Chesapeake Bay Baltimore Washington D.C. Fishing Report Today

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

3 min · 10 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Early Summer Striper Bite: Work the Tides and Low Light for Action on the Upper Bay

Descripción

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

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episode Summer Bite Settles In: Early and Late Light Rule the Upper Bay artwork

Summer Bite Settles In: Early and Late Light Rule the Upper Bay

This is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–Washington corridor. Around the upper Bay, NOAA tide tables for Fort McHenry show an early morning high followed by a late-morning fall, then an afternoon push back in. That gives you classic moving water both dawn and late day. Light north to northwest breeze, generally under 10 knots, with air temps climbing through the 70s into the low 80s and only a slight chance of a pop-up shower. Sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m. with sunset near 8:35 p.m., giving you a long low-light window to work. Water clarity is decent in the main stem after recent stable weather, though the rivers still carry a little stain, especially after any localized storms. Surface temps in the upper Bay and tidal Potomac are sitting in the low to mid-70s, which has the summer bite settling in: early and late are best, with a bit of a lull during the bright mid-day. Striper activity has been picking up on the channel edges and bridge structure. Anglers have been boxing schoolie rockfish in the 18–24 inch range with an occasional mid-20s fish mixed in. Jigging 3/4–1 oz bucktails or paddletails in chartreuse, pearl, or white on the drop-offs around the Key Bridge, Bay Bridge pilings, and the shipping channel ledges has been the ticket. When they’re on top, small metal spoons and spooks have drawn some explosive surface strikes at first light. White perch fishing has been steady in the shallows of the Patapsco, Magothy, Severn, and South Rivers. Folks soaking bloodworms or grass shrimp on bottom rigs over oyster bars and around pier pilings are putting together nice mixed bags of hand-sized perch and spot, with 20–30 fish a trip very realistic. Small Beetle Spins, 1/16 oz jigheads tipped with Gulp or small plastics will keep you busy if you prefer to cast. Blue catfish in the tidal Potomac and Patuxent remain the most reliable “meat trip.” Fresh cut bunker or shad on fish-finder rigs is producing numbers of cats in the 5–20 pound class, with bigger fish lurking on deeper outside bends and holes. The bite is consistent all day but strongest on that moving tide. For largemouth and snakehead in the upper tidal rivers and creeks off the Bay, low light is prime. Frogs and buzzbaits over grass at dawn, followed by Texas-rigged worms, chatterbaits, or swimbaits along weed edges once the sun gets up, have been putting fish in the boat. Snakeheads are smashing white frogs and noisy topwater in skinny water sloughs. Best lures and baits right now: - Rockfish: 4–6 inch paddletails on 1–1.5 oz jigheads, bucktails with twister tails, topwater plugs at dawn and dusk. - Perch/spot: bloodworms, grass shrimp, Fishbites strips, small spinners and shad darts. - Blue cats: fresh cut bunker, gizzard shad, or chicken with liver/oil soak. - Largemouth/snakehead: hollow-body frogs, buzzbaits, chatterbaits in white or black, and dark soft plastics. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: - The Patapsco River mouth and shipping channel edges from the Key Bridge down toward Seven Foot Knoll for jigging schoolie stripers. - The Bay Bridge pilings and nearby rock piles for a mix of rockfish and hefty white perch on jigs and bottom rigs. If you’re willing to drive a bit, the tidal Potomac near the Wilson Bridge and downstream channel holes are loaded with blue cats. That’s your on-the-water rundown 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 de jun de 20263 min
episode Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report: Stripers, Perch & Summer Topwater Action artwork

Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report: Stripers, Perch & Summer Topwater Action

I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–D.C. corridor. Around the mid-Bay this morning, winds are light out of the southwest, building to a 10–15 knot breeze by afternoon with a chance of pop‑up thunderstorms inland. Air temps are running from the upper 60s at first light into the mid‑80s by late day, with humid, summer‑sticky air and a hazy mix of sun and clouds. Water temps are in the low to mid‑70s across most of the upper and middle Bay, a touch cooler near the mouths of the rivers. Sunrise is right around the early‑morning six o’clock hour, with sunset in the mid‑eight o’clock range, giving you a long, bright day but the best windows are still low‑light and tide changes. The overnight brought a higher high tide on the western shore; expect a mid‑morning ebb, strongest mid‑day, then a late‑afternoon flood that should fire up the bite around structure, points, and channel edges. Stripers have been the main story this week from the Key Bridge down toward the Bay Bridge. Keeper‑class fish are coming on live spot and soft crab, but there’s been a solid schoolie topwater bite at dawn on rocky points and rip lines. A lot of anglers are throwing 4–5 inch paddletails in natural bunker or olive over pearl, along with white bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp or strip baits. When the sun gets higher, they’re dropping down to jig along 20–35 foot ledges and bridge pilings. On the panfish front, white perch are stacked up in the lower Patapsco, Magothy, and Severn rivers. Perch are chewing on bloodworms, grass shrimp, and small bits of soft crab on bottom rigs, with beetle spins and tiny paddletails doing work for folks who like to cast. Catfish action remains strong in the upper Bay and the Potomac side, with cut menhaden, chicken liver, and fresh perch heads producing steady bites. Speckled trout and red drum reports are still spotty this far north but a few specks have been picked off grass edges and creek mouths on the Eastern Shore side, especially for folks working shrimp‑pattern soft plastics or small MirrOlures at first light. Bluefish are beginning to show in better numbers down toward the mouth of the Choptank and the main‑stem Bay; metals and fast‑worked plastics are the ticket, but bring wire or heavier leaders if you’re targeting them. If you’re looking for hot spots today, put time in around: - The **Francis Scott Key Bridge** and adjacent channel edges in the Patapsco: early‑morning topwater for stripers, then jigging the drops as the sun gets up. - The **Bay Bridge rock piles and pilings**: classic mid‑Bay structure, with stripers and perch hugging the shade lines on moving water. Work both the shallow pilings at dawn and the deeper rubble during the stronger parts of the tide. Best overall lures right now: 4–5 inch paddletails on 1/2–1 ounce jig heads, white or chartreuse bucktails, chrome spoons or metals for bluefish, and small spinners for perch. For bait, you can’t go wrong with live spot, soft crab, cut menhaden, bloodworms, or grass shrimp. That’s your Chesapeake Bay rundown 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

21 de jun de 20263 min
episode Early Summer Rockfish: Ride the Tide for Consistent Action on the Bay artwork

Early Summer Rockfish: Ride the Tide for Consistent Action on the Bay

This is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for the Baltimore–D.C. crowd. We’re sitting on a classic early‑summer pattern. Weather’s shaping up mild and muggy, light south to southwest breeze, a mix of sun and clouds, and a chance of a pop‑up afternoon thunderstorm. Temperatures are running in the upper 70s to mid‑80s, so pack water and sun protection. NOAA’s marine forecast has winds generally under 15 knots and manageable chop on the main stem of the Bay. Tides around the mid‑Bay and upper Bay are giving you a good pre‑dawn incoming and a solid late‑afternoon moving tide. Think low water just before sunrise and a strong flood for the first few hours of light, then another push late day. That moving water window is when you want to be on your best structure and current edges. Sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m., with sunset near 8:35 p.m., so you’ve got a long day to play. The bite has been very tide‑driven; slack water has been slow, but once the current starts rolling, things pick up quick. Recent action reports from local tackle shops around Annapolis and the Patapsco have rockfish back in decent numbers, mostly 18–24 inches with an occasional keeper pushing upper 20s. Light‑tackle jigging over channel edges and humps has produced the most consistent counts, with boats reporting a dozen or more fish in a morning if they stay mobile. White perch fishing has been solid in the creeks and along riprap; buckets of hand‑sized perch are coming in for folks fishing from shore and small skiffs. Catfish are still thick up the rivers, especially the Potomac and Patuxent, with fish in the 5–15 pound range common on bait. For lures, it’s a soft‑plastic game right now. Think 3–5 inch paddletails and straight tails on 1/4 to 3/4 ounce jig heads, depending on depth and current. Natural colors like alewife, chartreuse over white, and olive are hot. Topwater plugs at first light – small walk‑the‑dog baits and poppers – have been producing some explosive rockfish strikes on the flats and along current seams. For perch, beetle spins, small inline spinners, and tiny paddle‑tails on 1/16 ounce heads are money. If you’re soaking bait, bloodworms and soft crab are the top tickets for perch and rockfish, while fresh cut bunker or chicken liver is the go‑to for blue cats and channel cats up the rivers. Grass shrimp and nightcrawlers will keep the kids busy with perch and panfish all day. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your chart: First, the Key Bridge and outer Patapsco River channel edges – working the pilings and nearby ledges with jigs and topwater at dawn has been producing rockfish and the odd bluefish. Second, the mouth of the Severn River out to the Bay Bridge pilings – early‑morning topwater and mid‑day jigging around the bridge and nearby lumps have been steady for schoolie rock and some fat perch. Closer to D.C., the upper Potomac channel edges and laydowns are still stacked with blue cats if you want steady rod‑bending action. Fish early, fish late, and line up those trips with the stronger parts of the tide. Move until you mark bait and arches, and don’t be afraid to downsize your offerings if the bite gets picky. 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

20 de jun de 20263 min
episode Early Summer Striper Bite: Chesapeake Bay's Morning Flood Tide Setup artwork

Early Summer Striper Bite: Chesapeake Bay's Morning Flood Tide Setup

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 the mid‑Bay and mouth of the Patapsco, tides today are running a pre‑dawn low, then a strong incoming through the morning, easing to high mid‑day, then a softer outgoing into the evening. That building morning flood is your best bet for a solid bite along channel edges and structure. Weather across the upper Bay is light to moderate southwest breeze, generally 5–12 knots, with warm, muggy air and water temps in the low to mid‑70s. Skies are partly cloudy with good windows of sun, enough to push bait up but not so bright that fish get lockjaw. Sunrise is right around a little after 5:30 a.m. locally, with sunset a bit after 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got generous dawn and dusk feeding windows. Rockfish have been the main show. Recent reports from local charter captains and marina docks around Port Covington, Fort McHenry, and the Key Bridge have put keeper stripers coming on live spot, soft plastics, and bucktails worked near the shipping channel edges and bridge pilings. Schoolie stripers are plentiful, with some mid‑20‑inch fish mixed in; the bigger keepers have been coming early and late or in deeper current seams. Best artificial offerings right now: - 4–5 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits in chartreuse/white or “electric chicken” on 1/2–1 oz jig heads - White or yellow bucktail jigs tipped with a small paddletail or pork rind - Topwater walkers in bone or silver/black at first light along points and rip lines If you’re bait‑soaking, peeler crab, live spot, and fresh cut menhaden have been producing. Bloodworms are still drawing white perch and the odd striper along piers and rock piles. Speaking of perch, the white perch bite around piers in Middle River, the Magothy, and the shallows off Bodkin Point has been steady. Small shad darts, 1/8‑oz jigheads with Gulp! minnows, and bits of bloodworm or grass shrimp under a float will keep the rod bent. Catfish are thick in the upper reaches of the Patapsco and Potomac tribs; fresh cut bait on fish‑finder rigs will find them fast. A few speckled trout and puppy drum have been sneaking into the lower stretches toward the mouth of the Bay and the lower Potomac; early risers throwing small paddletails in natural bunker or shrimp colors over grass flats have been rewarded. Couple of hot spots to circle: - The Key Bridge and adjacent channel edges: drifting live bait or jigging plastics along the pilings on the incoming tide for stripers. - The mouth of the Patapsco and shipping channel ledges off Fort McHenry down to Seven‑Foot Knoll: vertical jigging and trolling small spoons and bucktails around bait schools. Plan your trip around that morning flood tide or the last light outgoing, keep an eye on the bird activity, and match your lure size to the local bay anchovies and peanut bunker. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing intel. 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 de jun de 20263 min
episode Early Summer Stripers and Perch: Playing the Mid-Bay Tide Window artwork

Early Summer Stripers and Perch: Playing the Mid-Bay Tide Window

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

18 de jun de 20263 min