
I was eager to get out this weekend thinking Saturday was going to be cloudy and overcast. Well, we got handed some windy, high and white puffy clouded post frontal conditions, so I didn't really have the intention on fishing until Tuesday when the winds died down and the weather stabilized.
It was my dad that actually said we should go out on Sunday evening, so off we went around 4:30, with the plan to target stripers for the first hour or so and then focus on bass in some of our older haunts.
Run and gun a lot of my favorite areas with the bigger push of the incoming tide for about 45 minutes in white capping windswept waters for nothing. Check one final area on the way to the bass grounds and I connected with a low teener sized fish on an 8 inch savage gear glider in RBT color. Fish popped off as soon as it took it down. We had a few more followers in that area, but nothing really committing to eating the glide baits.
With that, and the growing wind, we took off to harass some bass throwing big topwater and gliders, hoping to maybe find a pre-spawner or maybe some post spawn fish in the shallows.
With some stronger winds blowing in some thicker grey and black cloud cover from the coastal range, we rolled up on an area we've done well on for bass in the past right as the sun started getting sucked into the clouds. Coasted in with the strong incoming tide without the trolling motor on and started looking at my graph. I've fished this spot many times over for bass, but never really have considered just how conductive it is for stripers as well. It features 11 foot depth following up to a 6 foot ledge, leading into a really shallow and narrow pocket with a point on it. Threw the Sinister 6 Rainbow Trout Delta Wood Bomber out there into the shallows and started walking it back, hoping that something, either a larger sized bass or maybe a striper was home.