Chesapeake Bay Baltimore Washington D.C. Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–D.C. stretch. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up. Around the mid‑Bay and mouth of the Patapsco, tides today are running a pre‑dawn low, then a strong incoming through the morning, easing to high mid‑day, then a softer outgoing into the evening. That building morning flood is your best bet for a solid bite along channel edges and structure. Weather across the upper Bay is light to moderate southwest breeze, generally 5–12 knots, with warm, muggy air and water temps in the low to mid‑70s. Skies are partly cloudy with good windows of sun, enough to push bait up but not so bright that fish get lockjaw. Sunrise is right around a little after 5:30 a.m. locally, with sunset a bit after 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got generous dawn and dusk feeding windows. Rockfish have been the main show. Recent reports from local charter captains and marina docks around Port Covington, Fort McHenry, and the Key Bridge have put keeper stripers coming on live spot, soft plastics, and bucktails worked near the shipping channel edges and bridge pilings. Schoolie stripers are plentiful, with some mid‑20‑inch fish mixed in; the bigger keepers have been coming early and late or in deeper current seams. Best artificial offerings right now: - 4–5 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits in chartreuse/white or “electric chicken” on 1/2–1 oz jig heads - White or yellow bucktail jigs tipped with a small paddletail or pork rind - Topwater walkers in bone or silver/black at first light along points and rip lines If you’re bait‑soaking, peeler crab, live spot, and fresh cut menhaden have been producing. Bloodworms are still drawing white perch and the odd striper along piers and rock piles. Speaking of perch, the white perch bite around piers in Middle River, the Magothy, and the shallows off Bodkin Point has been steady. Small shad darts, 1/8‑oz jigheads with Gulp! minnows, and bits of bloodworm or grass shrimp under a float will keep the rod bent. Catfish are thick in the upper reaches of the Patapsco and Potomac tribs; fresh cut bait on fish‑finder rigs will find them fast. A few speckled trout and puppy drum have been sneaking into the lower stretches toward the mouth of the Bay and the lower Potomac; early risers throwing small paddletails in natural bunker or shrimp colors over grass flats have been rewarded. Couple of hot spots to circle: - The Key Bridge and adjacent channel edges: drifting live bait or jigging plastics along the pilings on the incoming tide for stripers. - The mouth of the Patapsco and shipping channel ledges off Fort McHenry down to Seven‑Foot Knoll: vertical jigging and trolling small spoons and bucktails around bait schools. Plan your trip around that morning flood tide or the last light outgoing, keep an eye on the bird activity, and match your lure size to the local bay anchovies and peanut bunker. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing intel. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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