Artificial Lure here with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Sunday, September 7, 2025. The sun came up at 5:50 this morning, and we’ll have daylight until sunset at 7:43 tonight, giving us nearly 14 hours to wet a line. Air temps are running a perfect 75 degrees with only a light 6 mph wind from the southwest, keeping things comfortable but just breezy enough for a little surface chop. Water temperature is right at 70 degrees—about as good as we get in early September, and plenty comfy for bass and blues.
Tides today are straight out of the textbook for targeting feeding fish. We saw high tide just after 3 a.m., low at 9:34 a.m., another high at 3:36 p.m., and the final low at 10:07 p.m. That afternoon incoming, pushing toward high, often sets up classic Canal action. Best fishing times today line up with major solunar periods: from mid-morning 9:03–11:03 a.m. and again 9:17–11:17 p.m. Night crew, don’t pack it in early.
The Canal has been reliably producing both keeper-size striped bass and some real brute bluefish all week. Local sharpies reported schoolies mixed in with the occasional 35-inch cow. Some lobster boats drifting pogies right where the channel narrows connected with bigger fish near the west end. There’s also been some late-run mackerel and scup moving through, with schools herding close to bridges at first light. September is always “game on,” and word is you’re as likely to see a blitz at dawn as into the evening slack.
Hot spots? The “Scusset” end near the railroad bridge has had action at the top of the outgoing, especially for bass lurking behind boulders when the current rips. Closer to the Bourne end, the section by the herring run outflow is holding bait, and stripers are pushing them right up against the rocks. Don’t ignore mid-canal stretches between poles 250 and 300—for folks willing to walk, some of the biggest fish last week came from these less-pressured spots.
Lure selection—listen up. As always, you can’t go wrong with the legendary **bucktail jig**. This time of year, tip it with a soft trailer for extra movement, and work it along the bottom in the heavier current. Locals favor white or chartreuse, and don’t be shy with 2 oz or heavier heads when the flow is strong. Topwater action is possible, too: big pencil poppers in bone or blue are taking fish at dawn and dusk, especially when birds are pickin’ and bait is frantic. For bait, fresh squid or pogies will outperform anything frozen—always go local, always go fresh if you can.
For you boaters, consider poking your bow into Onset Harbor after you work the mouth of the canal—protected water, steady action, and an easy spot to tie up if you want to celebrate with some pizza in town.
Fish are feeding actively through these strong early-fall tides, and the Canal is living up to its nickname as “the Big Ditch.” Whether you’re stomping the rocks before work, swinging bucktails at sunset, or soaking bait by headlamp, now’s the time to be here.
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