I have room for one angler to share a trip on either November 18 or 20. This will be a full day (8 hour) trip out of Crisfield. Cost will be $250/angler. Rockfishing is great right now! Light tackle or fly fishing, your choice. Call Kevin for details at 443-783-3271 or email at kjosenhans@aol.com
Walk On Trip Notice
12 11 2015Comments : 2 Comments »
Categories : Fishing Reports
Rock on the Banks
28 10 2015Marsh banks, that is. Smith, Tangier, Fox, Holland and South Marsh islands are all providing some great shallow water striper fishing. Cast four inch swimbaits, such as Hogy Bunny in Bone or Tinker Mac colors on 3/8 oz. jig heads, or Stillwater Smack-It poppers for some explosive action! This fishing should last well into November.
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Open Dates and Walk-Ons
5 10 2015I’ve got a few open dates this fall that I’d like to fill before cold weather sets in. Striper fishing has really picked up, of late, and I look for great shallow water action until at least Thanksgiving. If you’ve always wanted to fish for rockfish in the tidal creeks of Smith Island, now’s the time! If the weather holds, we should also have great action with breakers into December. I can book these dates for the entire boat, or arrange them as walk-ons if you’d like to share the cost. Don’t miss out on some fantastic fall fishing! The following dates are available:
October 27
November 4, 5, 10, 12, 17, 18, 19, 23
Dates after Thanksgiving are subject to weather conditions.
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Topwater Redfish
3 10 2015Sign up to my social media accounts to see great videos like this..
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Huk Performance Fishing Red Trout Tournament
23 09 2015At this past weekend’s Huk Performance Fishing Red Trout Tournament in Crisfield, Maryland my crew placed 2nd in the Team Division as well as the Crisfield Slam Division. Congratulations to Dave Wilmoth and Ron Long, excellent fishermen, both. This was the third year for the tournament and, by far, the biggest and best event to date. You might want to mark this event on your calendar for next year. Keep tabs on the exact date on CCA Maryland’s website at CCA Maryland
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Walk On Opening – Crisfield
10 09 2015Short notice walk on opening for this coming Monday, September 14 fishing out of Crisfield. Have room for one angler at the cost of $250. Price includes fishing license, tackle, ice and cold drinks. Bring your own lunch. Call, text or email Kevin for details at 443-783-3271 or kjosenhans@aol.com. Catching rock, blues and speckled trout!
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Pickerel in the Spring – the Old Way
30 08 2015by Ted Josenhans (Guest Writer)
Picture a cool (cold), sunny day in early March with maybe a slight breeze. Few boats are on the water because summer’s not here yet. You are in an old wooden rowboat about 14 feet long powered by a pair of 7 foot oars. This is basic to early season pickerel fishing of years gone by and probably the most rewarding type of fishing a person can do who is looking for a sizeable fish, quiet, peaceful surroundings and a day of relaxation.
The early pickerel run in the Middle River area was eagerly awaited by many fishermen who by March were suffering from extreme ‘cabin fever’. Fishing for these toothy critters was very basic… 16 or 18 foot bamboo or Calcutta pole, line about two feet longer than the rod, 10 inch float, spreader, two #1 Carlisle hooks with 10 inch ‘snell’ and a pint of ‘bull’ minnows about the size of your index finger. To rig the pole and line was as follows:
– tie the line to the rod about 18 inches from the tip
– run the line to the tip and tie it again
– attach the float to the line
– attach a double end sinker below the float just heavy enough
to make the float stand up in the water, about 1/2 oz.
– put the hooks on the spreader
– hook the hooks in the end of the pole
– tie the line to the spreader with enough tension to bend the
spreader slightly and keep the hooks in the end of the rod.
The purpose of the last step is two-fold, one to make storage easy and keeps the lines from getting tangled, and second it makes the line just the right length for easy handling. If you hook a perch or some other panfish just lifting the rod will swing the fish right to you for easy unhooking.
Most fishermen at that time would rig their boat with the rods spread across the stern of the boat, one in the center and two to either side. With the five rods you had ten baits in the water. The floats would be moved up or down the line according to the depth of the water, I liked to keep the hooks about a foot above the bottom or bottom grasses if any. In the areas I fished the water was from three to six feet deep. Put the minnows on the hooks by passing the hook from under the mouth up through both lips. Don’t hook them too far back in the mouth or you will kill them and too far forward the lips will tear. Practice makes perfect!
After the rods are baited and positioned from the stern of the boat you then just row the boat slowly around the creek close to any structure such as logs or weed-beds and wait for the fish. When you get a bite stop rowing and give the fish time to swallow the bait. Watching the action of the float can give you an idea of what kind of fish is playing around. A pickerel attacks his prey from the side and will sometimes swim around with the minnow in his teeth for several minutes before deciding to take off so the float will just swim around in circles without bobbing very much. A perch will generally make the float dance more and then pull it under rather quickly as he takes the minnow from the head.
When you feel the fish has taken the bait firmly lift the rod to set the hook. If the fish is a pickerel don’t try to lift him out of the water with the rod but
keep tension on the line and slide the rod behind you and pull the fish to the boat with the line. If you don’t have a net just quickly grab the spreader and lift the fish over the side and into the boat. Pickerel have very soft mouths and if you tried to lift them with the rod you would probable lose most of them. Also, most of the spring fish will be about two or more pounds and the rod may break. If the fish is a panfish such as a perch you can just lift them in by raising the rod almost vertical.
Pickerel are, in my estimation, a good-eating fish when pan fried. The reason most people do not eat them is that they are very bony. Many of the bones can be circumvented with a little examination of the fillet. It’s been such a long time since I have eaten one that I have forgotten exactly how the bones are situated in the flesh, but if you check with the tine of a fork it’s easy to see. The most troublesome bones are shaped somewhat like a wishbone, and if you run the tine of the fork lightly through the fillet you can extract almost all with one pass. It’s worth the effort, at least once, to enjoy this good game fish.
Spring pickerel fishing as described above is fishing as it should be; lazy, occasionally tense as when the bobber starts doing tricks, exciting with the hooked fish, disappointment with the lost one and elation with a successful landing. Add it all together and you have the recipe for an enjoyable memory.
Kevin’s Note: For those of you not familiar with my family history, I was born while mom and dad lived in a small house on Hogpen Creek, a tributary to Middle River on the upper Chesapeake. My grandfather and grandmother Josenhans owned a summer waterfront home not too far away in Bauernschmidt Manor, which soon became their permanent residence. We called it, simply, “the Shore.” Needless to say, I spent a good bit of my summers fishing and crabbing the waters of Middle River – “in an old wooden rowboat about 14 feet long powered by a pair of 7 foot oars.”
Happy 84th Birthday Dad!
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Tags: Chesapeake Bay, middle river, pickerel, Ted Josenhans
Categories : Fishing Reports
Walk on for Party of Three
17 08 2015I have an opening for one angler to share a trip with two others on Thursday, September 3rd. This will be a substantial savings over my normal two party walk ons. Please call or email me at 443-783-3271 or kjosenhans@aol.com.
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Acres of Breakers
11 08 2015
The past two weeks I’ve traveled a little north of Crisfield to get in on the surface-feeding schools of rockfish and blues that have been hammering defenseless bay anchovies in the mid-bay region. While many of the stripers are undersized, it’s still great fun on fly and light tackle. Back to Crisfield on Thursday to resume our hunt for specks and reds.
Check out this short video!
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Categories : Fishing Reports
Fall Dates Available
5 08 2015Fishing is starting to pick up in a big way with massive schools of breaking stripers and bluefish. In addition, speckled trout action should get going soon as the days grow shorter. I have had a few prime dates open up in the past few days and I would like to fill them. Please let me know if you would like to reserve one of the following days. I can fish out of Crisfield or Cambridge, your choice. I currently have open September 21, 22 October 19, 20, 24, 28, 31. Contact me for November dates as well. Best way to reach me is my cell 443-783-3271 or email kjosenhans@aol.com
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Categories : Fishing Reports
























