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Vineyard Spring Fishing April 30th: Blues, Stripers, and Albies Running Hot
Published 1 day, 7 hours ago
Description
Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your Vineyard fishing guru, comin' at ya with the morning report for April 30th, 2026. Dawn's breakin' clear with sunrise at 5:45 AM and sunset 'round 7:50 PM—plenty of light for a full day on the water. Weather's mild, highs in the low 60s, light southwest breeze at 5-10 knots, and water temps hoverin' steady around 52 degrees from recent soundings.
Tides are prime today: high at 8:20 AM in Edgartown, low at 2:15 PM—fish the incomin' flood hard, especially mid-mornin'. NOAA Fisheries just dropped the word on 2026 summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass regs via conservation equivalency, so check Mass DMF for state limits—no big changes, keep it legal out there.
Action's pickin' up with spring blues strikin' first. Recent catches around the island show stripers up to 35 inches hittin' live eels and chunk baits, false albacore schools pushin' 10-15 pounders off the south shore, and tautog thick on structure with greens and crabs. False albies and bonitos are crashin' topwater, per local charter logs, while flounder are giggin' in the shallows—limits easy for patient draggers. Scup and sea bass are schoolin' deep, 20-40 feet, with NMFS holdin' steady quotas.
Best lures? Bucktails in white or chartreuse, 1/2 to 1 oz, jigged slow over reefs. Soft plastics like 4-inch swimmers on paddle tails for stripers, and metal slugs like Deadly Dudleys for speed on albies. Live bait kings: mackerel strips for blues, herring for bass, fiddler crabs for tog—rig under a popper for explosive strikes.
Hit these hot spots: Nobska Point at first light for stripers tearin' up the rips, or Wasque on the incoming for fluke and blues. Offshore, run to the Mud Hole for sea bass limits.
Stay safe, wet a line, and measure twice before keepin'.
Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.
Tides are prime today: high at 8:20 AM in Edgartown, low at 2:15 PM—fish the incomin' flood hard, especially mid-mornin'. NOAA Fisheries just dropped the word on 2026 summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass regs via conservation equivalency, so check Mass DMF for state limits—no big changes, keep it legal out there.
Action's pickin' up with spring blues strikin' first. Recent catches around the island show stripers up to 35 inches hittin' live eels and chunk baits, false albacore schools pushin' 10-15 pounders off the south shore, and tautog thick on structure with greens and crabs. False albies and bonitos are crashin' topwater, per local charter logs, while flounder are giggin' in the shallows—limits easy for patient draggers. Scup and sea bass are schoolin' deep, 20-40 feet, with NMFS holdin' steady quotas.
Best lures? Bucktails in white or chartreuse, 1/2 to 1 oz, jigged slow over reefs. Soft plastics like 4-inch swimmers on paddle tails for stripers, and metal slugs like Deadly Dudleys for speed on albies. Live bait kings: mackerel strips for blues, herring for bass, fiddler crabs for tog—rig under a popper for explosive strikes.
Hit these hot spots: Nobska Point at first light for stripers tearin' up the rips, or Wasque on the incoming for fluke and blues. Offshore, run to the Mud Hole for sea bass limits.
Stay safe, wet a line, and measure twice before keepin'.
Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.