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Autumn Arrives on Martha's Vineyard: A Fishing Report for September 24th
Published 7 months, 1 week ago
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Mornin’ folks, Artificial Lure here with your September 24th fishing report for Martha’s Vineyard and the sounds nearby. If you’re up before sunup, you felt that cool edge in the air: autumn’s creeping in. Sunrise hit at 6:33 AM, and we’re looking at sunset right at 6:33 PM—nice symmetry if you time that last cast just right. Weather’s shaping up in classic fall style: temps will top out in the mid-60s, with a light northwesterly breeze early, settling to just a waft by afternoon. Skies are mostly clear, with good visibility opening up the whole south shore.
Let’s talk tides. According to Tide-Forecast.com, you got a high tide at Oak Bluffs around 2:19 AM, low at 7:18 AM, another high at 2:37 PM, and back down for a 7:59 PM low. That means the outgoing tide just after dawn is prime time for working the boulder fields and sand holes off East Chop and the jetties around Vineyard Haven harbor.
Now if you’re after the glamour species: striped bass are front and center. The local surfcasters report keeper-sized linesiders moving in tight to the beaches at night and dawn, especially off Lobsterville and along Wasque. The Martha's Vineyard Times recently highlighted strong bass catches both east and west of the island, with a good mix of schoolies and some cow bass showing in deep pockets and current edges. What really got folks talking was a 39-inch striper landed near the Brickyard just two nights back.
The bluefish bite has gotten hot too, especially at Dogfish Bar and the flats at Menemsha. Reports from the Vineyard Gazette note a solid run of cocktail blues—14-24 inches—smashing topwater plugs and metals on outgoing tides. Nighttime brings in a shot at even bigger ones on live eels or chunked mackerel. Albie action (false albacore) is also building, especially down at the Edgartown lighthouse and the Cape Poge gut, with screaming drags for the boat guys using Deadly Dicks, Epoxy Jigs, and pink Hogy soft plastics.
Bait recommendations? If you’re plugging, go with something that pushes water in low light—Bombers, SP Minnows, and big pencil poppers have all produced this week. Daylight? Switch to metal: Kastmasters, Hopkins Shortys, and shad darts are the ticket for blues and albies. On the natural side, fresh squid strips and sandworms are always a killer for bass, while cut menhaden or butterfish will draw out a lunker blue.
As for bottom fishing, the scup and black sea bass bite remains lively on rocky structure, with limits possible if you work the pilings and off-the-beaten-path cribs from Oak Bluffs to Vineyard Sound. The Gazette reminds us that the striper derby is bringing big energy to every shoreline, and reports of sweet late-season fluke right at the drop-offs are giving hopes for a last blast before the door closes October 1.
For hot spots, you can’t miss:
- **Wasque Point**: Great early and late for both stripers and blues on the rips.
- **Lobsterville Beach**: Steady action, especially after dusk, and a shot at all three—bass, blues, and albies.
Boat anglers should consider drifting the holes off Middle Ground or working the shoals at Hedge Fence, especially on the moving tide.
Thanks for tuning in to your local report from Artificial Lure. If you’re out there today, crank ‘em slow, keep an eye on your leader, and check that drag—big fish are shadowing the schools and looking for an easy meal. Don’t forget to subscribe for more updates and local insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Let’s talk tides. According to Tide-Forecast.com, you got a high tide at Oak Bluffs around 2:19 AM, low at 7:18 AM, another high at 2:37 PM, and back down for a 7:59 PM low. That means the outgoing tide just after dawn is prime time for working the boulder fields and sand holes off East Chop and the jetties around Vineyard Haven harbor.
Now if you’re after the glamour species: striped bass are front and center. The local surfcasters report keeper-sized linesiders moving in tight to the beaches at night and dawn, especially off Lobsterville and along Wasque. The Martha's Vineyard Times recently highlighted strong bass catches both east and west of the island, with a good mix of schoolies and some cow bass showing in deep pockets and current edges. What really got folks talking was a 39-inch striper landed near the Brickyard just two nights back.
The bluefish bite has gotten hot too, especially at Dogfish Bar and the flats at Menemsha. Reports from the Vineyard Gazette note a solid run of cocktail blues—14-24 inches—smashing topwater plugs and metals on outgoing tides. Nighttime brings in a shot at even bigger ones on live eels or chunked mackerel. Albie action (false albacore) is also building, especially down at the Edgartown lighthouse and the Cape Poge gut, with screaming drags for the boat guys using Deadly Dicks, Epoxy Jigs, and pink Hogy soft plastics.
Bait recommendations? If you’re plugging, go with something that pushes water in low light—Bombers, SP Minnows, and big pencil poppers have all produced this week. Daylight? Switch to metal: Kastmasters, Hopkins Shortys, and shad darts are the ticket for blues and albies. On the natural side, fresh squid strips and sandworms are always a killer for bass, while cut menhaden or butterfish will draw out a lunker blue.
As for bottom fishing, the scup and black sea bass bite remains lively on rocky structure, with limits possible if you work the pilings and off-the-beaten-path cribs from Oak Bluffs to Vineyard Sound. The Gazette reminds us that the striper derby is bringing big energy to every shoreline, and reports of sweet late-season fluke right at the drop-offs are giving hopes for a last blast before the door closes October 1.
For hot spots, you can’t miss:
- **Wasque Point**: Great early and late for both stripers and blues on the rips.
- **Lobsterville Beach**: Steady action, especially after dusk, and a shot at all three—bass, blues, and albies.
Boat anglers should consider drifting the holes off Middle Ground or working the shoals at Hedge Fence, especially on the moving tide.
Thanks for tuning in to your local report from Artificial Lure. If you’re out there today, crank ‘em slow, keep an eye on your leader, and check that drag—big fish are shadowing the schools and looking for an easy meal. Don’t forget to subscribe for more updates and local insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.