In this area the fish hang in the deeper water during the day. Here I am fishing in 40ish feet of water and the fish are suspended from about 20ft up to about 10ft
damn this is awesome, i live just over the boarder in PA near Milford and stripes run up the delaware but not nearly this big, extremely jealous. gunna have to get out there this season
You happen to remember what the water temp, air temp and tide conditions were like? I tried this past spring but I think I went a little too close to spawning temperature. Newburgh is over an hour away from me so I don't get many chances to figure out when is the best time to go. Great video, thanks for posting.
Aweasome video, i live in Peekskill and I love go fishing , but I'm a beginner, I would like to know what type of fishing rod you're using and where exactly should I go on the hudson river to catch fishes like these, also I would like to know if is this time of the year good to go fishing? Thanks much, I loved your video.
The big rush of Striped Bass takes place mostly during late April and the May. However there are supposed to be holdover fish that live in the river and can be caught anytime. I know people fish from Dunnings point on your side of the river. As far as rod you can use an ugly stick striper rod or catfish rod with a large reel to hold extra line.
This is my favorite striper vid, I'm even calling my buddy Peete when we go out lol. Do you think this technique will work from shore with a bobber n a weight underneath?
Thanks i appreciate you liking the video. If the stripers are around the shallows it might work but you might be better off on the bottom but I am not sure
I am sure you can use any fishing line you like. As far as the weights I use it's based on the tide and wind. The lighter the better but when they tide is ripping I have gone as heavy as 6 ounces. Good luck with the fishing
axeandsmash48g thanks man. I think I’m gonna hit it soon up in croton once the water gets a little cooler. Appreciate any insight I’m new to fishing the Hudson river
Hows the striped bass fishing in November. I'm a fisherman from Florida currently living in Nyack trying to get into the striped bass fishing. Any good spots to fish from the bank that you know of?
ll Therealmvp l I I have a bunch of different rods but I’m at work and not sure if all the names. I do use the ugly stick catfish or the Striper rods. They work great and are relatively cheap. Most saltwater reels are right hand retrieve and you get used to them fast.
@@jjwillimann9317 those style reels can't be converted to left hand retrieve, but you can buy them with left hand retrieve. All spinning reels can be changed, but bait cast cant.
Nice fish but damn dude, you gotta get em back in the water a little faster. Them fish are dead tired after fighting and then they can't breath when you pull them. Nice catch though.
God, i use to live in wappingers falls right on the hudson. I never did any fishing their due to the vantage point of the rocks and terrain at the local park. Im sure i couldve found something better, in fact i recall several good spots near the local schools in the area and Poughkeepsie. Ultimately i was always of the mind that due to the toxins dumped in the river from the 50's to the 80's with the then industrial plants that lined the Hudson it was always warned not to eat the fish. So in all that time, the fish stock in the river grew enormously. stripe bass glamour. Still i didnt want to be tempted to eat what could harm me, so i kept from buying rods and gear. And also didnt know about Salmon runs much further north in NY, had no idea NY had salmon!!. anyone know what the current status of the huson is today? ive heard those toxins would remain with the fish for hundreds of years.
All I can say is the same saltwater Stripers that come up the coast from North Carolina are the same that spawn in the Hudson. I mostly catch and release in the Hudson and just fish for fun.
@@axeandsmash48g Yeah now that something to think about!. Your down in NC catching stripers from NY and never have a clue. I just watched a mini documentary from VICE on the health of the Hudson.. oh yeah its still REALLY bad!!!!. The Fish are coping and adapting but the bacteria and toxins they carry is crazy bad for people. And i also realized much of blue crab fisheries still still fish the hudson. so man... no wonder people are just sick all over the place. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VrUVLpFaUoM.html&ab_channel=VICE
I normally get them at Ceely's bait shop, 226 Shore Rd, New Windsor NY 12553 845 534-3495, but he was out of bait. My brother had to go to Jack's bait shop in the Bronx the night before to get them. If he didn't I could not have gone fishing.
@@axeandsmash48g I have been using live herring since I started striper fishing the Hudson.. I also grew up fishing in nyc so blood worms sandworms clams eel and bunker were the norm for me but all of my big stripers 30 pounds and up were caught off of live herring
@@axeandsmash48g I don't fish from a boat usually I'm just on the shore.. if your anchored up on a spot then I would suggest live lining them either through the nose or just behind the dorsal fin I rig them on a fishfinder rig the weight depends on the current but I find if you hook the herring through the nose they tend to stay closer to the bottom if you hook them behind the dorsal fin they have a little more freedom to move around the water column ive had good results either way. your biggest job is going to be getting live herring... (I have spots for that too specifically for herring) I live well mine in a 55 gallon homemade live well I usually jig with a sabiki rig to get my herring once I'm out on the shore and have my rods set up to soak I take one on the live herring live line it through its nose and scap net more herring while I'm waiting for bites so I seldom run out of bait. keep in mind you cannot scap net herring in the creeks and other tributaries. its a huge fine if you do but its perfectly legal to scap net in the river...I get most of my bait to start my days out of the wappingers creek in wappingersfalls using a rod and sabiki rig... then I scap net out of the river... also if you don't have a live herring to live line for scap netting you can use a nine inch storm swim shad from dicks I do that as well and if the herring are there youll be able to see them follow that swim shad then its just a matter of getting them to follow the swim shad over your net.. youtube search scap netting herring and youll find videos of people doing it on the Hudson in wappingers highland newburg good way to learn the technique.. hope all this info helps. another thing to note is the stripers run up the wappingers creek if you know how small of a creek this is youll be shocked to know that I have taken a 33 pound 42 inch striper during slack tide on a live herring... this was off the same bridge I sabiki my herring from too
Ha. I've only had luck a handful of times, but this guy outdid me in a single video. This spring I'm going to give newburgh another shot. I'd kill for a day of striper fishing like this.
@@axeandsmash48g some guy here name Joe AKA Chewbacca here in broad channel in queens new York York. Caught a massive 55 lb. I said oily molly. Took a picture had it mounted but ate the real fish .I've seen 20s in the channel. Great video.
I sure hope you've since learned how to properly revive a fish. That 38" is dead. Given the slot limit, this is exactly why DEC should require education and testing to obtain a marine permit. No offense, man. I can see you're passionate about it and really enjoying yourself.