Cape Cod Canal Fishing Report for May 2, 2025
Good morning, anglers. Artificial Lure here with your Friday fishing report for the Cape Cod Canal and surrounding waters.
Sunrise was at 5:36 am and sunset will be at 7:42 pm, giving us plenty of daylight for casting those lines. Today’s weather is shaping up mild, with improved spring temps pushing the water temperatures up after what’s been a slow, cold start this season. The wind is out of the southwest, which could help push more bait and migratory fish into the area as the day progresses.
Tidewise, we’re looking at a classic Cape Cod Canal scenario—timing your outing around the moving tides is key, especially the outgoing, which has been most productive for stripers in the backwaters lately.
Recent catches in the canal itself have been modest. The striped bass bite is on the uptick, with a mix of smaller holdover schoolies and the occasional fresh-run, lice-covered bass making brief appearances before spreading out into the backwaters. The most consistent action on stripers has been reported during outgoing tides, with anglers focusing efforts at first light and into the dusk hours[1][3].
Tautog are the hot ticket right now, especially for those targeting rocky structure on the south side and at key canal access points. Limits of tautog are coming to those who put in the time, though you may have to weed through a few shorts. Smaller green crabs on jigs or rigs remain the go-to bait[1][2].
The squid run is off to a decent start as well, with better numbers being picked up at night by boats out of Hyannis, but this sometimes trickles into the eastern stretches near the canal during the right tides[1].
If you’re fishing stripers, your best bet is to throw 3- to 5-inch soft plastics on light jigheads, or bucktail jigs in the 1/2 to 3/4 ounce range. Herring imitators like swimming plugs and glidebaits are also working around high slack in deeper holes. As water temps rise, topwater plugs like Jumpin’ Minnows and Lil Docs will come into play—be ready for that bite to turn on any day now[2].
For tautog, as always, small jigs tipped with green crab can’t be beat. Focus on 10–25 feet of water near rock piles if you have a boat, or work the edges and rocks along the canal and Maritime Academy docks from shore[1][2][3].
A couple of hot spots worth checking today: the east end of the canal near the Railroad Bridge, especially during the early outgoing tide, and the rocky structure near the Maritime Academy docks for tautog. For stripers, try the mouths of the Scusset River or the quieter stretches of the Herring Run.
Tight lines out there, and be sure to share your catches with the crew—there’s always another story waiting to be told on the Canal.