Chesapeake Bay Bite: Soft Tides, Showers, and Surprise Catches
03 September 2025

Chesapeake Bay Bite: Soft Tides, Showers, and Surprise Catches

Chesapeake Bay, Virginia Fishing Report - Daily

About
Sunrise came at 6:36 this morning over the Chesapeake Bay and brightened up a day with mild early temperatures and a light NE breeze, but keep your slicker packed—there’s still a 40% chance of scattered showers through midday, then clearing out toward evening. The water was moving gentle today: low tidal coefficients mean less current than usual, so you’ve got to work a bit smarter to draw strikes. High tides were just before dawn at 4:04am and again around supper at 4:51pm, with lows mid-morning and late-night, so your best bite windows cluster around those moving water hours. Sunset’s set for 7:31pm if you’re squeezing in an after-work cast, and we’ve got close to 13 hours of daylight for bending rods.

In terms of what’s biting, it’s been a classic late-summer Tidewater mix. Reports from Anglers Sport Center out of Annapolis show bottom fishers finding steady action on grass shrimp and soft crab bits—especially near structural spots like the Seven Foot Knoll, Bay Bridge pilings, and any of the deeper ledges off Thimble Shoal and around the HRBT. These same locales have been giving up good numbers of white perch, a tide-run of spot, and nice pan-size croaker. Toss in some blue cats and channel cats pulling drag upriver, and you’ve got a solid cooler.

Striped bass season is open south of the Maryland line, but remember Virginia summer regulations—one fish per person, sizes and slot limits apply, and be sure to check before keeping. Most rockfish action lately has come dawn or dusk, with fish hanging deep around pilings and bridge shadows. Jiggers and trollers working 4- to 7-inch soft plastics and bucktails—especially in flash/chartreuse or white/pink—are connecting. Anglers have also reported topwater explosions at first light near shallow flats and oyster bars.

In the saltier stretches around the CBBT and Lynnhaven, Spanish mackerel and bluefish blitzes have continued on outgoing tides. If the wind’s down, sight-cast to schooling fish busting bait balls—silver spoons and 1-ounce Gotchas are the ticket, but small white jigs moved fast work too. Out a bit deeper, the flounder bite is steady but requires finesse: drift live minnows or Gulp! baits along channel drop-offs.

Word on the docks has been spreading about a few surprise catches too: adult stone crabs made their first confirmed appearance in Chesapeake Bay this week, so check your crab pots and be ready for something new in the basket along with the blue claws.

Hot spots worth hitting today:
- The pilings and artificial islands at the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel. Early high tide pushes baitfish into the rocks, and everything from flounder to bluefish to rockfish will be prowling.
- Back rivers and creek mouths at the morning low, especially Broad Bay and Lynnhaven—feeder creeks push cooler water, drawing perch, puppy drum, and the occasional speckled trout.

Best baits? Grass shrimp and soft crab on bottom rigs if you’re going natural. For artificials, Z-Man GrubZ, 3-inch Gulp! swimming mullet, and 1/4-ounce jig heads are putting in work. For macks and blues, stick with flashy spoons or weighted plugs—retrieve quick, pause, then burn again.

With the tide running soft, stay patient, downsize your leader, and work the shady spots closest to structure. And don’t forget—if you’re after that trophy, sunrise and sunset are your best shot.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Chesapeake Bay report with Artificial Lure—don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and the inside scoop on what’s biting. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.

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