Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Spring Bite Heating Up: Trout Stockings and River Herring Migrations on Martha's Vineyard
Published 1 month ago
Description
# Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report
Good morning, friends. This is Artificial Lure bringing you your Friday morning fishing update for Martha's Vineyard and the surrounding waters.
Let's start with the tides. High tide hit at 9:17 this morning at 3.3 feet, with low tide coming in at 3:57 AM at just 0.44 feet. You've got another low tide at 4:48 PM and a high tide at 10:10 PM tonight at 2.91 feet. Those morning highs are prime time for shallow water action.
Weather-wise, we're looking at partly cloudy skies with a mild 70 degrees. Wind's pushing out of the north-northwest around 13 miles per hour this morning, so expect some decent surface action on the water. Humidity's sitting high at 87 percent, but that shouldn't keep you off the water.
Here's where it gets interesting. Spring's arrived and the largemouth bite is heating up across the island. According to local reports, fresh stockies—brown, rainbow, and eastern brook trout—have just been stocked on Cape, and Martha's Vineyard's seeing similar activity. River herring are beginning their spring migration upstream, which means bigger baitfish are moving into shallower waters. This is excellent news for bass and stripers.
For tactics, suspending jerkbaits and small chatterbaits are your go-to lures right now in these cooler waters. Throw finesse swimbaits under three inches and Ned rigs to really dial in the early spring bite. If you want to match the hatch with live bait, shiners will get you action, though watch out for pickerel—they'll be feeding aggressively this time of year.
For trout, spoons, inline spinners, and small jerkbaits work beautifully. Break out PowerBait if you want something simple and effective.
I'd suggest hitting Pleasant Bay and Oak Bluffs areas where those tidal flats are warming up. The shallower bog ponds will heat up faster in this late afternoon sunshine, making them prime hunting grounds.
Thanks so much for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe for daily reports.
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.
Good morning, friends. This is Artificial Lure bringing you your Friday morning fishing update for Martha's Vineyard and the surrounding waters.
Let's start with the tides. High tide hit at 9:17 this morning at 3.3 feet, with low tide coming in at 3:57 AM at just 0.44 feet. You've got another low tide at 4:48 PM and a high tide at 10:10 PM tonight at 2.91 feet. Those morning highs are prime time for shallow water action.
Weather-wise, we're looking at partly cloudy skies with a mild 70 degrees. Wind's pushing out of the north-northwest around 13 miles per hour this morning, so expect some decent surface action on the water. Humidity's sitting high at 87 percent, but that shouldn't keep you off the water.
Here's where it gets interesting. Spring's arrived and the largemouth bite is heating up across the island. According to local reports, fresh stockies—brown, rainbow, and eastern brook trout—have just been stocked on Cape, and Martha's Vineyard's seeing similar activity. River herring are beginning their spring migration upstream, which means bigger baitfish are moving into shallower waters. This is excellent news for bass and stripers.
For tactics, suspending jerkbaits and small chatterbaits are your go-to lures right now in these cooler waters. Throw finesse swimbaits under three inches and Ned rigs to really dial in the early spring bite. If you want to match the hatch with live bait, shiners will get you action, though watch out for pickerel—they'll be feeding aggressively this time of year.
For trout, spoons, inline spinners, and small jerkbaits work beautifully. Break out PowerBait if you want something simple and effective.
I'd suggest hitting Pleasant Bay and Oak Bluffs areas where those tidal flats are warming up. The shallower bog ponds will heat up faster in this late afternoon sunshine, making them prime hunting grounds.
Thanks so much for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe for daily reports.
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.