Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report. We’re in a late‑spring pattern now and the Canal is starting to wake up. Overnight we had cooler air pushing in, but today shapes up mild and fishable: light west to southwest breeze, generally under 10–15 knots, air temps climbing through the 50s into the 60s, and only a slight chance of a passing shower. According to the National Weather Service marine forecast for Cape Cod Bay and Buzzards Bay, seas stay relatively calm, so it’s a good day to walk the wall. Sunrise is right around 5:15 a.m., with first light just before that, and sunset about 8:00 p.m. Low light is still your money window on the Canal, especially with the water clearing up and bait holding tight to the rocks. Tidewise, the Canal’s always a little quirky, but early this morning we’ve got the east current easing and then flipping west later in the morning. Mid‑morning into midday you’ll see a stronger west run, then slack and another east push late afternoon into evening. Plan your sets: swing jigs and big swimmers on the west tide, and work lighter plastics, bucktails, or live bait when the current backs off. The bite the past few days has been improving. Local tackle shops around the Canal report keeper striped bass pushing into the 30–36 inch range with a few mid‑40s in the mix. No full‑blown topwater blitzes yet, but enough fish moving through that a patient angler can put together a solid morning. Schoolies are thick along the edges at first light and after dark. Best producers have been classic Canal offerings. On the west tide, heavy 3–5 oz jigs in bunker, olive‑white, or parrot patterns are getting down through the current—especially paired with a sparse pork‑style trailer or paddletail. For surface action, large pencil poppers and spooks in bone, mackerel, or blurple have taken fish at dawn. Several regulars have been doing well on big metal lips and deep‑diving swimmers at night, especially in darker colors. If you prefer bait, fresh chunked mackerel or pogie will out‑fish frozen most days. Live eels after dark are starting to come into play, especially around the ledges and seams when the current slows. Bring heavier leaders; fish rubbing against rocks and mussel beds have been fraying lighter fluoro. A couple of hot spots to consider: the stretch around the Railroad Bridge and down toward the middle of the Canal has seen a steady pick of keeper bass, especially on the west running tide just after slack. On the mainland side, the area around the “Herring Run” has schoolies and occasional bigger fish shadowing the last of the river herring. Work plugs just outside the thickest current and don’t overlook the pockets and back eddies. Overall activity is moderate but clearly trending up. If you can hit the pre‑dawn into early‑morning tide switch with a bag of pencils, a few heavy jigs, and maybe some fresh chunk bait, you’ve got as good a shot as anyone at bending a rod and maybe sticking your first real Canal cow of the season. That’s your Canal rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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