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Charles River Fishing Report: Tides, Temps, and Tasty Bites

Charles River Fishing Report: Tides, Temps, and Tasty Bites

Published 6 months ago
Description
Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your Wednesday, October 29, 2025 Charles River fishing report, coming to you straight from Boston’s urban banks.

Here’s what you need to know to make the most of your lines today: Sunrise is at 7:14am, and sunset will slide in at 5:40pm. The Boston air is crisp—temps starting in the mid 40s, barely warming to 47°F, with 21% cloud cover and a northwest wind at 11 mph gusting to 15. Water’s holding a brisk 56°F, so bring your layers and keep those hands toasty.

Tides are prime for action. High tide hits at 5:24am pushing close to 8 feet, and then again at 5:31pm surging just over 9 feet. Slack tide around midday (low at 11:19am near 2.4 feet) may slow activity briefly, but your best window? Early dawn on the incoming and evening outgoing tides. Major bite times sync up with 3:28–5:28am for those up-before-dawn diehards, and again from 4:24 to 6:24pm as daylight fades.

On the Charles lately, local folks have been hauling in a solid mix: largemouth and smallmouth bass are still holding in deeper haunts and near structure, responding well to slow presentations. Reports from guides and regulars alike mention striped bass making passes up from the harbor—these schoolies chase bait under bridges near the Museum of Science and Esplanade.

Yellow perch and pumpkinseed sunfish are active, especially up by Herter Park and across from Magazine Beach, taking worms and small jigs under float. Catfish, big old brown bullhead, are biting at dusk down by the Cambridgeport side—chicken livers and cut bait are sealing the deal there.

Your best bets for lures today include:
- Medium-diving crankbaits in firetiger or perch pattern just off river bends.
- Bladed jigs or chatterbaits near weed lines and downed timber for bass.
- Soft plastic swimbaits or white bucktail jigs for chance stripers—work these especially around the Longfellow Bridge or where the river transitions to tidally influenced brackish water.

Classic bait is hard to beat in the cold: nightcrawlers and cut shiners fished slow on the bottom are effective for both bass and the stray carp that roam these parts. For perch or panfish, tip your hooks with red worms or corn.

Now, if you’re looking for a couple of productive spots: Mystic Wharf and Millers River Basin are known for multi-species action, easily accessible and often less crowded than the main stretches. Constitution Wharf and the water just downstream of the New Charles River Dam also hold some of the better bass and the occasional striped bass run, especially on big tidal swings. Locals gravitate to these after that evening high tide, hoping for a late-fall surprise.

Remember, urban spots like these are most productive when you move often—work your bait or lure methodically, cover some water, and stay aware. Fish are stacking up on drop-offs and around lit docks after sunset.

That’s it for today’s Charles River update. Thanks for tuning in with Artificial Lure—don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s report and stay hooked for more tips.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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