This is Artificial Lure with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Wednesday, September 3rd, 2025.
It's early September, and anglers along the Canal can feel fall coming around the bend. This morning saw a sunrise at 6:29 AM and we’re expecting it to set at 6:33 PM tonight, offering an even 12 hours of daylight. The weather’s been classic Cape late summer—temperatures hanging around the low 70s, steady westerlies, and low humidity, making for prime conditions along the rocks.
Tide-wise, CapeTides.com reports low tide hit around 5:38 AM, high tide rolled in about 10:57 AM, and the water will bottom out again this evening around 5:45 PM. Late morning’s incoming tide into high slack and the afternoon’s ebb are both looking juicy for predatory runs.
Now, let’s talk fish. After the swirl left by Hurricane Erin and with that new moon in our rearview, the Canal and the southside are alive. According to My Fishing Cape Cod, there's been a strong showing of **false albacore**, **bonito**, **striped bass**, and **bluefish** all blasting through balls of peanut bunker and small herring. The fall run’s starting to spark—expect blitzes, especially on moving tides.
On the striper front, solid fish have been coming over the wall, mostly in the pre-dawn hours and again at dusk. Fish up into the low 30-pound range have been caught in the east end and along the stretch by the Herring Run. Mid-sized bass are thick, sometimes mixed right in with the schoolie tornadoes.
Albies and bonito are showing through the western entrance and out into Buzzards Bay, chasing small bait—the guys at Goose Hummock and Eastman’s Sport & Tackle are saying this is one of the best late summer runs in the past few years, especially after the big bump in water movement post-storm.
For lures, Canal regulars are sticking with the classics: **magic swimmers**, **Savage Gear sand eels**, and **Sebile Stick Shadds** fished hard on the sweep. Pre-dawn has seen some respectable fish taken on big pencil poppers and loaded Cotton Cordell Red Fins—work the surface when those bait balls are packed tight against the rip rap. Daylight hours, break out the jig sticks and sling heavy metal like a 3- to 5-ounce Al Gag’s soft plastic or a Guppy resin jig in the white or bunker patterns.
If you’re looking to fish bait, chunking fresh mackerel or live eels in the deeper holes at the west end after dark has tempted some cows. But most daytime action is all about the plug-and-jig game.
Tautog are starting to get active again too, especially around rocky haunts near the Railroad Bridge and Maritime, but the main show remains with the migratory pelagics and bass.
Hot spots? The **Herring Run** is lights-out for bass right now, especially around the bottom of outgoing and first of the flood. Out west, around **Sagamore Bridge**, albies are blitzing when the tide swings hard and bait gets pinned along the edge. Keep moving—if you’re not seeing birds or busting fish in thirty minutes, leapfrog down-canal. The Canal rewards mobility and hustle.
That’s the rundown for today, September 3rd—conditions are ripe, fish are in, and the run is just beginning to light up. Thanks for tuning in to the Artificial Lure report! Make sure you subscribe so you don’t miss future updates. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out quiet please dot ai.
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