Chesapeake Bay Bonanza: Cobia, Reds, and More Biting Strong on Virginia's Summer Hotspots Podcast By  cover art

Chesapeake Bay Bonanza: Cobia, Reds, and More Biting Strong on Virginia's Summer Hotspots

Chesapeake Bay Bonanza: Cobia, Reds, and More Biting Strong on Virginia's Summer Hotspots

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You’re tuned in with Artificial Lure, bringing you the latest from Chesapeake Bay, Virginia, on this warm July 7th, 2025. Summer’s in full throttle and so’s the fishing—from Cape Charles to Lynnhaven Inlet, the Bay is alive and kicking.

Let’s kick things off with your sunrise at 5:52 AM and sunset at 8:26 PM. The moon’s rising at 6:10 PM, which should help the evening bite. According to Tide-Forecast.com, you had a low tide at 3:18 AM, high at 8:08 AM, low at 2:54 PM, and a solid high again at 8:35 PM—prime for that twilight topwater action.

Weather’s been classic July: humid, highs in the upper 80s, light SW winds. Water temps are running in the low to mid-80s, a sweet zone for both inshore and nearshore action.

The bite? Flat-out on fire. Cobia are thick from the mouth of the Bay up to the bridge-tunnels. Reports over the weekend had boats regularly hooking into fish in the 30-50 lb class, with a few real bruisers mixed in. Anglers drifting live eels or tossing big bucktails tipped with Gulp! Eel trailers scored best, especially around buoys and channel markers. Chumming’s also been productive, so bring some cut menhaden if you want a shot at a citation.

Red drum are holding strong on the shoals. Folks are landing them running a spread of peeler crab, fresh bunker, or even cut bluefish. For the artificial crowd, red and white paddle tails or topwater plugs like Spooks are drawing explosive strikes on the flats, especially at daylight and dusk. There’s been talk on social media—TikTok anglers showing off personal bests—about red drum hammering white/red combos just off Lynnhaven.

Sheepshead are hot right now on the pilings of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel. Fiddler crabs and sand fleas are classic, but drop a crab-pattern Jigging Bugger or a small chartreuse bucktail if the sheepies are picky. Local charters report limits are coming easy on the right tides, with some fish breaking 10 pounds.

Spanish mackerel and bluefish are blitzing around the tunnel and up the rivers. Troll small silver or gold spoons at 6-8 knots to find the birds and the jumpers. Ribbonfish? Yes, those toothy critters are here too—rig a flashy, white swimbait and hold on.

For the fly crowd, don’t overlook the Woolly Bugger in saltwater patterns—shrimp and baitfish colorways have knocked out weakfish and schoolie stripers in the grass beds, especially around early-morning moving water.

If you’re bottom bouncing, now’s the time for spot and croaker. Pile up some bloodworms or Fishbites and fish the edges of the deeper channels late in the day.

Hotspots? The CBBT (Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel) remains unbeatable for sheepshead, spadefish, and the occasional big drum. The mouth of the York River is holding solid schools of croaker and spot, while the shoals off Cape Charles are where big reds and cobia are turning up reliably. Also look to the drop-offs around Lynnhaven Inlet for a mixed bag—Spanish, bluefish, and even a bonus flounder.

Bait and tackle? Live eels and peeler crab for the trophy fish, cut bunker for the bottom biters. For lures: 1- to 2-ounce bucktails (tipped, if you got ’em), paddle tails in pearl or chartreuse, and don’t sleep on the classic white and red topwaters for reds and specks.

All in all, it’s a banner week. Whether you’re chunking, jigging, or soaking baits, Chesapeake Bay is serving up summer in style.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—remember to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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