Artificial Lure here with your Sunday, May 25 Cape Cod Canal fishing report.
The Canal’s been electric this week, no doubt about it. Early mornings have been the best bet, with sunrise today at 5:13 AM and sunset at 8:05 PM. Winds are coming out of the southwest around 10 to 15 mph, skies partly cloudy, and air temps hovering in the mid-50s early, creeping into the low 70s midday. Tides are running strong: the early morning brought a rising east tide transitioning to the west in the late morning—classic Canal action hours.
The bite’s been hot on quality striped bass, with regulars and first-timers after trophy linesiders. Plenty of above-slot and over-slot fish have hit the rocks the last few days, including a solid 33-incher landed on a white Al Gags Whip-It Eel near the west end. Mid-Canal’s been lively as well, with fish up to 40 inches taken casting light-colored SP Minnows into the east tide. The late west tide on Friday saw “Bill on the Grill” prod out a pair of 39 and 40-inchers, so the big ones are definitely still moving through. Lots of fish in the 35 to 39-inch range, with a steady supply of keeper and over-slot bass if you put in the hours and fish the moving water[1][4].
As for lures, white remains the Canal’s top producer right now. The hot list: Al Gags Whip-It Eels, Striper Gear Shaddy Daddy in white-black-pink, Joe Baggs Swarters, 5-ounce Bill Hurley Canal Killers, Albie Super Snax, and 4-ounce Al Gags jigs. If bait’s your game, herring are thick in the runs and mackerel, clams, and sea worms are available at most shops. The influx of herring has had the bigger linesiders feeding heavy, but the bite can turn finicky—try matching the hatch and working your lure with a slower retrieve if you’re getting follows but no takes[1][2].
On the bycatch front, bluefish have shown up in Buzzards Bay and occasionally in the Canal, especially early morning, chasing herring and squid. Fluke are starting to nose in, and flounder fishing remains steady in Cape Cod Bay[1].
Top hot spots this week are the west end around the Herring Run for the early bite and the mid-Canal stretches from the Cribbin down to the Railroad Bridge, especially near structure on the moving tide. Don’t overlook the east end if you’re after some lighter crowds and want a crack at that first push of incoming bass[1][4].
All in all, these next few days should be excellent for anyone looking to tangle with a big striper. Pack up your white jigs, get there for the tide change, and keep your eyes peeled for bird activity and surface pushes. Tight lines!