Come join us Friday evening July 30 7:00 PM to wade the mile-long Penfield Reef in search of stripers and bluefish. Penfield Reef is a narrow sandbar extending from the beach in Fairfield almost out to the Penfield Lighthouse. This has been a popular trip for the past several years and we typically catch good numbers of stripers after dark. Anglers of all skill levels are welcome.
This time of year fishing is best in the evening and deep into the night. We will start fishing on a safe outgoing/falling tide that will offer the best chance at success.
Wading conditions range from walking on a level sandy beach to wading waist-deep around slippery boulders. You can fish wherever you are comfortable. To make it out to the end of the reef where the best action is requires about a 40 min. walk over sand/ gravel.
Time: Meet at 7:00 PM at Veterans Park 909 Reef Rd, Fairfield CT 06824. We will provide an overview of the reef and how to fish it. We will then figure out parking closer to the access. Fish as little or as long as you like. We will stick together out there.
Fly Tackle: 7-9 Wt rods with floating lines. Approx. 7 ft. leaders tapering to around 15 lb test. Standard saltwater flies like deceivers, clousers, epoxy flies, etc. work fine. Consider some high floating patterns for after dark like crease flies and gurglers.
Other Gear needed: Waders with wading belt, headlamp, pliers (needle nose with cutters work fine). Carry a water bottle with you.
Optional but helpful gear: Wading staff, stripping basket, Boga grip, rain top.
Spinning Lures/ Teasers: A correctly rigged spinning rod will usually out-fish a fly rod by a lot. Think light tackle like heavy freshwater bass rods on the longer side. A 7-9 ft rod rated for 10-15 lb line is ideal, but whatever you have will likely work. We have done very well after dark using floating swimming plugs that run shallow. YoZuri Crystal Minnow, Redfin, Bomber A-Salt, Daiwa SP Minnow in 5-6” can be very effective. Please remove barbs from these plugs. In the daylight hours, surface poppers, soft plastics, light bucktails, and tins can all produce fish. After dark, swimming plugs are usually fished on a teaser rig with a fly.
Respond to John Hildenbrand with any questions.