Fall Fishing Frenzy on the Charles River with Artificial Lure

17/10/2025 4 min
Fall Fishing Frenzy on the Charles River with Artificial Lure

Listen "Fall Fishing Frenzy on the Charles River with Artificial Lure"

Episode Synopsis

It's Artificial Lure reporting from the banks of the Charles River in Boston, and fall is in full swing—colors popping, air crisp, and the fishing continues to fire up with every sunrise. Let’s run through today’s conditions and the recent action.First, the **weather’s cooperating big time**. According to US Harbors, we’ve got a mostly sunny morning with a gentle fall breeze and temps starting out around 51°F, warming up into the upper 50s later today. That fresh post-nor’easter chill lit the fuse for migration and feeding frenzies, so don’t leave the wool hat at home.**Sunrise hit at 6:59 a.m., sunset is coming at 5:58 p.m.**—plenty of daylight for those pre-work and after-school sessions. As for the **tides**, Lovell Island in Boston Harbor is a good Charles proxy: low tide early at 2:48 a.m., high tide rolls in at 9:10 a.m. Another low at 3:08 p.m., then a night high peaking at 9:27 p.m. If you want moving water, fish around the change—especially outgoing, which lines up nicely with midmorning and late afternoon today.The big news on the **fish activity**? Herring fry are pouring out from the Charles and Mystic as reported by On The Water. That’s drawing in schools of **striped bass**, pushing up into the river and holding around pinch points, drop-offs, and outflows. Striper blitzes have been most consistent at dawn and dusk, especially on the outgoing tide.In the shallows and slackwater stretches, **black bass—largemouths and smallmouths—are stacked**, feasting on the same herring fry. It’s not just bass, either; you’ll find crappie, white perch, and yellow perch getting in on the fry chase. Some stretches have been “fish-per-cast” at first light, according to Fore River Fishing Tackle.**What’s been caught lately?**- Schoolie and slot striped bass, many in the 20-28" range, have been landed consistently on both plugs and soft plastics.- Black bass up to 4 pounds, with some true lunker largemouths reported.- Panfish, including hefty bluegill and slab crappie, have popped in the slower stretches and coves.- Smelt starting to show up, especially at night near dock lights and piers.**Top lures & baits**:- For striped bass: 3-6" paddle tail soft plastics (white or pearl) rigged on 1/4 to 3/8 oz jigheads, and smaller swim baits to match the herring fry.- Topwaters and spooks at dawn are still drawing explosive strikes if you’re first on the water.- Black bass are biting spinnerbaits, swim jigs, and buzz baits—chartreuse/white has been money.- Crappie and perch want tiny hair jigs or marabou under a float.- For smelt: bits of grass shrimp and small sabiki rigs are filling buckets.If you want a live bait option, small shiners and eels are moving fish, especially after dark for the bigger stripers.**Best hot spots this week**:- The *bend near Magazine Beach*—try the drop-off adjacent to the boathouse at first light for stripers on the move.- *Weeks Footbridge up to Harvard*, especially on the Cambridge side, where the fry are pooling and everything from bass to crappie are slamming small baits.- For night fishing and smelt, the piers below the Museum of Science are lighting up on the outgoing tide.With water temps dropping and bait bunched up, these next couple of weeks are prime time to hustle out there—before the real cold and winter drawdowns slow things down.Thanks for tuning in to the Charles River fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide, hot lure tip, or bite window. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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