PODCAST · society
Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Tune in to "Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report Today" for the most up-to-date fishing conditions, expert tips, and captivating stories from local anglers. Perfect for enthusiasts and pros alike, our podcast keeps you informed about the best spots, bait, and techniques to reel in your next big catch. Don't miss out on the insider info for fishing success on Martha's Vineyard!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Early Summer Stripers and Blues: Martha's Vineyard's Perfect June Bite
This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern around the Island: light southwest flow this morning, building to a 10–15 knot southwest breeze by afternoon, with air temps in the low 60s at first light pushing into the low 70s. Humidity is up but not oppressive, and seas are modest: generally 1–3 feet outside, with a bit more chop in the rips as that breeze stacks against the tide. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., with sunset close to 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got a nice long window, but the best bite has been in the low light. Early dawn and the last hour before dark are money right now, especially on the south shore and around the rips. Tides today favor the morning crew. Around Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs you’re looking at an early morning high followed by a strong outgoing through mid-morning; over on Wasque and Middle Ground, that falling water has been the trigger. The fish have been setting up on the edges when the current really starts to move, then spreading out as it slacks. Striped bass remain the main story. Schoolies are everywhere, but there are legit slot and occasional over-slot fish in the mix. Shore guys have been picking bass off State Beach at first light, along South Beach, and up-Island around Squibnocket and Menemsha, especially on a moving tide after dark. Boat anglers working Middle Ground, Hedge Fence, and Wasque rips are finding good numbers when the tide stands up and the bait gets pinned. Bluefish are in better than they were a few weeks back. You’ll find them crashing sand eels and squid off the south shore and in the rips, with some choppers showing in the evening along Norton Point and off East Beach on Chappy. Not wall-to-wall blues, but enough to keep things interesting and to chew through a few leaders. There are also fluke scattered along the south side. Drifters working from off Katama toward Great Point in 30–60 feet have been putting some decent doormats in the box when they commit to a steady drift. Inside, scup and sea bass are still very much on the menu around structure: rock piles, wrecks, and the shoals around the north side. On the bait front, the buffet is classic Vineyard June: sand eels thick in spots, squid around the rips and off the south side, plus small baitfish tight to the beach at dawn. Match that and you’re in business. For lures, keep it simple: – Small to mid-size soft plastics in olive or bone on light jigheads for schoolie bass. – Needlefish plugs and slim metal for the surf when fish are on sand eels. – Pink or amber soft plastic squid imitations and bucktail jigs in the rips. – For blues, anything that shines: Kastmasters, metals, and inexpensive topwater pencils you don’t mind getting shredded. – For fluke, bucktail jigs tipped with squid strips or Gulp in chartreuse or white are doing the work. Best bait right now: – Fresh or frozen squid strips for bass, blues, and fluke. – Sandworms or sea worms for shore-bound anglers targeting bass and scup around the jetties and rock piles. – Cut mackerel or pogies if you can get them, especially after dark for larger bass. A couple of hot spots to circle: – Wasque and the surrounding rips on Chappaquiddick: solid bass with a shot at blues when the tide stands up. Work the edges, don’t plow through the middle, and keep an eye on that current. – Middle Ground and the shoals off Vineyard Haven: schoolie-heavy but great action, with some bigger fish mixed in at dawn and dusk, especially on the outgoing. From the sand, focus your effort pre-dawn and after dark on South Beach, Norton Point, and the rocks around Menemsha. Keep your presentations low and slow if the water’s clear and the moon is bright. That’s it from Artificial Lure here on the Vineyard. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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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Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report: Prime Striper Bite with Evening Rip Action
This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a nice, fishy pattern setting up around the Island. Early morning started cool with light southwest breeze, building to 10–15 knots this afternoon with a bit more chop on the south side. Skies are partly cloudy, air in the 60s pushing into the low 70s, and just enough breeze to keep the mosquitoes honest. According to the National Weather Service marine outlook, seas in Vineyard Sound are running 1–3 feet, a touch higher along Squibnocket and the South Shore. That makes boat and kayak work comfortable close to home, but you’ll want to watch the rips. Sunrise was right around 5:10 a.m., with sunset about 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got a good, long light window. The prime feeding bites have been the pre‑dawn gray light and the last hour before dark, especially on moving water. NOAA’s tide tables show a mid‑morning high and an evening low in Vineyard Haven today, so you’ll see strong current pushing through the normal chokepoints: Middle Ground, the edges of Menemsha and Quicks Hole, and the boulder fields off Squibby and Philbin. The outgoing tide tonight should really light up the rips. Local reports from island tackle shops say the **striped bass** bite has been solid, with a mix of schoolies and plenty of legal fish, plus the occasional 30‑inch‑plus taken after dark. Shore anglers have been picking them along State Beach, the jetties at Oak Bluffs and Vineyard Haven, and the Menemsha shoreline. Boat crews drifting the rips around Middle Ground and Lucas Shoal are seeing steady action. **Bluefish** have been in and out, but the last few days saw more consistent catches in Vineyard Sound and along the South Shore. Gators are still scattered, but 4–8 pound blues are chewing when the bait shows. A few short **fluke** and keeper **sea bass** have been hitting the coolers from drift boats working the sand and rubble east of the Island and off Cape Poge. According to recent weigh‑ins reported by island shops, anglers are bringing in multiple stripers per tide, sometimes a dozen or more schoolies per angler with a couple of keepers in the mix, plus enough blues to keep things interesting. Best lure choices right now: - For bass at first and last light: small metal lips, SP Minnows, and 5–7 inch soft plastics in bone or olive on ½–1 oz jigheads. - For daytime blues: 1–2 oz Kastmasters, Hopkins, or simple tin with a single hook; swap to wire or heavy fluoro leaders if you’re getting bit off. - In the rips: bucktail jigs tipped with soft plastics or pork rind, bounced just off the bottom. Best baits: - Fresh squid strips and live eels after dark for bigger stripers along the rocks. - Sand eels, if you can get them, fished on a fish‑finder rig in the troughs. - Clam or squid on high‑low rigs for sea bass and fluke on the drifts. A couple of hot spots to circle for today: - **Middle Ground and Vineyard Sound rips**: Hit them on the ebb with bucktails and soft plastics for bass, with blues mixed in when the bait stacks. - **Menemsha and the North Shore rock fields**: Waders and rock‑hoppers throwing swimmers and soft plastics at dusk have a real shot at a better‑class striper. Fish smart: watch the birds, mind the bathers as the day warms up, and be respectful around the jetties and crowded access points. The fish are here; it’s all about timing that moving water and leaning into the low‑light windows. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates. 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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Early Summer Bite: Bass, Blues, and Long Light on Martha's Vineyard
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer setup around the Island. Light southwest breeze overnight, building into 10–15 knots this afternoon with a little chop on the south side and Vineyard Sound. Air temps riding in the mid‑60s early, pushing into the low 70s later. Skies partly cloudy, good visibility, and the barometer steady enough that fish should stay active. Sunrise came just after 5 a.m., with sunset coming just before 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a nice long window, but the best bite is hugging low light and moving water. First light through about 8 a.m. and then again in the last couple of hours before dark are prime. Local tide tables for Vineyard Haven show a predawn high, dropping to a late‑morning low, then filling back in this afternoon and evening. That falling water through mid‑morning has been the sweet spot, especially along current edges in Vineyard Sound and around the openings on Chappy. As that tide turns and starts flooding back in later today, expect a second push of fish tight to structure. Striped bass are still the headliner. Word from island tackle shops is that schoolies up to slot, with a few over-slot fish, have been stacked along the north shore rip lines and around the bridges. The Sound side of East Chop and the deeper edges off West Chop have been giving up good numbers on the outgoing, with some boats reporting a dozen or more fish in a tide when they stay on the birds and bait. Over on Chappy, the Gut and Wasque have both seen solid bass action when the tide is cranking, though it’s very much a “fish the window” situation—dead tide equals dead bite. Bluefish are around, but not wall‑to‑wall. Scattered pods have been showing off Cape Poge and occasionally sliding down into the Sound. When you find birds working and terns dipping on sand eels, be ready—those blues have been running 3 to 6 pounds, plenty of fun on lighter gear. Fluke and sea bass guys are still doing well in Vineyard Sound. The drifts off Tashmoo and down toward Middleground have produced keeper fluke mixed with shorts, plus some nice humpback sea bass on the rockier patches. It’s not drop‑and‑stick easy every day, but patient drifts over the right bottom have been filling coolers. For lures, keep it simple and match what’s here. Bass are keyed on sand eels and small squid, so soft‑plastic paddletails and straight‑tail sand eel imitations on 3/8- to 1‑ounce jigheads are money. White, olive, and amber have been hot. Small metal like Deadly Dicks and slender epoxy jigs will get you bit when fish are on tiny bait or when the wind’s up and you need some casting distance. At night, black or blurple needlefish plugs and soft plastics fished slow across the current are taking the better bass. If you’re fishing bait from shore, fresh squid strips and live or chunked mackerel or pogies are top choices for bass, with bluefish happy to chew anything that bleeds. For bottom fish, classic fluke rigs tipped with squid and spearing, or a bucktail and teaser combo for sea bass, are hard to beat. Couple of hot spots to circle for today: First, **East Chop and the Vineyard Haven side of the Sound**—work the rips and current seams on that dropping tide with soft plastics or small metals for steady bass action, with a shot at blues when the birds bunch up. Second, **the Gut and outer edges of Cape Poge on Chappy**—great mix of bass and occasional blues when the tide is moving hard; fish the seams, not the dead slack, and don’t be afraid to go a bit heavier on your jigs to stay down. That’s the word from the water. 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
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Martha's Vineyard Early Summer: Bass, Blues, and Fluke on the Rise
This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern around the Island. Light southwest breeze this morning building a bit in the afternoon, with air temps riding the 60s into low 70s. Skies are mixed sun and clouds, decent visibility, and only a light chop on Vineyard Sound and along the South Shore by midday. Sunrise was right around a quarter past five, sunset will be just before eight-thirty, giving you a long, workable day on the water. Tides around Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs are running the usual semidiurnal swing: a pre-dawn high, dropping to a late-morning low, then filling again mid- to late afternoon. The key windows today are the last two hours of the outgoing and the first push of the flood. Fish that moving water and you’ll do fine. Striped bass are still the headliners. Schoolies are thick along State Beach and under the big bridge at Little Bridge, with enough keepers mixed in to keep it interesting. Night tides have produced some solid mid-30-inch fish on swimming plugs and soft plastics worked deep in the current. Out front, along Wasque and down around the Gut, the surf guys have been into bigger bass after dark on needlefish plugs and black bucktails tipped with pork rind. Bluefish have been spotty but improving. Boats working Middle Ground and the rips off East Chop have found small pods of choppers smashing topwater in the rip lines when the tide stands up. When they’re fussy, metal spoons and epoxy jigs are outfishing the big noisy plugs. Fluke and sea bass action has been steady in Vineyard Sound. Drifters bouncing bucktail jigs sweetened with squid strips are putting some nice keeper fluke in the box. Black sea bass are stacked on the rock piles and wrecky bits; squid and clams on high-low rigs are plenty, but small jigs with Gulp are taking the larger humpbacks. Best lures right now: - For bass: 5–7 inch soft plastics in sand eel colors, SP Minnows, mag darters, and slender needlefish at night. - For blues: pencil poppers, small metal spoons, and epoxy jigs. - For bottom fish: 1–3 oz bucktails with squid or Gulp, and standard bait rigs with squid strips or clam. If you’re fishing bait from shore, fresh squid, seaworms, and chunks of menhaden or mackerel are the top producers. Keep your hooks sharp and leaders a little heavier if you’re expecting blues. A couple of local hot spots to consider today: - **State Beach / Little Bridge**: Work the bridge and adjacent bars on the dropping tide for schoolie bass and the odd keeper, especially first light and after dark. - **Middle Ground shoal**: Excellent for drifting fluke and sea bass, with bluefish and bass pushing bait over the edges when the tide builds. That’s the word from the Island. 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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Martha's Vineyard Early Summer: Stripers, Blues, and Long Light Windows
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a good early-summer pattern setting up around the Island. Light southwest breeze this morning, building 10–15 by afternoon, with air temps riding the mid‑60s to low‑70s along the water. Skies are a mix of sun and clouds, with a little haze over Vineyard Sound. Humidity’s up, but not brutal yet. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, with sunset a bit after eight‑twenty in the evening, so there’s a long fishable window. First light and last light are both worth your time today. Tide-wise, we’re on a typical Vineyard summer cycle: mid‑morning incoming setting up through the early afternoon, then a dropping tide into the evening. The stronger moving water around the top of the flood and first of the ebb is what you want to target, especially along the north shore and in the rips off the east end. Striped bass have been the headline lately. Surfcasters are picking schoolies with the occasional keeper along the north shore from Menemsha over toward Lambert’s Cove, and around the bridge edges on the Lagoon and Senge. Boat guys working Middle Ground and Hedge Fence have been into good numbers of bass, mostly slots with a few overs mixed in when the tide really cranks. According to local tackle shops on the Island, there’ve been some solid nights where anglers have gone tight every drift. Bluefish are around, but not wall‑to‑wall yet. Folks running the rips off Cape Poge and Wasque have found small pods—mostly 3–6 pounders—blowing up on sand eels when the tide stands up. A few have filtered along South Beach and Norton Point as well, enough to chew up a bag of soft plastics in a hurry. Fluke fishing has been picking up on the Vineyard Sound side in 40–70 feet, with keepers mixed in with a lot of shorts. A few nice sea bass are still being taken on the deeper humps and rockpiles, though the easy pickings of early season are tapering. For lures, keep it simple. In the surf, small metal and epoxy jigs in olive, sand eel, and silvery patterns have been hot, along with 4–5 inch soft plastics on 3/8–3/4 ounce heads. At night, black or blurple bottle plugs and needlefish are still putting bass on the sand. Boat anglers are doing well with weighted soft plastics, slim profile swimmers, and bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of squid for both bass and fluke. On the bait side, fresh squid is king right now for bottom fish and will take plenty of bass. Sand eels, if you can get them, are gold. Clam works for mixing in scup and sea bass. For chunking bass from shore, fresh menhaden or mackerel is the way to go after dark on the south side. Couple of hotspots to circle today: First, Middle Ground in Vineyard Sound—classic early-summer striper water when that tide is rolling, and a decent shot at a blue or two. Second, the Wasque/Cape Poge area—still one of the best bets for a mixed bag of bass and blues if you pick your tide and watch the bars and currents carefully. If you’re shore‑bound, the Menemsha area and the jetties around the Lagoon and Senge are both worth a tide. That’s it 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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Vineyard Early Season: Schoolies to Slot Fish, Evening Tides, and Bridge Action
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Vineyard fishing report. We’re in a nice early‑season groove now. Overnight we had light southwest wind easing into 5–10 knots this morning, picking up to 10–15 by afternoon with a bit of chop on the south side. Air temps are sitting in the 60s early, pushing into the low 70s later with decent cloud cover and good visibility. Sunrise slid in around 5:07 a.m., sunset will be just after 8:20 p.m., giving you plenty of light to work both ends of the tide. Tides around Vineyard and Nantucket Sounds are running a modest range today. Mid‑morning brings a building incoming on the north shore, with the ebb lining up late afternoon into evening. That evening drop on the Vineyard Haven and Lagoon side has been the most productive window, especially when it overlaps with the last hour of daylight. Striped bass action has been steady, not insane, but worth the effort. Schoolies to slot fish have been working the rips and shorelines, with a few low‑30‑inch fish reported off East Chop and along the State Beach stretch between Oak Bluffs and Edgartown. The last couple of days, locals have been picking away at bass around the bridges—Jaws, Little Bridge, and Big Bridge—on the outgoing, mostly in the dark or first light. Bluefish are starting to show more consistently outside the ponds and along the south shore, with some tailor‑size fish mixed in off Wasque and down toward Norton Point. Fluke and sea bass are part of the picture now. Drifters inside Vineyard Sound have seen keeper sea bass over rock piles and scattered keepers on the edges, with shorts keeping people busy. A few nicer fluke have come off sandy drops near Middle Ground and Lucas Shoal when the drift isn’t ripping. For lures, keep it simple and local‑style. Soft plastics on half‑ounce to 1‑ounce jig heads—albiesnacks‑style baits, paddle tails in bone, olive, and amber—have been doing most of the damage on bass. Bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of squid or Gulp are still the go‑to for sea bass and fluke. At night, skinny metal lips, bottle plugs, and black or blurple darters played slow in the current are taking better bass off the rocks. If you’re fishing bait, fresh squid and live or freshly dead mackerel are tough to beat for stripers. Clam bellies and squid strips will keep you in business around the bridges and deeper holes. For sea bass and fluke, squid strips or spearing‑and‑squid combos on high‑low rigs will get bit. Couple of hot spots to circle: First, **East Chop to Vineyard Haven Harbor** on that evening dropping tide—work soft plastics or small swimmers along the current seams and boulder fields. Second, **the State Beach bridges** on a moving tide—light jigs, small soft plastics, or bait fished tight to the pilings can produce bass and the occasional blue. If you’ve got a boat, poking around **Middle Ground Shoal** with bucktails for sea bass and fluke is worth your time when the drift cooperates. That’s the word from the Island for now. 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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Martha's Vineyard Early Season: Sand Eels, Schoolies, and the Evening Bite
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑season pattern around the Island. Light southwest flow this morning, building to 10–15 by afternoon, with a bit more breeze on the south shore. Skies trending partly cloudy, air temps pushing into the upper 60s to low 70s along the water. The barometer’s steady enough that the bite should stay consistent through the day. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, with sunset just before eight‑thirty. That gives you a long window, but the best action has been tight to low light: first two hours after dawn and the last two before dark. Tides around Vineyard and Nantucket Sounds are running on a typical semi‑diurnal cycle. Figure mid‑morning high on the north side and a slightly later turn on the south and east. The productive windows have lined up around the last of the incoming and the first push of the drop. On the outgoing, bait flushes off the flats and points and the bass have been stacking on the edges. Striped bass are the headline. Schoolies up to slot fish are pretty steady, with a few bigger girls mixed in at night. Numbers have been good along the north shore rips and around the ferry lanes, with fish pushing sand eels and small squid. Blues have started to show more consistently off the south side and out toward Wasque, not wall‑to‑wall yet, but enough to chew you off if you’re under‑gunned. Fluke picks are scattered but improving on the shoals in Vineyard Sound, and there are some scup and sea bass to round out a cooler if you work the rock piles. Best producers right now: for artificials, think **small and subtle**. Soft‑plastic paddletails in olive, bone, and albino on light jigheads, 3/8 to 3/4 ounce, have been money along the beaches and in the rips. Slim metals and epoxy jigs in sand‑eel colors are a solid bet when the wind comes up. At night, black or blurple swimming plugs and needlefish are still turning the better bass. For bait, you can’t go wrong with fresh squid strips, sandworms, or chunks of menhaden fished on simple fish‑finder rigs. If you’re targeting fluke, bucktail tipped with squid bounced right on the bottom has been the ticket. Couple of hot spots to put on your short list: – Menemsha and the north shore stretch east and west of the harbor: good mix of schoolie bass and some slots on the evening tide, especially when there’s a little chop. Work small plastics and bucktails along the current seams. – Wasque and the surrounding rips on the southeast corner: classic early‑summer playground. Bass and emerging bluefish on the turn of the tide, particularly when the current’s really standing the water up. Heavy jigs, larger soft plastics, and wire‑leader metals if the blues are thick. If you’re fishing from the sand, focus on points, outflows, and any bit of white water you can find. From the boat, pay attention to birds and bait; when the sand eels ball up, the bass won’t be far. That’s the story for now from around the Vineyard. 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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Early June Striper Bite: Work That Afternoon Flood at Martha's Vineyard
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern. Light southwest breeze this morning building into 10–15 knots by afternoon, cooler on the water than on shore, with just enough chop to keep things lively. Skies are mixed sun and clouds, with a slight haze offshore. Sunrise slid in just after 5:05 a.m., sunset will be around 8:20 p.m., giving you a long, fishy day to work with. Tides around Vineyard Haven and Menemsha are running your typical semi‑diurnal cycle. Expect a pre‑dawn high, dropping to a mid‑morning low, then filling back in for a strong afternoon flood and an evening high. That afternoon flood lining up with the sunset bite is the window you want circled in red. Moving water is your ticket; if it’s not running, you’re just casting practice. Stripers are the headline. Schoolies are stacked tight along the north shore and inside the harbors, with a few better slots and the occasional over pushing bait right up onto the beaches at first and last light. Blues are starting to chew more consistently, mostly small to mediums, but they’re aggressive and not picky when that tide stands on its ear. A few folks have been quietly sliding into some early fluke on the south side shoals, and there are whispers of sea bass hanging on the deeper rock piles and wrecks. Recently, the more consistent action has come on smaller offerings. Think 4–5 inch soft plastics on light jigheads, worked just off the bottom through the rips. White, bone, bunker, and olive over white have all been putting fish in the wash. For hardware, SP Minnows, small metal lips, and slender metals like Deadly Dicks and Kastmasters have been solid, especially when sand eels are the main forage. If you’re hunting a bigger bass, a black or blurple needlefish or a big soft‑plastic paddletail swung on the edge of a rip at dusk is still tough to beat. Bait guys are doing well with fresh chunked pogie or mackerel after dark, plus sandworms and clams for a mixed bag of bass, scup, and the odd fluke. If you can get live eels, tuck them into the rocky points on the last of the flood and first of the ebb; that’s when the better fish usually show their faces. Couple of spots to keep on your short list: • The north shore stretch from West Chop to Makonikey: classic Vineyard structure. Work the dropping tide at first light with soft plastics and small swimmers. Birds have been giving away the schools most mornings. • Wasque and the east end, when the tide isn’t ripping your arms off: swing big plugs and jigs through the seams on the flood. If the wind lays down, that evening flood can be magic for a mix of bass and blues. If you’re poking around Menemsha or Lobsterville, keep your eyes on the birds and your feet moving. These fish are roaming; you want to stay one step ahead of the bait, not parked where it was an hour ago. That’s the word from the rock piles for today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide update. 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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Martha's Vineyard Early June: Schoolie Bass and Dawn Bites Around the Tide
Good morning from **Artificial Lure** with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. As of early June, the island is waking up with classic pre-summer action: **striped bass** are the main draw, with **bluefish** likely mixed in, and boat and shore anglers should expect the best movement around moving water and first light. Without live local data in hand, the most reliable approach today is to target the tide swings, fish the dawn bite, and stay mobile if the schoolies aren’t showing. For **tides**, plan your trip around the **incoming tide** and the **first couple hours of the outgoing**. Around Martha’s Vineyard, that moving water pushes bait through the cuts, harbors, and points, and that’s where bass like to feed. The morning window is especially useful because it lines up with low light and less boat pressure. For **weather**, early June on the Vineyard is usually comfortable fishing weather: cool dawn air, a warming day, and often a light sea breeze once the sun gets up. If it’s calm, work the rips and edges. If there’s chop, lean harder on windblown shorelines and current seams, because the bait gets pinned there. For **sunrise and sunset**, early June gives you a long fishing day, with sunrise coming very early and sunset well after 8 PM. That means your best bite windows are often **sunrise**, **last light**, and any strong tide change in between. On **fish activity**, the local story this time of year is usually schoolie bass with a chance at better-sized fish where the bait stacks up. Recent Vineyard action in early June typically centers on **small sand eels, bay anchovies, and menhaden** when they’re around, and that means bass will key on slimmer profiles and natural presentations. If bluefish are in the mix, they can show fast and rough things up, so be ready to switch to tougher tackle. Best **lures** right now: - **Slim soft plastics** on light jig heads - **SP-style minnows** and slender hard baits - **Pencil poppers** at dawn if fish are blasting on top - **Topwater swimmers** when bait is tight to the surface - **Small tins** for covering water from shore or boat Best **bait**: - **Bunker chunks** if larger stripers are around - **Live eels** for a bigger-fish option - **Sand eels** when available and legal to fish - **Clams** for steady shore action on less aggressive fish A couple of **hot spots** worth checking are **Edgartown Harbor and the nearby channels**, especially on moving water, and the **south side rips and points** where bait gets swept along the edge. If you’re shore-bound, fish any inlet, jetty, or current cut that funnels water hard enough to pull bait through. Keep your casts tight to the seam, work the lure just fast enough to stay in the strike zone, and don’t be afraid to move if the water looks alive but quiet. On the Vineyard, that next pocket of fish is often only a few casts away. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe for the next report, and **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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Martha's Vineyard Early June: Stripers Hot, Long Daylight, Perfect Conditions
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool early‑June pattern around the Island. Overnight marine forecasts call for light southwest to west winds, generally 5–15 knots, with seas 1–3 feet and a mix of sun and clouds through the day. Air temps are running in the high 50s at first light, pushing into the upper 60s to low 70s this afternoon, with decent visibility and only a slight chance of a passing sprinkle. Sunrise is right around 5:07 a.m. and sunset near 8:17 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those tides. Vineyard Sound and Nantucket Sound tides are on the early‑morning flood, swinging to an outgoing mid‑day, then another nice evening push of water. In most of the prominent rips and around the ponds you can figure on roughly a 6‑hour cycle, so plan on that first light and last light moving water for your prime shots. Stripers are the headline right now. Schoolies are thick along the north shore and in the ponds, with a solid shot at slot fish and the odd bigger one after dark on the ocean side. Folks working the edges of Lambert’s Cove and Makonikey have been picking away at good numbers, with reports of a dozen or more bass in a tide when the bait stacks in tight. Down‑Island beaches like State Beach and Inkwell have seen steady schoolie action under birds when the sand eels push in. Bluefish are around, but they’re a little here‑today‑gone‑tomorrow. The rips off Wasque and the east end of Chappy have produced some choppers when the current stands up, with a mix of 3–6 pound fish. A few scattered blues have also shown along South Beach and Norton Point on the evening tide, especially when the wind’s got a bit of east in it. Back in the ponds, there are schoolie bass and some decent fluke and scup action. The deeper holes near the channels in Lagoon and Senge are worth a drift with bucktail and squid strips. Shore anglers working local docks and rockpiles are still seeing plenty of porgy, which is great fun and great on the table. Best lures right now: for stripers, small to mid‑sized soft plastics on 3/8 to 3/4 ounce jig heads, sand eel imitations, and slim metal like Deadly Dicks or Kastmasters for when they’re on small bait. Needlefish plugs and small bottle plugs are doing damage after dark on the south side. For blues, toss anything that shines or pops – metal spoons, surface poppers, and sturdy soft plastics you’re willing to sacrifice. For bait, you can’t beat fresh chunked mackerel or bunker, sand eels if you can get them, and seaworms for the shore bite and the kids. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: First, **Chappaquiddick / Wasque area** – classic moving‑water spot with a strong shot at both bass and blues when the tide’s ripping, especially the first couple hours of the drop. Second, the **north shore stretch from Lambert’s Cove up toward Makonikey** – great early‑morning and evening surf fishing, with stripers cruising just off the beach on that inshore bait. That’s the word from around the Island. 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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343
Martha's Vineyard Early Summer Bite: Stripers, Blues, and Fluke in the Rips
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a building early‑summer bite around the Island. A cool ocean breeze overnight left the water with just a light chop and decent clarity. Air temps are running in the low 60s early, heading toward the low 70s this afternoon with a mix of sun and some high clouds. Winds are light southwest, picking up a bit by midday, just enough to put a nice ripple on the rips and beaches. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, with sunset just after eight‑twenty this evening, giving you a long window to work dawn and dusk – still the prime times for stripers on the sand. Tides around Vineyard Haven and Menemsha are running an early morning incoming, peaking mid‑morning, then dropping out through the afternoon, with the evening flood lining up nicely with sunset. That turning water has been the key; slack has been noticeably slower. Local shop talk from the Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs tackle counters has the **schoolie to slot striper** bite steady, with a few fish pushing over 35 inches mixed in. Night guys drifting eels along Wasque and off East Chop have tangled with some heavier bass this week, but it’s far from a blitz – more of a grind with rewards for patience. **Bluefish** are finally showing more consistently. Word from the boats working Middle Ground and Hedge Fence is of scattered pods of 3–8 pound choppers smashing topwater when the tide runs. Not wall‑to‑wall, but enough action to chew up a few plugs. There’ve been **fluke** taken south of the Island and inside Vineyard Sound, mostly shorts with some solid keepers for drifters bouncing bucktails tipped with squid strips. Scup and sea bass are still a good option around rock piles and wrecks, especially for filling a cooler when the bass sulk. For lures, keep it simple and local‑style: - On the beaches at first and last light, small **SP Minnows**, Yo‑Zuri style plugs, and 3/4–1 oz white bucktail jigs with pork rind or Fat Cow strips have been producing. - Around the rips and boulder fields, soft‑plastic paddletails on 3/4–1 oz jig heads in olive, bone, or bunker patterns are tough to beat. - For blues, anything that splashes: pencil poppers, metal spoons, and inexpensive poppers you don’t mind losing. Best bait right now: - Fresh or salted **squid strips** for fluke and sea bass. - **Sea worms** and clam for scup along the piers and rock edges. - Live eels after dark around structure for that one big bass. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: - **Wasque / Katama**: When that tide stands up, there’s still serious current and ambush points for bass and blues. Fish the edges with bucktails on the drop and be ready – it can go from dead to mayhem in minutes. - **East Chop to Vineyard Haven Harbor**: The evening flood has been pushing bait tight to shore. Walk‑and‑cast with small swimmers and soft plastics along the ferry lanes and rock edges; schoolies are common, with the occasional slot cruising through. If you’re shorebound, don’t overlook Menemsha jetty and the State Beach bridges after dark – eels and small jigs in the shadow lines have quietly put up some respectable stripers. That’s the word from around the Island. 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
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342
Early June Striper Bite: Sand Eels and Tide Turns Around Martha's Vineyard
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern around the Island. Light southwest breeze this morning, building a bit by afternoon, with air temps riding the mid‑50s early and topping out in the upper 60s to low 70s. Skies are mixed clouds and sun, just enough chop to put a little life on the water without making it ugly. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, and sunset lands just after eight‑fifteen. That gives you long, fishy edges at first and last light, and if you can line those up with a moving tide, you’re in business. Tide-wise, we’re dealing with good current around the usual striper highways: Middle Ground, Hedge Fence, and the openings at the south side ponds. Think higher water pushing into the ponds mid‑morning, dropping out through late afternoon or evening. Those turns of the tide have been key for the better fish. Striped bass are the main story. Schoolies are thick around the north shore—West Chop, East Chop, and along Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs beaches. There’ve been consistent reports of bass into the low‑30‑inch range, with the occasional bigger fish taken at night on eels. The bite’s been steady enough that you can pick away all day, but the best windows have been dawn and dusk. Bluefish have started to settle in more solidly. South Beach and Norton Point have seen scattered blues busting on sand eels just outside the breakers. It’s not wall‑to‑wall yet, but when they slide in, it’s fast action on metals and topwater. A few gators have been lurking around the rips between the Vineyard and Nantucket Sound, so don’t undersize your leader. On the bottom, scup and sea bass are cooperating nicely. Rocky patches off Menemsha and around the east end reefs are giving up keeper black sea bass with jumbo porgies mixed in. It’s a good plan‑B if the surface bite slows or the wind kicks up. For lures, keep it simple and match the groceries. Sand eels are the main forage right now. Slim soft plastics on half‑ounce jigheads, small paddle tails, and epoxy‑style jigs have been money for both stripers and blues. Needlefish plugs and small metal lips have been producing in the surf at night, especially along the north shore rocks. When the wind lays down, a bone‑colored spook or small pencil popper at first light can pull bigger fish off the edges. If you’re fishing bait, fresh is king. Striped bass have been eating chunked menhaden, fresh squid strips, and clams on the bottom. Live eels after dark around the bridge lights and rocky points are still the best shot at a larger linesider. For sea bass and scup, squid strips and clams on high‑low rigs over structure are hard to beat. Couple of hot spots to circle on the map: First, **Dogfish Bar** up in Aquinnah. That bar has been holding good numbers of stripers on an incoming tide, especially early and late. Work the edges with soft plastics and needles; be ready for a surprise blue sliding through. Second, **Wasque and the Norton Point stretch**. When the currents line up you get textbook rips and bait pushed tight to the beach. Metals and heavy soft plastics get you down in the sweep for stripers and blues, while bait soakers pick at bass on the slack. Crowds are lighter very early, so if you can drag yourself out before the coffee kicks in, you’ll have some prime water to yourself. Bring a mix of hardware, a few confidence baits, and don’t be afraid to move—right now it’s about staying on the bait and the moving water. 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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341
Martha's Vineyard Late Spring: Early Light Bass and Blues on the Move
This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic late‑spring pattern around the Island. Light west to southwest breeze early, building a bit by afternoon, with air temps riding the low 60s into upper 60s along the south side. Skies are partly to mostly clear, and the water is still cool but warming just enough to keep the bite steady, especially at first and last light. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, with sunset just after eight. That gives a long, fishable day, but the best action has been jammed into the low‑light windows. Fish are pushing bait right up onto the bars at dawn, then sliding off into deeper rips once the sun gets up. We’ve got a decent tidal swing today, with an early‑morning flood rolling through Vineyard and Nantucket Sounds, then a mid‑day slack, and an evening ebb that’s been lining up nicely with sunset along the north shore. Think moving water: top of the incoming and first of the outgoing have been the money hours. Striped bass are the headliners. Local chatter from the tackle shops in Edgartown and Vineyard Haven has schoolies just about everywhere, with a solid mix of slot fish and the occasional bigger girl reported from the rips. The Hooter, Middle Ground, and Lucas Shoal have all coughed up keeper bass in the last couple of days on a mix of live bait, soft plastics, and metal. Shore anglers are doing well along State Beach, the Edgartown Lighthouse area, and up-island at Lobsterville. Bluefish have finally shown in better numbers along the south shore and off Chappy. Guys tossing tins and topwater plugs at Norton Point and Wasque have been into scattered gators mixed with bass, especially when birds pin sand eels on the surface. Nothing wall‑to‑wall yet, but enough to chew through your leaders if you’re not ready. Fluke and sea bass reports from Vineyard Sound are steady. Drift the edges off East Chop or between Oak Bluffs and Falmouth, and you’ll pick up a mixed bag. Keep your bucktail on the bottom and tip with squid or Gulp, and you’re in the game. As for what to throw: - For bass from shore, 4–6 inch soft‑plastic paddletails in sand eel or olive on light jig heads have been the go‑to. Needlefish plugs and small metal lips are working in the wash after dark. - From the boat, small diamond jigs, epoxy‑style metals, and white bucktail jigs have been deadly in the rips. - For blues, any metal spoon or tin with a single hook will do; bring wire or heavy fluoro if you’re tired of bite‑offs. - Bait anglers are doing well on fresh squid strips, sandworms, and live eels after dark around bridges and harbor mouths. If you’re looking for hotspots, circle these on your chart: - Wasque Point and the Chappy south‑side bars for bass and blues, especially on a pushing or dropping tide with some chop on it. - Middle Ground Shoal between West Chop and Falmouth for boat anglers jigging bass and sea bass on the moving tide. The pattern right now is simple: fish early, fish late, and fish where that current pinches over structure. Keep your offerings small and natural, match the sand eels, and you’ll bend a rod. 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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Martha's Vineyard Early June: Schoolies Thick, Keepers on the Move, Long Light Windows
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑June setup around Martha’s Vineyard. Light southwest breeze this morning, building a bit by afternoon, with air temps riding the upper 60s into low 70s. Skies are mixed clouds and sun, a little haze over the water. Sunrise came early over Nantucket Sound, and you’ll lose the light late this evening, giving you long low‑light windows on both ends of the day. Tide-wise, we’re working decent moving water on the south and east sides. Think mid‑morning flood pushing into the ponds and a solid outgoing lining up for late afternoon and into the night along the beaches and rips. Around here, that translates to prime striper and bluefish activity, especially an hour on either side of the turn. Striped bass are the main story. Schoolies are thick along the north shore and inside the ponds, with keepers and some bigger fish sliding along the south beach and out around Wasque and Middle Ground. Reports from local shops and beach regulars say plenty of fish in the low‑ to mid‑30‑inch class, with a few heavier ones showing after dark. Bluefish have been more scattered than years past but are definitely in the mix off State Beach and along East Beach on Chappy when the bait balls push tight to shore. Best lures right now: - For bass, small to mid‑size **soft plastic paddletails** in natural sand eel or olive over white, 3–5 inches, on light jigheads. - **White or bone spooks and sliders** at dawn and dusk over the bars and along the rocky points. - When the breeze kicks up, **metal spoons and epoxy jigs** are money for both blues and bass, especially around birds. For bait: fresh **sea worms, squid strips, and chunked mackerel or bunker** are doing damage. Worms drifted in the ponds and along the north shore are pulling steady schoolies. Chunk rigs on the south side at night are finding the bigger fish; just mind your leaders if the blues move in. Recent catches around the island include good numbers of schoolie stripers almost everywhere there’s current, with some crews reporting a dozen or more fish per tide when they stay mobile. A few local sharpies have slid into the teens and low twenties in numbers on the rips with live eels and small soft plastics. Bluefish generally run smaller than those old‑school choppers, but they’re still plenty of fun on lighter gear. Couple of hot spots if you’re heading out: - **Chappaquiddick / Wasque area**: Classic moving water, rip lines, and sand structure. Great on a building or dropping tide with soft plastics, metals, and live eels after dark. - **Middle Ground and the Vineyard Sound edges**: Strong current and bait. Small jigs and epoxy lures for bass and blues, especially around tide changes. - From shore, keep an eye on **State Beach** and the **Little Bridge/Big Bridge** area when the tide pushes bait through—light tackle, small jigs, and swimmers can light up fast. That’s the word from around the Island—pack the bug spray, watch the tide, and don’t overlook those after‑dark sessions; June nights here can quietly turn epic. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. 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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Martha's Vineyard Early June: Stripers and Blues Setting Up for Prime Evening Tides
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑June pattern setting up around the Island. Light southwest breeze this morning, 5–10 knots, building a bit in the afternoon with temps topping out in the upper 60s to low 70s. Skies are partly cloudy, just enough cover to keep fish comfortable up top. Sunrise was right around 5:10 a.m., sunset will be close to 8:15 p.m., giving you a long window to work the tides. Vineyard Haven tide is running a predawn high, then dropping through the morning, with a low mid‑day and another push of water late afternoon into evening. Around here, that evening flood has been the money tide, especially on the north shore rips and the entrances to the ponds. Striped bass are the main story. Schoolies are thick along State Beach, East Chop, and around Oak Bluffs Harbor, with a steady pick of keeper‑size fish mixing in after dark. The Canal crowd and local Vineyard sharpies have been reporting decent runs of 26–32 inch fish sliding through, and a few bigger ones into the low 40s showing on the rips off Middle Ground and Lucas Shoal. Bluefish have started to show in better numbers, mostly 3–6 pounds, roaming between Chappy, Wasque, and occasionally blitzing bait off Cape Poge. Nothing like the old days, but enough to saw you off if you’re not ready. A few weakfish and the odd fluke are coming from the south side and around Menemsha, with scup pretty much a sure thing on bait over rockier patches. For artificial lures, this is prime time for small to medium swimmers and soft plastics. Think: - 4–6 inch soft plastic paddletails or straight tails in olive/white or all white on 3/8 to 3/4 oz jigheads. - Slim minnow plugs and SP‑style swimmers in bone or sand eel patterns along State Beach and the ferry lanes. - Unweighted or lightly weighted soft plastics swung in the current at inlet mouths and creek openings on that flooding tide. When the wind is up or fish are blitzing, metal is still king. Small to medium metals with siwash hooks, epoxy jigs, and old‑school Kastmaster‑style tins have been producing bass and blues from the beaches and jetties. If you’re soaking bait, fresh is everything. Fresh squid strips, sandworms, and chunked menhaden or mackerel have all been putting fish on the sand. Clam will take bass in the rocks and scup anywhere you can hold bottom. Two hot spots to circle for today: 1. **State Beach / Joseph Sylvia State Beach (Edgartown–Oak Bluffs side)** That inside edge near the bridge and the deeper cuts have been holding schoolie bass with keepers mixed in. Work small soft plastics and minnow plugs on the dropping tide at first light, then again on the evening flood. If the wind lays down, it can light up quickly. 2. **Wasque / Cape Poge area on Chappy** If you can get over there safely, this has been the place for a mixed bag of bass and blues, especially when the current is ripping. Metals, big soft plastics, and topwater spooks at first light or dusk can produce some serious action. Always respect the surf and shifting bars down there. Overall fish activity is best at first light and again in that last hour of daylight, especially when those periods line up with a moving tide. Mid‑day is slower but not dead; go deeper, smaller, and more subtle with your presentations. That’s the word from the Island for now. 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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338
Martha's Vineyard Late May: Stripers and Squid Under Perfect Conditions
This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting under a classic late‑May pattern: a cool, dry start, light northwest breeze swinging onshore by late morning, and highs pushing into the low 60s along the water. Vineyard Haven and Menemsha are seeing 5–10 knots early, building to 10–15 with an afternoon sea breeze. Skies are mostly clear, so bring the sunscreen and a windbreaker for the morning bite. Sunrise came just after 5:20 a.m., with sunset due a bit before 8:00 p.m., giving a long, fishy day. First light and last light are your best windows, and that lines up nicely with the tides. Around Vineyard Haven Harbor and East Chop, the morning low hits around mid‑morning with a strong incoming through late morning into early afternoon; the evening high stacks up near sunset. Over on the south side—Katama and Norton Point—the tide is running a bit offset, but you’ll still see the best current on that flooding water into early afternoon, then again on the outgoing after dark. Expect a decent push of water in all the rips: Wasque, Middle Ground, and Quick’s Hole just off‑Island. Striped bass are the main story. Schoolies are thick along the north shore from Lagoon Pond out to West Chop, with a growing number of keeper‑size fish sliding in on the stronger tides and at night. Anglers this week have been picking up good numbers of 20–26 inch bass on small soft plastics and 3/4‑ounce bucktails, with a few mid‑30‑inch fish reported after dark on bigger swimmers. The south‑side beaches have seen a nice pulse of migratory fish—nothing crazy, but enough action to keep casters honest, especially around the cuts at Norton Point and the outflow at Katama Bay. Bluefish are starting to show, but they’re still spotty. A few cocktails have been hooked off State Beach and East Chop on metal spoons and small topwaters during the afternoon breeze. No consistent gorilla blue bite yet, but keep a wire leader handy; they’ll chew through your bass rigs when they move in. Squid remain in the mix around the ferry slips in Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs at night. Lights over the water and small pink or glow jigs have been producing steady buckets for those putting in a few hours after dark. Those fresh squid strips are gold for bass, especially drifted in the rips or floated off the bottom along the beaches. Best lures right now: – Small soft plastics on 1/2 to 3/4‑ounce jig heads in pearl, olive, and bone for schoolie bass. – 1‑ounce bucktails tipped with pork rind or soft‑plastic trailers in white. – Slim metal like Deadly Dicks or Kastmasters for mixed bass and early bluefish, especially on the north shore when the wind comes up. – Smaller topwater plugs—Spooks and pencil poppers in bone or mackerel—for the low‑light topwater bite. Best baits: – Fresh squid strips for everything. – Seaworms and sandworms around the bridges and estuary mouths for schoolies. – Clams soaked on the bottom if you’re looking to sit in one spot on the north shore. Hot spot number one: East Chop to West Chop along the Vineyard Haven side. Work the rips and edges on the incoming tide, especially at first light. Cast up‑current, let your jig or soft plastic swing, and be ready—most hits come as that lure straightens out in the current. Hot spot number two: Norton Point and the Katama Bay outflow. Fish the edges of the bar and the cuts on the turn of the tide and the first of the flood. At dusk, throw swimmers and small pencils; after dark, slow‑roll black or blurple plugs and hang on. A quick reminder: handle those schoolies gently—barbless hooks if you can, quick photos, and send them on their way. The better we treat this fishery, the better it treats us. That’s the Vineyard fishing scene for now. 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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Martha's Vineyard Fall Bite Heats Up: Bass, Blues, and Prime Tide Windows
This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a classic shoulder-season setup around the Island. The night cooled off into the low 50s, and today will climb into the low 60s with a light northwest breeze early, swinging south-southwest and building to 10–15 knots this afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, with a mix of sun and high haze. NOAA’s marine forecast calls for seas 1–3 feet, a bit lumpier outside Vineyard Sound but very fishable inshore. Sunrise hit around 5:20 a.m., with sunset just after 8:00 p.m., giving you a long window to work the moving water. Vineyard Sound tide at West Chop is running on a morning ebb, bottoming mid‑morning and filling back in late morning into early afternoon; evening will see a second ebb that lines up nicely with dusk and into the first couple hours of dark. The key today is to fish the beginnings and ends of those tide swings—slack has been slow, but as soon as the current starts to walk, the bite picks up. Striped bass action has really woken up the last week. Local reports from charter skippers out of Menemsha and Oak Bluffs say schoolies are thick with a growing mix of slot fish, and a few over-slot cows showing after dark. Fish have been pushing sand eels and small squid, especially on the south side and around the rips. There’s also been a decent pick of bluefish in Vineyard Sound—nothing massive yet, but enough 4–6 pounders to bite you off if you’re not ready. Best producers for bass have been soft-plastic paddle tails in the 4–6 inch range in olive, bone, and pink, rigged on 3/8–1 oz jig heads for the beaches and a bit heavier in the rips. Metal lips and small needlefish plugs at first light have been fooling the better fish, especially the darker colors silhouetted against the sky. At night, black or blurple darters and needles are the ticket. Fly anglers have been doing well with sparse sand eel patterns and small Deceivers, intermediate lines on the flats and sink-tips in the current. For bait, fresh squid from local shops is king right now—threaded on 5/0 circle hooks and drifted in the current. Clam will still take fish in the harbors, but squid strips and live eels after dark are your best shot at a heavier bass. Bluefish have been chewing on anything shiny; casting tins like Kastmasters and Deadly Dicks are easy and effective, just bring wire or heavy fluoro leaders. A couple of hotspots to keep on your short list: First, Wasque and the surrounding south‑side rips. When that tide stands up, bass stack on the edges picking off sand eels. It can be sporty in a small boat, so mind the conditions and watch the bars, but if you hit the first of the flood with bucktail jigs or 5–7 inch soft plastics, you’ve got a real shot at steady fish and maybe a bigger one. Second, the East Chop to Oak Bluffs stretch. The ripline off the bluff has held good schools of bass on the ebb, and bluefish have been sliding through as well. Shore anglers working the rocks and ferry slip area right at first light with small swimmers and soft plastics have been into fish most mornings. Boat guys drifting outside the line and casting up-tide with jigs have been putting up numbers. Inside the ponds—Sengekontacket and Lagoon—there are plenty of schoolies for light tackle. Smaller 3–4 inch soft plastics, unweighted or lightly weighted, are the move in that skinny water. Work the creek mouths as the tide turns; fish have been cruising the edges more than sitting in the middle. Overall, figure a solid pick of bass through the day, with the best bite on the early morning and evening tides, bluefish scattered but present, and water temps just right for things to keep building over the next week. 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
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Martha's Vineyard Late Spring Bass Bite Heats Up
Artificial Lure here with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sliding into that sweet late‑spring pattern now. The water around the Vineyard is running in the low to mid‑50s offshore and a touch warmer in the ponds and up-island shallows. NOAA’s marine forecast for Vineyard Sound has light southwest winds this morning building to 10–15 knots by afternoon, seas 1–3 feet, and mostly clear skies. Air temps pushing into the low 60s, dropping back into the low 50s overnight. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., sunset near 8:00 p.m., giving you a fat window of prime light. Tide-wise in Vineyard Haven and along the north shore, we’ve got a predawn high followed by a strong falling tide through the morning, then a late‑afternoon push. That outgoing morning tide is going to stack bait tight to the rips and creek mouths, while the evening flood should light up the beaches and rock edges. Striped bass are the main story now. Schoolies are thick around the ferry docks, Lagoon Pond, and along Beach Road, with more slot and a few over‑slot fish showing from the north shore points out toward Menemsha and the Elizabeths. Reports from local shop talk over the weekend had multiple boats into 20–30 fish each on the morning ebb, with keepers mixed in, especially where the current breaks off the points and ledges. Soft plastics are king: 4–6 inch paddle tails in bone, olive, or amber on light jigheads, or straight-tail baits swung through the current. Small swimming plugs like SP Minnows and Bombers in classic blurple or bone are producing well at first and last light. For bait, fresh sea clams, chunked mackerel, and sandworms along the edges of the channels are bending rods. If you’re fishing the ponds and back bays, don’t overlook small bucktails tipped with a strip of squid. Bluefish are starting to trickle in. A few gators were reported off East Beach on Chappy and out toward Wasque over the past couple of days, mostly on metals and topwater plugs worked fast. Keep some wire or at least heavier fluoro on hand if you’re working those rips; they’ll be chewing through light leaders in a hurry once they really settle in. Tautog action is still decent around rocky structure and jetty piles, especially on that slower part of the tide. Green crabs and Asian crabs on simple bottom rigs are your ticket. You’re not going to fill a cooler in a hurry, but patient anglers are picking away at respectable tog for the table. A few early fluke have been nosed up in Vineyard Sound and just off the south side, but it’s not wide‑open yet. If you’re drifting for them, try bucktail teasers with squid strips or Gulp! in chartreuse or pink and cover water until you find a pocket of fish. Couple of hotspots to circle for today: – **Wasque / East Beach (Chappaquiddick):** Hit the first light hours on the dropping tide for bass pushing bait along the bars, and keep an eye out for early bluefish. Metals, pencil poppers, and 5–7 inch soft plastics will all play. – **Menemsha and the north shore points:** Work the rocks and current seams on the morning ebb and evening flood. Cast parallel to the shoreline with small swimmers and soft plastics. Nighttime casters tossing darters and needlefish have a real shot at a better‑class bass. If you’re heading into the ponds, think subtle: smaller baits, lighter leaders, and a quiet approach. Those fish are shallow and spooky but willing to eat if you don’t stomp all over them. That’s the word from the water. 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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Vineyard Fishing Report: Stripers, Blues, and More Biting Across the Island
Artificial Lure here with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report for Saturday, June 21st, 2025. First light hit at 5:08AM and you’ve got daylight running until sunset at 8:18PM. Weather’s lining up classic Vineyard: mild mornings, light southerly breeze, and a few clouds drifting by—perfect for working the shoreline or hopping on a skiff. The water temps are warming nicely, pulling those big fish right up close. According to Tide-Forecast.com, the tides today are steady favorites for striper fans—low at 1:39AM, high at 8:19AM, low again at 1:55PM, and back to high at 8:40PM. That pre-dawn to mid-morning flood tide is prime time for casting into moving water, and the evening high is a hot ticket for beach hounds looking to fish that magic hour. The bite has absolutely heated up around the island. According to Kismet Outfitters, sand eels are in thick and hungry striped bass are not far behind. Recent charters and beach goers are reporting impressive catches—slot-sized and up stripers are holding around Lobsterville Beach, Wasque Point, and Menemsha. Evenings and early mornings are when the bigger linesiders have been cruising in tight, especially with that outgoing tide. Blues are starting to show up in solid numbers, some pushing 30 inches. If you’re looking for variety, black sea bass and the first fluke of the season are in the mix, especially on the drift off East Chop and along the edges of Vineyard Sound. Best bet for lures right now? Topwater action is heating up. Throw metal lips, needlefish, or a white bucktail jig for stripers. A big soft plastic, like a Slug-Go or Albie Snax, can turn shy fish into takers—don’t be afraid to swing by the rips with those on a slow retrieve. For the bluefish, nothing beats a flashy popper or a sturdy metal spoon. If you want to soak bait, fresh squid or chunked menhaden are landing both bass and blues, especially near the jetties and creek mouths. Don’t forget: sand eel imitations are hot—bring a few in the box. Fish activity is all over the board: early risers are finding fish stacked at the ferry slips and along the north shore, while nighttime eeling around Edgartown and Tashmoo is producing some of the biggest bass of the week. If you’re in the market for a real shot at a trophy, Wasque Point at sunrise or the drop-off at Dogfish Bar in the evening are hard to beat. Hot spots today—hit Wasque Point for both moving water and big bait schools, or work the creek mouths at Menemsha after the mid-afternoon low. For boaters, drifting the shoals off East Chop or along Hedge Fence should reward you with a mixed bag of stripers, blues, and even the occasional black sea bass. That’s your Saturday Vineyard fishing report. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and local tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Tune in to "Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report Today" for the most up-to-date fishing conditions, expert tips, and captivating stories from local anglers. Perfect for enthusiasts and pros alike, our podcast keeps you informed about the best spots, bait, and techniques to reel in your next big catch. Don't miss out on the insider info for fishing success on Martha's Vineyard!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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