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Striper Slam and Tog Takedown on the Cape Cod Canal

Striper Slam and Tog Takedown on the Cape Cod Canal



Artificial Lure here with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Sunday, November 2nd, 2025.

A cool, crisp morning greets you canal-side. Sunrise cracked at 7:06 am, and anglers were already pacing the riprap hoping for a trophy striper. The **canal water temp’s hovering around 60°F**, with the air lingering near 52°F—light cloud cover, a gentle 9 mph southwest breeze, and humidity at 75% making for comfortable layered fishing conditions. We’re looking at a high tide rolling in at **11:36 am** and a low at **6:40 pm**, which means you’ll want to set up for that classic outgoing tide bite around midday.

**Striped bass action is the headline** this week. According to EastBayRI, a solid 45-inch striper was taken in the canal late last week—a real beauty, suggesting there’s still a push of big fish moving through. The fall migration’s in full swing, with schoolies mixed in, but the slot and over-slot fish are what everyone’s chasing. There’ve been more keepers reported than last year, likely thanks to cooler nights and steady bait presence.

**Tautog fishing has also been strong**, with boats and shore-bound anglers regularly pulling blackfish from the canal’s rocky edges. The recent limit increase to five fish per person has brought out more toggers, and many are finding success on crab baits around structure—bridge pilings and bulkheads are hot right now.

For lures, nothing beats a **6" white or bone Savage Gear Sand Eel**, “Loaded” Al Gags soft plastics, or **mag darters** in bunker or mackerel pattern when stripers are feeding on moving tides. Some locals swear by bucktails tipped with Gulp when bass are tight to bottom structure. On the bait front, **live eels** remain the perennial favorite, especially on the evening outgoing; cut mackerel or fresh pogies will draw bites if you can’t find eels.

For tautog, the old standbys work best: **green crabs** on a basic tog jig, dropped right into rocky pockets and bridge abutments. Most serious blackfishermen stick to jigs under 2 oz for canal current, and keep terminal tackle beefy—a 30 lb leader is smart.

If you haven’t been out lately, you’ll want to check these **hot spots**:
- The east end around the **Sagamore Bridge**, where deeper holes concentrate bass and tautog during peak tide swings.
- **The Cribbin’** near the Railroad Bridge, which has produced some hefty stripers and is a go-to for toggers all October long.

Major feeding windows today run **1:26–3:26 am** and **1:44–3:44 pm**, with minor times near moonrise (**9:52–10:52 am**) and moonset (**6:37–7:37 pm**). The bite’s best around moving water, so dial in your casts just as tide flow picks up.

Lastly, remember tautog are getting aggressive before cold shuts them down, so get after them while the bite lasts. The evening sunset at 5:47 pm will close out a great day, and if you get lucky with a last-light striper—snap a pick and send it in!

Thanks for tuning in. Subscribe for your daily canal fix and fishing forecasts. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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


Published on 1 month, 2 weeks ago






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