Virginia Beach fishing

Virginia Beach Fishing Species, Lower Chesapeake Bay Fishing

On our Virginia Beach fishing trips we usually fish for the most popular and most common species of the season. The main season would be Virginia striper season, especially in Virginia Beach within 3 miles of the beach. We are talking about winter striper fishing as this is when the trophy striper are present and also when thousands upon thousands of anglers take advantage of the great Virginia Beach striper fishing that takes place during the short winters of the mid-Atlantic.

Other times of the year, mainly spring and summer we will either be fishing well offshore on Virginia wrecks or bottom fishing in the Chesapeake Bay. We fish for species you have probably heard of often like flounder, bluefish, spanish mackerel, and other fish that frequent the Chesapeake Bay. As far as Virginia wreck fishing goes, or deep drop fishing as it is called we may catch a variety of deep water species that include sea bass, tautog, and varieties of tilefish.

Listed below are some of the more common species we catch around Chesapeake Beach and the Virginia Beach regional fishing grounds.

Chesapeake Bay striper aka rockfish

Striper - Subject to Restrictions - The 2006 Spring Trophy Season begins April 15 and goes to mid-May. It is not uncommon to catch fish over 40" during this season. During the Summer and Fall seasons you are allowed two Striped Bass over 18" per person. Big Striped Bass can also be caught in late October through November.

SIZE: Averages 10 pounds - Some fish over sixty pounds have been caught.
FOOD VALUE: One of the most popular fish of the Chesapeake Bay, with white fluffy meat.
GAME QUALITIES: Great fun on light tackle.
TACKLE AND BAITS: Usually caught casting small articficial baits or trolling large lures at different heights of the water column.
FISHING STYLE: Trolling, Bait-casting.
MORE INFORMATION: All coastal inshore and Chesapeake Bay waters (tidal waters) have school-size fish; Chesapeake Bay tributary rivers, Eastern Shore bayside creeks south to the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel have best concentrations of fish. Large fish most often found along CBBT, main portion of Chesapeake Bay and off the Virginia Capes at the mouth of the Bay. Assateague surf in late fall and early spring
January - December; peak for large fish in November and December along the Virginia Beach coastal waters; peak fishing for school fish generally in spring and fall - 10 - 50 plus pounds.


Flounder - April to November - Flounder aka fluke enter the Chesapeake Bay around late April to early May. Flounder are usually daytime feeders and tend to hit squid or stripped cut bait. If you are looking to catch a trophy sized flounder, over 5 or 6 pounds you may want tp try live bait like a small spot or small croaker above.

SIZE: Averages around a pound or two but can reach sizes over 15 pounds.
FOOD VALUE: Excellent table fare, common on many restuarant menus.
GAME QUALITIES: Very scrappy fighter. A very distinct fighting action and experienced flounder anglers can usually tell right away if they have a flounder on the line as soon as the fight starts.
TACKLE AND BAITS: Fun to catch but you must be patient. Give them the bait a bit before you yank back on the rod. Use squid strips or cut bait strips on a small lightweight bucktail. Can be caught trolling on the bottom around structure..
FISHING STYLE: Drifting, trolling. Can be caught on the edges of boat or shipping channels or around rocks or bridge pilings.


Croaker - May to November - Croaker usually run hand in hand or fin and fin that is with spot. Usually if you are catching croaker you will most like catch spot too. Croaker usually appear in all areas of the Chesapeake Bay in the late spring and will hang around in the surf, bays and inlets until fall when the water starts to cool around October at which time the bite will slow down.

SIZE: Averages a pound or less, but sometimes reache super sizes of 3 pounds or more.
FOOD VALUE: Croaker make good panfish.
GAME QUALITIES: Very scrappy fighter. A large croaker can be a real fun fight.
TACKLE AND BAITS: A blast to catch on light tackle. Can be caught on bloodworms, squid strips, cutbait, and even a small jig.
FISHING STYLE: Drifting, anchored, bottom fishing.


Chesapeake Beach spot fishing

Spot - May to November - Spot usually appear in all areas of the Chesapeake Bay in the late spring and will hang around in the surf, bays and inlets until fall when the water starts to cool around late October or early November at which time they will make a run to warmer deeper water for the winter.

SIZE: Averages 6-8 inches; Sometimes will grow to over a pound..
FOOD VALUE: One of the most popular panfish.
GAME QUALITIES: Spirited panfish. Great fishing fun for the kids and family.
TACKLE AND BAITS: Light spinning tackle, small hooks, blooworms, fishbites, pieces of cut fish, squid or shrimp.
FISHING STYLE: Bottom fishing, either drifting or anchored.
MORE INFORMATION: Caught bottom fishing with bait, anchored or drifting from boats, also caught from docks, piers, shore and surf; big runs of fish in the fall in lower Chesapeake Bay and in surf and piers of Virginia Beach.
Caught throughout the entire Chesapeake Bay and Bay tributary rivers, coastal ocean waters, inlets - all inshore Maryland coastal waters
June - October; peak July - September for Chesapeake Bay and tributary rivers; peak middle August - middle October in lower Bay and coastal ocean areas.
8 - 12 ounces


Trout - May to November - Gray trout, also called weakfish and summer trout become active in the Chesapeake Bay around the month of May and will not leave until as late as November. They range from pan size to larger than 10 pound.

SIZE: Averages around a pound or two for bottom fishers but can reach sizes over 15 pounds, especially for wire liners or live baiters.
FOOD VALUE: Very good, larger trout can be filet'd.
GAME QUALITIES: Not really a brawler but the larger trout can put up a decent fight straight down. Care must be taken when fighting and landing gray trout because they have a very soft mouth.
TACKLE AND BAITS: Wide range of baits can be used for gray trout. Squid, peeler crabs, shrimp, live spot or other live bait, artificial lures.
FISHING STYLE: Drifting or anchored up for the smaller gray trout, trolling along structure for large gray trout.


Other Species of the Virginia Beach Chesapeake Bay Region

Black Drum!

Black Drum
Whole clam, peeler crab, whelk, peeler crab/clam "sandwich", bucktail and leadhead jigs
Bottomfishing with bait on "fishfinder" rig; running tides and late afternoons and evenings considered best; occasionally caught on bucktails or metal squids by casting or jigging to a school of fish
Chesapeake Bay along shallow portion of channel ledge running from Fisherman's island to north of Cape Charles, especially off Kiptopeake, at Cabbage Patch and buoys C-10 & C-12; around middleground bars of Eastern Shore seaside inlets; 2nd & 3rd islands of Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel
May - August; peak May - early June along Eastern Shore bayside and seaside inlets; peak late June - early August at 2nd & 3rd islands of Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel
40 -60 pounds
111 pounds; caught off Cape Charles in 1973 by Betty Hall

Red Drum!

Red Drum
Cut bait (fresh mullet, spot, menhaden), peeler crabs, artificial lures (spoons, large plugs, jigs)
Bottomfishing with bait on "fishfinder" rig; trolling and casting spoons, plugs and jigs
Surfcasting with bait on Eastern Shore barrier island beaches and baitfishing along interior seaside marshes and Smith Inlet area; baitfishing in Chesapeake Bay along Eastern Shore bayside channel edge from Kiptopeake area to Onancock and shoal areas at the mouth of the Bay; trolling and casting artificial lure in Smith Inlet area
Late April - June; August - October; peak May at Smith Inlet for casting and trolling lures; peak late May - June for Surfcasting; peak middle August - September for Eastern Shore bayside fishing; peak middle September - October for surf-casting and fishing seaside marshes
30 - 50 Pounds
85 lbs., 4 oz.; caught at Wreck Island on Eastern Shore seaside in 1981 by Herman Moore

Black Willy!

Black Sea Bass
Squid, crab, cut fish, clam, shrimp
Bottomfishing, generally near and over underwater obstructions (wrecks, reefs, rocks and rough bottom areas)
Ocean waters; species less plentiful (especially large individuals) in lower Chesapeake Bay
April - December; species moves to waters far offshore (35 fathoms and more) during winter
1 - 3 1/2 pounds
9 lbs., 8 oz (tie); caught in offshore waters off Virginia Beach in 1987 by Joe Mizelle, Jr. and 1990 by Jack G. Stallings

Choppers!

Bluefish (large)
Artificial lures (spoons, tube eels, metal squids, surface plugs) cut bait (fresh menhaden, mullet, herring, spot) whole balao or boston mackerel
Trolling, casting or jigging to schools of fish with artificial lures; surfcasting with cut bait or lures; chumming while using cut bait; bluefish can be taken on streamer flies with a fly rod
Offshore and coastal waters; Chesapeake Bay; Eastern Shore barrier island surf
Middle April - July; October - November
8 - 16 pounds
25 lbs., 4 oz.; caught at Bluefish Rock in Chesapeake Bay in 1986 by Gayle E. Cozzens

Bluefish (small)
Artificial lures (small spoons, feather lures, metal squids, surface plugs) and cut bait
Trolling or casting to schools of fish with artificial lures; surfcasting and bottom fishing with cut bait; surfcasting with artificial lures
Chesapeake Bay, coastal ocean waters, ocean surf, inlets
May - October
1 -5 pounds

Cobia!

Cobia
Live Bait (eels, spot, menhaden, mullet); artificial lures (large spoons, white bucktails, plastic eels, swimming plugs); cut bait (menhaden or spot)
Cast, drift or slow troll live baits around buoys, underwater obstructions and schools of fish swimming on the surface; anchor, chum and fish live baits, fresh dead baits and cut bait in chum slick and on bottom; cast and troll lures around buoys, obstructions and to schools of bullfish (rays) or schools, pods or individual cobia swimming on surface
Buoys in lower Chesapeake Bay, at the mouth of the Bay and along coastal beaches; CBBT; Bluefish Rock off Hampton, Cabbage Patch and Kiptopeake areas off Cape Charles, and Your Spit area; coastal buoys and wrecks; Chesapeake Light Tower; Latimer Shoal
June - September; peak mid-June - mid- September
20 -50 pounds
103 lbs., 8 oz., Mobjack Bay in 1980 by Edward K. Brown

Spadefish!

Spadefish
Pieces of fresh mussels and clams; pieces of jellyfish
Fish visible schools of fish around obstructions (buoys, towers, etc.) with small (#5 or #6) double strength hooks
Coastal ocean waters and the lower Chesapeake Bay; Fish consistently found at the Cell, Plantation Light, York Spit Light, and Tiger wreck, 4A-buoy, Chesapeake Light Tower
June - September
3 - 8 pounds
13 lbs.; caught at the Cell in 1988 by Otis Tribble


Spanish Mackerel

Tautog!
Tautog

Tilefish!
Tilefish

Species We May Catch

  • Striper a.k.a. Rockfish a.k.a. Striped Bass
  • Black Drum
  • Black Sea Bass
  • Bluefish
  • Cobia
  • Croaker
  • Flounder
  • Red Drum
  • Spadefish
  • Spanish Mackerel
  • Spot
  • Tautog
  • Tilefish - Blueline Tilefish, Golden Tilefish
  • Trout

 

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Captain Jeff Adams
admin@adamsfishing.net
Virginia Beach, Virginia
804-725-6288

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