Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Daily Fishing Report

Cape Cod Canal Fishing Report: Early Spring Stripers, Tautog, and Bass Heating Up


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Cape Cod Canal Fishing Report for April 23, 2025

Good morning from the Cape! This is Artificial Lure with your local report from the banks of our famed Cape Cod Canal. We’re in that classic early spring transition, with things ramping up each day as water temps tick upward and the herring run brings life back to the canal and nearby estuaries.

Weather is looking friendly today, with mild spring temps, light wind, and a bit of cloud cover—prime conditions for getting out there whether you’re chasing the early birds or looking for a sunset bite. Sunrise was at 5:52 a.m. this morning, and sunset will hit around 7:34 p.m., so there’s a solid window for fishing both tides.

The tide will be running in favor of the morning crew, with a solid eastward flow after first light. Afternoon anglers will want to target the west tide as the sun starts to drop. These moving tides are key right now, especially for stripers—make sure to match your fishing time as close to the swing as you can.

On the catch front, trout and largemouth bass have been stealing the spotlight in ponds across the Cape, but things are finally heating up around the Canal itself. Small holdover striped bass are showing up in the creeks and streams leading to the canal, and every day we’re inching closer to the arrival of those bigger migratory bass. Tautog have started biting around the Canal and Buzzards Bay, with most action coming on green crabs and seaworms. If you’re after tog, stick to rocky structure near the east and west ends of the Canal[5].

Reports of striper catches are mostly schoolies for now, but folks are getting them at both ends of the canal, especially at first and last light. The best lures right now are glidebaits, metal lips, surface swimming plugs like Red Fins and Bombers, and big soft plastics. There’s a ton of herring in the area, so don’t be afraid to go big with your presentation[1][5]. For tautog, crabs and seaworms are your ticket.

A couple of canal hot spots to try today:

The East End near Scusset Beach—great on an outgoing tide, especially if you’re targeting holdover bass or early arriving migrators.
The West End near the Railroad Bridge—always a solid bet on the first push of the incoming, and prime real estate for a surprise tog bite as well.
If you’re itching for tog, target the rock piles and drop-offs closer to the West End, but if it’s schoolie stripers you’re after, start near the outflows or any place you see herring stacking up.

Big bass are usually about two weeks off, but it pays to be ready—a few 28 inchers can always surprise the early risers. Grab your 7 to 8 foot setup for the schoolies, and keep the 10 foot rod ready for May’s big girls.

Good luck out there and tight lines!
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Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Daily Fishing ReportBy Quiet. Please