Good morning, fellow Vineyard anglers! Artificial Lure here with your insider’s look at Martha’s Vineyard fishing, straight from the sand and surf for Thursday, November 6th.
## Weather & Conditions
We’re rolling out of a cool, clear November dawn—sunrise peeks over the Vineyard horizon at 6:43 a.m., with sunset coming early at 6:04 p.m. as we settle into late fall. The sky’s clear, and we’re looking at sea temps hovering around a mild 18.4°C—not bad for early November. The breeze is shifting southwest, building a bit later in the day, but nothing that should chase you off the water. If you’re thinking of hitting up Chilmark, you’ll find the swell’s still got some energy from Tuesday’s blow, but it’s settling, and the bait’s staging close to shore.
## Tides & Timing
Today’s tides are looking typical for the season—low tide around 1:36 a.m. and a good high at 7:22 a.m., with another low at 1:36 p.m. and another high at 7:44 p.m. Moving water equals moving fish, so plan your trips accordingly. For Vineyard Haven, the US Harbors and local jetty rats say the outgoing and incoming tides, especially around those moonlit lows, are prime for working the rips and bars. The best bite’s often at first light and again at dusk, so don’t be late.
## Fish Activity
Striped bass are still the main event, with schools cruising the beaches and inside edges, chasing thick inshore bait balls of peanuts and sand eels. Most fish running mid-20 inches, but persistent anglers are pulling the occasional 30-plus-inch linesider—especially after dark or before sunrise. Bluefish blitzes are thinning as water drops, but there’s still a shot if you find the birds and busts. The albies seem to have moved on for the season, but for bottom scratchers, there are still a few black sea bass on the jetties. All in all, it’s a classic Vineyard late fall: not wide-open, but enough to keep the sand shufflers and night stalkers happy.
## Tackle & Tactics
Match the hatch, locals. Sand eels are thick—toss a sand eel profile soft plastic or a slim jig. The Albie Snax hair jig is a personal favorite in the wash. If the bass are keyed on peanuts, try a small bunker soft plastic, a Kastmaster, or even live-lining if you can snag a handful. For the fly rod crowd, Squimpish sand eel and sparse Clouser patterns are out-fishing everything at dawn and dusk. If you’re drifting the gut, a slow-rolled yo-zuri or a Hopkins spoon can surprise.
## Hot Spots
Oak Bluffs Harbor jetty is holding solid at the outgoing tide, with bass pushing up as the current surges. Wasque Point on the south shore is a late-fall classic—when the bait stacks on the bar, the stripers follow. Don’t sleep on Cape Poge Gut, either. The tides push bait through there, and late-season surprises love to stack up in the current.
## Final Advice
Keep an eye on the birds, watch the tide, and don’t hesitate to switch up plugs if the bite slows. Persistence pays—this isn’t spring fishing, but the rewards are real for those willing to work moving water and put in the time. And, according to the Vineyard Gazette, there are no new striper closures as of this week—so get out there while the getting’s good.
Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. Stay sharp, keep those lines tight, and, as always, subscribe so you never miss the local scoop. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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