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Reel in the Vineyard Fall Fishing Frenzy
Published 6 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Friday, October 3rd, 2025, Martha’s Vineyard fishing report, and let me tell you, the fall action is living up to its reputation this week!
You’ll want to kick things off early—today’s sunrise is at 6:40 AM and sunset’s at 6:22 PM, so there’s a solid 12 hours of light to chase that dream catch. The tide’s working in your favor too: high tides are rolling through Oak Bluffs around 7:56 AM and again at 8:26 PM, with lows around 2:04 AM and 1:45 PM according to Tide-Forecast.com. That means your sweet spot for moving water, especially targeting hungry predators, is mid-morning into early afternoon.
The weather’s mild, waters are sitting in the high 60s, and skies are calm—which means great conditions for anyone casting from shore or drifting just off the rocks. Early October here is prime time for boat and land-based anglers alike.
Let’s talk fish: keeper tautog—otherwise known as blackfish—are biting hard right now in Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay. Folks are getting their limits fast, working green crab-tipped jigs along rocky bottom near the islands in 20–30 feet. There’s also a nice mix of scup in these spots, so don’t be surprised to pull up a bonus dinner plate or two. The tog bite is strong and only going to get better as those water temps cool—keep those crab traps ready and your jigs light for precision near the bottom.
Striped bass are lurking, especially around estuaries and harbors loaded with bait. There’s plenty of peanut bunker and silversides swirling, drawing in bass from schoolies up into the prized slot size. The big girls are shadowing bait balls, so work those live eels, soft plastics, or topwaters like the Rapala Skitter Pop and Hogy Micro Popper for surface action. Evening outgoing tide could kick up a solid bite for the night owls.
Bluefish and hardtails—bonito and false albacore—are still around, but be ready to hunt. The albies are feeding heavy on anchovies, popping up fast in small groups. When you find ‘em, cast small epoxy jigs, Deadly Dicks, or metal tins for the best odds. Bluefish have been feisty as well, responding well to topwaters and classic metal spoons. Bonito are a little more scattered, but they’re there—expect short flurries with plenty of excitement when you lock in.
For bait: green crab rules for tautog. For stripers and blues, live eels, peanut bunker, or soft-plastic paddle tails are the ticket. Hardtails want flashy, speedy presentations—epoxy and metal jigs in the 1–2 inch range are king.
If you’re itching for a couple of today’s hot spots, make a beeline for:
- The jetties at Oak Bluffs and Vineyard Haven, especially at first light and dusk for stripers, blues, and tautog.
- Middle Ground and the rocks around Menemsha for a shot at a mixed bag—tog, scup, schoolie bass, maybe even an albie blitz mixed in.
Word from some captains is that folks are tight-lipped during Derby season, so don’t expect too many specifics if you strike up dock chat. But trust me, there’s plenty to go around—just put in the time and follow the birds.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Martha’s Vineyard fishing report! Go get your lines wet, stay safe, and remember to subscribe for your daily bite updates. 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.
You’ll want to kick things off early—today’s sunrise is at 6:40 AM and sunset’s at 6:22 PM, so there’s a solid 12 hours of light to chase that dream catch. The tide’s working in your favor too: high tides are rolling through Oak Bluffs around 7:56 AM and again at 8:26 PM, with lows around 2:04 AM and 1:45 PM according to Tide-Forecast.com. That means your sweet spot for moving water, especially targeting hungry predators, is mid-morning into early afternoon.
The weather’s mild, waters are sitting in the high 60s, and skies are calm—which means great conditions for anyone casting from shore or drifting just off the rocks. Early October here is prime time for boat and land-based anglers alike.
Let’s talk fish: keeper tautog—otherwise known as blackfish—are biting hard right now in Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay. Folks are getting their limits fast, working green crab-tipped jigs along rocky bottom near the islands in 20–30 feet. There’s also a nice mix of scup in these spots, so don’t be surprised to pull up a bonus dinner plate or two. The tog bite is strong and only going to get better as those water temps cool—keep those crab traps ready and your jigs light for precision near the bottom.
Striped bass are lurking, especially around estuaries and harbors loaded with bait. There’s plenty of peanut bunker and silversides swirling, drawing in bass from schoolies up into the prized slot size. The big girls are shadowing bait balls, so work those live eels, soft plastics, or topwaters like the Rapala Skitter Pop and Hogy Micro Popper for surface action. Evening outgoing tide could kick up a solid bite for the night owls.
Bluefish and hardtails—bonito and false albacore—are still around, but be ready to hunt. The albies are feeding heavy on anchovies, popping up fast in small groups. When you find ‘em, cast small epoxy jigs, Deadly Dicks, or metal tins for the best odds. Bluefish have been feisty as well, responding well to topwaters and classic metal spoons. Bonito are a little more scattered, but they’re there—expect short flurries with plenty of excitement when you lock in.
For bait: green crab rules for tautog. For stripers and blues, live eels, peanut bunker, or soft-plastic paddle tails are the ticket. Hardtails want flashy, speedy presentations—epoxy and metal jigs in the 1–2 inch range are king.
If you’re itching for a couple of today’s hot spots, make a beeline for:
- The jetties at Oak Bluffs and Vineyard Haven, especially at first light and dusk for stripers, blues, and tautog.
- Middle Ground and the rocks around Menemsha for a shot at a mixed bag—tog, scup, schoolie bass, maybe even an albie blitz mixed in.
Word from some captains is that folks are tight-lipped during Derby season, so don’t expect too many specifics if you strike up dock chat. But trust me, there’s plenty to go around—just put in the time and follow the birds.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Martha’s Vineyard fishing report! Go get your lines wet, stay safe, and remember to subscribe for your daily bite updates. 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.