Artificial Lure here with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for Thursday, October 30th, 2025.
Sunrise rolled in at 7:26 a.m. today, with sunset coming up early at 6:07 p.m. Tides are subtle, with a low coefficient of around 41, meaning only light current action—so you’ll want to work those tide turns for any serious bite, especially around the highs and lows set for early morning and midafternoon. For the Lower Bay and Virginia Beach, high tide is just past 8 a.m. and again close to 9:20 p.m., with lows mid-morning and afternoon. That means your best shot for strong fish activity comes with those tide changes.
Weather’s setting up rough for small boats—WBOC’s marine forecast is warning of east winds 25 to 30 knots today with a Small Craft Advisory in effect and waves running 3-5 feet. There’s a Gale Watch kicking off late tonight and minor tidal flooding expected, so keep a close eye on conditions and mind those channel markers.
Now, on to the bite! Main story for the Bay is a continued struggle for the striped bass population, with this year’s juvenile index still well below average—as reported by the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and Virginia Institute of Marine Science. But that doesn’t mean the linesiders aren’t around. In the Lower Bay, recent reports out of the Potomac and Patuxent rivers put striped bass on the attack in deeper holes—especially morning and evening—cued by cooling water temps driving baitfish like bay anchovies and menhaden out of the shallows and down the main channels.
Your best bet right now: jigging with soft plastics or metal jigs along channel edges, and working paddletails or jerkbaits right up tight to shoreline structure on the outgoing tide. Umbrella rigs pulled deep are picking up some better fish along major drop-offs and river mouths. For bait anglers, live eels or spot (when you can get them) will outfish cut bait most times; otherwise, chunks of menhaden can still draw a strike. Keeper stripers have been landed at Piney Point, Cedar Point rocks, Cornfield Harbor, and the mouth of the St. Mary’s—classic late October honey holes.
White perch are moving to harder bottoms on river mouths and oyster bars as waters chill. You’ll score numbers with dropper rigs tipped with grass shrimp or bloodworm, especially near Curtis Creek, the Patapsco, and deeper shoals off Hoopers Island. Also keep an eye out for speckled trout shadowing schools of small baitfish near Tangier Sound and up the eastern Bay islands; soft plastics on 1/4 oz jigheads do the trick.
As for hot artificial lures—mid-sized paddletails (olive or pearl), jerkbaits, and soft plastic jigs are standing out. On windier days like this, metal jigs give you distance and control. For the surf hounds, don’t pass on topwater plugs early—a walk-the-dog or pencil popper can still wake up a striper at dawn if you find birds working bait.
Two hot spots to focus on right now are:
- The Bay Bridge pilings and nearby rock piles—especially at high tide, drifting live eels or jigging the pilings produces.
- Point Lookout and the mouth of the Potomac, where deeper trolling near structure is putting solid-sized fish in the boat.
On menhaden, just a heads up—recent regulation changes mean the overall catch limit is down 20% for next year, but Omega Protein and boats out of Reedville are still working the nets, so expect some disruption but also find the stripers and big blues tight behind any bait schools.
All in all, the weather and water are classic late-season Chesapeake—tough for the small boats so pick your windows, focus on the tides, and keep an eye on the bait movement. As always, thanks for tuning in to the Chesapeake Bay fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite.
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