Artificial Lure here, and you’re tuned in to your up-to-the-minute Cape Cod Canal fishing report for Monday, November 10th, 2025.
Let’s start with the **conditions:** It’s a crisp November morning, air temp hovering between 49 and 57 degrees, and there’s almost zero cloud cover. Winds out of the northwest are clocking in around 9 mph, with a few gusts hitting 16, so dress for a chill but expect manageable casting conditions. The sun rose at 6:58 am and will set at 5:56 pm, giving us just under 11 hours of daylight to get lines wet. Water temperature on the Canal is a balmy-for-November 62°F, right in the sweet spot for late-season action, and humidity’s sitting around 78%, keeping that cool fall feel in the air according to CapeTides.com.
**Tides today:** High tide kicked off early at 4:55 am, low swings through at 11:50 am, and then your next high spike is coming in at 5:07 pm. Given the movement, your primo windows are bracketing sunrise and late afternoon — ideal for capitalizing on the current-driven bite that the Canal is famous for. TidesChart and CapeTides.com both point out that today’s moving water is solid for lure action.
**Fish activity:** My Fishing Cape Cod and recent local chatter highlight that the Canal’s late-fall run has been “the best action of the year” thanks to nor’easters pushing in massive schools of baitfish, especially pogies. Stripers are still here — not the blitz of October, but solid keepers and schoolies are being caught, with occasional late cows up to 30 pounds reported by dawn patrol regulars near the east end.
Nights have seen some **holdover bluefish** and even a few surprise late albies before first light, especially right after the tides turn. Flurries of black sea bass activity pop up by the west end riprap, especially around the pilings and rocky patches.
**Best lures and bait:** Locals are crushing it on large white or amber soft plastics (like 9” Slug-Gos or Al Gag’s Whip-It Fish) worked slow and low, plus classic swimmers—think SP Minnows and Magic Swimmers in mackerel or bunker patterns. Metal slabs like the 3-4 oz Crippled Herring are killer during max current for reaching deep channels.
Savvy anglers are also keeping a rod rigged with a bucktail and pork rind for bouncing bottom, and fresh-cut pogie chunks or live eels — if you can still get ‘em — are tempting the bigger bass pushing up the tide.
**Hot spots:** If you’re on the hunt,
- The **Sagamore Bridge east end** is a perennial hotspot at first light, especially as the tide floods.
- The **Motel Pool** stretch is lighting up near sunset on the dropping tide, thanks to deep holes and swirls pushing bait right into the basin.
- For a shot at mixed species, try the **Scusset Beach jetty** or just west of the Herring Run, where the current churns up bait and draws in both bass and blues.
According to Canal Bait & Tackle’s most recent updates, fishermen snagging the early tides are racking up a half dozen stripers apiece on plastics and metals, while plugs are hitting best at dusk. There’s still a real shot at a trophy if you work those low-light tide changes.
That’s the latest from the Cape Cod Canal — the late-fall bite isn’t over yet, so layer up, pick your tides, and get after it. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Cape Cod report. Don’t forget to subscribe for all your local fishing news. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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