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New York City Hudson River Fishing Report Today

Podcast von Inception Point AI

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Kultur & Freizeit

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Mehr New York City Hudson River Fishing Report Today

Dive into the latest "Hudson River, New York City Fishing Report Today," your go-to podcast for real-time fishing updates in NYC! Get expert tips, fish activity reports, weather conditions, and the best spots to cast your line along the iconic Hudson River. Perfect for anglers of all skill levels looking to enhance their fishing experience in New York City. Tune in daily to stay ahead of the catch! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Episode Early Summer Heat: Stripers Thinning, Blues Heating Up on the Lower Hudson Cover

Early Summer Heat: Stripers Thinning, Blues Heating Up on the Lower Hudson

Artificial Lure here with your Hudson River and New York Harbor fishing report. We’re sitting on a warm, muggy early-summer pattern around the city. Overnight temps sat in the upper 60s to low 70s with daytime highs pushing into the upper 80s under hazy sun and some humidity. Light south to southwest breeze around 5 to 10 knots keeps the river just choppy enough to move baits without beating you up. Clouds may build late with a small chance of a shower inland, but along the river it’s mostly dry. On the lower Hudson and harbor, tides are running on the typical semi‑diurnal cycle: a pre‑dawn high followed by a mid‑morning ebb, then an afternoon flood. That first outgoing right after sunrise and the start of the evening flood are your prime windows. Slack water in the middle of the cycle has been slow; fish are turning on when the current shows some push along the edges. Sunrise is right around the early 5 o’clock hour, with sunset close to 8:30 in the evening, giving a nice, long crepuscular bite. The low‑light periods are still your best bet for quality fish, especially around structure where boat traffic is lighter. Striped bass are thinning out from the peak of the migration, but there are still schoolies and the occasional mid‑20s to low‑30‑inch fish hanging around from the George Washington Bridge down to the Battery, especially where there’s a hard current seam. Anglers chunking fresh bunker near the Jersey side piers have been picking a handful of keepers a tide when they commit to sitting on one good edge. Up by Inwood and Spuyten Duyvil, smaller bass and schoolie blues have been harassing peanut bunker on the surface during the stronger part of the tide. Bluefish action has been solid in the harbor and around the Statue of Liberty. Most are cocktail to 5‑pound class, with a few bigger choppers mixed in. Metals and small topwater plugs in the morning have produced quick flurries of fish when birds pin bait against the current lines. Fluke are settling into their summer haunts at the mouth of the Hudson and along the channel edges off Jersey and Brooklyn. Drift bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp swimming mullet or strips of squid and spearing combos in 15 to 35 feet. Shorts still dominate, but there are keeper panels if you work the drops and change up color and weight with the current. Best artificial lures today: – For stripers: 4‑ to 5‑inch soft plastics on 3/8 to 1‑ounce jigheads in white, bone, and bunker patterns; small swimming plugs and walking topwaters at first light. – For blues: tins like Kastmasters and Deadly Dicks, plus durable poppers you don’t mind getting chewed. – For fluke: bucktails from 3/4 to 1‑1/2 ounces with chartreuse or white Gulp. Best baits: fresh bunker chunks and clam for bass, spearing and squid strips for fluke, and whole or chunked bunker for blues. Fresh matters; frozen has been noticeably less productive. A couple of local hot spots worth your time: – The west‑side Manhattan shoreline from Pier 40 down toward Battery Park, working the rock edges and pier pilings on the outgoing. – The confluence around the Kill Van Kull and the mouth of the Hudson, where the mixing currents stack bait and draw both bass and blues when the tide is moving. Water clarity is typical city summer: stained with a green‑brown tint, so go a bit heavier on profile and vibration. Keep leaders in the 30–40‑pound range around the rocks and bridge abutments; there’s plenty of junk to rub you off. That’s it from Artificial Lure. 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

22. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Hudson River Early Summer: Schoolies, Blues, and Prime Tide Windows in NYC Cover

Hudson River Early Summer: Schoolies, Blues, and Prime Tide Windows in NYC

Artificial Lure here with your Hudson River fishing report for the New York City stretch. We’re sitting on a classic early‑summer pattern. Overnight temps dipped into the 60s, climbing into the mid to upper 70s today with light southwest wind and decent visibility. Local forecasts call for a mix of sun and clouds with only a slight chance of a passing shower, so it’s a comfortable day to post up along the bulkheads or drift the channel edges. Tides through the city reach are running the usual mixed semidiurnal rhythm. Expect a strong incoming tide pushing up from the Battery through midday, then a steady ebb flushing bait back downriver in the afternoon. On these warmer days, that first half of the incoming and the start of the outgoing are your prime windows, when current breaks form along pier pilings, rock edges, and the mouths of the smaller coves. Sunrise hit early, around the 5:20–5:30 AM mark, with sunset near 8:30 PM, giving you a long stretch of low‑angle light at both ends. Dawn has been the most consistent for active feeds; the last hour of light is a close second, especially when the breeze lays down and the river slicks off enough to see surface pops. The big spring striped bass push has mostly slid upriver by now, but there are still schoolie stripers hanging around the deeper holes and current seams, along with plenty of harbor species. Anglers along the West Side piers and the Jersey side have been picking at schoolie bass in the 18–26 inch range, a mix of bluefish from cocktails up to low teens, and the usual suspects—schoolie weakfish, porgy, and some chunky white perch closer to the brackish stretches. Boat guys working the channel edges report flurries of blues shredding bait on the surface when the tide starts moving. For lures, keep it simple and local. Small to mid‑size soft plastics on jig heads, 3–5 inches, in bunker, pearl, and chartreuse are putting fish in the net when bounced along the bottom or swung through current seams. Slim metal jigs and casting tins cover water and match the small bait that’s thick in the river now. Topwater plugs and walk‑the‑dog style lures can fire up blues and the better bass during low‑light periods, especially along rip lines and around pier ends. If you’re soaking bait, fresh or well‑cured bunker chunks are still king for stripers and blues. Clam and sandworms score on smaller bass, porgy, and the occasional weakfish, especially if you’re fishing closer to bottom along structure. Sabiki rigs tipped with small bits of bait can fill a bucket with baitfish and the odd surprise when the current isn’t ripping too hard. A couple of city hot spots to target: • The West Side piers from about 34th Street up through the 70s: plenty of access, good current, and steady reports of schoolie stripers and bluefish, especially on the corners where the tide sweeps around. • Around the Battery and up into the lower East River: strong current, bait concentrations, and the chance at mixed‑bag action—stripers, blues, and the odd weakfish when the tide is right. Fish smart: mind the current, use enough weight to stay in the zone, and don’t be afraid to move until you find life—birds dipping, bait flipping, or that one swirl that gives away where they’re feeding. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on‑the‑water updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Hudson River Early Summer: Stripers, Blues, and the Perfect Tide Window Cover

Hudson River Early Summer: Stripers, Blues, and the Perfect Tide Window

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Hudson River fishing report for the New York City stretch. We’re on a warming early‑summer pattern. The National Weather Service calls for temps climbing through the 70s into low 80s, light southwest breeze around 5–10 mph, and only a slight chance of a passing shower later. Skies are partly sunny, humidity creeping up but still comfortable. According to timeanddate, sunrise is right around 5:25 a.m., sunset about 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long, fishable day with classic low‑light windows at dawn and dusk. Tide-wise, NOAA’s Hudson River gauges for the Battery and West 145th Street show a predawn low followed by a strong incoming through the morning, peaking mid‑day, then a draining outgoing in the late afternoon and after dark. That means the morning flood will push bait up along the Manhattan and Jersey shores, while the evening ebb will pull everything off the flats and around structure—perfect ambush setups. Recent word from local tackle shops along the West Side and Pier 40 crowd is that **striped bass** action has slowed from peak spring but there are still keeper‑class fish hanging around, especially in the deeper channels and along the pilings at first light and after dark. Schoolies are more common, with a few 30‑inch fish taken this week on soft plastics and live bunker. The **bluefish** bite has been on and off—mostly cocktails to low teens, blitzing peanut bunker and spearing when the tide really rips. **Stripers:** – Best lures: 4–6 inch soft plastic shads on 3/4–1 oz jig heads in white or bunker pattern; slim metal lures and bucktail jigs bounced near the bottom; and small to mid‑size swimmers like SP Minnows after dark. – Best bait: live or fresh bunker chunks, bloodworms if you’re fishing closer to the Albany line, and the occasional clam chunk for picky fish. Fish the edges of the channel and around pier pilings on the first push of the incoming or the start of the outgoing. **Blues:** – Best lures: metal spoons, surface poppers, and anything you don’t mind getting chewed—think flashy and fast. – Best bait: fresh bunker chunks or mackerel strips drifted mid‑water in the rip lines. There have also been **schoolie weakfish** reported sporadically, mostly at night on pink soft plastics and small bucktails, and plenty of **harbor species**—white perch, eels, and the usual mix of porgies and sea robins down toward the Verrazzano as the water continues to warm. A couple of hot spots to circle: – **Pier 25 to Pier 40, Manhattan:** Good access, strong current seams, and lots of structure. The morning incoming pushes bait right along the wall, and guys have been picking off stripers on soft plastics and bunker chunks. Night sessions here can be very productive when the lights pull in bait. – **George Washington Bridge area / Fort Washington Park side:** Deep water, heavy current, and classic lines where the main river meets shoreline eddies. Bucktails and heavier jigs are the ticket here; fish the start of the outgoing when the river really starts to move. On the Jersey side, the stretch around **Liberty State Park and the old piers** continues to give up a mix of bass and blues, especially on the evening ebb. Work the rip lines where the current breaks around jetty tips and pilings. Tactically, think low‑light and moving water. First light with that incoming tide: throw soft plastics and swimmers tight to structure. As the sun gets high, drop deeper with jigs and bait. Then switch back to plugs and topwater right before sunset and into the night, especially around lit piers and any place the river necks down and the current pinches. That’s the scoop from Artificial Lure on the Hudson today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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

20. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Episode Hudson River Early Summer: Stripers, Blues, and Prime Tide Windows Cover

Hudson River Early Summer: Stripers, Blues, and Prime Tide Windows

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Hudson River NYC fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑summer pattern. The National Weather Service calls for a mild, mostly clear day over the city with light southwest wind around 5–10 knots, highs pushing into the upper 70s to low 80s, and only a slight chance of a stray shower late. That means comfortable conditions and good water clarity along the bulkheads and piers. According to NOAA tide tables for the Battery, we’ve got a predawn low, a strong incoming through the morning, and then a mid‑afternoon high slack before it ebbs again into the evening. In other words: moving water most of the morning and again toward sunset—the prime feeding windows. First light is just after 5:20 a.m., with sunset a little after 8:30 p.m., giving you a long stretch of workable light, especially that golden 2‑hour window around dawn and dusk. Hudson River anglers, local forums, and recent social reports out of Manhattan and Jersey City are all lining up: schoolie striped bass are still around, with a few keeper‑sized fish mixed in, plus steady action from harbor blues, cocktail size up to low teens. Closer to the piers and back inside the slips, folks are picking away at porgies, bergalls, and the occasional weakfish and fluke when the water cleans up on the flood. Best bet for stripers in this tide is to work the edges of the main current seams on the incoming. Bucktail jigs tipped with a small strip of squid or Gulp in white or chartreuse are putting fish in the net. Local sharpies also swear by soft‑plastic paddletails in bunker or “Albino Shad” patterns on 3/8–1 oz jig heads—bounce them slow along the bottom. At night or in low light, a black or dark‑backed swimmer or spook‑style topwater can draw explosive strikes around the light lines. For bait, fresh bunker is king. Chunk it on a fish‑finder rig just off the bottom along the channel edges. If you can’t get fresh, frozen bunker or herring still work, and bloodworms will tempt smaller bass and mixed bottom life. For blues, wire leader and shiny metals or poppers will keep you busy when they push bait to the surface on the rips. Bottom fishermen should bring small hooks and light leader. Sandworms or clams on high‑low rigs will score porgies and assorted panfish around structure. On clearer afternoons, try small bucktails or Gulp shrimp for fluke along sandy patches between the rocks and pilings. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your mental chart: – The piers around West 72nd Street down to about 59th on the Manhattan side: plenty of current breaks, steady striper and blue reports, and decent access. – The Jersey City waterfront, especially near Liberty State Park and the ferry terminals: good current, bait often stacked in tight, and regular catches of bass and blues when the tide is moving. Plan it so you’re set up and fishing an hour before the tide turns, fish through the swing, and keep an eye on bait flipping—gulls and terns will show you where the game’s on. That’s the word from the river. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure—if you dig these reports, make sure to subscribe so you never miss the next tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

19. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Hudson River NYC Fishing Report: Building Moon, Strong Tides, Schoolies On The Move Cover

Hudson River NYC Fishing Report: Building Moon, Strong Tides, Schoolies On The Move

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Hudson River NYC fishing report. We’re on a building moon phase and the **tide** is doing a lot of the work for you today. NOAA’s Battery and West 23rd Street tables show a classic two‑high, two‑low cycle, with a strong early **flood pushing in from the south** and a solid **ebb rolling out mid‑day into the evening**. Around the Hudson, that means best windows are **the last two hours of the incoming and the first hour of the outgoing**, especially around structure and current seams. Weather-wise, National Weather Service has us in **comfortable early‑summer conditions**: light southwest breeze, fairly stable barometer, and **partly cloudy skies**. That’s prime for fish roaming the channel edges and piling onto current breaks. Expect a soft bite mid‑day if the sun gets high and bright, then a pickup again toward the evening tide swing. Sunrise and sunset from USNO tables put **first light just after 5 a.m.** and **sunset a little after 8:30 p.m.** That **pre‑work gray light** and the **last hour before dark** are your money times, especially for stripers and blues sliding tight to the rocks and pier shadows. Recent action report from local tackle chatter and dock talk along Pier 25, Pier 40, and down by Battery Park has been **mixed but improving**. Schoolie **striped bass** in the 18–24 inch class are still around, with the occasional keeper pushing high 20s to low 30s. A few **bluefish** have been blitzing bait on the surface during the stronger tides, mostly 2–5 pounds. Daytime has seen steady **schoolie bass, cocktail blues, and plenty of harbor bycatch**—**snapper‑sized bluefish, sundial, and the usual mix of sea robins, eels, and the odd fluke** on the bottom rigs. If you’re throwing artificials, the hot producers have been **small paddletail swimbaits** in the 4–5 inch range, **white, bunker, and olive over pearl**, on 3/8 to 3/4 ounce jig heads to match that Hudson current. Anglers working the edges with **3/4 to 1 ounce bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp** in chartreuse or white are picking up fluke and the better bass. At night and in low light, **slim profile plugs**—sp minnows, small metal lips, and 5–6 inch soft jerkbaits—have been taking fish right along the wall. For **bait**, fresh is king. Local shops report **fresh bunker, sandworms, and bloodworms** moving quickest. A **chunk of bunker on a fish‑finder rig** dropped just off the rocks during the tide swing is still one of the best ways to connect with a bigger bass or blue. If you’re looking for mixed bag and just want rod bend, **peel shrimp or bits of clam** on hi‑lo rigs will keep you busy with smaller bass, perch, and panfish species that push up with the salt. A couple **hot spots** to keep on your list: - **Pier 25 to Pier 40, Manhattan side**: Fish the **current seams off the pier ends** and the **rocky edges just north and south of the structures**. Great for schoolie stripers on soft plastics and bucktails, plus roaming blues when the bait stacks up. - **Battery Park and South Ferry area**: Classic **meeting point of East River and Hudson water**, lots of moving current. Work **jigs and chunks along the bottom contours**; it’s snaggy but holds quality fish, especially on that outgoing tide flushing bait out of the harbor. Keep your leaders **20–30 lb fluoro**, especially with those cocktail blues around, and don’t be afraid to downsize lures if the water clears—those Hudson fish see a lot of hardware. That’s the word from the river. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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

18. Juni 2026 - 3 min
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