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Autumn Winds and Tides: A Charles River Fishing Report for November 6th, 2025
Published 5 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here checking in with your Thursday, November 6th, 2025 Charles River fishing report. We’ve got a crisp autumn send-off this morning—temps hovering in the mid-40s, light northwest breeze, and skies starting off mostly clear. Expect highs bumping up into the low 50s as the day unfolds, not bad for working a shoreline or launching the canoe. Sunrise hit at 6:22AM this morning and you’ll have daylight until sunset wraps things up at 4:32PM, so those after-work casts are still in play.
Now, let’s talk tides: Down at the mouth by Charlestown, today’s low tide sweeps in around 4:53AM and you’ll see that high water right at 11:02AM, peaking just north of 12 feet, and dropping out for another low tide near 5:29PM according to tide-forecast.com and local charts. That mid-morning push should fire up the bite—especially closer to the harbor end—if you’re working ambush points or river mouths.
Water’s cooling off, so bass and perch activity has slowed some, but don’t hang ‘em up yet. Local anglers report decent buckets of yellow perch and some solid largemouth, particularly during the warming part of the day on the upper stretches through Newton and Watertown. Last week, a few nice 2- to 3-pound bass were landed by the Longfellow and Arsenal bridges, as well as a handful of feisty pickerel and fat crappie near the deeper bends. A couple lucky folks even managed holdover trout below the dam after the last stocking.
For bait, you can’t beat live shiners or fathead minnows—especially fished beneath a slip bobber just off the channel edge or near downed timber. Worms still score on panfish too. Artificial lures to tie on today: go small and slow. Stay natural with soft plastic grubs in dark green or brown, or try chartreuse if the water’s a bit stained from leaf fall. Blade baits like the Johnson ThinFisher or small silver Kastmaster spoons have been winning on cold mornings, especially jigged near structure. Lipless cranks in craw or shad patterns can tempt the bigger bass that are stocking up for winter, especially if you bang them along the rocky bottom.
A couple hot spots worth your time:
- Magazine Beach in Cambridge is producing both bass and decent perch, especially mid-morning and late afternoon.
- The mouth of the Muddy River, especially with the incoming tide, is a solid bet for mixed bag action—expect perch, bass, and even an occasional pike sighting as they get frisky before winter.
- Look for crappie and bluegill pockets along the Esplanade coves; vertical jigging under the trees or near docks should pay off.
With another steady high tide around mid-morning, I’d be hitting breaks, rip-rap, and weed lines—not too deep, but just off the drop. Presentation counts: retrieve slow, pause often, and let those fish get a good look. Scented baits or a touch of fish attractant won’t hurt in these cooler waters.
That’s all for this Charles River report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in—remember to subscribe so you never miss a bite-by-bite update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Now, let’s talk tides: Down at the mouth by Charlestown, today’s low tide sweeps in around 4:53AM and you’ll see that high water right at 11:02AM, peaking just north of 12 feet, and dropping out for another low tide near 5:29PM according to tide-forecast.com and local charts. That mid-morning push should fire up the bite—especially closer to the harbor end—if you’re working ambush points or river mouths.
Water’s cooling off, so bass and perch activity has slowed some, but don’t hang ‘em up yet. Local anglers report decent buckets of yellow perch and some solid largemouth, particularly during the warming part of the day on the upper stretches through Newton and Watertown. Last week, a few nice 2- to 3-pound bass were landed by the Longfellow and Arsenal bridges, as well as a handful of feisty pickerel and fat crappie near the deeper bends. A couple lucky folks even managed holdover trout below the dam after the last stocking.
For bait, you can’t beat live shiners or fathead minnows—especially fished beneath a slip bobber just off the channel edge or near downed timber. Worms still score on panfish too. Artificial lures to tie on today: go small and slow. Stay natural with soft plastic grubs in dark green or brown, or try chartreuse if the water’s a bit stained from leaf fall. Blade baits like the Johnson ThinFisher or small silver Kastmaster spoons have been winning on cold mornings, especially jigged near structure. Lipless cranks in craw or shad patterns can tempt the bigger bass that are stocking up for winter, especially if you bang them along the rocky bottom.
A couple hot spots worth your time:
- Magazine Beach in Cambridge is producing both bass and decent perch, especially mid-morning and late afternoon.
- The mouth of the Muddy River, especially with the incoming tide, is a solid bet for mixed bag action—expect perch, bass, and even an occasional pike sighting as they get frisky before winter.
- Look for crappie and bluegill pockets along the Esplanade coves; vertical jigging under the trees or near docks should pay off.
With another steady high tide around mid-morning, I’d be hitting breaks, rip-rap, and weed lines—not too deep, but just off the drop. Presentation counts: retrieve slow, pause often, and let those fish get a good look. Scented baits or a touch of fish attractant won’t hurt in these cooler waters.
That’s all for this Charles River report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in—remember to subscribe so you never miss a bite-by-bite update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI