Artificial Lure here with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Wednesday, October 29, 2025. We’re waking up to classic late-October conditions along the ditch—crisp and clear, with dawn coming up at 7:11 and the sunset set for 5:40 tonight. If you’re planning a before- or after-work session, those are your bookends for daylight.
Let’s talk tides. We’ve got a high at 5:02 AM, then the water drops to a low at 11:05 AM, rises up for another high at 5:09 PM, and finishes with a low just before midnight. Big movements today, as the tidal coefficient is running high (85 this morning, easing to 82 by evening according to tides4fishing.com). That means brisk currents, classic canal sweep, and increased bait movement—a great scenario for both daybreak and evening bites. Water temp’s holding steady around 62°F, and it’s a little brisk, hovering in the mid-50s, with a light wind, mostly clear skies, and barely a ripple on the surface according to TidesChart.com and US Harbors.
Fishing activity’s not letting up even as October winds down. My Fishing Cape Cod notes that fresh striped bass are still coming through, with a real mix of schoolies and the occasional keeper in the 28-35 inch range. Word on the service road is that some anglers have landed low-40s this week—solid late-season action. Blues are still being reported, mostly smaller choppers but decent numbers, and a few diehard toggers are still finding blackfish close to the rocks near the pilings.
Best action has been early on the west end near the Railroad Bridge and the infamous Mussel Bed stretch, particularly as the tide turns and water pumps east. The high tide sweep at Herring Run is also drawing the last of this run’s stripers chasing peanut bunker and scattered mackerel. With that strong current, the classic Cape Cod Canal arsenal is working overtime: 7-9 inch pencil poppers and surface walkers—think white and mackerel patterns at daybreak—are drawing aggressive topwater strikes. As the sun gets higher, switch to loaded swim shads, Magic Swimmers, and trusty Savages. Heavier metals like Crippled Herrings or Bill Hurley Sand Eels get bites down deep when the current really rips.
If you want a more subtle presentation, the old-school bucktail jig with a pork rind trailer—or soft plastics like Gravity Tackle GT Eels—are deadly, especially fished on the bottom during the slack or start of the flood. Chunk baiters are picking up a few late bass on bunker, but with the amount of baitfish in the water, artificials seem to be outpacing fresh bait, especially for the bigger fish.
Local shops such as Canal Bait & Tackle report steady business as folks are stocking up on both classic and new-age plugs, and the regulars will tell you: don’t hit the canal without a loaded pencil or bright soft plastic. If you’re looking to try your luck this evening, the incoming tide after 5pm should set up another shot at surface action right at sunset.
Couple of hotspots to focus on: the stretch from the Rail Bridge down to Tidal Flats is still holding fish, and the mid-canal area near the Power Plant is another under-the-radar option that’s been delivering for those willing to hike a bit.
Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Cape Cod Canal report. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates, tactics, and the inside line on where they’re biting. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 4 days, 3 hours ago
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