
Think Like A Striper When Fishing For Stripers
Striped bass spend a lot of their time in the ocean and are very aggressive when attacking their bait. So when anglers use a relatively light fishing rod and reel, the fight can be amazing. You never know if you are going to catch that 3-5lb or that 20-40lb fish. Anglers find stripers great table fare but most would agree that the smaller fish are better to eat than the larger ones.
Anglers have several options on what technique to use when targeting striped bass. They often use a variety of baits while sitting on anchor or fishing from shore. Pluggers cast a variety of lures while others troll for them.
I have had the opportunity to troll for stripers with a lot of friends as well as fishing guides in the California region. In my opinion, the best trollers are the ones that troll their baits into specific spots or zones. They are using the current, tule islands, and other structures to their advantage. They locate depth contours in the river to identify paths the stripers are traveling. They identify schools of bait and what depths the bait is in.
I believe great striper pluggers and great shallow water striper trollers have many differences but they do have a lot in common. Pluggers make a cast into a specific spot or zone because they think like a fish and when they make a cast they believe that a fish is there for a reason. A few of those reasons include ambush spots, current, and back eddies. Shallow trollers often use their boat to troll their lure into similar areas as well. Let’s use the West Bank on the California Delta as an example. Pluggers and shallow water trollers are able to get their lures into similar locations like near the tules and up tight to other structures in the shallow water. Most importantly, they are able to get their lures where the shallow water meets the deep.
Remember, stripers love to ambush bait and will sit against tule islands and use the current to their advantage. Usually, waiting for baitfish coming down the current line right to them.
I believe that