
Chesapeake Bay Fishing Report: Stripers, Blues, and More on the Summer Flats and Channels
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First light broke at 6:08 a.m., and sunset will be around 8:07 p.m., so you’ve got over 14 hours of daylight to work with. The marine weather is friendly: warm, stable, just flirting with low-80s water temps, and only a mild chance of afternoon storms, so get out there early before the heat pumps up[6][5]. Tidal action is prime: a morning low rolled through around 5:45 a.m. with the next high tide cresting late morning and another low this evening. Strong tidal coefficients today mean good current movement and often heavy fish activity on the turn, especially for stripers and bottom dwellers[6][10].
On the catching side, this has been a classic dog-days-of-summer week. Middle Bay is still producing respectable striped bass, especially around sunrise and late in the evening—topwater walkers and poppers cast along the Choptank, Patapsco, and Eastern Bay flats are getting slashed, while deeper spots near the Bay Bridge and up by Pooles Island are best fished with live spot or soft crab drifted near the pilings[3][5]. Jigging soft plastics in shad or bunker patterns at the bridge piers at dawn gets the rods bent, too.
Bluefish have pulled back from last week’s surface frenzy but can still be found hunting bait on the channel edges near the mouth of the Potomac and the Target Ship—drop cut spot or paddle-tail jigs tight to the bottom for a shot at these toothy bruisers[3]. Out further toward the mouth, anglers drifting bloodworms and peeler crabs are hauling in a nice mix: spot, croaker up to 13 inches, northern blowfish, small sea bass, and kingfish. Pound for pound, white perch are steady on the shallows and shoals, smacking spinners and small jigs, especially around Sandy Point, the western Bay Bridge, and the Magothy mouths[5].
Snakehead are heating up in the grassy tidal rivers—walking frogs and chatterbaits worked early, or cut bait on bottom rigs, will do the trick if you’re after a different sort of drama this summer[3]. And don’t overlook blue catfish, which are reliably hitting cut bait and chicken parts in the Susquehanna and Elk, Chester, and most major tidal rivers[5].
Bait and tackle rundown? Live spot is king for stripers and larger blues this week. Bloodworms, peeler crab, and shrimp are producing croaker, kingfish, and perch. For artificial fans, try 4- to 5-inch paddletails, bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp, and, for jacks and pompano if you’re at the ocean interface, throw spoons and Gotcha plugs. Banana jigs paired with sand fleas or shrimp are also reliable for pompano[4].
Local hot spots to try today:
- The Bay Bridge east pilings and 30-foot edge—drift live bait or bounce jigs at first light.
- Channel edges near the Brick House Bar and Gum Thickets—stripers and late bluefish on cut bait or soft plastic lures.
- The mouth of the Choptank, especially near Cambridge, for steady striper and bluefish action on live-lining spot.
For those watching the forage base, there’s worry among watermen about shrinking menhaden numbers, with commercial and recreational interests butting heads over management. But the boards say no overfishing confirmed yet, so bait remains available—just don’t wait too long if you want to stock up[1].
Thanks for tuning in to this Chesapeake Bay fishing update! Be sure to subscribe for your daily tides, tips, and tall tales. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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