Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report Today

Fall Run Kickoff on the Cape Cod Canal


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This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Saturday, September 6, 2025. Sunrise was at 6:32 this morning and we’re looking at a gorgeous late summer day, with ideal overnight temps cooling things down and a light southerly breeze keeping the bait close to shore. Sunset tonight rolls in at 6:33.

Tides are running in our favor for most of the morning bite: low tide rolled through in the pre-dawn hours and we’re staging for a bold high just after 10 am at the East Entrance and soon after at Bourne Bridge. Tidal coefficients are climbing—expect strong currents and moving bait, exactly what shoreline and canal anglers should be cheering for. For the best top-of-tide action, try to hit the jetties or fish around the piers just before or at peak flood.

September on Cape Cod means one thing—**fall run kickoff**. According to On The Water and My Fishing Cape Cod, we’re seeing *albie fever* all over the Canal, with pods of false albacore blitzing on schools of peanut bunker and sand eels. Bonito are thick and striper numbers are climbing, with fish ranging from good-size schoolies up to heavyweight keepers feeding on the edges at dawn and dusk. If you’re chasing topwater action, this is prime time—stripers have moved in tight to the rocks, especially near the river mouths and within casting range of the east and west ends.

The chunk bite offshore for yellowfin is red-hot, but right here in Canal country, the hot ticket is to target fast-moving albies and bonito in the morning and slide over to slack water and bridge pilings for stripers midday. Anglers this week have also been landing bluefish in good numbers—some real choppers in the 8-12 pound class—and even some late-season fluke on the mudflats and deeper edge.

For lures, nothing beats a well-presented **metal jig** or epoxy minnow when albies are blitzing. Hogy Epoxy Jigs, Deadly Dicks, and Albie Snax are all producing, especially when fished fast and erratic. Try small olive or pink patterns for the selective fish, and go natural with silver if you see them chasing peanuts or spearing. For stripers, classic **swimming plugs** like SP Minnows and big paddletail soft plastics are king, especially on an early flood tide or at night. Savvy locals are still working topwater pencils at first light and scoring on some big fish. For tautog, green crabs fished on rigs near the rocky abutments and pilings are pulling in fish, as noted by offshore reports—these blackfish are just starting to fire up as the water cools down.

If you’re looking for that extra edge, fresh mackerel fillets or live eels after dark are still a proven ticket for a Canal cow. Meanwhile, bonito and false albacore have keyed in on moving baits—presentation and speed matter most. Don’t forget your fluorocarbon leaders—these fish are sharp-eyed, especially when the water’s clear.

For today’s **hot spots**—
- The East End rip near the Railroad Bridge is seeing heavy albie action at dawn.
- Mid-canal rockpiles around the herring run are holding feeding stripers and blues on moving tides.
- Flatt Ledge just offshore is still producing late-season cod for those venturing out with heavier gear.

Action will only get hotter as we move deeper into September’s “second season.” Watch for birds diving and keep an eye on bait pushing into the current seams—when you find the life, stick around, and you’ll likely find the fish.

Thanks for tuning in to your Cape Cod Canal fishing report with Artificial Lure! Don’t forget to subscribe for all your local angling updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai