Artificial Lure here with your Monday morning Cape Cod Canal fishing report for May 5th, 2025. We’re rolling into May with that unmistakable buzz—stripers are starting to trickle in, and the Canal is waking up for another season.
First off, let’s talk tides. We’ve got a mid-morning outgoing today, and that’s been the ticket lately. Fish are most active during the tail end of the outgoing, so set your alarms early. Sunrise hit just before 5:30 AM and sunset’ll be around 7:45 PM. The air’s crisp, starting in the low 50s with a southwest breeze picking up through the day, and water temps are climbing steadily, hanging in the mid-50s.
Fish activity’s picking up across the board. Schoolie stripers have been caught at the east end and throughout the main stretch of the Canal, especially at first light and during moving tide. Most of these are resident or early migratory fish, anywhere from 20 to 28 inches. Keepers are thin, but that’s normal for the first May push. The best bites have come on the west-moving tide.
Tautog action is strong right now too, especially along the rocky edges near the railroad bridge and behind the Maritime Academy. Shallow structure up to 20 feet is holding good numbers. Anglers are reporting easy limits, though you’ll need to sift through some shorts. For squid fans, Hyannis and the south side are seeing a solid night bite but it’s quiet during daylight hours.
As for lures and bait, don’t overthink it. Soft plastics on light jig heads have been slaying the stripers, especially white and pink paddletails. Small bucktails around two ounces with pork rind are classic Canal producers, and a few are still scoring fish on SP Minnows and Daiwa Mag Darters, especially on overcast mornings. For tog, green crabs and Asian shore crabs on simple tog rigs are the ticket—keep your bait tight to the rocks.
Top hotspots today are the west end by Bell Road and the east end near the herring run. Both areas have seen the most consistent striper reports this past weekend. For tog, hit the rocky ledges around the railroad bridge or cruise north along the Buzzards Bay entrance.
Remember, the main body of migratory fish hasn’t shown yet, but the Canal is primed. Each day’s getting better, and it’ll be firing on all cylinders once the bait stacks up and the temps nudge higher. If the wind picks up, try the south-facing side for a shot at some tautog out of the worst of it.
That’s your morning rundown from Artificial Lure. Tight lines and see you on the rocks.