Maine Striper fishing with TIDE ChaserGUIDE SERVICE and Capt. George Harris, midcoast Maine's premier Fly & light tackle saltwater guide service. Serving the waters of Midcoast Maine from Casco Bay to Penobscot Bay Fishing for Striped Bass, Bluefish, Bluefin Tuna, & More. For more info on Maine saltwater fly & light tackle fishing
For Reservations Call The Maine Saltwater Fishing Hotline 207-691-0745
Maine Saltwater Fishing Reports Blog
Welcome to the Fish Blog & saltwater fishing reports page of TIDE CHASER GUIDE SERVICE & Capt. George Harris. We're looking forward to providing you with the most up to date inshore saltwater fishing reports on the Maine coast as the Maine Striper Fishing season goes forward into 2019!!! You wont find any generic"cut & paste" reports or info here...Just pure fishing!!!
TIDE CHASER provides friendly, professional guided fly & light tackle fishing trips.
We operate our fishing TRIPS in the Mid-Coast region of Maine, from Casco Bay to Penobscot Bay. This area features an astonishing 1000 miles of jagged, pristine coastline. We focus our efforts on the broad reach of the lower Kennebec river estuary & the outer boundaries of Casco Bay...with its countless thousands of acres of untouched saltwater flats, gnarly tides that rip over rocky structure and an intricate maze of backcountry channels, It's a fly & light tackle fishermans nirvana. On any given day we can be found fishing sandy beaches, ocean front ledges, coastal tide marshes or shallow hard bottom flats. Wherever the fish are!!! Whether it's on the fly...pitching plugs or live lining frisky live baits we've got you covered check out our website for all of our trip offerings...and stay tuned for some new trips options for 2019
Welcome to Maine's #1 Striper Fishing Blog with Capt. George Harris Call 207-691-0745
- Capt. George Harris
- Tide Chaser Guide Service Midcoast Maine's premier fly & light tackle guide service, fishing for Striped Bass, Mackerel & Bluefish , i~ USCG 100 Ton Master ~ Registered Maine Tidewater Guide ~ For reservations call 207-691-0745 ~
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
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3 comments:
At 0:54 Jeremiah starts talking about having the right line...To elaborate on what he is talking about...I was explaining to Jeremiah that we need to methodically fish the rip by picking lines of drift through the rip...by doing this you can pin point where the stripers are hanging on the structure...in large rips the fish often move around so it's important to periodically choose new "lines" of drift...
Did that the other day at "hospital". After a few non-strike drifts at the North side, I ventured South about 75 yards to a new "drift line" and BANG, first drift I was on a beautiful linesider. But I've gotta tell ya CGH, changing those old vices of drifting the same drifts is big time mind game. That "I've caught a big fish there before" mentality plays games with your brain and can lead you to do the same old thing with that same old anticipation. You are SO right, drift line changes within the same area is SO critical.
Downward pressure waves from boats repeatedly shadowing over head or worse motoring over head will force the fish to move to different areas of the rip line or just completely abandon the ledge altogether...ever wonder why the bite shuts down on a ledge that's covered up with fish after only a few drifts???...when people think of 20 feet of water being deep and they think they can motor over without spooking...they are so off track it's not funny...It's so counter productive..for most of us 20 feet is not even a boat length...fish can easily get spooked from boat traffic in 100 feet of water...thats why I get so frustrated when I see dingbats motoring over the fish
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