Cape Cod Canal gave up a real mixed bag today, with typical August variety and a splash of surprise action for those who put in their time. The sunrise came at 5:41 this morning and anglers were already lining the banks before first light, hoping to intercept some early-moving fish before the mid-day boat traffic and heat. With sunset set for 7:53pm, there’s still plenty of daylight to sneak in some late evening casts—often a prime bite window for those bigger fish that hang deep during the heat of the day.
The tide for Wednesday, August 6th played out with low water at 7:11am, high tide rolling in at 12:27pm, and then another low at 7:13pm. Slack water periods were short and mid-morning into midday brought some of the best current for working lures, especially in those tail-out sections—perfect timing for the lunch-break crowd to squeeze in a few drifts.
Weather has been classic August: mild southwesterly breezes and warm, muggy air, hovering in the low 80s, with water temps holding steady—making fish still active but definitely driving them towards deeper, cooler flows come midday. Cloud cover held in through the afternoon, giving a nice buffer from the sun and helping the surface bite linger just a bit longer than usual.
On the fishing front, this week has seen a salty mix of both striped bass and some early-season bonito moving through. According to My Fishing Cape Cod, the Canal bite’s been highlighted by a recent bonito blitz. Kevin Rosetta did great on 1-ounce Joe Baggs peanut epoxy jigs—so if you’re targeting speedsters, scale down and match the hatch. Bonito and false albacore are scattered but showing more daily, especially on the east end when the tide flips to outgoing.
Striped bass have been spotty in terms of numbers, but quality fish are still popping up for those working larger soft plastics and topwater plugs, particularly early and late in the day. The 12-inch Sluggo and Snax XL plastics are drawing strikes from better-sized bass—especially if you mimic squid or sand eel patterns. For topwater, bone-colored pencil poppers and spooks fished on a rhythmic sweep have been getting looks from dusk to dawn, with some over-slot fish reported near the Herring Run and the west end railroad bridge. The Canal’s famed jig-and-crank technique is also producing, especially on the dropping tide with a 4- to 5-ounce paddle-tail swung deep.
If you’re after numbers more than size, consider a stop at Monomoy or the rips south of the Canal; recent reports from Eli Smith and Rick Vandale reflect a consistent mixed-bag bite with plenty of legal-length stripers on bone-colored topwaters and even some surprise fluke on the backside, especially for those bouncing bucktails tipped with squid.
As for tackle, make sure you’re beefed up for the Canal—30 to 40 lb braid with 40 lb leaders is the norm when hunting big striped bass in the heavy current. For bonito and albie action, drop down to 15–20 lb fluoro leaders for better odds on those wary, sharp-eyed predators.
A couple of hot spots to have a go right now: try the Herring Run just west of the Sagamore Bridge at first light for stripers and the mid-Canal area by the poles at daybreak as bonito move through with the tide. On the east end, near the railroad bridge, stay sharp for late-afternoon surface feeds when the bait gets pushed by the current. Don’t sleep on the west end “Cribbin” section during slack-outgoing—stripers are still being pulled on heavy jigs during the switch.
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