipped on the GPS/Fish Finder and fired up the engine. As I turned aft to free the stern line I realized that the engine spook a bunch of fish 25 yds behind the boat. With the engine still running I flung a cast there and had a fish swirl at the popper. I took another cast and caught a 21" fish with the engine still running!! "OK time to get serious here!" so I turned off the engine and GPS/FF and took another dozen or so fruitless casts. I fired everything back up and got underway.

On the way down to the intended target, the scene of yesterday's successful trip, I made a few stops at likely places with only one moderately interested swirl to show for it. When I got to "the spot" I was greeted by inevitable bane of consecutive days of high winds, a smaller version of the Sargasso Sea, tons of seaweed floating about, making it unfishable. I figured I could check out some other areas when I noticed terns working over a spot I had been considering and managed a few fish, but nothing exciting.

However it was the PERFECT tide to hit one of my favorite spots so I ran upriver to it and anchored up. Well there wasn't ANYTHING there and after hitting it hard for 20 min I decided to go back down into the harbor. On the way down I drifted past another favorite spot and caught a nice, fat 25" fish. After that I noticed multiple small pods of bass busting the surface feeding on brit herring and the game was on, positioning the boat uptide from where I guessed the pods would be as I drifted down.

My "Stripey Sense" was good this AM, in that I was pretty consistent in boat positioning without spooking the fish. The only "non-standard" issue was lure choice. I've learned that when the bass are feasting on tiny herring my standard Creek Chub Striper Striper 2500 isn't always the best choice, so I switched over a Sebile Magic Swimmer and cranked like hell. The bass were much more receptive to that. The disadvantages of that lure are 2-fold, they are expensive and the hooks are tiny, freshwater wire ones so you have to fish with a very light drag, and even with that, I have to keep bending the hooks back into shape and/or replacing them. Sadly I've yet to find a replacement hook of better strength that doesn't negatively impact the lure's action, but this is a happy problem...

When it got close to quitting time I kept saying "Last Cast!" only to have a pod pop up within easy casting distance of the boat. This went on for so long I HAD to leave lest I lose the minimum amount of water to get my boat docked, so I left them biting, the bane of any fisherman. I wasn't too sad about quitting in that I'd been out for 2.5 hrs, a very long time for a Roccus fishing sortie, and caught a dozen nice, fat and fiesty fish. Still no Keepahs, but that will happen soon as I'm closing in on 300 fish for the season, the magic number that usually triggers a keeper.

This is how we Pod Cast along Maine's Midcoast!!
 
With the exception of listening to, and participating in George's excellent podcasts, I have little interest in listening to self-proclaimed "experts" ranting over the internet on topics of marginal to zero importance. However come late June, I love to Pod Cast, that is casting to pods of breaking bass chasing the little "Brits" in the harbor. It makes me feel patriotic especially on July 4, :p :p:p.

Well this morning was the first day of this summer ritual, as the pods showed up in the harbor. Managed to get a dozen fish to 25". The omen's were favorable in that this morning was the first one in over a week with zero wind and no fog. I sashayed down to the dock in the pre-dawn twilight and took my ritual three casts to see if there were any fish by the dock with no results. I then flipped on the GPS/Fish Finder and fired up the engine. As I turned aft to free the stern line I realized that the engine spook a bunch of fish 25 yds behind the boat. With the engine still running I flung a cast there and had a fish swirl at the popper. I took another cast and caught a 21" fish with the engine still running!! "OK time to get serious here!" so I turned off the engine and GPS/FF and took another dozen or so fruitless casts. I fired everything back up and got underway.

On the way down to the intended target, the scene of yesterday's successful trip, I made a few stops at likely places with only one moderately interested swirl to show for it. When I got to "the spot" I was greeted by inevitable bane of consecutive days of high winds, a smaller version of the Sargasso Sea, tons of seaweed floating about, making it unfishable. I figured I could check out some other areas when I noticed terns working over a spot I had been considering and managed a few fish, but nothing exciting.

However it was the PERFECT tide to hit one of my favorite spots so I ran upriver to it and anchored up. Well there wasn't ANYTHING there and after hitting it hard for 20 min I decided to go back down into the harbor. On the way down I drifted past another favorite spot and caught a nice, fat 25" fish. After that I noticed multiple small pods of bass busting the surface feeding on brit herring and the game was on, positioning the boat uptide from where I guessed the pods would be as I drifted down.

My "Stripey Sense" was good this AM, in that I was pretty consistent in boat positioning without spooking the fish. The only "non-standard" issue was lure choice. I've learned that when the bass are feasting on tiny herring my standard Creek Chub Striper Striper 2500 isn't always the best choice, so I switched over a Sebile Magic Swimmer and cranked like hell. The bass were much more receptive to that. The disadvantages of that lure are 2-fold, they are expensive and the hooks are tiny, freshwater wire ones so you have to fish with a very light drag, and even with that, I have to keep bending the hooks back into shape and/or replacing them. Sadly I've yet to find a replacement hook of better strength that doesn't negatively impact the lure's action, but this is a happy problem...

When it got close to quitting time I kept saying "Last Cast!" only to have a pod pop up within easy casting distance of the boat. This went on for so long I HAD to leave lest I lose the minimum amount of water to get my boat docked, so I left them biting, the bane of any fisherman. I wasn't too sad about quitting in that I'd been out for 2.5 hrs, a very long time for a Roccus fishing sortie, and caught a dozen nice, fat and fiesty fish. Still no Keepahs, but that will happen soon as I'm closing in on 300 fish for the season, the magic number that usually triggers a keeper.

This is how we Pod Cast along Maine's Midcoast!!,
,
roccusssssssss!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,, great report (y),,, mojoe was on it word for word,,, great POD CAst ? ,,, 300 8-),,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ><)))):>
><))):>
 
roccusssssssss!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,, great report (y),,, mojoe was on it word for word,,, great POD CAst ? ,,, 300 8-),,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ><)))):>
><))):>
 
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