Good morning folks, this is Artificial Lure with your November 15, 2025, fishing report for the Cape Cod Canal and surrounding waters. We’re waking up to classic shoulder-season conditions—crisp air, calm waters, and that signature bite of November in the breeze.
The Canal is seeing a falling tide just about now. According to Tides4Fishing, the tides at Sagamore show we hit low tide early, with the next incoming tide building late morning and peaking around 8.3 feet by about 7:12 p.m. The solunar activity is marked as low today, so timing your casts around tidal shifts will be even more critical than usual. Sunrise was at 6:54 a.m. and sunset will be at 6:00 p.m., giving you about 11 hours of daylight to work the tides and current swings. Over at the east end, NOAA reports similar tidal movement with low early and the tide on the rise through midday.
Weather out here today (according to US Harbors) is cool and stable—high around 47°F and a low tonight dropping to a brisk 30°F. Winds should remain light out of the northwest, making for manageable casting conditions and less drift on your presentations. That’s a blessing for plugging and jigging in the Canal’s famous intersecting currents.
As for the fishing itself, the “My Fishing Cape Cod” blog notes that striper season is tapering but far from over—especially for the committed. Anglers are still reporting catches of healthy striped bass from the west end right up toward Sandwich. Just last week, Mark MacNeill landed a lively 45-inch striper on the Canal. These late-season schoolies are often mixed with the bigger cows, so don’t be surprised at anything that bends your rod. Bass have been keying in on smaller bait—mostly peanut bunker and some lingering juvenile herring. With water temps dropping steadily, the bite windows are short but rewarding.
Tautog are now the prime targets for bottom fishermen. According to My Fishing Tales, this is peak tautog season and reports from near the Bourne Bridge confirm solid action. The Canal itself, the east end rockpiles, and the pylons around the shipping moorings have been giving up keeper-sized blacks—many in the 3-6 pound range, with a few true bulldogs over 7 pounds coming from those deeper holes and along the jetty edges.
For lures and baits, locals are still having luck throwing classic Canal fare. For stripers, go with white or bone-colored soft plastics like Slug-Gos and paddle tails, dressed on 1-2oz jigheads to match the current. Metal lips and bucktail jigs remain go-tos, especially at dusk or dawn—tip those bucktails with pork rinds for extra thump. For tautog, green crabs and Asian shore crabs are the top baits—keep your rigs simple: a Carolina or tog jig right on the bottom, tight to the structure.
Hot spots this morning: the east end Rail Trail bike bridge area is seeing less foot traffic and has good current breaks on the incoming tide—bunker schools have pinned bass here at first light all week. Over at the west end, the area around the Herring Run and the Scusset Jetty are producing solid tog and the occasional late run bluefish, especially on chunk baits in deeper eddies.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Cape Cod Canal fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for daily updates, and remember to dress in layers—it gets chilly fast on the rocks.
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