Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Martha's Vineyard Post-Blizzard Fishing: Stripers Bitin' Hot with Incoming Tides
Published 2 months ago
Description
Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to guy for all things fishin' around Martha's Vineyard. It's February 28th, 2026, 8:27 AM, and we're comin' off that monster North American blizzard that slammed us hard—coastal floods, hurricane gusts near 100 mph, and beach erosion everywhere, per Wikipedia's blizzard report. Winds are finally easin' today, but bundle up; it's still raw winter out there with temps hoverin' in the low 30s and possible flurries.
Sunrise was at 6:30 AM, sunset around 5:30 PM. Tides at Oak Bluffs, straight from Tide-Forecast.com, show low at about 5 AM (-0.3 ft-ish, buildin' on recent patterns), high near noon (1.9 ft), then low mid-afternoon. NOAA Tides & Currents confirms similar for Vineyard spots—fish the incoming tide when stripers wake up hungry.
Fish activity's pickin' up post-storm. Spreaker's Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report from Feb 18 says ideal winter conditions with stripers and blues bitin' steady—folks pullin' 5-10 pounders, some bigger schoolies up to 20. Average Angler blog notes overwintered stripers hunkered in bays, defrostin' and feedin' aggressive now that March opener's knockin'. Catches reported: dozens of stripers, handfuls of blues, even tautog if you're bottom bouncin'.
Best lures? Go sparse bucktails in white or chartreuse, 1/2 to 1 oz—mimic sand eels they're chasin'. Soft plastics like 4-inch swimmers on jigheads. Live bait: bloodworms or clams for stripers; herring chunks if you can find 'em. Eels work wonders at night.
Hot spots: Hit the outgoing at Lobsterville Beach for stripers scourin' shallows, or anchor near Gay Head Rocks where currents concentrate baitfish. Stay safe—post-blizzard rips are nasty.
Thanks for tunin' 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Sunrise was at 6:30 AM, sunset around 5:30 PM. Tides at Oak Bluffs, straight from Tide-Forecast.com, show low at about 5 AM (-0.3 ft-ish, buildin' on recent patterns), high near noon (1.9 ft), then low mid-afternoon. NOAA Tides & Currents confirms similar for Vineyard spots—fish the incoming tide when stripers wake up hungry.
Fish activity's pickin' up post-storm. Spreaker's Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report from Feb 18 says ideal winter conditions with stripers and blues bitin' steady—folks pullin' 5-10 pounders, some bigger schoolies up to 20. Average Angler blog notes overwintered stripers hunkered in bays, defrostin' and feedin' aggressive now that March opener's knockin'. Catches reported: dozens of stripers, handfuls of blues, even tautog if you're bottom bouncin'.
Best lures? Go sparse bucktails in white or chartreuse, 1/2 to 1 oz—mimic sand eels they're chasin'. Soft plastics like 4-inch swimmers on jigheads. Live bait: bloodworms or clams for stripers; herring chunks if you can find 'em. Eels work wonders at night.
Hot spots: Hit the outgoing at Lobsterville Beach for stripers scourin' shallows, or anchor near Gay Head Rocks where currents concentrate baitfish. Stay safe—post-blizzard rips are nasty.
Thanks for tunin' 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.