Good morning from the banks of the Cape Cod Canal. This is Artificial Lure with your Saturday April 19th local fishing report. The spring bite is stirring, and it is time to dust off your gear if you have not already.
Sunrise hit at 5:56am and sunset will be at 7:31pm today, giving us a good long window to fish. The weather looks promising—expect temperatures climbing into the high 50s and maybe reaching 60 by midday, with mostly clear skies and a light breeze. That means comfortable conditions and active fish, especially as waters keep slowly warming after a cold winter.
Tidal swings are always key here. High tide rolls in early today, and the dropping tide will be prime for tossing lures along the east end of the Canal or working the rock edges by the railroad bridge and Herring Run. These are my go-to hot spots this time of year.
Fishing action so far is showing plenty of promise. Small holdover striped bass are starting to poke around the creeks and streams feeding the Canal. The bigger migratory stripers are still a week or two out, but savvy anglers are already seeing some schoolies up to about 24 inches on soft plastics and small jigs. Keep an eye on the huge numbers of herring moving upriver—where there’s bait, those larger bass will soon follow.
For now, I recommend scaling down your tackle. Seven or eight foot rods matched with light spinning reels are ideal for landing early season stripers. Top baits this week are small glidebaits, surface swimming plugs like Red Fins, Bombers, and metal-lipped swimmers. Big soft plastics in natural colors are working—think paddle tails and slender swimbaits. If you’re looking to bend a rod on something different, tautog are starting to bite around the Canal as well. Seaworms and crabs are the ticket for tog, and local shops are keeping both in stock.
On the freshwater side, trout fishing remains solid in the stocked ponds, with shiners and small spinners getting bites, and largemouth bass are waking up and feeding hard as they get ready for the spawn.
In short, it is still a little early for blitzes of big stripers in the Canal, but the action is picking up fast. Try your luck at the railroad bridge for stripers at dusk or dawn, or fish the stone edges near the Sagamore for early tautog. Keep your setups light, your lures small, and your eyes open for the first big push of migratory bass any day now.
Tight lines and good luck out there.