Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report Today

Tune in to "Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report Today" for the most up-to-date fishing conditions, expert tips, and captivating stories from local anglers. Perfect for enthusiasts and pros alike, our podcast keeps you informed about the best spots, bait, and techniques to reel in your next big catch. Don't miss out on the insider info for fishing success on Martha's Vineyard! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 11h ago

    Martha's Vineyard Late Spring: Bass on the Rise, Long Light Windows, and the Falling Tide Bite

    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

    4 min
  2. 1d ago

    Martha's Vineyard Early Season: Light Bite, Prime Tides, and Where to Find Stripers Today

    This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑season pattern around the Island. Light southwest breeze building this afternoon, air in the upper 60s to low 70s, and mostly clear skies. Sunrise was right around quarter past five, sunset will be just after eight twenty. That long daylight window is great, but the bite is still best low‑light and tide‑turn focused. Tides around Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs are running a mid‑morning high and an evening low. Think first light dropping tide and that evening push for your prime windows. Moving water is the whole story right now—dead slack has been slow. Striped bass action has been steady, with a mix of schoolies and keeper‑class fish. Local shop talk has bass stacked along the ferry lanes and rips from West Chop down toward East Chop, plus solid reports along the north shore beaches. A few slots and overs have come from boat guys drifting eels at night and working soft plastics along the edges of the rips. Bluefish have finally settled in with more consistent catches off State Beach and outside Cape Pogue. Anglers tossing metal like Deadly Dicks and Hopkins, plus big surface plugs, are finding choppers when the wind kicks up a bit and pushes bait onto the bars. Nothing huge, but enough 4–8 pound fish to keep things lively. Albies aren’t in play yet this time of year, but there are whispers of early squid and small scup tight to the rock piles. Kids soaking squid strips off the docks are picking up scup and the odd sea robin—great way to bend a rod if the bass are being fussy. On the lure side, you can’t go wrong with **white or bone soft plastics**—things like 4–7 inch paddle tails or straight tails on half‑ounce jigheads. Work them slow and near the bottom on the dropping tide. **Black or blurple swimmers** and bucktails shine after dark, especially around bridge lights and harbor mouths. For topwater, walk‑the‑dog spooks and smaller pencil poppers in bone or mackerel patterns have been drawing explosive hits at first light. If you’re a bait angler, **fresh squid, sea clams, and live eels** are king right now. Fish them on fish‑finder rigs along the channel edges or just outside the breakers on the south side. A chunk of fresh bunker, when you can get it, is still the top ticket for a bigger bass at night. Couple of hot spots to circle for today: - **Wasque / East Beach** on Chappy: good current, classic structure, and a real shot at both bass and blues when that tide starts to hustle. Mind the rips and fish with a buddy if you’re wading. - **West Chop to East Chop**: drift those edges by boat with soft plastics or bucktails; from shore, hit the points on the tide change and keep a plug in the wash. If you’re land‑based and want an easier walk, State Beach between Oak Bluffs and Edgartown is worth a look in the evening, especially with a light southwest wind pushing bait toward the sand. That’s the word from around the Island. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  3. 2d ago

    Martha's Vineyard Early Summer: Stable Conditions, Moving Water, and Striped Bass

    This is Artificial Lure with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’ve got a stable early‑summer pattern around the Island right now: light southwest breeze in the low teens this morning, building a bit in the afternoon, air temps in the upper 60s to mid‑70s, and mostly clear skies. The Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs harbors are calm at first light, with a little chop building on the south side by midday. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., sunset about 8:20 p.m., giving you a long, fishable day. Tides around Vineyard Haven are running a pre‑dawn high, dropping through the early morning into a late‑morning low, then filling again midafternoon into an evening high. That outgoing morning tide and the first push of the afternoon flood are your best windows. Fish are using that moving water hard on the rips and along the points. Striped bass are the headliners. Schoolies are thick in the harbors and along the inner beaches, with a solid mix of slot fish and a few bigger girls showing after dark. Recent reports from local Vineyard anglers mention steady bass action along State Beach, the Edgartown Lighthouse area, and the rocks around West Chop, with several fish in the low‑ to mid‑30‑inch range taken this week on plugs and soft plastics. Bluefish are scattered but becoming more consistent, especially on the south side and out toward Wasque. Folks drifting the rips have been into 3‑ to 8‑pound blues, mostly on metals and topwater when the wind kicks up a little chop. Keep some bite leaders handy; they’re shearing off unprotected mono. Fluke and sea bass are showing on the drops between Oak Bluffs and Edgartown and off the east side toward Cape Poge. Drifting bucktail jigs tipped with squid strips has been putting keeper sea bass in the bucket, with plenty of shorts to weed through. For lures, think classic Vineyard. At first light, slim profile soft plastics on 3/8‑ to 3/4‑ounce jigheads in white, olive, or amber are bending rods along the beaches. Small needlefish plugs, SP minnows, and bottle plugs in darker colors are producing well in the low light and after dark, especially on the north shore. During the day, metal like a Kastmaster or Deadly Dick will cover water and tempt both bass and blues. For the south‑side surf, a 1‑ to 2‑ounce bucktail with a pork or synthetic rind trailer is always a good bet in the wash. If you’re fishing bait, fresh or salted squid, sandworms, and chunked mackerel or bunker are the top producers. Sandworms on a simple fish‑finder rig are still taking plenty of schoolie bass along State Beach and in the Lagoon. For bigger bass after dark, step up to fresh chunks on a sturdy circle hook and wait them out on the edges of the current. A couple of hotspots to circle today: First, **Wasque and the east‑end rips**. Work the moving water on the edges of the rips for bass early and blues once the sun is up, either trolling swimmers and tubes or drifting plastics and metals. Second, **State Beach from the Little Bridge to Big Bridge**. Fish the channels on the dropping tide for schoolie bass and the occasional slot, especially right at dawn with small soft plastics and bucktails. The key today is timing that moving water and being on your spot right at first light or right before dark. Keep your offerings small and natural if the water’s clear, and don’t be afraid to go bigger and louder if the wind and chop pick up. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Vineyard fishing report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next conditions update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  4. 3d ago

    Martha's Vineyard Early Season: Sand Eels, Schoolies, and the Evening Bite

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑season pattern around the Island. Light southwest flow this morning, building to 10–15 by afternoon, with a bit more breeze on the south shore. Skies trending partly cloudy, air temps pushing into the upper 60s to low 70s along the water. The barometer’s steady enough that the bite should stay consistent through the day. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, with sunset just before eight‑thirty. That gives you a long window, but the best action has been tight to low light: first two hours after dawn and the last two before dark. Tides around Vineyard and Nantucket Sounds are running on a typical semi‑diurnal cycle. Figure mid‑morning high on the north side and a slightly later turn on the south and east. The productive windows have lined up around the last of the incoming and the first push of the drop. On the outgoing, bait flushes off the flats and points and the bass have been stacking on the edges. Striped bass are the headline. Schoolies up to slot fish are pretty steady, with a few bigger girls mixed in at night. Numbers have been good along the north shore rips and around the ferry lanes, with fish pushing sand eels and small squid. Blues have started to show more consistently off the south side and out toward Wasque, not wall‑to‑wall yet, but enough to chew you off if you’re under‑gunned. Fluke picks are scattered but improving on the shoals in Vineyard Sound, and there are some scup and sea bass to round out a cooler if you work the rock piles. Best producers right now: for artificials, think **small and subtle**. Soft‑plastic paddletails in olive, bone, and albino on light jigheads, 3/8 to 3/4 ounce, have been money along the beaches and in the rips. Slim metals and epoxy jigs in sand‑eel colors are a solid bet when the wind comes up. At night, black or blurple swimming plugs and needlefish are still turning the better bass. For bait, you can’t go wrong with fresh squid strips, sandworms, or chunks of menhaden fished on simple fish‑finder rigs. If you’re targeting fluke, bucktail tipped with squid bounced right on the bottom has been the ticket. Couple of hot spots to put on your short list: – Menemsha and the north shore stretch east and west of the harbor: good mix of schoolie bass and some slots on the evening tide, especially when there’s a little chop. Work small plastics and bucktails along the current seams. – Wasque and the surrounding rips on the southeast corner: classic early‑summer playground. Bass and emerging bluefish on the turn of the tide, particularly when the current’s really standing the water up. Heavy jigs, larger soft plastics, and wire‑leader metals if the blues are thick. If you’re fishing from the sand, focus on points, outflows, and any bit of white water you can find. From the boat, pay attention to birds and bait; when the sand eels ball up, the bass won’t be far. That’s the story for now from around the Vineyard. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  5. 4d ago

    Early June Striper Bite: Work That Afternoon Flood at Martha's Vineyard

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern. Light southwest breeze this morning building into 10–15 knots by afternoon, cooler on the water than on shore, with just enough chop to keep things lively. Skies are mixed sun and clouds, with a slight haze offshore. Sunrise slid in just after 5:05 a.m., sunset will be around 8:20 p.m., giving you a long, fishy day to work with. Tides around Vineyard Haven and Menemsha are running your typical semi‑diurnal cycle. Expect a pre‑dawn high, dropping to a mid‑morning low, then filling back in for a strong afternoon flood and an evening high. That afternoon flood lining up with the sunset bite is the window you want circled in red. Moving water is your ticket; if it’s not running, you’re just casting practice. Stripers are the headline. Schoolies are stacked tight along the north shore and inside the harbors, with a few better slots and the occasional over pushing bait right up onto the beaches at first and last light. Blues are starting to chew more consistently, mostly small to mediums, but they’re aggressive and not picky when that tide stands on its ear. A few folks have been quietly sliding into some early fluke on the south side shoals, and there are whispers of sea bass hanging on the deeper rock piles and wrecks. Recently, the more consistent action has come on smaller offerings. Think 4–5 inch soft plastics on light jigheads, worked just off the bottom through the rips. White, bone, bunker, and olive over white have all been putting fish in the wash. For hardware, SP Minnows, small metal lips, and slender metals like Deadly Dicks and Kastmasters have been solid, especially when sand eels are the main forage. If you’re hunting a bigger bass, a black or blurple needlefish or a big soft‑plastic paddletail swung on the edge of a rip at dusk is still tough to beat. Bait guys are doing well with fresh chunked pogie or mackerel after dark, plus sandworms and clams for a mixed bag of bass, scup, and the odd fluke. If you can get live eels, tuck them into the rocky points on the last of the flood and first of the ebb; that’s when the better fish usually show their faces. Couple of spots to keep on your short list: • The north shore stretch from West Chop to Makonikey: classic Vineyard structure. Work the dropping tide at first light with soft plastics and small swimmers. Birds have been giving away the schools most mornings. • Wasque and the east end, when the tide isn’t ripping your arms off: swing big plugs and jigs through the seams on the flood. If the wind lays down, that evening flood can be magic for a mix of bass and blues. If you’re poking around Menemsha or Lobsterville, keep your eyes on the birds and your feet moving. These fish are roaming; you want to stay one step ahead of the bait, not parked where it was an hour ago. That’s the word from the rock piles for today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  6. 5d ago

    Martha's Vineyard Early June: Schoolie Bass and Dawn Bites Around the Tide

    Good morning from **Artificial Lure** with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. As of early June, the island is waking up with classic pre-summer action: **striped bass** are the main draw, with **bluefish** likely mixed in, and boat and shore anglers should expect the best movement around moving water and first light. Without live local data in hand, the most reliable approach today is to target the tide swings, fish the dawn bite, and stay mobile if the schoolies aren’t showing. For **tides**, plan your trip around the **incoming tide** and the **first couple hours of the outgoing**. Around Martha’s Vineyard, that moving water pushes bait through the cuts, harbors, and points, and that’s where bass like to feed. The morning window is especially useful because it lines up with low light and less boat pressure. For **weather**, early June on the Vineyard is usually comfortable fishing weather: cool dawn air, a warming day, and often a light sea breeze once the sun gets up. If it’s calm, work the rips and edges. If there’s chop, lean harder on windblown shorelines and current seams, because the bait gets pinned there. For **sunrise and sunset**, early June gives you a long fishing day, with sunrise coming very early and sunset well after 8 PM. That means your best bite windows are often **sunrise**, **last light**, and any strong tide change in between. On **fish activity**, the local story this time of year is usually schoolie bass with a chance at better-sized fish where the bait stacks up. Recent Vineyard action in early June typically centers on **small sand eels, bay anchovies, and menhaden** when they’re around, and that means bass will key on slimmer profiles and natural presentations. If bluefish are in the mix, they can show fast and rough things up, so be ready to switch to tougher tackle. Best **lures** right now: - **Slim soft plastics** on light jig heads - **SP-style minnows** and slender hard baits - **Pencil poppers** at dawn if fish are blasting on top - **Topwater swimmers** when bait is tight to the surface - **Small tins** for covering water from shore or boat Best **bait**: - **Bunker chunks** if larger stripers are around - **Live eels** for a bigger-fish option - **Sand eels** when available and legal to fish - **Clams** for steady shore action on less aggressive fish A couple of **hot spots** worth checking are **Edgartown Harbor and the nearby channels**, especially on moving water, and the **south side rips and points** where bait gets swept along the edge. If you’re shore-bound, fish any inlet, jetty, or current cut that funnels water hard enough to pull bait through. Keep your casts tight to the seam, work the lure just fast enough to stay in the strike zone, and don’t be afraid to move if the water looks alive but quiet. On the Vineyard, that next pocket of fish is often only a few casts away. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe for the next report, and **This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.** Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  7. 6d ago

    Martha's Vineyard Early June: Stripers Hot, Long Daylight, Perfect Conditions

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool early‑June pattern around the Island. Overnight marine forecasts call for light southwest to west winds, generally 5–15 knots, with seas 1–3 feet and a mix of sun and clouds through the day. Air temps are running in the high 50s at first light, pushing into the upper 60s to low 70s this afternoon, with decent visibility and only a slight chance of a passing sprinkle. Sunrise is right around 5:07 a.m. and sunset near 8:17 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those tides. Vineyard Sound and Nantucket Sound tides are on the early‑morning flood, swinging to an outgoing mid‑day, then another nice evening push of water. In most of the prominent rips and around the ponds you can figure on roughly a 6‑hour cycle, so plan on that first light and last light moving water for your prime shots. Stripers are the headline right now. Schoolies are thick along the north shore and in the ponds, with a solid shot at slot fish and the odd bigger one after dark on the ocean side. Folks working the edges of Lambert’s Cove and Makonikey have been picking away at good numbers, with reports of a dozen or more bass in a tide when the bait stacks in tight. Down‑Island beaches like State Beach and Inkwell have seen steady schoolie action under birds when the sand eels push in. Bluefish are around, but they’re a little here‑today‑gone‑tomorrow. The rips off Wasque and the east end of Chappy have produced some choppers when the current stands up, with a mix of 3–6 pound fish. A few scattered blues have also shown along South Beach and Norton Point on the evening tide, especially when the wind’s got a bit of east in it. Back in the ponds, there are schoolie bass and some decent fluke and scup action. The deeper holes near the channels in Lagoon and Senge are worth a drift with bucktail and squid strips. Shore anglers working local docks and rockpiles are still seeing plenty of porgy, which is great fun and great on the table. Best lures right now: for stripers, small to mid‑sized soft plastics on 3/8 to 3/4 ounce jig heads, sand eel imitations, and slim metal like Deadly Dicks or Kastmasters for when they’re on small bait. Needlefish plugs and small bottle plugs are doing damage after dark on the south side. For blues, toss anything that shines or pops – metal spoons, surface poppers, and sturdy soft plastics you’re willing to sacrifice. For bait, you can’t beat fresh chunked mackerel or bunker, sand eels if you can get them, and seaworms for the shore bite and the kids. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: First, **Chappaquiddick / Wasque area** – classic moving‑water spot with a strong shot at both bass and blues when the tide’s ripping, especially the first couple hours of the drop. Second, the **north shore stretch from Lambert’s Cove up toward Makonikey** – great early‑morning and evening surf fishing, with stripers cruising just off the beach on that inshore bait. That’s the word from around the Island. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  8. Jun 7

    Martha's Vineyard Early Summer Bite: Stripers, Blues, and Fluke in the Rips

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Martha’s Vineyard fishing report. We’re sitting on a building early‑summer bite around the Island. A cool ocean breeze overnight left the water with just a light chop and decent clarity. Air temps are running in the low 60s early, heading toward the low 70s this afternoon with a mix of sun and some high clouds. Winds are light southwest, picking up a bit by midday, just enough to put a nice ripple on the rips and beaches. Sunrise is right around quarter past five, with sunset just after eight‑twenty this evening, giving you a long window to work dawn and dusk – still the prime times for stripers on the sand. Tides around Vineyard Haven and Menemsha are running an early morning incoming, peaking mid‑morning, then dropping out through the afternoon, with the evening flood lining up nicely with sunset. That turning water has been the key; slack has been noticeably slower. Local shop talk from the Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs tackle counters has the **schoolie to slot striper** bite steady, with a few fish pushing over 35 inches mixed in. Night guys drifting eels along Wasque and off East Chop have tangled with some heavier bass this week, but it’s far from a blitz – more of a grind with rewards for patience. **Bluefish** are finally showing more consistently. Word from the boats working Middle Ground and Hedge Fence is of scattered pods of 3–8 pound choppers smashing topwater when the tide runs. Not wall‑to‑wall, but enough action to chew up a few plugs. There’ve been **fluke** taken south of the Island and inside Vineyard Sound, mostly shorts with some solid keepers for drifters bouncing bucktails tipped with squid strips. Scup and sea bass are still a good option around rock piles and wrecks, especially for filling a cooler when the bass sulk. For lures, keep it simple and local‑style: - On the beaches at first and last light, small **SP Minnows**, Yo‑Zuri style plugs, and 3/4–1 oz white bucktail jigs with pork rind or Fat Cow strips have been producing. - Around the rips and boulder fields, soft‑plastic paddletails on 3/4–1 oz jig heads in olive, bone, or bunker patterns are tough to beat. - For blues, anything that splashes: pencil poppers, metal spoons, and inexpensive poppers you don’t mind losing. Best bait right now: - Fresh or salted **squid strips** for fluke and sea bass. - **Sea worms** and clam for scup along the piers and rock edges. - Live eels after dark around structure for that one big bass. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: - **Wasque / Katama**: When that tide stands up, there’s still serious current and ambush points for bass and blues. Fish the edges with bucktails on the drop and be ready – it can go from dead to mayhem in minutes. - **East Chop to Vineyard Haven Harbor**: The evening flood has been pushing bait tight to shore. Walk‑and‑cast with small swimmers and soft plastics along the ferry lanes and rock edges; schoolies are common, with the occasional slot cruising through. If you’re shorebound, don’t overlook Menemsha jetty and the State Beach bridges after dark – eels and small jigs in the shadow lines have quietly put up some respectable stripers. That’s the word from around the Island. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min

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Tune in to "Martha's Vineyard Fishing Report Today" for the most up-to-date fishing conditions, expert tips, and captivating stories from local anglers. Perfect for enthusiasts and pros alike, our podcast keeps you informed about the best spots, bait, and techniques to reel in your next big catch. Don't miss out on the insider info for fishing success on Martha's Vineyard! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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