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Fishing the Cape Cod Canal's November Transition: Stripers, Shad, and Tautog Bite Updates

Fishing the Cape Cod Canal's November Transition: Stripers, Shad, and Tautog Bite Updates



Artificial Lure here with your Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Tuesday, November 4th, 2025.

First light hit at 6:37AM, sunset coming early at 4:18PM, so it's a short window for action today. Tides are running strong—a negative low near 6:42AM and a solid high tide at 11:54AM, so plan for heavier currents that’ll stir up baitfish and fish alike. Midday high tide lines up perfectly for lunch-hour casting, then expect another low at 7:15PM, right as dusk sets in according to CapeTides.com. Canal currents are ripping too, with tidal coefficients peaking at 85 this morning, so hang on to your gear and expect lots of water movement—ideal for ambush feeders.

Weather’s mild for November: 53° to start the day, probably climbing to the upper 50s before cooling to the low 40s by nightfall. Winds are moderate, so fishable conditions along the Canal edge per Cape Cod Canal, East (Sandwich) weather update. No major storms, just classic fall briskness.

Recent catches reflect the November transition. Striped bass are still in the system, but thinning by the week. Local legend East End Eddie Doherty reported “Mashpee Mike” and “Paulie the Painter” landed nine fat stripers in one session last week—all over slot—using white and green paddle tails, fished heavy right on bottom to cut the current. After dark, some bigger bass show around breachways and inlets, but most daytime fish are smaller slots. The big cows are getting tougher to find. Shad are moving hard inside the pond—some real slab sizes providing bonus action for light tackle folks. False albacore remain present, though their bite windows are short, so expect sporadic blitzes. Bluefish have slowed, but tautog remain steady; structure like rocks and jetties is hot for decent tog.

Best bets for lures: Heavy paddle tails (white and chartreuse always winners), green mack Shaddy Daddy plastics, and you can’t beat a bucktail jig for canal stripers. Mix in a Kastmaster or metal jig if the wind picks up or you’re chasing bonito and albies. When working for tautog, crab on a simple rig near submerged rocks is gold. Declan O’Donnell at Breachway Bait & Tackle confirms tautog are coming thick for shore anglers who work structure.

Top Canal hot spots today—head for the East End near the Railroad Bridge at first light, especially with the outgoing tide. The Herring Run area is always prime, especially during high tide when bass push bait tight to shore. The “Mossy” at the west end edges, right before the Sagamore Bridge, is producing hits on chartreuse plastics and bucktails. If the bass bite slows, swap to the rocks off Bourne and target tautog.

Don't forget, with fish moving out and cold fronts pushing, now’s the time to cover water and change tactics fast. If you’re finding action, stick with it. If not, move—Canal fish won’t wait. With shorter days, evenings are prime for a big bite.

Thanks for tuning in! Be sure to subscribe for your daily Canal fix and for real-time reports. 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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