Fishing the Cape Cod Canal this morning, you’re waking up to a crisp one—air temperature around 64°F, with gentle September sun rising at 6:21 am and setting at 6:55 pm. Water temperature’s a comfy 69°F, a little above seasonal average, which has kept the baitfish pretty active and drawn in some bigger predators.
Tidal flow’s middlin’ today, with a low tide at 5:26 am and the flood starting to roll in and peak at 10:49 am. The tidal coefficient is running on the lower side, so currents won’t be screaming, but you’ll get enough water movement through the early-mid morning for a good bite according to tides4fishing.com. If you’re looking to play the solunar tables, major fish activity should pick up around 8:54 to 10:54 am and after dark between 9:18 and 11:18 pm.
Recent days have been classic “fall run preview” action—plenty of schoolie stripers working over peanut bunker, silversides, and scattered macks. In the pre-dawn hours, bigger bass have been found blitzing between the Railroad Bridge and the Herring Run, with fish up to the low 30-inch class reported in the east end, and some respectable bluefish mixed in down by Bell Road. A few regulars even connected with small keeper-size fluke and sea bass near the slower-moving western flats.
Your best bet for lures? Tossing a *white Savage Gear eel*, the ever-reliable *SP Minnow* in mackerel or bone color, and *Magic Swimmers* have been picking up nice fish in the moving water, especially in the rip lines and over structure. Guys running topwater after sunrise caught some on *pencil poppers*—blue and bone patterns did damage when the fish came up chasing bait splashes. For those who prefer bait, fresh or chunked mackerel and live eels are classic choices and have been consistent after dark.
If you want to get dialed in, bring a 9- to 10-foot inshore rod like the St. Croix Mojo Inshore, well-suited for slinging plugs and working both the current and heavier lures. Match up with a 30–40 lb braid mainline and a 30–50 lb fluorocarbon leader to survive the Canal’s notorious rocks and unexpected monsters.
Local hot spots today:
- **East End under the Railroad Bridge**: Schoolies stacked at dusk/dawn, with bigger fish pushing through at changing tides.
- **The Herring Run**: Mid-morning bite worth a shot, especially as the tide turns and flushes bait into the main channel.
Don’t overlook the stretch at Sagamore, where outgoing tides are pulling in sand eels—keep a couple of small bucktails ready for that quick blitz.
In summary, solid numbers of striped bass around, plus bonus bluefish, with a bite window centering on moving water early and late. Work those structure edges, mix up the retrieve, and switch colors if you’re getting sniffs but no takers. Bait soakers might land a bonus tog or sea bass as bycatch near the boulder piles.
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