Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report Today

Cape Cod Canal Fishing Report: Classic September Bite with Topwater and Metal Lip Lures


Listen Later

Artificial Lure here with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Sunday, September 14, 2025. If you’ve got a rod in hand and salt on the brain, keep listening—conditions are lining up for a classic September bite in the Ditch.

The sun shrugged up just after 6:20 this morning and we’ll have daylight until a shade before 7:00 this evening. Expect about 12 and a half hours of fishing light. Air temps will hover in the mid-60s, water’s a balmy 71°F, and the early fall humidity is dropping, making for comfortable casting all day long. Winds are light, so the canal’s got some good chop in places but nothing wild—just enough to break up surface glare and keep bait active, especially as we head into the evening.

Let’s talk tides. This morning’s low was at 10:37 am, with the next high rolling in at 4:12 pm—topping out over 5 feet. That late afternoon incoming tide is prime, especially around the east end, when stripers use the push to ambush bait coming through the herring runs and outflows. These September tides are solid—moderate coefficients mean decent water movement and fish on the chase, especially as the big moon hits later this week (according to TidesChart.com).

Hot bites have been reported right through the week—just check in with the regulars at Canal Bait & Tackle on Cranberry Highway and you’ll hear about action both east and west. Anglers working the east end early are hooking into schoolies and keepers, with sunrise topwater runs producing the most excitement. There’s still an occasional slot or over-slot striped bass lurking around the deeper edges and under the breaking surface during the major feeding windows—7 to 9 am and again around dusk, per the solunar tables from Tides4Fishing.

Best lures lately? Keep it classic. Gravity Tackle Jigs in olive or pink are putting fish on the stringer. For topwater, the Albie Snax, especially white or bone, has been slamming. Outgoing tide? Switch to heavier metal lips or 2-ounce Savage Sandeel Jigs, matching the peanut bunker and sand eels thick along much of the Canal. If the bite is finicky, anglers drifting fresh mackerel chunks or live eels—picked up right at Canal Bait & Tackle—have connected with some stubborn cows holding deep.

Reports from seasoned locals say bluefish have made sporadic blitzes, especially near the Railroad Bridge just after slack tide. Bonito and false albacore are showing up on the running tides, especially on the west end flats—tie on a Deadly Dick or a small epoxy jig for shots at the speedsters.

As for hot spots, the area around the Herring Run is no secret for a reason—bait loads up thick there, bringing in predatory bass, especially on the last two hours of the flood tide. Morning glory is right at the Sandwich bulkhead, with the west end productive after sunset as bait stacks on the outgoing.

To sum it up—sunrise and sunset are your golden hours, incoming tide this afternoon is money, and the topwater bite is still going strong. Mix up your arsenal, keep your eyes peeled for bait balls, and move if you don’t find fish inside the first hour—mobility is key on the Ditch.

Thanks for tuning in to your Cape Cod Canal report. Don’t forget to subscribe for more daily updates and tight lines out there.

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 content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai