Charles River Fishing Heating Up in June 2025 Podcast Por  arte de portada

Charles River Fishing Heating Up in June 2025

Charles River Fishing Heating Up in June 2025

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Artificial Lure here with your Charles River, Boston fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. We’re locked into the heart of summer, and the river is buzzing with action from sunrise to sunset.

Today’s sunrise at 5:09 AM and sunset at 8:14 PM mean a full stretch of daylight to work with. Temperatures are cruising in the low to mid-70s, classic June weather with a mild westerly breeze—perfect for both boaters and shore anglers. According to the local tide chart, the Charles River sees its first high at 5:52 AM and low around 12:10 PM, so plan your outings around that early high tide for your best shot at active fish.

The bite is on fire lately. Stripers—both schoolies and solid slot fish—are pushing in, with early morning showing the most topwater action as straggling river herring drop back into the harbor. The tube-and-worm rig continues to be the MVP for consistent hookups, especially dragging it slow by the Museum of Science and the bridges near BU, which have been two standout hot spots this week. For folks working the flats and shallows, flutter spoons, white/chartreuse swimbaits, and soft plastics like paddletail shads are all producing, especially near the mouth of the river and the Longfellow Bridge.

If you’re after a mixed bag, largemouth bass, panfish, and even a few channel catfish have been caught from Magazine Beach upriver to Herter Park. Crappy and sunfish are hitting small spinnerbaits and live worms, while largemouths are crushing frog lures and Senkos pitched tight to shade and overhanging trees. Don't overlook chunk mackerel or seaworms for stripers—these natural baits have been steady producers for those fishing the deeper stretches.

Recent reports out of Fishing FINatics in Everett and On The Water both agree the Charles is seeing great diversity right now, with strong striper runs blending into productive flounder action at river’s mouth and panfish moving closer to shore as the water warms.

For those new to the area or looking to try somewhere different, the Esplanade docks and the stretch behind the MIT boathouse are holding fish, especially at dawn and dusk, while the old railroad trestle upriver is a sleeper for big bass when boat traffic spikes elsewhere.

That’s the latest from the banks of the Charles. Thanks for tuning in to your daily river report—don’t forget to subscribe and stay hooked for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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