Ocean City Fishing

Ocean City has something for everyone. Take some time to get to the sand and do a littlesurf fishing. Take your own boat or join others on a head-boat for exciting offshore fishing, The inshore bays provide lots of flounder, spot, croaker, tog and the occational Striper! Do you prefer to fish from ajetty? Try the Ocean City Inlet. Also, vist our Assateague Island page.
Summer Flounder ("fluke") - a flatfish with eyes and color pattern on the left side of the body. These fish spend most of their time on or near the bottom although they can swim rapidly in pursuit of prey. Maximum size is 37". Two to five pounders are most commonly caught.
Drum Family: Atlantic croaker, Spot, Kingfish, Weakfish, Black drum and Red drum are members of the drum family, so named because of the drumming sound they make. These fish are identified by a lateral line that extends to the end of the tail fin.
Atlantic Croaker ("hardhead") - silvery with slightly diagonal dark lines or rows of spots along the upper body. Tiny barbels form a row along the inner edge of the lower jaw. Maximum size is 24". Two pounders are considered big.
Spot distinguished from croakers by their shorter, deeper body and the absence of chin barbels. The body is silvery with 12-15 slightly diagonal yellowish bars along the side. The spot's tail fin is slightly forked; the croaker's is slightly rounded. Maximum size is 14". A 1/2 pound spot is a big surf catch.
Kingfish (whiting, sand mullet) - Both southern and northern kingfish may be taken in the surf. Both species are silvery gray above with 7 to 8 darker diagonal bars (the bars are much darker on northern kingfish). The snouts are conical with a subterminal mouth. The chin has a single barbel. The first dorsal fin is triangular and much higher than the second dorsal fin. Maximum size for northern kingfish is 18" and 15" for southern kingfish. A 1 1/2 pounds is a decent catch.
Weakfish (gray trout, squeteague, yellowfin) - upper body dark olive to bluish, peppered with many small spots of varying color. Occasionally the spots form irregular diagonal lines. The underside is silvery-white. All fins are tinged with yellow. The mouth is large but delicate. Maximum size is 36"; most taken are less than 28". A 4-6 pound fish from the surf is good.
Black Drum (young: puppy drum) - deep bodied with an arched back. There are many long barbels on the chin. When alive the body is silvery with a brassy sheen and 4 or 5 broad black bars. When dead the body turns dark gray. The throat of the black drum is armed with large pavement-like teeth used to crush shellfish. Maximum size is 66"; most taken are under 36". Historically, 38-40 pound black drum were caught regularly along Assateague. Now they are rare.
Red Drum (channel bass, redfish, young: puppy drum) - body more elongated than the black drum's. The upper body is copper-colored above grading to silvery below. May be distinguished from the black drum by the absence of chin barbels and the presence of a black spot at the base of the tail. Maximum size is 60".
Striped Bass (rockfish, striper) - body elongated with a slightly protruding lower jaw. The back is olive-green to dark blue grading into silvery sides and a white belly. Black spots form 6-9 longitudinal stripes extending from behind the head to the tail. The separated first and second dorsal fins are triangular in shape. Maximum size is 72". In the early 1970's, 14-pound stripers were common. Restrictions were imposed to increase population size.
Bluefish (young: snapper blue) - body elongated with a forked tail fin. The body is greenish or bluish above with silvery sides and a white underside. The mouth is large with many razor sharp teeth. The jaw protrudes. The first dorsal fin has 7-8 spines and the taller second dorsal fin is twice as long as the first. Maximum size is 45"; 15-18 pound"chopper" blues are a great catch in the Assateague surf. |