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Hudson River March Bite: Schoolies, Perch, and the Shoulder Season Awakening

Hudson River March Bite: Schoolies, Perch, and the Shoulder Season Awakening

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Hudson River NYC fishing report.

We’re sliding into that late‑winter, early‑spring shoulder, and the river’s just starting to wake up. Water temps are still cold, so the bite is picky, but the fish that chew are solid.

Tides today on the lower Hudson are running the usual twice‑a‑day cycle: a pre‑dawn low, flooding through the morning, and another ebb pushing out mid‑afternoon into evening. Think of the **last two hours of the incoming** and the **first hour of the outgoing** as your prime windows – that’s when current lines tighten up around the piers and rock edges.

Weather around the city is classic March: chilly, damp, and breezy out of the west–northwest, with air temps climbing from the 30s into the 40s and flirting with low 50s in the afternoon if the clouds break. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., sunset just before 6 p.m., so you’ve got decent light on both ends of the tide.

Recent action has been a **schoolie striper** game with a few better fish mixed in, plus the usual cold‑water **white perch** and **holdover largemouth** back in the marinas and connected creeks. Local pier regulars from the west side say the night bite picked up this past week on smaller bass in the 18–24 inch range, mostly catch‑and‑release, with a couple pushing keeper size. Up around Inwood and Spuyten Duyvil, a few folks are quietly picking perch and the odd early catfish on worms.

Best bet right now is to fish **slow and small**. For lures:
- 3–4 inch soft plastic paddletails on 3/8 oz jig heads in white, bunker, or olive.
- Slim profile metal (Kastmaster, Hopkins‑style) for working current seams.
- Small bucktail jigs, 1/2 oz and under, tipped with a little strip of soft plastic.

For bait:
- Bloodworms or sandworms on hi‑lo rigs for perch and early stripers.
- Fresh or lightly salted bunker chunks if you can get it; otherwise squid strips will still draw a bite.
- Nightcrawlers under a float or on the bottom for perch and cats up‑river.

Fish activity will be better **midday into late afternoon** once the sun has had a chance to warm the surface a hair, especially on the lee sides of piers and bulkheads where that dark structure radiates heat. Don’t overwork your lures – slow roll those paddletails just off bottom, let the bucktail swing in the current, and be ready for soft taps instead of big thumps.

A couple of local hot spots to focus on:

- **Pier 40 / Pier 26 area, lower west side Manhattan**: Good current breaks, access to deeper water, and plenty of structure. Work the edges of the pier pilings on the flood and the downstream side on the ebb.

- **Riverbank State Park / 125th Street stretch**: Classic early‑season schoolie water with riprap and ambush points. Cast parallel to the wall and let your jig swing along the edge on the outgoing.

If you’re willing to roam, poking around **Inwood Hill / Dyckman Street** and the **Spuyten Duyvil confluence** on a sunny afternoon can produce perch and an occasional surprise bass in the softer water.

Keep it safe, mind the slick rocks and strong current, and remember the Hudson’s still cold – a dunk now is no joke. That’s your check‑in from Artificial Lure; 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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