|
INSHORE REPORT - Chesapeake Bay, Coastal Waters Out To The
Towers

By Dr. Julie Ball
VBSF.net fishing report
contributor and
IGFA
Representative,
Virginia Beach
June 5, 2009

With the warmer weather setting
in, many folks are hitting the water. Most attention is
directed towards the newly arriving cobia. The first
boated fish were reported last week, with several more
added to the list this week. And it looks like things
will only get better, as Carolina anglers are boasting
of astounding numbers of fish still heading this way.
Most catches are coming from off the Buckroe area of
Hampton, where some of the biggest fish will fall to
chummer’s offerings. Several fish are also coming from
top water efforts, where nice fish were hooked around
the CBBT and cruising off the Virginia Beach ocean front
this week.
Spadefish are next on the list. Spades began biting with
some regularity this week at the Chesapeake Light Tower,
the CBBT, and other inshore and Bay structures. Limits
of fish ranging from 4 to 6-pounds are the norm right
now. Anglers are swarming to the popular haunts, such as
the Chesapeake Light Tower and the CBBT to intercept
these mighty fighters, resulting in large crowds.
Red drum are providing plenty of action right now. Boats
are releasing dozens of bulls from the seaside of
Fisherman’s Island and the Nautilus Shoal areas. Peelers
and blue crabs are working best. Rob Collins and David
Cohen, both from Virginia Beach, released a pair of
bulls measuring 46-inches long while fishing aboard the
“Panacea” at buoy 10 this week. Large schools of reds
are also cruising the surface along the ocean front. The
Virginia Beach Fishing Center reports that one boat
released several large drum from a school they
encountered just outside of Rudee Inlet this week. Big
black drum are also still taking clam and crab offerings
near buoys 10, 13 and 16 off the Eastern Shore. These
fish will begin moving to the islands of the CBBT soon.
Flounder pounders continue to sift through many shorts
to get their bounties, but a few big fish are rounding
out catches. Most flatfish are coming from drifting
strip baits near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, buoys
36A, 40, 42, and the Cell areas. Live baiters are also
beginning to see some action. Stanley Barto of Suffolk
enticed a nice 7-pound, 8-ounce doormat from the CBBT on
a live spot this week.
A few keeper flounder and Taylor blues are still
available within the local inlets. Pier anglers along
the ocean front are picking through a few small
flounder, small croaker, and bluefish. Reports of
speckled trout and puppy drum are still coming from
within Rudee Inlet, and specks are faring well from
within Mobjack Bay. Croaker are an easy target as decent
hauls come from all over the lower Bay, with squid and
Fish Bites working well.
Another summertime favorite, Spanish mackerel, made a
debut this week along the shorelines off Virginia beach.
These fish are easily enticed with a small Drone or
Clark spoon trolled at a fast clip along rips and tide
lines. Bluefish up to around 5-pounds are available in
this same area, as well as throughout the lower Bay.
Striped bass still available live-baiting over the tubes
and near the rocks of the artificial islands of the CBBT,
as well as at the curve approaching the 3rd island.
Sheepshead should make a better showing along the CBBT
proper as the water continues to warm.
|
Subscribe to VBSF
Fishing Reports
|
|
|