Good morning, folks—Artificial Lure here with your September 19th Cape Cod Canal fishing report. Sunrise hit at 6:30 am, sunset is due around 6:51 pm, giving us over 12 hours of daylight on the water—plenty of time to put a bend in the rod. Weather’s holding mostly fair and seasonable with a mild northeast breeze, which always spices up striper action along the Canal’s shadowy stretches. Dress in light layers, and keep an eye on those winds: blustery pockets can turn conditions in your favor, especially for surfcasters.
As for the tides, we’re sitting on a **modest tidal coefficient** today—that means gentler current and smaller swings than you might expect during our legendary blowout tides, but don’t let it fool you. According to Tides4Fishing, both Bourne and Sagamore Canal stations see tidal coefficients dropping from the mid-40s to upper-30s through the day, making for subtle water movement but good opportunities to time your approach—especially if you can fish the end of the ebb or start of the flood.
In terms of recent catches, action’s heating up. On The Water reports the **Canal lit up this week with stripers and bonito**. At Red Top Sporting Goods in Buzzards Bay, big pencil poppers are drawing big bass at first light—some mornings it’s been schoolies, other days there are overslot cows mixed in. Bonito are blitzing silversides right on top, especially out west—shop weighed in an 8-pounder just this morning. Heavy epoxy jigs and smaller minnow plugs are taking their fair share of bones, especially when you can match the hatch to silversides or peanut bunker. Meanwhile, the east end has good numbers of squid, with schools of pogies and mullet moving through the Ditch, which can push up the action on heavier gear.
Still, the albie bite is a bit hit-or-miss inside the Canal proper—anglers are reporting more consistent albies around the Elizabeth Islands and along the south side, but don’t count out a surprise showing, especially during low-light periods or after a tide change. Outgoing tide, particularly the last two hours of the ebb, has been the money window for both bass and bones, as those baitfish get flushed out of the backwaters.
For lures and bait, here’s the local rundown:
- **Eels:** Always a favorite for nighttime Canal striper hunters—pick up a dozen and fish the classic way on inline circles.
- **Bucktails and soft plastics:** Slug-Gos and XL Albie Snax are hot right now, especially for low-and-slow retrieves in the pre-dawn.
- **Epoxy jigs/minnow plugs:** Go heavy for casting distance to bones and albies, or downsize when they’re pushing bait right to the rocks.
- **Pencil poppers:** The morning magic ticket to bigger striped bass.
- **Green crabs:** If you’ve got a mind for tautog, grab some and try the rock piles as they move shallow this month.
Hot spots? Try the **West End riprap** for dawn bonito blitzes—get there early to stake out your rock. Striper action is “widespread” according to Red Top, with reliable bites from the Army Corps east all the way to the Sandwich bulkhead, so don’t be afraid to move if crowds or the bite fizzles.
If you’re heading out by boat, the south side from Chatham to Falmouth is dotted with sporadic albies, and the Vineyard Sound is holding bones. Shore anglers, track wind direction—it’s pushing quality bass shallow on Cape Cod Bay beaches, especially during the outgoing tide. Needlefish, metal lips, and those old reliable minnow plugs should pack your bag.
That’s today’s Cape Cod Canal rundown from Artificial Lure—thank you for tuning in. Don’t forget to subscribe for your daily fixes of local angling knowledge. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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