Whenever I try to chunk and plug at the same time, I can never set the hook on the chunk!
Tell me more about the orange lure? Maybe find a link on google and try to post it here? Or describe it a little better? Is it a metal lipped swimmer? Needlefish?
As far as where to throw... This is a very difficult question to answer.
When people fish for these, or any predatorial gamefish from shore, there are a couple different approaches. You can go to a spot where you've heard fish have been running through and pray that they end up coming by and taking your bait. I did it for years, and still do when I'm checking out new spots. A lot of beaches around here are like this. Very little structure, and a seemingly endless stretch of beach. I remember getting frustrated and thinking "how the hell am I supposed to find them in all of this?! It's like a needle in a haystack!" The other approach is trying to imagine that you are a fish, look at where the water moves, and try to guess where you would set up to ambush bait...
These fish are, for the most part, lazy. They wait for food to come to them. They also love moving water because there is more oxygen and because they know that bait gets overwhelmed by fast currents... So see where the water is dumping out. See which way the current is going too. At Castle Island, it tends to curve one direction or the other. And then, like I said, cast to where you would wait for an easy meal.
Also, "the night time is the right time." This time of year, stripers will bite more during the day than any other time in the season. In fact, I read on OnTheWater that some guy hit a 50 lber off of Revere Beach a little bit ago in the middle of the day. But, for the most part, this fish is active during the night time and much easier to catch when the sun is down. They tend to move in closer to shore to eat, there are no boats to scare them away, etc. I've noticed that when I succeed during the day, I have to finesse my lures, much like I would when trying to catch freshwater bass... On a rod that weights much more than a freshwater setup. It gets real tiring. At night, usually a simple, slllloooooowwww, straight retrieve is preferable.
Also, sunrise, and to a lesser extent (for me anyway), dusk, can also be really productive. If you can't go during these times, make sure you try to go on cloudy days, and more importantly, when the water is moving!
There. Tried to pack years of trial and error into a few paragraphs. Sorry for the novel and good luck!
Posted Sun Nov 03, 2013 3:12 am