Cape Cod Canal Early Summer: Schoolies and Slot Fish on the Morning Flood Tide
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Cape Cod Canal report.
We’ve got a classic early-summer setup on the Ditch. Overnight temps dropped into the upper 50s, bouncing into the low 70s this afternoon with light southwest breeze and decent visibility. Humidity’s up but not brutal, and only a slight chance of a passing shower. Sunrise hit right around 5:05 a.m., sunset will be just after 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got long light and plenty of time to work the tides.
Tide-wise, you’re looking at strong moving water on both ends of the day. Expect a flood pushing hard toward the west this morning, then a robust east-running ebb this afternoon and into the evening. As most locals know, those first two hours of a fresh tide, especially when it lines up with low light, are when the Canal really shows its teeth.
Recent action has been classic June mixed bag. Solid numbers of schoolie striped bass are still around, with a fair share of slot fish and the occasional over-slot cruising the edges. A few anglers reported multiple fish mornings with a half-dozen or more bass apiece, mostly 22–30 inches, with some pushing into the mid-30s. Scattered bluefish have begun nosing into the Canal, not huge numbers yet, but enough 5–8 pound choppers to slice up your soft plastics if you’re not paying attention.
Best producers have been big-profile offerings that match the mackerel and squid pushing through. On the hardware side, heavy metal lips, 2–4 ounce pencil poppers, and swim shads in the 5–7 inch range have been getting crushed on the breaking tides, especially at first light. White, mackerel pattern, and bone remain the confidence colors. For subsurface work in deeper, faster stretches, guys are doing well with 3–4 ounce jigs tipped with paddle tails or bucktail skirts, bounced tight to the bottom.
If you’re fishing bait, fresh chunked mackerel and pogies are the tickets, with live eels coming into their own after dark along the rocky edges. Soak them on a fish-finder rig with just enough weight to keep them down in the sweep. With the water warming, the night bite has been steadily improving, especially on the bigger fish that don’t want to play in bright sun and boat traffic.
A couple of hot spots to keep in mind today: the Railroad Bridge area has been productive on the west-running tide, with fish stacking on the current seams and eddies. Down toward the east, the Cribbin’s/Scusset stretch has been giving up good fish to early risers working pencils and big swimmers across the rips right at gray light. If the surface bite dies, drop jigs straight down the edges of those rips; there’ve been some better marks hanging low.
Fish activity has been very tide-dependent. Slack water has been pretty dead, but as soon as that current starts to dig in, bait shows and the bass perk up. Bird life has been decent—nothing like a full-blown blitz week, but enough gulls and terns tipping you off to where the bait is getting pushed.
Plan your session around moving water, keep your offerings big and natural, and don’t be afraid to walk if your first stop is quiet. The Canal rewards the anglers who cover ground and adjust to the tide.
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