Late Summer Chesapeake Slam: Reds, Macks and More on the Bite
31 August 2025

Late Summer Chesapeake Slam: Reds, Macks and More on the Bite

Chesapeake Bay, Virginia Fishing Report - Daily

About
Good morning, y’all, this is Artificial Lure with your Chesapeake Bay fishing report for Sunday, August 31st, 2025. Let’s get right to what’s biting and where, so you can make the most of this late summer outing.

First up, the **tides** today around the Bay are setting us up for some solid moving water, with a predawn high tide at 3:50 AM, low tide at 10:43 AM, and that afternoon push coming back up for high tide at 4:26 PM. These swings usually fire up the bite, especially around structure and channel edges. **Best fishing windows** are looking like right at dawn and then again late afternoon with that second incoming—classic conditions for big strikes. **Sunrise** is at 6:34, and you can expect to fish right up until sunset at 7:33 tonight.

The **weather** for Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel and Virginia Beach is lining up perfectly—mostly clear skies, temps starting in the mid-70s and topping out near 80, with light northeast winds at 5–10 knots and waves right at a friendly 1 foot. That’s just about as ideal as it gets, so no worries about getting blown off the water and it’ll be easy on the drift[National Weather Service Marine Forecast].

**Water temp** is steady at around 75°F, which is prime time for late summer fishing, keeping everything from baitfish to gamefish active and cruising in the shallows and over oyster beds[Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel tide chart].

**Recent catches** up and down the lower Bay have been hot. Just this week, local inshore fleets reported limits of **bluefish** and nice runs of **slot-size red drum** just below the bridges. **Spanish mackerel** are schooling up tight and tearing through bait balls—you’ll see birds and blitzes from the tunnel down to Lynnhaven. **Sheepshead** have been stacked up near pilings, with the usual brutes pulled off the rocks[Hatteras Harbor Marina Fishing Reports]. Offshore—if you’re chasing the bluewater species—anglers are still finding dolphin (mahi), a few wahoo, and even reports of blackfin tuna for those running out past the Capes.

Fish activity’s been strong, with the **major solunar times** predicted for around 7 to 9 AM and again from 7:30 to 9:30 PM. Focus your efforts right at those switching tides around the CBBT and you’ll up your odds.

For **baits and lures**, you can’t beat a well-presented chunk of fresh peeler crab or fiddler for the sheepshead on the bridge pilings. Strip baits and cut mullet are still producing steady red drum and blues off the deeper flats. Trolling small **Clark spoons** or casting Got-Cha plugs works wonders for Spanish macks around rips. If you want a do-it-all option, tie on a **Johnson Beetle Spin**—it’s been a go-to for white perch and schoolies for decades. That unmistakable flash and vibration pull strikes from stripers, perch, and even eager trout[Discount Tackle, BBC Boards].

**A couple hot spots to hit**:
- The **Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel** itself—particularly the 3rd and 4th islands—remains the Bay’s top dog for sheepshead, big spadefish, and flurries of Spanish mackerel.
- **Lynnhaven Inlet**: always reliable for mixed-bag action with speckled trout, puppy drum, and bluefish hanging on the drop-offs and marshy edges.

With the water nice and clean, wind light, and plenty of bait around, it’s a classic late August bite—not many of these summer weekends left, so get out while the fishing’s lively.

Thanks for tuning in to your local Chesapeake Bay report. Don’t forget to subscribe for your daily dose of what’s biting and where, and keep your lines tight out there.

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