July 2008 Issue
Now On Sale:

 Home
 Fly Fisherman Store
Make Your Own Fly-Tying DVD
 
Subjects


 Conservation
 Downloads
 Fly Tier's Bench
 Fly Pattern Archive
 Fly-Fishing Tactics
 Gear Review
 Gene Trump Cartoons
 Rod Building
 Saltwater Fly Fishing
 Schools
 Species Guide
 Video Library
 
Regions


 Alaska
 Canada
 Florida & Caribbean
 Great Plains
 Foreign Destinations
 Mexico & C. America
 Midwestern States
 Northeast
 Northwest
 Rocky Mountains
 Southern States
 Southwest

 
Sister Publications


 Florida Sportsman
 Shallow Water Angler
 In-Fisherman
 Game and Fish
 IMOutdoors.com

 


Classifieds   Fishing Reports   Travel Center   Business Directory   Bulletin Boards



The Cape Cod Area
Intro | Water Types | Tide & Wind | Tactics | Light or Night? | Gear

Cape Cod has long been a vacation spot for both fishermen and families. The peninsula has more recently become a mecca for inshore saltwater fly fishermen, largely because it offers a diverse fishing terrain: coves, flats, and estuaries on the south side; outer Cape beachfronts; and quieter bayside inlets. There is a type of water to match every fly fisherman's tastes. Figuring out how to fish Cape Cod, however, requires some preparation.

Scouting and time on the water are undoubtedly the best ways to learn about an area. Scouting fishermen pick a few spots and fish them regularly during various tides (incoming, outgoing), directions of wind (off-shore, onshore, cross-shore), water temperatures, light (first or last light, midday, night), as well as times of year. Some areas, as fishy as they look, simply don't hold the migratory fish.

But a vacationer on Cape Cod usually does not have the luxury of spending a lot of time scouting an area. Since striped bass and bluefish are migratory species, locating the schools of fish is paramount to catching them.

The many excellent bait shops on Cape Cod can provide current information about where the fish are and often what they are eating. The general fishing shops don't always stock fly-fishing equipment, but in the last few years several full-service fly shops have opened on the Cape, and they generally have all the equipment and advice you will need.

Guides are another way to learn about saltwater fly fishing. Good guides fish almost every day and know where the fish are and which tides and times of day offer the best fishing. They can show you firsthand how to identify the types of bait present, and how to select a fly and presentation technique that will work. Self-motivated fly fishers should start preparing for a trip several weeks in advance of a trip.

As water temperatures warm in spring, stripers and blues migrate north. Water temperatures in the 53- to 64-degree range are optimal feeding temperatures for the fish, and that means you can expect the stripers to be on the New York coast in early April; in Connecticut and Rhode Island, and around Block Island by mid-April; and around Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard, and the southside of the Cape by early May. Many of the fish will work around the outer Cape beaches, around Truro and Provincetown, into the bay, and up the Massachusetts coast to Maine, where they will spend late June through August eating and growing. As the water temperatures cool, the larger fish migrate south and can be caught again on the Cape from September through December.


Tom Keer is a Fly Fisherman field editor. He lives in Boston, Massachusetts, and has a home on Cape Cod.


On-Line Catalogs
A.A. Outfitters
Full service, fully stocked flyshop located in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania.

Allen Brothers Quality Fishing Flies
Click above for a chance to WIN 4 DOZEN FREE FLIES! Only the best materials. Great prices and knowledgeable service.

Angler's Pro Shop
The finest products the fly fishing industry has to offer.

Bighorn Fly and Tackle Shop
Montana's premium fly shops, lodging and guide service. We're dedicated to helping you experience the best Montana has to offer.

Bob Henley's TIE-A-FLY
19 traditional patterns. TIE-A-FLY kits have all materials needed to tie them, instructions/illustrations, a pre-tied fly to use as a model.

Gary LaFontaine's "The Book Mailer"
Every angling book & media in print—10% off 3 or more. LaFontaine fly patterns & materials.
FREE anti-catalog.

Crystal Fly Shop Online Store
Quality products at reasonable prices from Winston, Elkhorn, St. Croix, Galvan, Solitude, Idylwilde, Chota, etc. Many items 15-35% off.

Custom Fly Rod Crafters
Fly rod building components, tools & supplies.

Dan Bailey's Online Fly Shop
Outfitting fly fishermen since 1938. Equipment & information to make your next fly fishing trip be a memorable one.

Fly Fishing Flies & Gear
Shop RiverBum.com for premium FLIES and GEAR from Simms, Sage, Fishpond & more ... Free Shipping on orders over $25!

FlyShack.com
High quality, hand-tied flies. Assortments from $.60/fly. Great selection and excellent service. Free Shipping.

FlyShopCloseouts.com
Now—new and expanded—with much more brand name fly fishing tackle and gear at huge savings. Save 30-50% on quality brands you will recognize in an instant.

Galloup's Slide Inn Online Fly Shop
Full online store offering cutting-edge flies, equipment, and the best streamer selection found anywhere in the U.S.

K & K Flyfishers
Win A Winston BIIX fly rod. Browse our website, then click to enter the drawing. Sage, Ross, Simms, Rio, Fishpond, etc. Many sale items 30% to 50% off. 800-795-8118

Hills Discount Flies
Fly shop quality flies at wholesale prices. Over 1,000 patterns. Check out bargains in "Hot Deals" section.

Hooked On Flies
65¢-69¢ a fly. That's 3 flies for less than the retail price of one fly. 450+ Trout Fly Patterns!

Madison River Fishing Co.
Spring is coming! We have TONS of new gear this year. Cloudveil, Simms, Sage, Under Armour, Vosseler Reels and lots more. Click or call 800-227-7127 for catalog.

www.ShopUltimateAngler.com
Your steelhead and smallmouth specialists featuring Simms, Sage, Patagonia, Orvis, guide services, local fishing reports and more!

 
 Log In
 Register
 


Outdoor Offers