Chesapeake Bay Baltimore Washington D.C. Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–D.C. corridor. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up. Around the mid‑bay, tide tables from NOAA show a pre‑dawn incoming tide rolling through the Key Bridge and Hart–Miller area, topping out mid‑morning, then draining hard through early afternoon, with a smaller evening flood. Sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m., sunset near 8:35 p.m., giving you a long light window to play the tides. Weatherwise, local marine forecasts are calling for a warm, muggy day: morning temps in the upper 60s pushing into the low 80s by afternoon, light southwest winds 5–10 knots, and only a slight chop on open water. Skies are partly cloudy, which is great—enough light to see but dim enough to keep fish comfortable in the upper water column during the early bite. Recent reports from local tackle shops and charter skippers up and down the western shore say rockfish are still the headliners. Keeper stripers have been coming off shallow structure at first light: think rip‑rapped points in the Patapsco, ledges and humps around the Key Bridge, and the flats near Hart–Miller and Pooles Island. Most folks are picking a handful of fish per outing, with the better crews putting 5–10 solid schoolies in the boat, plus plenty of shorts. White perch action has been steady in the upper rivers—the Patapsco, Magothy, and Severn—especially around dock pilings and channel edges. Bankside anglers are reporting decent numbers of hand‑size perch, with the odd bigger slab mixed in. A few speckled trout and small red drum are starting to trickle into the lower western shore creeks and around the mouths of the Choptank and South River, typical of this time of year. For lures, early and late in the day you can’t go wrong with small to mid‑size **paddle‑tail swimbaits** on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads in chartreuse, pearl, or olive over white. Topwater plugs—Zara Spook‑style walkers and poppers—are putting on a show at dawn and dusk around points and rip lines; just remember to pause the bait when a fish blows up. Metal spoons and 1 oz jigging spoons are working when stripers push bait deeper around channel edges. If you’re soaking bait, **soft crab**, cut menhaden (bunker), and bloodworms are the staples. Bloodworms or small grass shrimp on a high‑low rig are deadly for perch around piers and bridge pilings. For catfish in the upper Bay and lower Susquehanna reach, cut gizzard shad or chicken liver is putting fish in the cooler. A couple of local hot spots to put on your list: - **Francis Scott Key Bridge / Patapsco Mouth** – Work the bridge pilings, current seams, and nearby channel ledges on the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing. Good shot at schoolie stripers and the occasional better fish. - **Hart–Miller Island and Pooles Island area** – Drift or slow‑troll jigs along the drop‑offs, or cast swim shads across the shallow bars at first light. Perch and the odd trout are also showing on the inside edges. If you’re bank fishing, check out the **Fishing Pier at Ft. Smallwood Park** or **North Point State Park** for perch, stripers, and catfish, especially on that evening tide. That’s the latest from around the Bay. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. 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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