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Stripers Crushing Bucktails in the Ditch - Winter Bite Lights Up the Cape Cod Canal
Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to guy for all things angling around the Cape Cod Canal. It's a crisp winter morning on January 24, 2026, and the striper bite is heating up in the Ditch just like yesterday's report from the Cape Cod Canal Fishing Report Today podcast had it—winter stripers schooled deep and hungry.
Tides today at Sagamore station from Tides4Fishing show a solid incoming flow: high at 1:21 a.m. around 7.2 feet, dropping to low 1.5 feet at 7:26 a.m., then pushing back up to 8.1 feet by 1:24 p.m., and evening low at 0.6 feet around 8 p.m. Fish the incoming tide hard, especially that afternoon push when current rips and bait gets funneled in. Sunrise at 7:05 a.m., sunset 5:47 p.m., with average solunar activity—moon up at 10:21 a.m., so overlap those peaks for best action.
Weather's typical January: chilly winds from the northwest, highs in the low 30s, bundle up but no big storms messing things up. Stripers are the stars right now—decent numbers of 28- to 36-inch keepers reported yesterday, holding deep in the channel, slamming offerings on the scour line. Limits are coming quick for those working it right; a few schoolies mixed in, but the cows are showing.
Top lures? Bucktails jigged slow and deep, 1- to 2-ounce in white or chartreuse, tipped with pork or soft plastic trailers. Soft plastics like 5-inch swimbaits on jigheads are deadly. For bait, fresh herring chunks or whole mackerel strips on a fish-finder rig—stripers can't resist 'em in this cold water.
Hot spots: Hit the east end near the railroad bridge during incoming for current breaks, or mid-Canal by the power lines where depth changes hold fish tight. Park legal, fish smart, and respect the no-wake zones.
Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Tides today at Sagamore station from Tides4Fishing show a solid incoming flow: high at 1:21 a.m. around 7.2 feet, dropping to low 1.5 feet at 7:26 a.m., then pushing back up to 8.1 feet by 1:24 p.m., and evening low at 0.6 feet around 8 p.m. Fish the incoming tide hard, especially that afternoon push when current rips and bait gets funneled in. Sunrise at 7:05 a.m., sunset 5:47 p.m., with average solunar activity—moon up at 10:21 a.m., so overlap those peaks for best action.
Weather's typical January: chilly winds from the northwest, highs in the low 30s, bundle up but no big storms messing things up. Stripers are the stars right now—decent numbers of 28- to 36-inch keepers reported yesterday, holding deep in the channel, slamming offerings on the scour line. Limits are coming quick for those working it right; a few schoolies mixed in, but the cows are showing.
Top lures? Bucktails jigged slow and deep, 1- to 2-ounce in white or chartreuse, tipped with pork or soft plastic trailers. Soft plastics like 5-inch swimbaits on jigheads are deadly. For bait, fresh herring chunks or whole mackerel strips on a fish-finder rig—stripers can't resist 'em in this cold water.
Hot spots: Hit the east end near the railroad bridge during incoming for current breaks, or mid-Canal by the power lines where depth changes hold fish tight. Park legal, fish smart, and respect the no-wake zones.
Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI