EPISODE · Jun 11, 2026 · 3 MIN
Cape Cod Canal: East Tide Stripers and Pre-Dawn Hardware in Late Spring
from Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI
This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal report. We’re lining up on a cool, clear late-spring night rolling into morning on the Big Ditch. Light northwest breeze, temps sliding through the 50s into the low 60s, and decent visibility. A weak system pushed through earlier in the week, but skies are generally fair and the air has that crisp, dry feel that keeps you comfortable on the rip-rap. Tides in the Canal today are running classic mid‑June: predawn east tide easing toward slack, then turning west mid‑morning, with another east push late afternoon into the evening. That first east tide before sunup and the start of the west flood at dusk are your prime striper windows. Sunrise is right around the very early 5 o’clock hour, sunset near 8:20 in the evening, giving you a big stretch of low‑light to work. Striper activity has picked up again after a brief slowdown. Anglers along the Maritime Academy side and mid‑Canal report schoolies mixed with solid keeper bass into the mid‑30‑inch range, with a few bigger fish cruising underneath. The bite has been best when the current really digs in; slack has been slow and picky. A handful of bluefish have shown, mostly in the low‑teens inches, slashing bait on the surface here and there. Recent catches have leaned heavily toward striped bass: plenty of 20–26 inch fish, fair numbers in the 28–34 inch slot, and an occasional mid‑40‑inch cow for the folks grinding the dark hours. Scup are thick on the bottom around the rocks, and a few tog are still being picked off for those dropping crabs tight to structure, though stripers are stealing the show. For lures, this is prime Canal hardware season. Heavy **jigheads with soft plastics**—five to seven inch paddletails and straight tails in white, bone, and olive—have produced well when bounced near the bottom on the east tide. Keep your jig heavy enough to stay down in that ripping current. **Metal lips** and big **swimbaits** in mackerel or bunker patterns have been connecting during the pre‑dawn swing lines. Once the sun is up, work **bucktail jigs** with a small pork or synthetic trailer, white or chartreuse, ticking just off the rocks. If you prefer bait, fresh **mackerel**, **herring**, or **bunker chunks** on the bottom have accounted for some of the bigger bass, particularly at night around the turns of the tide. Eels are starting to come into their own again; a live eel slow‑rolled along the edge during the night tide is still one of the best big‑fish tickets in the Canal. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: • **The Herring Run / Cribbin area**: Always a magnet when bait is around. Work your jigs slightly down‑current of the outflow on that first light east tide. • **The Railroad Bridge stretch toward the Sagamore side**: Good current seams and deep lanes; ideal for heavy jigging on the west tide and running big swimmers just off the drop‑off. Focus on reading the current—no matter where you stand, those breaks and seams are where feeding fish stack up. Keep moving if you’re not getting bumped; the Canal rewards the walkers. That’s the word from Artificial Lure today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
What this episode covers
This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal report. We’re lining up on a cool, clear late-spring night rolling into morning on the Big Ditch. Light northwest breeze, temps sliding through the 50s into the low 60s, and decent visibility. A weak system pushed through earlier in the week, but skies are generally fair and the air has that crisp, dry feel that keeps you comfortable on the rip-rap. Tides in the Canal today are running classic mid‑June: predawn east tide easing toward slack, then turning west mid‑morning, with another east push late afternoon into the evening. That first east tide before sunup and the start of the west flood at dusk are your prime striper windows. Sunrise is right around the very early 5 o’clock hour, sunset near 8:20 in the evening, giving you a big stretch of low‑light to work. Striper activity has picked up again after a brief slowdown. Anglers along the Maritime Academy side and mid‑Canal report schoolies mixed with solid keeper bass into the mid‑30‑inch range, with a few bigger fish cruising underneath. The bite has been best when the current really digs in; slack has been slow and picky. A handful of bluefish have shown, mostly in the low‑teens inches, slashing bait on the surface here and there. Recent catches have leaned heavily toward striped bass: plenty of 20–26 inch fish, fair numbers in the 28–34 inch slot, and an occasional mid‑40‑inch cow for the folks grinding the dark hours. Scup are thick on the bottom around the rocks, and a few tog are still being picked off for those dropping crabs tight to structure, though stripers are stealing the show. For lures, this is prime Canal hardware season. Heavy **jigheads with soft plastics**—five to seven inch paddletails and straight tails in white, bone, and olive—have produced well when bounced near the bottom on the east tide. Keep your jig heavy enough to stay down in that ripping current. **Metal lips** and big **swimbaits** in mackerel or bunker patterns have been connecting during the pre‑dawn swing lines. Once the sun is up, work **bucktail jigs** with a small pork or synthetic trailer, white or chartreuse, ticking just off the rocks. If you prefer bait, fresh **mackerel**, **herring**, or **bunker chunks** on the bottom have accounted for some of the bigger bass, particularly at night around the turns of the tide. Eels are starting to come into their own again; a live eel slow‑rolled along the edge during the night tide is still one of the best big‑fish tickets in the Canal. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: • **The Herring Run / Cribbin area**: Always a magnet when bait is around. Work your jigs slightly down‑current of the outflow on that first light east tide. • **The Railroad Bridge stretch toward the Sagamore side**: Good current seams and deep lanes; ideal for heavy jigging on the west tide and running big swimmers just off the drop‑off. Focus on reading the current—no matter where you stand, those breaks and seams are where feeding fish stack up. Keep moving if you’re not getting bumped; the Canal rewards the walkers. That’s the word from Artificial Lure today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide. 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: East Tide Stripers and Pre-Dawn Hardware in Late Spring
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