This is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Saturday, October 11th, 2025.
We’re off to a chilly October morning along the banks of the canal, but spirits and fish activity are running high. Sunrise today was at 6:50 am and you’ll have daylight until just after 6:07 pm. Temps are hovering comfortably in the high 60s, reaching up to 72°F with just a bit of cloud cover—perfect weather to be working the banks or the rocks. Winds are mostly gentle this morning, around 5 mph, so casting is manageable and no rain to bother you.
The major tidal swings are the name of the game today. Down at the Bourne and Sagamore ends, tides are the engine that keeps the canal alive. The morning saw high water roll through around 7:59 am, and we’re coming off that now heading toward a low at 2:39 pm. These transition periods, especially the start of a falling tide, are classic prime feeding windows—stripers love cruising with the moving water, ambushing bait as it flushes down-canal.
And if you’re looking for the sweet spots, pay close attention near the railroad bridge on the west end and down by the herring run on the east end. Both stretches have been holding bait and bass after last week’s full moon and big tides. The popular holes around the state park visitor center and the adjacent rip-rap also continue to produce, especially as the water cools and migratory fish push through on the fall run.
Now, let’s talk about what’s biting. The word from shops like Red Top and sources like My Fishing Cape Cod is the fall run has seriously kicked into gear. Stripe bass are here in great numbers, with a solid mix of schoolies and legit slot fish up to 35 inches coming over the rails this past week. Folks are also reporting some bluefish blitzes in the early hours, though the main event remains the stripers. A handful of diehards are still chasing small keeper-sized tog (tautog) and scup off the rocks, especially during bottom slack.
Best lures right now are no surprise—swimbaits like the Al Gag’s Whip-It Fish, classic jig heads with soft plastics, and the ever-trustworthy Magic Swimmer paddletail, especially on a steady retrieve during moving water. Pencil poppers and big topwater plugs have drawn vicious hits (and plenty of spectators!) during dawn and dusk, but don’t sleep on the bucktail jig when water’s running fast. Bait guys are picking up fish with fresh chunk mackerel and live eels after dark, with the chunk working especially well on the deeper west end or up against the canal walls on an outgoing tide.
Fishing pressure is solid but not shoulder-to-shoulder like in June, and the canal’s got that crisp, autumn energy—the kind that makes you want to keep casting "just one more time" as the sun slips west.
So, a quick recap: Major activity is right at the change of tides, especially first light and late evening. Your best bet is stripers on soft plastics, bucktails, and topwater; bluefish hitting metals and swimmers. For live bait, chunk mack and eels after sunset are hard to beat. Hot spots are the west end near the RR bridge, and anywhere you see birds or splashing bait along the canal walls.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Cape Cod Canal fishing report! Be sure to subscribe and never miss a tide or a bite. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI