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Late December Hustle - Fishing the Cold Hudson River

Late December Hustle - Fishing the Cold Hudson River

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from the Hudson right here in the city.

We’re in classic late‑December mode: cold, clear, and a little bitey on the fingers, but the river’s got some life in it. Air temps are hovering in the 30s and low 40s with a light northwest breeze, mostly clear skies, and just enough wind to put a ripple on the water. The chill’s keeping casual traffic down, which is great if you’re willing to layer up.

Sunrise is around 7:15 a.m., sunset just after 4:30 p.m., so your real window is that late‑morning to mid‑afternoon stretch when the sun’s had a chance to warm the surface a touch. That’s when the bite’s been the most consistent.

According to NOAA’s Hudson River tide tables for the city reach, we’ve got modest winter swings today. Think of it as a medium morning high, dropping out late morning into early afternoon. On the piers from Battery Park up through Midtown, the best action has been on the last two hours of the outgoing and the first push of the incoming, when that current really starts sliding and consolidating bait.

Species‑wise, the main striper run is basically wrapped; The Fisherman’s Metro NY report yesterday noted the bulk of the bass already sliding out of the river, with just a few stragglers still moving through.[The Fisherman] If you’re hunting a unicorn December linesider, you’re fishing slow and deep near structure with small soft plastics or bucktails and you’re grinding for one or two bites at most.

More realistic targets now are **schoolie stripers, white perch, and resident panfish** in the brackish pockets. White perch have been getting a lot of attention since DEC highlighted that new state record from Westchester and reminded everyone how common they are in the Hudson system, including down here in the estuary.[DEC, New York Almanack] Folks soaking bait around the creeks and back basins have picked a mix of perch and small bass over the last week—no crazy numbers, but enough to keep you honest.

Best offerings:

- **Lures:**
• 3–4" soft‑plastic paddletails on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads in white, alewife, or bunker.
• 3/4–1 oz bucktail jigs tipped with a small strip of soft plastic, crawled right along bottom.
• For perch and smaller schoolies: tiny metal spoons and 1/16–1/8 oz marabou jigs under a float.

- **Bait:**
• Bloodworms and sandworms on hi‑lo rigs for perch and schoolie bass.
• Fresh or salted clam and cut bunker on smaller hooks near bottom structure.
• Grass shrimp, if you can get them, are money around the quieter slips.

Hot spots to think about:

- **Pier 25–40 stretch in Lower Manhattan:** Good deep water close to shore, solid current edges on the tide changes, and just enough structure to hold late‑season schoolies and perch.
- **East side of Hoboken and Jersey City across the way:** Those waterfront parks and piers sit right on the channel edge; winter fish tuck tight to the rocks and pilings on the slower parts of the tide.

Tactics: travel light, fish slow. This time of year you’re almost dragging bottom—lift the jig just enough to feel it, then let the current work it. Long pauses, especially near pier pilings and rock fingers, have been key. Scale down leaders to 15–20 lb fluoro for bass, 8–10 lb for perch, and don’t be afraid to go to smaller hooks; the cold makes them peck more than smash.

That’s the word from the Hudson. Bundle up, mind those slick planks, and pack a thermos along with the jig box.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.

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
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