Cape Cod Canal Early Season: Schoolies and Slot Fish on the Morning Jig Bite episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 13, 2026 · 3 MIN

Cape Cod Canal Early Season: Schoolies and Slot Fish on the Morning Jig Bite

from Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI

This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report. We’re sitting on an early morning **outgoing tide** through mid‑morning, flipping to **incoming early afternoon and flooding toward dark**. Local tide tables out of Sandwich and Buzzards Bay show a strong mid‑tide push both morning and evening, with the heaviest current in that 3–4 hour window after turn. That’s your prime jig and pencil popper time. Weather along the Canal is classic early‑season mix: cool start in the low 50s warming into the upper 60s, light west to southwest breeze, mostly clear skies with some high clouds. Humidity’s moderate and visibility is good. Sunrise is right around 5:05 a.m. and sunset about 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got nice long low‑light windows at both ends of the day. In terms of **fish activity**, the night bite has been best, with the pre‑dawn gray light still producing. Local shop talk up and down the Canal says there’s a steady pick of **schoolie to slot striped bass**, with a few **mid‑30‑inch fish** and the occasional bigger girl when the tide and bait line up. Mackerel have been in and out, and herring schools are thinning but still around enough to keep the bass interested. A few keeper **fluke** have been taken on the Cape side edges and scattered **scup** on bait closer to the bottom. The last few days, guys working jigs at first light have reported **good numbers of 22–28 inch stripers**, with some crews tallying a dozen or more fish in a tide when they stay mobile. After sunup the bite slows and shifts deeper, with more fish coming on bottom presentations. For lures, it’s been very much a **jig and topwater** game: - Heavy **bucktail jigs** and 2–4 oz soft‑plastic jigs in natural sand eel or mackerel patterns bounced near bottom on the moving tide. - **Pencil poppers** and spooks in bone, blurple, and mackerel patterns have been drawing explosive hits at first light when the surface slicks show bait. - Slim soft plastics on jigheads – 5–7 inch sand eel imitations – have been money in the slower stretches and along the edges. Best bait right now: fresh **mackerel chunks**, **seaworms**, and **clams** fished on the bottom for a mixed bag of bass, scup, and the odd fluke. Eel guys soaking live eels at night along the deeper banks are still quietly picking off a few better‑class fish. A couple of **local hot spots** to consider: - **The Cribbin / Pole 120–130 area** on the mainland side: classic Canal structure, strong current seams, and a good shot at bass on jigs during the middle of the tide. - **Army Corps and down toward the Herring Run** on the Cape side: great in low light with topwaters and metals when bait stacks on the east end push. As always out here, match your weight to the current, keep your offering in the strike zone, and don’t be afraid to move if you’re not bumping fish – the Canal rewards the walkers. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report. We’re sitting on an early morning **outgoing tide** through mid‑morning, flipping to **incoming early afternoon and flooding toward dark**. Local tide tables out of Sandwich and Buzzards Bay show a strong mid‑tide push both morning and evening, with the heaviest current in that 3–4 hour window after turn. That’s your prime jig and pencil popper time. Weather along the Canal is classic early‑season mix: cool start in the low 50s warming into the upper 60s, light west to southwest breeze, mostly clear skies with some high clouds. Humidity’s moderate and visibility is good. Sunrise is right around 5:05 a.m. and sunset about 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got nice long low‑light windows at both ends of the day. In terms of **fish activity**, the night bite has been best, with the pre‑dawn gray light still producing. Local shop talk up and down the Canal says there’s a steady pick of **schoolie to slot striped bass**, with a few **mid‑30‑inch fish** and the occasional bigger girl when the tide and bait line up. Mackerel have been in and out, and herring schools are thinning but still around enough to keep the bass interested. A few keeper **fluke** have been taken on the Cape side edges and scattered **scup** on bait closer to the bottom. The last few days, guys working jigs at first light have reported **good numbers of 22–28 inch stripers**, with some crews tallying a dozen or more fish in a tide when they stay mobile. After sunup the bite slows and shifts deeper, with more fish coming on bottom presentations. For lures, it’s been very much a **jig and topwater** game: - Heavy **bucktail jigs** and 2–4 oz soft‑plastic jigs in natural sand eel or mackerel patterns bounced near bottom on the moving tide. - **Pencil poppers** and spooks in bone, blurple, and mackerel patterns have been drawing explosive hits at first light when the surface slicks show bait. - Slim soft plastics on jigheads – 5–7 inch sand eel imitations – have been money in the slower stretches and along the edges. Best bait right now: fresh **mackerel chunks**, **seaworms**, and **clams** fished on the bottom for a mixed bag of bass, scup, and the odd fluke. Eel guys soaking live eels at night along the deeper banks are still quietly picking off a few better‑class fish. A couple of **local hot spots** to consider: - **The Cribbin / Pole 120–130 area** on the mainland side: classic Canal structure, strong current seams, and a good shot at bass on jigs during the middle of the tide. - **Army Corps and down toward the Herring Run** on the Cape side: great in low light with topwaters and metals when bait stacks on the east end push. As always out here, match your weight to the current, keep your offering in the strike zone, and don’t be afraid to move if you’re not bumping fish – the Canal rewards the walkers. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips. 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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Cape Cod Canal Early Season: Schoolies and Slot Fish on the Morning Jig Bite

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How long is this episode of Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report Today?

This episode is 3 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 13, 2026.

What is this episode about?

This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report. We’re sitting on an early morning **outgoing tide** through mid‑morning, flipping to **incoming early afternoon and flooding toward dark**. Local tide tables out of Sandwich and...

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