Artificial Lure here with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Tuesday, October 28, 2025, bringing you the nuts and bolts for a crisp fall day along the Big Ditch.
Sun poked up at 7:02 and will settle at 5:51 this evening. We’ve got strong tidal swing today—high tide set for 6:57 am and again at 7:01 pm, with lows at 1:40 am and 1:50 in the afternoon, per CapeTides.com. Expect almost eleven hours of daylight, but keep in mind that high tidal coefficients (running strong at 85) mean those canal currents are ripping and will stir things up, prime time for gamefish movement.
The air is brisk with temps in the lower 50s, light westerlies keeping things manageable. Dress for layers, as the wind on the riprap and canal bike path cuts deeper than you think, especially after sunrise.
Let’s talk recent bite. Stripers are still pushing through, and just last week anglers landed some solid fish up to 45-inches, reports EastBayRI.com. Schoolies are mixed in, and there are still reports of keepers smashing topwater at first light—focus your efforts around those sunrise hours. Don’t snooze your alarm: the bite drops off once that sun’s fully up, as confirmed by The Fisherman’s field team.
Tautog action is peaking, especially near canal rocks and pilings. Buzzards Bay and the canal itself produced plenty of keeper blackfish recently, says Maco’s Bait & Tackle. If you want fillets for dinner, tog is your best bet right now—come prepared with green crabs and stout gear to pull them from the structure.
Lure selection is classic October: big swinging tides mean fish are feeding aggressively. For stripers, start with white or bone SP Minnows, topwater pencils at dawn, and the ever-reliable Daiwa Salt Pro or Savage Gear pulse tails. Bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp! curly tails have also been hot. When the sun climbs or if you hit the late tide, switch over to metal, like 3-5 ounce Ava jigs or Kastmasters, to punch into the current and find deeper-running stripers.
For tog, you can’t beat a simple hi-lo rig with green crab on a 2/0 hook—fish tight to the rocks at places like the Maritime Academy wall or the pilings at the east end. Move if you’re not getting chewed within 15 minutes. Some anglers are also getting into tog around the east end herring run and Queen’s Sewer pipe, two perennial fall hotspots.
Speaking of hotspots, here are a couple must-try zones:
- The Railroad Bridge area mid-canal, especially on the east side access, has been a striper magnet on outgoing tide edges.
- The stretch from Bell Road west to the Scusset Beach Jetty is holding both bass and tog, particularly at slack moving to incoming tides.
For bait, it’s hard to beat fresh chunk mackerel or squid when the stripers get finicky, especially later in the day. For blackfish, stick purely with green crab. Local tackle shops have had ample supply according to recent updates, but call ahead for availability.
All told, the canal’s still alive with fall action. Bring your biggest plugs, your grippiest boots, and a good headlamp for early arrivals. The season’s winding down, but there’s fish—sometimes big fish—still waiting for you before the gates close on the migration.
Thanks for tuning in to your Cape Cod Canal fishing report from Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe and follow along for more bite-by-bite updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 5 days, 3 hours ago
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