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Winter Wrangling on the Charles: Chasing Holdover Bass and Panfish
Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Charles River fishing report for the Boston stretch of the river.
We’re sliding into true winter patterns now. Mornings are cold, afternoons just barely softening up, with light northwest wind and clear to partly cloudy skies typical for early December, and air temps riding the 30s into low 40s. Local weather services are calling it a dry, high‑pressure day with decent visibility and just enough breeze to put a mild chop on the basin.
According to NOAA’s Charlestown/Charles River entrance tide station, we’re working a classic Boston harbor cycle: low water first thing this morning, a solid incoming through late morning, high early afternoon, then a falling tide into the evening. That late‑morning push of clean harbor water up into the lower Charles is your key feeding window.
Sunrise is right around 7:00 a.m., sunset just after 4:10 p.m., so you’ve got tight daylight. First light to about 9:30 a.m. and the last hour before dark are your best windows, especially bracketing the stronger current around tide changes.
Recent chatter from local shops and river regulars has been consistent: the **striper run is effectively done**, with just an odd schoolie reported near the locks and Museum of Science, but nothing you can plan a trip around. The **winter game now is holdover largemouth, crappie, yellow perch, and some chunky pumpkinseed** in the slower, deeper sections above the basin. A few diehards also report the occasional by‑catch carp on small jigs while they’re panfishing.
Best approach:
- For **largemouth**: Work deeper edges and slow current seams around Magazine Beach, near the BU Bridge, and the coves by the Esplanade docks. Slow‑roll a **1/4 oz green pumpkin or black‑blue finesse jig with a compact trailer**, or drag a **wacky‑rigged 4" stickbait** painfully slow. In this cold water, think inches per second.
- For **crappie and perch**: Look to the marinas and pilings in the **Basin and by Community Boating**, plus the quiet water just above the Longfellow. A **1/16 oz marabou jig**, **tiny hair jig**, or **small soft‑plastic on a micro jighead** in white, chartreuse, or natural shad colors under a float is putting fish in the kayak. Tip with a **small piece of nightcrawler or maggot** if you’re fishing bait.
- For folks still hoping for a unicorn **holdover striper**: Fish the **downstream side of the dam and the mouth near the locks** on the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming. Small **3–4" soft‑plastic paddletails on 3/8 oz jigheads** in bone or olive, crawled just off bottom, give you your best shot. Expect long hours between bites.
Local favorites for this time of year are **small profile baits**:
- Lures: 1/8–1/4 oz blade baits, silver or gold; 2.8" swimbaits; tiny jerkbaits worked with long pauses.
- Natural bait: **live shiners** for bass, **worms** or **waxworms** for panfish. Keep leaders light and presentations subtle – the water’s cold and clear enough that the fish are picky.
A couple of hot spots to circle on the map:
- **BU Bridge to Magazine Beach stretch**: deeper bends, mixed rock and softer bottom, good wintering water for bass and panfish when the sun gets on it.
- **Esplanade lagoon and docks inside the Basin**: protected, a bit warmer, plenty of structure; great for crappie, perch, and the occasional surprise bass.
If you’re heading out, dress for immersion, not just air temp. The river is cold enough to be dangerous, and most of the serious action is coming from shore casters and kayak anglers staying close to the bank.
That’s the Charles River report for today from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing
We’re sliding into true winter patterns now. Mornings are cold, afternoons just barely softening up, with light northwest wind and clear to partly cloudy skies typical for early December, and air temps riding the 30s into low 40s. Local weather services are calling it a dry, high‑pressure day with decent visibility and just enough breeze to put a mild chop on the basin.
According to NOAA’s Charlestown/Charles River entrance tide station, we’re working a classic Boston harbor cycle: low water first thing this morning, a solid incoming through late morning, high early afternoon, then a falling tide into the evening. That late‑morning push of clean harbor water up into the lower Charles is your key feeding window.
Sunrise is right around 7:00 a.m., sunset just after 4:10 p.m., so you’ve got tight daylight. First light to about 9:30 a.m. and the last hour before dark are your best windows, especially bracketing the stronger current around tide changes.
Recent chatter from local shops and river regulars has been consistent: the **striper run is effectively done**, with just an odd schoolie reported near the locks and Museum of Science, but nothing you can plan a trip around. The **winter game now is holdover largemouth, crappie, yellow perch, and some chunky pumpkinseed** in the slower, deeper sections above the basin. A few diehards also report the occasional by‑catch carp on small jigs while they’re panfishing.
Best approach:
- For **largemouth**: Work deeper edges and slow current seams around Magazine Beach, near the BU Bridge, and the coves by the Esplanade docks. Slow‑roll a **1/4 oz green pumpkin or black‑blue finesse jig with a compact trailer**, or drag a **wacky‑rigged 4" stickbait** painfully slow. In this cold water, think inches per second.
- For **crappie and perch**: Look to the marinas and pilings in the **Basin and by Community Boating**, plus the quiet water just above the Longfellow. A **1/16 oz marabou jig**, **tiny hair jig**, or **small soft‑plastic on a micro jighead** in white, chartreuse, or natural shad colors under a float is putting fish in the kayak. Tip with a **small piece of nightcrawler or maggot** if you’re fishing bait.
- For folks still hoping for a unicorn **holdover striper**: Fish the **downstream side of the dam and the mouth near the locks** on the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming. Small **3–4" soft‑plastic paddletails on 3/8 oz jigheads** in bone or olive, crawled just off bottom, give you your best shot. Expect long hours between bites.
Local favorites for this time of year are **small profile baits**:
- Lures: 1/8–1/4 oz blade baits, silver or gold; 2.8" swimbaits; tiny jerkbaits worked with long pauses.
- Natural bait: **live shiners** for bass, **worms** or **waxworms** for panfish. Keep leaders light and presentations subtle – the water’s cold and clear enough that the fish are picky.
A couple of hot spots to circle on the map:
- **BU Bridge to Magazine Beach stretch**: deeper bends, mixed rock and softer bottom, good wintering water for bass and panfish when the sun gets on it.
- **Esplanade lagoon and docks inside the Basin**: protected, a bit warmer, plenty of structure; great for crappie, perch, and the occasional surprise bass.
If you’re heading out, dress for immersion, not just air temp. The river is cold enough to be dangerous, and most of the serious action is coming from shore casters and kayak anglers staying close to the bank.
That’s the Charles River report for today from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing