Crab trap check open to the public Aug. 10

By Rich King
Posted 7/21/22

The heat wave is here, triple digits — must be state fair time. The fishing is fine if you can stand the heat. The water will warm up a little faster now is the only issue. I prefer night …

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Crab trap check open to the public Aug. 10

Posted

The heat wave is here, triple digits — must be state fair time. The fishing is fine if you can stand the heat. The water will warm up a little faster now is the only issue. I prefer night fishing this time of year, early predawn or late evenings. Daytime is for air conditioning or the pool. Working on combining those two.

There are pompano in the surf far south of us, but should be here soon enough. Otherwise it is all the summer suspects — small weakfish, spot, croaker, kingfish, sand perch and the usual summer catches — using Fishbites or bloodworms. The latter has been scarce. It is off and on good action that changes daily. Some days are better than others. The charters and boats are doing well on the tuna bite offshore.

Sharks are close to the surf. I mean, they live in the ocean. A lot are being caught this year. We have a pool going on how many bull sharks we pull this year. Last year was the most we have ever seen. I mean real bull sharks, not those misidentified as sand bars or dusky. Many sharks pup in the surf at night and evenings.

The Delaware Bay is the pupping grounds for sand bar, dusky and sand tiger sharks, which is one of the reasons we have the prohibitions on their releases. Know your shark laws and know your sharks. A good rule to go by is if the shark has a dorsal ridge, then it stays in the water.

Flounder fishing has been OK around the inland bays and Cape Henlopen fishing pier. The summer heat and increased boat activity makes fishing a little difficult, especially on the weekends. It’s better to go offshore in cooler, deeper water or the Delaware bay sites.

The offshore reefs and wrecks are producing, with a bunch of ribbon fish in the mix. They are slippery fish that are good to eat, just bony. They make great flounder bait, too.

Spot are all over the inland bays with croaker and pin fish. Those pins make killer flounder bait, so do the spot.

Bluefish has been random action along the beaches, with decent action offshore.

Short striped bass slot season has been productive for many anglers. Using sand fleas is a fast way to produce catches. It’s easy to just put a flea or two on a four- to six-aught hook with no weight. Then seed the area with some fleas and drop in your line. It’s fun as all get out, with ultralight gear.

Assateague is seeing great action in the surf. Because the beach isn’t overrun with tons of people and vehicles, there is room and you can actually fish. We bailed kingfish and spot every 10 minutes for a few hours on Wednesday. DS Custom Tackle’s spot, top and bottom, and pompano rigs were putting in some work. One rig broke — half the drop loop at the knot was cut by a crab claw, but the hook held. We caught a dozen fish on that broken dropper. The way they loop the hooks onto the dropper holds very well.

We were on the beach by 7:30 a.m. and were the 13th vehicle. When we left around noon, the vehicle counter was up to 119. The park had a half-mile-plus line at the gate. Go early. The removal of the auto gate for annual card holders is not helping. This is what happens when people share their park passes. Now everyone suffers long lines to get into the park when you could bypass the line with your annual card.

There have been some nice slot sized red drum caught there using cut spot for bait mostly. Peeler crab and fishbites is working, too.

Those aren’t little jellyfish stuck to your fishing line. The salps (salpae, or salpa) are back and washing up on the beaches, but not in huge numbers yet. One year they were so thick in the surf, your lines would get coated with them and make it all the way to your reel. It was slimy, then dried up and crusty. Especially with braided line. They can clog up line to the point you are cutting it off and rerigging all day. When they become really annoying, it is best to quit for the day.

You will also catch them when you are scooping up sand fleas.

Salps are barrel-shaped pelagic tunicates. They move by contracting their body — that action pumps water and pushes them along. As the water is pushed through their body cavity, they filter feed plankton for food. There about 50 species of salps around the globe. They are one of the most common and important tunicates in the ocean. They grow in many different shapes and sizes, some elaborate like a chandelier, others just look a blob of Jello. By the time they wash ashore, they are no longer alive.

One species of salps near Antarctica is the second most abundant large plankton after krill. They will cover thousands of square miles at times. They live solitary lives at one point, but will link up in huge chains, lines, wheels and elaborate shapes of salp colonies.

Salps start life as females then switch to males for the rest of their lives. No one knows why. Their life cycle is days to months, depending on the species.
They are harmless but annoying for anglers on their lines and rigs.

Kate Fleming, coastal ecology specialist with Delaware Sea Grant, is hosting an event open to the public on Aug. 10 at Holt’s Landing State Park.

“I have been hosting some events in Delaware inland bay crabbing communities this summer, to raise awareness for lost and abandoned crab pots, and encourage responsible crabbing. At these events, we invite people to bring us their crab pots and we’ll get them updated with gear to make them more resilient to pot loss (e.g. new sink line, and bullet floats to replace something that can be punctured). We are also replacing and educating about terrapin excluder devices,” she said.

These are the folks I helped with removing ghost crab pots over the winter. It’s a great program that the public can get involved with, so be sure to check it out.

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