Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a light early breeze out of the southwest, building a bit by late morning, with air temps hanging in the 60s and pushing toward the low 70s by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, a little haze over the Sound, and just enough chop to put some life on the surface. The Vineyard’s in a typical late‑spring pattern: stable barometer, no big fronts crashing through, which usually means consistent, if not crazy, action. Sunrise is right around a quarter past five, with sunset a little before eight‑thirty this evening. That gives you long low‑light windows, and that’s when the bite has been best: first light until about 8 a.m., and again from about an hour before dark into full dark. Tides in Vineyard Sound today are running early‑morning high, dropping through mid‑day, then a late‑afternoon push. That falling tide has been key on the north shore rips and the bridges. On the south side, the incoming tide has lined up nicely with the evening topwater bite along the bars. Striped bass have been the headliners all week, with solid schoolies and a good number of slot fish mixed in, plus the odd bigger girl for those putting in the night hours. Surfcasters walking the north shore from Lagoon Pond out toward Makonikey have been into steady action. Boat anglers drifting the rips off Middle Ground and Lucas Shoal have reported bass stacked tight on the edges when the tide’s moving. Bluefish are scattered but showing more regularly. A few gator‑class blues crashed the party off Cape Poge and along East Beach, mostly on cloudy evenings when the bait pinned tight to the shore. Nothing like years past, but enough to chew up your soft plastics if you’re not careful. Fluke and sea bass are filling coolers for the bottom crowd. The shoals between Oak Bluffs and Falmouth, and out toward Hedge Fence, have been giving up keeper sea bass on jigs tipped with squid. Inside the ponds, scup are thick on mussel beds and rock piles—easy pickings for kids and anyone looking for a fish fry. Best offerings right now: - For bass at first and last light, throw **bone or blurple pencil poppers**, classic metal‑lip swimmers, and medium‑size swimming plugs like SP Minnows or Red Fins. Needlefish plugs at night have been deadly along the south‑shore beaches. - Soft plastics—5 to 7 inch paddle tails and straight tails on 1/2 to 1 oz jig heads—are crushing fish around the bridges and in the rips once the sun climbs. - For bait, **live eels** after dark around the rocks and bridge pilings are still the gold standard for a bigger striper. Fresh chunked mackerel or pogies on a simple fish‑finder rig will get it done too. - For bottom fish, bucktail jigs with a strip of squid, high‑low rigs baited with squid or clam, and small metal jigs hopped off the bottom are all producing. Couple of local hot spots to circle today: - **Wasque and East Beach, Chappy** – On a moving tide, especially sunset into dark, bass push bait right up onto the bar edges. Sling a pencil popper or a metal‑lip tight to the white water. If the wind lays down, bring a lighter rod and work soft plastics along the drop‑offs. - **Middle Ground and the Vineyard Haven side of West Chop** – Boat anglers drifting these rips on the dropping tide have been into mixed bass and blues. Focus on the seam where fast water meets the slicks. Vertical jigging soft plastics or bucktails has outfished trolling most days. Inside the ponds—Senge, Lagoon, and Tashmoo—small bass have been all over sand eel imitations and small bucktails; great place to bend a rod if the outer beaches get crowded or the wind kicks up. That’s the story around Martha’s Vineyard for now. Keep an eye on those tide changes, lean into the low‑light hours, and don’t be afraid to move if a spot feels dead after a tide swing. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn