Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Fall Frenzy on the Hudson: Striper Blitz and Catfish Crush
Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Hudson River anglers—Artificial Lure here with your October 15th, 2025, local fishing report live from New York City!
We’re hitting the heart of the fall run, and the river’s pulse is picking up. Today’s weather is shaping up beautifully for a day on the water: skies are clear, with early morning temps hovering in the upper 50s and a high expected in the mid-60s by afternoon, according to local reports. Winds will be calm, southeast at about 5-10 mph. Sunrise came at 7:15am and you can expect sunset around 6:26pm—plenty of light for a full day’s cast.
Tidal movement is key on the Hudson, especially through Manhattan and further north. NOAA’s Riverdale station predictions show a low tide this morning, coming in around 7:20 AM, swinging back to a late morning incoming tide—so prime conditions for hungry predators pushing in with the bait.
How’s the bite? According to On The Water and recent fishingreminder.com updates, the fall migration is in full force. Massive schools of bunker and peanut bunker are pouring into the Hudson, and the stripers and bluefish are right on their heels. Striped bass action has stepped up over the past week, with plenty of slots and overs reported from Battery Park up through Spuyten Duyvil. Bluefish are marauding through the lower river, chopping bait and taking just about anything tossed their way.
The mix right now also includes schoolie bass, big channel catfish, white perch, and the occasional weakfish or American eel—local students even snagged a few surprise species, from needlefish to tiny sea horses, last week during a “Day in the Life of the Hudson” event reported by NY.Gov.
Recent catches have mostly been stripers, from 22-inch schoolies to that magical 35-inch class, with a handful pushing higher, especially around dusk at the piers and the mouths of the Harlem and East Rivers. Catfish action is steady further up near Yonkers and Edgewater—big chunk baits get the nod, especially after sunset.
Hot baits and rigs:
- If you’re after bass or bluefish, toss 4–6 inch soft plastics on ¾ oz jigheads, or twitch paddle tails up current around structure. Topwater spooks and poppers produce explosive hits in the early mornings.
- For livies, bunker chunks and clam belly are drawing the bigger stripers, with cut mackerel and eel getting slurped up near Pier 96 and Pier 66.
- Catfish anglers are doing best with chicken liver, bunker, and shad chunks on Carolina rigs with EZ-Rig sinker slides, as recommended by Whisker Seeker Tackle for quick weight swaps when the current picks up.
A few must-try hot spots for today:
- **Pier 84 and Pier 96:** Both are producing well at first and last light—fish the edges of the current where baitfish stack up.
- **The Harlem River mouth (near Spuyten Duyvil):** Always a fall magnet, especially as tide shifts. Stripers moving up, bunker clouds present—bring soft plastics and jigs.
- **Edgewater ferry slips and the old pilings by Hoboken:** Great for night chunking—catfish and bass are prowling here after dark.
Fish activity will likely peak on the incoming tide late morning and again at dusk. Remember, action slows during slack water, so time your casting around tidal movement for best results.
Thanks for tuning in to your Hudson River fishing fix! Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest waterside updates, keep those lines tight, and keep sending in your catches.
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.
We’re hitting the heart of the fall run, and the river’s pulse is picking up. Today’s weather is shaping up beautifully for a day on the water: skies are clear, with early morning temps hovering in the upper 50s and a high expected in the mid-60s by afternoon, according to local reports. Winds will be calm, southeast at about 5-10 mph. Sunrise came at 7:15am and you can expect sunset around 6:26pm—plenty of light for a full day’s cast.
Tidal movement is key on the Hudson, especially through Manhattan and further north. NOAA’s Riverdale station predictions show a low tide this morning, coming in around 7:20 AM, swinging back to a late morning incoming tide—so prime conditions for hungry predators pushing in with the bait.
How’s the bite? According to On The Water and recent fishingreminder.com updates, the fall migration is in full force. Massive schools of bunker and peanut bunker are pouring into the Hudson, and the stripers and bluefish are right on their heels. Striped bass action has stepped up over the past week, with plenty of slots and overs reported from Battery Park up through Spuyten Duyvil. Bluefish are marauding through the lower river, chopping bait and taking just about anything tossed their way.
The mix right now also includes schoolie bass, big channel catfish, white perch, and the occasional weakfish or American eel—local students even snagged a few surprise species, from needlefish to tiny sea horses, last week during a “Day in the Life of the Hudson” event reported by NY.Gov.
Recent catches have mostly been stripers, from 22-inch schoolies to that magical 35-inch class, with a handful pushing higher, especially around dusk at the piers and the mouths of the Harlem and East Rivers. Catfish action is steady further up near Yonkers and Edgewater—big chunk baits get the nod, especially after sunset.
Hot baits and rigs:
- If you’re after bass or bluefish, toss 4–6 inch soft plastics on ¾ oz jigheads, or twitch paddle tails up current around structure. Topwater spooks and poppers produce explosive hits in the early mornings.
- For livies, bunker chunks and clam belly are drawing the bigger stripers, with cut mackerel and eel getting slurped up near Pier 96 and Pier 66.
- Catfish anglers are doing best with chicken liver, bunker, and shad chunks on Carolina rigs with EZ-Rig sinker slides, as recommended by Whisker Seeker Tackle for quick weight swaps when the current picks up.
A few must-try hot spots for today:
- **Pier 84 and Pier 96:** Both are producing well at first and last light—fish the edges of the current where baitfish stack up.
- **The Harlem River mouth (near Spuyten Duyvil):** Always a fall magnet, especially as tide shifts. Stripers moving up, bunker clouds present—bring soft plastics and jigs.
- **Edgewater ferry slips and the old pilings by Hoboken:** Great for night chunking—catfish and bass are prowling here after dark.
Fish activity will likely peak on the incoming tide late morning and again at dusk. Remember, action slows during slack water, so time your casting around tidal movement for best results.
Thanks for tuning in to your Hudson River fishing fix! Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest waterside updates, keep those lines tight, and keep sending in your catches.
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.