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Chesapeake Bay Baltimore Washington D.C. Fishing Report Today

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Dive into the latest updates with the "Chesapeake Bay, Baltimore/Washington D.C. Fishing Report Today" podcast. Stay informed on daily fishing conditions, tips, and hotspots in the Chesapeake Bay area, including detail-rich reports for Baltimore and Washington D.C. Ideal for anglers of all levels, our expert hosts deliver timely advice on bait, tackle, and the best catches. Tune in for your essential fishing guide in the Chesapeake region! 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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354 episodios

episode Early Summer Striper Bite: Baltimore Bay Bridge and Key Bridge Hot Spots artwork

Early Summer Striper Bite: Baltimore Bay Bridge and Key Bridge Hot Spots

This is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–Washington corridor. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern. Weather Service marine forecasts are calling for light southwest winds early, building a bit in the afternoon, with air temps climbing through the 70s into the low 80s and only a slight chance of a pop-up storm. Skies are partly cloudy, humidity’s up, and we’ve got stable barometric pressure—good ingredients for a decent bite, especially around the tide changes. According to NOAA tide tables for the upper Bay around Baltimore, we’ve got a moderate morning incoming, a mid-day high, then a late-afternoon ebb. Think moving water windows: one in the morning and another toward evening. Sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m. with sunset near 8:35 p.m., so you’ve got a lot of low-light to play with at both ends of the day. Recent reports out of local charter captains and tackle shops around Middle River and the Bay Bridge say striped bass are still the headliner, with plenty of 18–24 inch schoolies and a few bigger keepers mixed in. Anglers are putting double-digit counts in the boat when they stay mobile and work the marks instead of camping on one spot. White perch numbers are strong in the creeks and along hard bottoms, and there’s a steady pick of channel catfish in the upper rivers. A few speckled trout and small blues are showing down toward the mouth, but they’re still spotty up this way. Fish activity has been best at first light and again late in the day when the boat traffic dies down. Midday, the bite’s tougher unless you go deeper or fish the shade lines and pilings. Stripers are holding on structure: bridge pilings, drop-offs, and rock piles in 15–35 feet. Perch are stacked on oyster bars and around riprap, especially where there’s current. For lures, local favorites are working: - **For stripers:** 3–5 inch soft plastics on 1/4–1/2 oz jig heads in chartreuse, pearl, or purple; half-ounce bucktail jigs tipped with a paddle tail; and metal spoons or Kastmaster-style jigs when they’re chasing bait. A lot of guys are doing well with white or chartreuse paddletails slow-rolled near the bottom. - **For perch:** small beetle spins, shad darts tipped with grass shrimp, and tiny gulp-style plastics. - **For cats:** simple bottom rigs with cut bunker or chicken liver. On the bait side, bloodworms and grass shrimp are hard to beat for perch and schoolie stripers. Fresh bunker chunks or soft crab on a fish-finder rig will tempt bigger stripers and cats. Live spot, if you can get them at the bait shops, are producing some nicer rockfish around the pilings and channel edges. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Key Bridge and the Patapsco channel edges:** Work jigs around the pilings on the moving tide for stripers, and don’t overlook the nearby ledges for cats. - **Bay Bridge pilings and rock piles:** Classic striper territory—jig vertically along the shadow lines, especially during the stronger parts of the tide. Closer in, the mouths of the Magothy and Severn are giving up good perch and the occasional keeper rock along points and oyster bars. If you’re heading out, think safety first, watch that afternoon wind, and try to time your best effort around those tide swings and low-light periods. Travel light, stay flexible, and let the fish tell you what they want—start with plastics, switch to bait if the bite slows. 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

14 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bay: Dawn Patrol Stripers and Moving Tide Gold artwork

Early Summer Bay: Dawn Patrol Stripers and Moving Tide Gold

This is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–D.C. corridor. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern. Air temps are running in the mid‑60s at first light, pushing into the upper 70s to low 80s by afternoon, with light southwest winds and a mix of sun and clouds. Humidity is up, so expect a bit of haze over the water and the usual afternoon pop‑up shower risk. NOAA’s marine forecast is calling for generally calm bay conditions this morning, building chop if the breeze kicks up later. Sunrise is around 5:40 a.m., with sunset close to 8:35 p.m., giving you a long window to work those low‑light bites. First light and last light are still your best bets for bigger, less pressured fish, especially in the upper bay. Tide-wise, we’re on a typical mid‑June cycle with a pre‑dawn incoming and a late‑morning high at most upper bay stations, then a mid‑afternoon low. Check nearby stations like Annapolis, Tolchester, and Baltimore Harbor for your exact times, but plan to fish the last two hours of the incoming and the first hour of the outgoing for the sharpest current and best action. Recent reports from local anglers and tackle shops around Kent Narrows, Middle River, and the Bay Bridge say striped bass are still the main show, with a mix of schoolies and keeper‑sized fish coming off structure, especially during moving tide. There’ve been steady catches of 18–24 inch rockfish, with a few bigger ones for folks working deeper edges and pilings. White perch are thick in the creeks and along hard bottoms, and spot are starting to show, especially down toward Eastern Bay. A few speckled trout and small red drum have been reported from the lower Eastern Shore side, not wide‑open yet but worth a look. Fish activity has been best early and late. Midday bite slows unless you drop deeper or find shaded structure. Bait schools—mainly small menhaden and bay anchovies—are clustered around channel edges and bridges; where you find the bait, you’ll find the rock. For lures, think small, natural, and versatile: - For stripers: 3–5 inch soft plastic paddletails in pearl, chartreuse, or bunker pattern on 1/4 to 1/2 oz jig heads, plus bucktail jigs dressed with twister tails. Topwater walkers and poppers at dawn around riprap, points, and bridge pilings are producing some explosive strikes. - For perch and spot: tiny shad darts, 1/16 oz jigs with Gulp minnows, and small spinners. Best baits: - Stripers: fresh cut menhaden, soft crab, or live spot if you can get them. Bloodworms still do work, especially on the edges. - Perch and spot: bloodworms, grass shrimp, and small bits of clam on high‑low rigs. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your chart: 1. The Bay Bridge pilings and rock piles: Work the down‑current side of the pilings with jigs during moving tide. Let your jig swing naturally; most hits come just as it lifts off the bottom. Early morning topwater along the shallower spans can surprise you. 2. Mouths of Middle River and Hart‑Miller area: Drifting channel edges and shoals with jigs or live bait has been putting keeper stripers and good perch in the box. Focus on that transition from 8–15 feet where you can mark bait. If you’re closer to D.C., the upper tidal Potomac around Fort Washington and downstream has been kicking out some nice catfish and occasional rockfish on cut bait, with largemouth bass tight to grass and wood in the creeks. That’s your Chesapeake Bay report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next rundown. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

Ayer - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bite: Stripers, Perch, and Catfish on the Upper Bay artwork

Early Summer Bite: Stripers, Perch, and Catfish on the Upper Bay

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 Baltimore, first light is just after 5:40 a.m. with sunset close to 8:35 p.m., giving you a wide window to work those low‑light bites. Mornings are starting mild and humid, afternoons warming into the upper 70s to low 80s with a south to southwest breeze most days and a chance of pop‑up thunderstorms late in the day. Plan to be off the water or tucked in a creek by mid‑afternoon if you see those dark clouds stacking. Tides on the upper Bay are running the usual two highs and two lows, with a mid‑morning high and late‑afternoon low around the Key Bridge and up into the Patapsco. Down toward Annapolis and the mouth of the Severn, shift that schedule a little later. Moving water has been the key; slack tide has been dead slow, but once that current starts sliding, the bite turns on fast. Striped bass are still the headliner. Most fish are schoolies in the 18–24 inch range with some mid‑20s mixed in, holding on channel edges, bridge pilings, and any hard structure with a clean current seam. Light‑tackle jigging has been solid: 3/4‑ to 1‑ounce jig heads with 4–5 inch paddle tails in chartreuse, electric chicken, and natural bunker colors are producing steady action. A lot of locals are also doing well tossing small metal spoons and 1‑ounce jigging spoons straight under the birds when they pop up. Live bait has been deadly when you can get it. Live spot and soft crab are top of the menu; bloodworms are still pulling fish but they’re pricey, so most folks are saving them for picky bites. Cut bunker on the bottom is pulling in a mix of schoolie rock and the occasional catfish in the upper reaches of the rivers. White perch are thick in the creeks and along rip‑rapped shorelines. Small jig heads tipped with grass shrimp, bloodworms, or little pieces of soft crab are doing work, and any tiny gold spoon or beetle‑spin has been money for folks fishing light spinning gear. Perfect time to take kids or just put a mess of fish in the cooler for a fry. Blue catfish in the Potomac and upper Patuxent are still wide open. Fresh cut gizzard shad, bunker, or chicken breast soaked in a little garlic are filling coolers with fish in the 5–20 pound range, with bigger ones showing after dark. Heavy sinkers, strong leaders, and patience – they’ll come to you. As for hotspots, two standouts right now: • The **Key Bridge and Patapsco River channel edges** – Work those pilings, drop‑offs, and nearby humps with jigs or live bait on the moving tide. Schoolie stripers and the odd better fish have been stacked here when the current’s right. • The **Mouth of the Severn River and surrounding Bay side points** – Early and late, cast soft plastics or small topwaters along points and rip‑rap. Once the sun’s up, slide out deeper and jig the drops and ledges where the bait is marking. If you’re looking for an easy half‑day, slip into any of the shallower creeks at first light with small paddletails or topwaters for rockfish and perch. Once the sun gets high, back off into 10–20 feet and fish jigs or bottom rigs. That’s the scoop from around the Chesapeake for 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

12 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Early June Bay Awakening: Striped Bass, Specs, and Perch Bite Guide artwork

Early June Bay Awakening: Striped Bass, Specs, and Perch Bite Guide

Good morning, anglers, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore and Washington, D.C. waters. Early June has the Bay waking up fast, with **striped bass**, **speckled trout**, **bluefish**, **white perch**, and **catfish** all in play depending on the water and tide. For **tides**, the smartest move today is to fish the moving water. In this part of the Bay, the bite usually picks up best on the last of the outgoing and the first of the incoming tide, especially around creek mouths, bridge pilings, points, and channel edges. If you’re launching before dawn, target the first hour of current change and again near the evening flood. For **weather**, expect classic early-summer Chesapeake conditions: warm, humid air, with the chance of morning clouds or pop-up showers and a breeze that can help break up the surface. A light chop is often a good thing out here, especially for breaking fish. If the wind lays down hard, go smaller and quieter with your presentation. **Sunrise** is early enough to make first light worthwhile, and **sunset** gives you that last strong window for topwater and baitfish activity. The best action is often right around dawn and again in the final hour before dark. Recent reports from local waters have been pointing to a mixed bite. Anglers around the upper Bay and tributaries have been finding **rockfish hitting live bunker, cut bait, and paddletails**, while **white perch** have been stacking up near docks, riprap, and bridge shadows on bloodworms and small jigs. In warmer pockets and grassy shorelines, **speckled trout** have been showing on soft plastics and small topwaters. **Bluefish** can show up suddenly and cut through a school like a pair of scissors, so keep wire leaders handy if they’re around. If you’re fishing deeper holes and tidal edges, **catfish** remain steady on cut bait and shrimp. Best **lures** for today: - **4 to 6-inch paddletails** on jigheads, especially pearl, chartreuse, and opening night colors - **Topwater walkers and poppers** at first light - **Metal spoons** for covering water when bait is scattering - **Small soft plastics** for perch and specks near structure Best **bait**: - **Live bunker** for striped bass - **Cut menhaden** or **fresh cut bait** for bigger predators and catfish - **Bloodworms** for perch - **Shrimp** when you want steady bites from mixed species A couple of **hot spots** worth checking: - **The mouths of the Magothy, Severn, and Chester River systems**, where bait gets pushed by the tide - **Bridge pilings and current seams** around the Bay Bridge approaches and nearby channel edges If I were running the boat today, I’d start shallow at daybreak with a topwater or paddletail, then slide deeper as the sun gets up and the current starts rolling. Keep an eye out for breaking fish, working birds, and nervous bait flicking on the surface—that’s where the action is. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to **subscribe** for more local fishing reports. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

11 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Striper Bite: Work the Tides and Low Light for Action on the Upper Bay artwork

Early Summer Striper Bite: Work the Tides and Low Light for Action on the Upper Bay

This is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–D.C. corridor. We’re sitting under classic early‑summer patterns around the upper and mid‑Bay. The National Weather Service is calling for a warm, muggy day: light southwest breeze early, building into the low teens by afternoon, with a mix of sun and clouds and a chance of a pop‑up shower as the heat builds. Morning air temps start in the upper 60s, pushing well into the 80s by mid‑day. According to the U.S. Naval Observatory, sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m. with sunset near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long window to work the tides. NOAA tide tables for the upper Chesapeake show an early‑morning incoming tide, peaking mid‑morning, then easing to a late‑afternoon low. That sets up a classic one‑two punch: pre‑sunrise to mid‑morning on the flood, then an evening bite as current picks back up. Slack in the heat of the day is likely to be slow, especially in the shallows. Recent dock talk from local marinas and charter captains around Rock Hall, Kent Island, and the Patapsco has been consistent: striped bass are still the headliner, with a mix of keepers and schoolies. Light‑tackle jigging over mid‑Bay structure has been producing decent numbers when the current is moving. Anglers have been reporting pockets of 18–24 inch fish with some larger mixed in, especially at first light. White perch are thick on hard bottom and around piers, and the catfish bite in the upper Bay rivers has been steady, especially in the Susquehanna, Patapsco, and Potomac. For lures, think “natural and subtle” in this clear early‑summer water. Local tackle shops are moving a lot of 4–6 inch soft plastics in alewife and chartreuse/white on 1/2 to 1 oz jig heads for stripers. Small metal spoons and Kastmaster‑style jigs are working when fish are chasing small bait on top. Topwater plugs—Spooks, poppers, and walkers—have been drawing explosive strikes right at daybreak over shallow bars and points; once the sun’s up, switch to jigs and deeper edges. For perch, tiny beetle spins, shad darts tipped with bait, and small inline spinners are putting fish in the bucket. On the bait side, fresh menhaden remains king for stripers and big blue cats, either chunked or live‑lined where allowed. Bloodworms or good quality fish‑bite strips are deadly on perch and spot. Nightcrawlers and cut eel are doing work on catfish in the rivers and creek mouths. If you’re soaking bait, focus on that moving water window; dead slack has been a grind. Couple of local hot spots to keep on your radar: 1. Mouth of the Patapsco and Francis Scott Key Bridge area: current breaks around channel edges and structure have been holding schoolie stripers, especially on the last half of the incoming tide. Work jigs along the drop‑offs and watch for bait on the sounder. 2. Eastern Bay and the mouth of the Chester: hard bottom and channel edges are producing mixed bags of stripers, perch, and the occasional speckled trout. Early‑morning topwater over the flats, then slide off to jig the deeper contours once the sun gets high. If you’re fishing close to D.C., the tidal Potomac is still a solid bet for blue cats and the odd striper down around the bridges and channel ledges—just bring enough weight to hold in the current. Work the low‑light, moving‑water windows, stay mobile until you mark fish, and keep an eye on that afternoon breeze; it doesn’t take much to stack up a nasty chop in the open Bay. 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

10 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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