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"Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report: Stripers, Bluefish, and Tautog Heating Up for Spring"
Published 11 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Hey there, fellow anglers! Artificial Lure here with your Martha's Vineyard fishing report for Wednesday, May 7th, 2025.
We're finally seeing that spring warmup we've been waiting for! After what locals have been calling an unusually cold start to the year, the fishing action is heating up around our island.
Striped bass are making their presence known, with schoolies being caught more consistently now. The holdovers that were in our rivers and salt ponds are being joined by fresh arrivals. While we're not seeing the main migration yet, numbers are increasing daily as water temperatures climb. South Shore has been producing some nice catches, and I'm hearing good reports from Menemsha and Chappaquiddick.
Bluefish should be showing up any day now! Typically they arrive mid-May, so keep your eyes peeled along the south-facing beaches. First arrivals tend to be the bigger choppers, so beef up your leaders if you're targeting them.
Tautog fishing remains strong in Buzzards Bay and Vineyard Sound. Rock piles outside river mouths are holding keeper-sized fish, especially during falling tides when warmer water pushes out, carrying all those tasty crabs with it. Small green crabs with trimmed legs are still the top bait, but jigs are also working well.
Scup season opened last week, and black sea bass season opens in about 10 days. There's already been good activity with squid showing up in force - they're running strong under dock lights in the evenings.
For those targeting tautog, try the rockier areas around West Chop or Squibnocket Point. Stripers are being found near the Elizabeth Islands and in the salt ponds around Edgartown.
Best lures right now include white or chartreuse soft plastics for the schoolie stripers, with success on small swimming plugs during low light. If you're after tautog, green crabs are outfishing everything else, though Asian crabs will work in a pinch.
Hot spots this week: Wasque Point is starting to heat up for early-season stripers, especially on the outgoing tide. The rocky structure around Gay Head has been giving up consistent tautog action. For a mixed bag, try drifting along the north shore between West Chop and East Chop.
With warming temps and longer days, we're about to hit prime time fishing. Get out there while you can before the summer crowds arrive!
Until next time, this is Artificial Lure reminding you that a bad day fishing is still better than a good day working. Tight lines, everyone!
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
We're finally seeing that spring warmup we've been waiting for! After what locals have been calling an unusually cold start to the year, the fishing action is heating up around our island.
Striped bass are making their presence known, with schoolies being caught more consistently now. The holdovers that were in our rivers and salt ponds are being joined by fresh arrivals. While we're not seeing the main migration yet, numbers are increasing daily as water temperatures climb. South Shore has been producing some nice catches, and I'm hearing good reports from Menemsha and Chappaquiddick.
Bluefish should be showing up any day now! Typically they arrive mid-May, so keep your eyes peeled along the south-facing beaches. First arrivals tend to be the bigger choppers, so beef up your leaders if you're targeting them.
Tautog fishing remains strong in Buzzards Bay and Vineyard Sound. Rock piles outside river mouths are holding keeper-sized fish, especially during falling tides when warmer water pushes out, carrying all those tasty crabs with it. Small green crabs with trimmed legs are still the top bait, but jigs are also working well.
Scup season opened last week, and black sea bass season opens in about 10 days. There's already been good activity with squid showing up in force - they're running strong under dock lights in the evenings.
For those targeting tautog, try the rockier areas around West Chop or Squibnocket Point. Stripers are being found near the Elizabeth Islands and in the salt ponds around Edgartown.
Best lures right now include white or chartreuse soft plastics for the schoolie stripers, with success on small swimming plugs during low light. If you're after tautog, green crabs are outfishing everything else, though Asian crabs will work in a pinch.
Hot spots this week: Wasque Point is starting to heat up for early-season stripers, especially on the outgoing tide. The rocky structure around Gay Head has been giving up consistent tautog action. For a mixed bag, try drifting along the north shore between West Chop and East Chop.
With warming temps and longer days, we're about to hit prime time fishing. Get out there while you can before the summer crowds arrive!
Until next time, this is Artificial Lure reminding you that a bad day fishing is still better than a good day working. Tight lines, everyone!
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.