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Late-Fall Fishing Grind on Martha's Vineyard
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Vineyard fishing report.
We’re in the late‑fall grind now, and the ocean’s feeling it. Water temps are cold, bait’s thinned out, and most of the big migratory stripers and blues have already slid south, leaving us with holdover schoolies, tog, and bottom fish for those still willing to bundle up.
Tides around the Island today run on a standard two‑high, two‑low cycle; CapeTides shows early‑morning high followed by a strong falling tide through mid‑morning for the Vineyard region, with the second high late afternoon into evening. That dropping water has been the best shot at any real life along the beaches and in the harbors.
Weather‑wise, the National Weather Service marine forecast for the waters around Nantucket and the Vineyard is calling for cold air, light to moderate northwest breeze early, building a bit as the day goes on, seas generally manageable. Clear to partly cloudy skies mean decent visibility, but it’s a real chill—dress like you’re going skiing, not clamming.
Sunrise is just after 7 a.m. and sunset just before 4:15 p.m. locally, so your prime windows are the first light bite on the outgoing and that last hour of daylight into dusk on the evening flood.
Recent action: local chatter and charter skippers around the Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs side say it’s pretty much down to small resident stripers and some stubborn tautog on the rockpiles. A few anglers this past week reported half‑dozen schoolies in the 18–24 inch range in Vineyard Haven Harbor and off Eastville on soft plastics fished painfully slow. Up‑Island, the surf at Squibnocket and Dogfish Bar has been quiet for days, with the odd schoolie and plenty of casting practice.
For tog, guys soaking green crabs on the rock edges off Menemsha and around West Chop have scratched out a couple of keepers mixed with shorts when the tide is moving. Nothing fast and furious—think two to five fish over a tide if you stay on them.
Best lures right now for the remaining stripers are small, subtle profiles:
- 4–5 inch soft plastics on 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads in white, bone, or olive.
- Slim metal like Deadly Dicks or Kastmasters, worked slow and low.
- Small bucktail jigs tipped with a bit of pork rind or curly tail.
On the bait side:
- Sandworms or seaworms on a simple hi‑lo rig in the harbors.
- Fresh clam or squid strips on bottom rigs for a mixed bag of scup (where they’re still around), sea bass stragglers, and the occasional tog.
- Green crab halves right on structure if you’re targeting tautog.
A couple of hot spots to try:
- **Vineyard Haven Harbor / West Chop**: Work the rips and edges on the start of the outgoing with small soft plastics and metals. The schoolies that are left are lazy—slow retrieves, long pauses.
- **Menemsha / Squibnocket area**: Tog on the rockpiles and the very occasional striper in the surf. Fish green crab tight to the rocks for tog; in the surf, keep it simple with a small white jig or a narrow metal.
Action is modest, but if you time that falling tide with low light and keep your expectations realistic, you can still bend a rod and end the season on a good note.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.
We’re in the late‑fall grind now, and the ocean’s feeling it. Water temps are cold, bait’s thinned out, and most of the big migratory stripers and blues have already slid south, leaving us with holdover schoolies, tog, and bottom fish for those still willing to bundle up.
Tides around the Island today run on a standard two‑high, two‑low cycle; CapeTides shows early‑morning high followed by a strong falling tide through mid‑morning for the Vineyard region, with the second high late afternoon into evening. That dropping water has been the best shot at any real life along the beaches and in the harbors.
Weather‑wise, the National Weather Service marine forecast for the waters around Nantucket and the Vineyard is calling for cold air, light to moderate northwest breeze early, building a bit as the day goes on, seas generally manageable. Clear to partly cloudy skies mean decent visibility, but it’s a real chill—dress like you’re going skiing, not clamming.
Sunrise is just after 7 a.m. and sunset just before 4:15 p.m. locally, so your prime windows are the first light bite on the outgoing and that last hour of daylight into dusk on the evening flood.
Recent action: local chatter and charter skippers around the Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs side say it’s pretty much down to small resident stripers and some stubborn tautog on the rockpiles. A few anglers this past week reported half‑dozen schoolies in the 18–24 inch range in Vineyard Haven Harbor and off Eastville on soft plastics fished painfully slow. Up‑Island, the surf at Squibnocket and Dogfish Bar has been quiet for days, with the odd schoolie and plenty of casting practice.
For tog, guys soaking green crabs on the rock edges off Menemsha and around West Chop have scratched out a couple of keepers mixed with shorts when the tide is moving. Nothing fast and furious—think two to five fish over a tide if you stay on them.
Best lures right now for the remaining stripers are small, subtle profiles:
- 4–5 inch soft plastics on 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads in white, bone, or olive.
- Slim metal like Deadly Dicks or Kastmasters, worked slow and low.
- Small bucktail jigs tipped with a bit of pork rind or curly tail.
On the bait side:
- Sandworms or seaworms on a simple hi‑lo rig in the harbors.
- Fresh clam or squid strips on bottom rigs for a mixed bag of scup (where they’re still around), sea bass stragglers, and the occasional tog.
- Green crab halves right on structure if you’re targeting tautog.
A couple of hot spots to try:
- **Vineyard Haven Harbor / West Chop**: Work the rips and edges on the start of the outgoing with small soft plastics and metals. The schoolies that are left are lazy—slow retrieves, long pauses.
- **Menemsha / Squibnocket area**: Tog on the rockpiles and the very occasional striper in the surf. Fish green crab tight to the rocks for tog; in the surf, keep it simple with a small white jig or a narrow metal.
Action is modest, but if you time that falling tide with low light and keep your expectations realistic, you can still bend a rod and end the season on a good note.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.