Norwich Bulletin
Connecticut Fishing Reports gathered from Connecticut newspapers, tackle shops, and websites. Click on each post title to read original article.
Best Bets for Connecticut and Rhode Island: If the weather breaks nicely for Sunday and your boat is ready to float, go give a try for some tasty winter flounder in Connecticut waters, maybe bumping into a tautog along the way. If your boat isn’t quite ready to get wet, grab your freshwater gear and hit one of the many Trout Management Areas. Most have been stocked at least once, and several have been stocked multiple times. The continued warmth ought to get the trout a little more willing to play.
Its the start of another round of Friday fishing reports. Its been an interesting winter, the mild weather in December and January brought out more fishermen and brought about a two month extension of the traditional season. I don't think the weather affected the bass as much as the bass chasers. The leading theory is that there are more winter holdover bass other than in the Thames River. We may have a much longer season than we previously thought.
STRIPED BASS- They've been catching schoolies in Hamburg Cove for about two weeks now, mostly on leadheads and small plastic tails. They have also been catching them on sandworms off the DEP Piers. I suspect that theres also bass along Great Island but there hasn't been any confirmation of that yet. The action in the Thames has also escalated in the last 10 days.
FLOUNDER- The season opens this Sunday, April 1st. Last season saw some activity in Niantic, Jordan Cove and Bluff Point.
SEMINARS:None this weekend. Saturday April 7th at 11am- Trolling the Tube and Worm with Pat "T-Man" Renna Saturday April 14th at 11am- Fluke Fishing with Bob Sampson Saturday April 28th- Saltwater Fly Fishing School with Lou Tabory- Call us for details Rivers End Tackle 440 Boston Post Road Old Saybrook, CT 06475 (Pat Abate, Rivers End Tackle)
March's thaw coupled with saturated grounds helped to topple the already bulging water tables. As rivers crested and streams swelled, flows increased washing banks clean of winter debris and early springtime fish food. Small finfish become stimulated and, in turn, cause a stir among larger predatory inhabitants.
Many anglers know that when ice breaks up and its edges gradually recede, the state's trophy trout lakes come alive. Alewives are stalked and driven towards the shore where a few dedicated fishermen cast their bait and lures looking for that infamous hooked-jaw brown trout. More often than not there are shoulder/arm-weary die-hards who come up short of their hopes, but still spend a good early springtime day on the water.
This was not the case with Mike Megargee of Madison who, after having a few curious pickerel take an interest in his bait, had something take more than a look at his lure. Following the first powerful run, largemouth was his thought, but after several more (including a weed-embraced top water roll) this 9.2-pound, 27 1/2-inch, brilliantly colored red-speckled brown trout revealed itself. What seemed like an eternity ended when finesse finally brought this beauty to net.
For those who haven't checked out the TMAs yet, they have been providing excellent fishing opportunities. Note that the Hammonasset River TMA (catch and release until opening day) is that stretch of water between Lake Hammonasset dam (Route 80) to Chestnut Hill Road. The Sea Run Trout Stream runs from the breached dam upstream of River Road downstream to LIS and is open year round. The daily creel limit here is two fish at a 15" minimum length and is the only part of the river that fish can be kept legally until the season opens on Saturday, April 21st.
Largemouth bass are definitely stirring. Various shoreline lakes/ponds are seeing activity with four- to six-pound plus fish being caught. Although water temperatures are on the cold side, a mix of baits, including spinners to minnow imitations, are producing fish. Sensitive rods, like strong, lightweight St. Croixs, are good choices when looking for finesse and that extra touch. Add an innovative soft plastic or realistic hard bait and fish beware!
Anglers are looking for the upper tidal rivers to moderate enabling striper action to pick up. Temperatures are gradually edging upward and after the recent flip-flop weather conditions, bass should become more active. Togs certainly will follow suit and, as April Fool's Day approaches, many anglers are looking to fool a limit of winter flounder after a long wait for the season to open.
A great weekend it was for anglers to fish and prepare for the new fishing season. So, for all things fishy, swing by the shop (203-245-8665) open seven days located at 21 Boston Post Road in Madison. Until next time from your Connecticut shoreline's full-service fishing outfitter where we don't make the fisherman, we make the fisherman better... (Captain Morgan, Guilford Courier)
It won’t be exactly balmy this weekend but it beats last weekend and the fish are getting active. In Connecticut, holdover stripers are stirring in the Thames and the coves in the Connecticut River. A few striper fans will be making their first casts at the West Wall in Rhode Island. The Cape is the place to be if trout fishing is part of your early Spring routine.
Last November I received this email from On The Water Magazine.
Hi Sandy,
I stumbled upon your CT fishing report blog. Good idea to pull
together fishing reports all in one place. Thanks also for posting your source
(On The Water, Author). You'd be amazed how many people copy things on the web
and pass them off as their own. Feel free to include a link to OnTheWater.com as
well.Also, I'm attaching a press release for our new cookbook if you'd like to
post it.
Thanks,Kevin-- Kevin Blinkoff, Assistant Editor, On The Water
Striped bass : The Thames River is about two or three weeks from "turning on" for the spring season. The snow has to melt and the sun will need to warm the shallows up to and above 50 degrees before things turn to bonkers. Joe Balint of the Fish Connection said that customers have been catching fish as far down river as Poquetanuck Cove in Preston, which is Stage 1 in this process. Those large schools of bass that have been stacked like cord wood in the harbor for the past few weeks are beginning to break up and spread on downriver.
Because of continued cold nights and snowmelt, river temperatures are in the high 30s to low 40s after a day of bright sunshine, but it's not quite there yet. When the snow melts off, the water temperature rises from 32 degrees, the freezing point of water, to 39, which is when it reaches its maximum density. This means this heavy, cold water will sit at the bottom of the river, often driving the bass up off the bottom into the warmer, less dense waters near the surface, making a depth finder screen look like a layer cake because the bass will suspend 8 to 10 feet off the bottom. Under these conditions, catching becomes difficult at times, especially when on top of this weird water temperature stratification a cold blast blows down from the north, dropping the mercury and pushing the barometric pressure sky high. By early to mid-April, depending on prevailing temperatures and the amount of sunlight we receive every day, the bass will spread out all the way downriver and out onto the flats, creating that crazy spring fishery.
Freshwater : Eric Covino and Rick Rinaldi, two of the most devout anglers I know, have been fishing for and catching both bass and pike from some of the shallow ponds across the border in Rhode Island for a couple weeks now. The Ocean State's coastal ponds are always free of ice a week or so before most of Connecticut's lakes and ponds.
Trout : The stocking trucks are running and many waters are closed to trout fishing. There are numerous Trout Management Areas (TMAs) open to fishing year-round, sea-run brown trout along the coast and the ponds at the Quinebaug Valley Hatchery open by appointment. Check the 2007 Connecticut Anglers Guide for specifics before fishing.
Unless we get a real deep freeze, the coves and inlets along the Connecticut River will be melting off for open water fishermen who target yellow perch, calicos, bluegills and northern pike within the next two to three weeks.
The lower river spots, such as Hamburg Cove will usually melt open before the more northerly areas, such as Wethersfield or Keeney Coves. This time of year, yellow perch are getting ready to spawn, so they are building up into huge dense schools in the protected areas along the entire river (as well as in area lakes). Right after ice-out, especially when temperatures are mild and the sun has a chance to warm the water a tad, yellow perch will turn on where ever they can be located.
Another good option will be sea-run brown trout. The upper reaches of the Mystic River, Niantic River near the Golden Spur and the lower Hammonassett Rivers have all been producing some sea runs (top end two to four pounds) over the past few years. The most popular spot around here is the upper Niantic River where Latimer Brook and Oil Mill Brook, two state stocked sea-run spots converge.
Historically, Latimer Brook was the state's original sea-run brown trout experiment in the 1960s. The original stockies came from European egg sources from England and Denmark. These stockings created a unique fishery that generated a good deal of media attention in the angling world at that time. Unfortunately the program waned and was dropped by the early-'80s when the Atlantic salmon began to come back to the Connecticut River.
In 2001, the sea-run program was recreated under the then new Trout Management Plan, which now utilizes excess hatchery fingerling brown trout as the primary source for stocking. As a result, over the past few seasons, anglers have been successfully targeting and catching sea-run brown trout once again in most of the areas that produced them during the heyday fishing years of the late-1960s and early-1970s. Ron Meroy caught a 1 1/2 pound state record sea-run brown from the Saugatuck River during the warm spell in early January.
Fishing has generally been productive lately right up inside Norwich Harbor, especially when storm fronts are approaching with cloudy skies and dropping barometric pressure. I finally had a break in my schedule and managed to catch a fair number of fish (60-70 to about 24 inches) over the weekend.
There is some frozen water further north and into Massachusetts where the hard-core ice fishing fanatics are still venturing out, often within sight of open water on places such as Quaddick Reservoir and Alexander Lake, according to Bob Lemoine of Bob's Place in Ballouville.
Likewise, Gary Brummett of Connecticut Outfitters in Hartford said the large coves on the Connecticut River are also still holding ice and those who are still fishing are drilling holes and setting tip-ups for bass and pike or jigging for panfish.
Both of these shops report their customers are catching. Bob's Place said Alexander Lake has been giving up some very nice holdover trout, while Connecticut Outfitters is hearing stories of yellow perch and pike to 36 or 38 inches from Wethersfield Cove. There are even occasional schoolie stripers being taken on baits intended for pike in Wethersfield Cove as well.
I don't recommend stepping out on any ice that's covered with snow after all the warm weather, rain and sun that's hit the earth between snow storms lately. One guy had to be rescued from Gardner Lake over the weekend and we heard a report from Boondocks of one of their customers falling through the ice at Chapman Pond in Rhode Island. So there is a serious risk every time one steps onto the ice from here on out to the big meltdown, whenever that takes place.
However, as we all know, hard-core fishermen (of all types) are basically nuts, the author included and will on occasion take chances to pursue our passion. We've all done stupid things that may get wet feet or waders from time to time, but messing around under winter water temps can kill you and do it quickly, so be careful.
The problem is the ice fishing is usually fairly productive when it's the most dangerous every spring, so let's hope the allure of catching a few last-minute fish doesn't cause any one to lose their life during the waning days of this winter's ice season, even though the danger is at its highest.