New York fishing reports
283 reports for New York — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Striper Blitz Intensifies on Long Island
Water temps at 52°F (NOAA buoy 44025) are driving one of the more productive early-May striper runs in recent memory. The Fisherman — Long Island South Shore reports the bass bite "blew up" last week, with schoolies through oversized fish showing across the bays and beaches. Dick's B&T in Mastic Beach confirms school fish, slot fish, and oversized bass in both bay and ocean, with bunker schools holding fish in place. On the North Shore, Cow Harbor Bait and Tackle reports very good action in Huntington Bay and Cold Spring Harbor — fish running 30 to 44 inches on trolling Mojo's and bunker chunks. At Montauk, Star Island Yacht Club notes slot-size bass in front of the lighthouse on diamond jigs and bucktails worked close to bottom. Fluke season opened May 4 — per The Fisherman — Long Island East End, a three-fish daily bag limit with a 19-inch minimum applies through August. Sea Rogue Charters out of Freeport found keepers to 5 pounds on early exploratory runs.
Hudson: Fresh-Stocked Trout, Stripers Moving, Walleye Season Opens
Water temp at USGS gauge 01357500 on the Hudson clocked 56°F at 1,400 cfs early Thursday morning — firmly in the prime spring feeding range for trout, bass, and stripers alike. NY DEC's April 24th Fishing Line reports hatchery crews have been actively transporting and stocking brook, brown, and rainbow trout across the state, making freshly stocked streams and tributaries top targets right now. The coolwater sportfish season opened statewide on May 1, per NY DEC, unlocking walleye on the Finger Lakes and larger Hudson tributaries. On The Water's May 1 striper migration map notes the push "really snowballs once the large post-spawn females leave the Chesapeake," suggesting Hudson River striper action is intensifying this week. On the bass front, Tactical Bassin reports early-May fish are deep in the post-spawn transition, with topwater and swimbait patterns both producing. This is one of the most active multi-species windows of the year.
Lake Erie Hits 53°F: Smallmouth Pre-Spawn and Walleye Drive the May Bite
Water temperature at USGS gauge 04231600 came in at 53°F on the afternoon of May 6, with flows running at 8,910 cfs — an elevated spring reading signaling active tributary influence across the western Lake Erie corridor. At that temperature, walleye are typically in the post-spawn feeding ramp and smallmouth bass are staging on pre-spawn structure, making this one of the more productive transitional windows of the season. Elevated flows suggest some turbidity in tributary mouths, which can consolidate fish along cleaner lake-side margins. Field & Stream's spring early-season primer notes that cold, dirty water near inflows tends to push fish toward defined structure and transitional depth breaks — advice that maps well onto current conditions. No charter or tackle-shop dispatches appeared in this cycle's feed, so species timing reflects general seasonal patterns for early May on Lake Erie rather than live on-the-water intelligence; check local reports before committing to a specific area.
Catskill Gauges Show Elevated Spring Flows as Caddis Hatches Build
USGS gauges across the Catskill drainage show moderate-to-elevated spring flows — gauge 01413500 logging 397 cfs and gauge 01415000 at 191 cfs as of late afternoon on May 6. No water temperature was available at either station. MidCurrent's current fly-tying coverage observes that 'hatches begin to fire and predatory fish start pushing into the shallows' at this stage of the season, a signal consistent with early-May timing on Catskill freestone streams. Hatch Magazine's ongoing caddis-emergence coverage underscores the hatch type most associated with this northeastern trout window. The higher reading at gauge 01413500 will push brown trout toward softer water — inside bends, bankside eddies, and pool tails. Gauge 01415000's lower 191 cfs suggests comparatively cleaner, more approachable wading conditions. No direct New York guide or shop reports appeared in this cycle's feeds; the conditions picture here draws on gauge data and regionally applicable national fly-fishing coverage.
Salmon River at 622 cfs as Late Spring Steelhead Season Winds Down
USGS gauge 04250750 on the Salmon River recorded 622 cfs as of May 6, putting wading in the moderate-to-difficult range but keeping the river fishable from shore or a drift boat. Water temperature data was unavailable in today's gauge read; seasonal norms for early May in this drainage typically place tributary temps in the mid-40s to low-50s°F — a range that can still hold late-season steelhead. No charter, shop, or agency feeds covering this specific drainage were included in today's intel pull, so this report leans on gauge data and known seasonal patterns rather than confirmed on-water testimony. The spring steelhead run on Lake Ontario tributaries traditionally peaks in March and April and tapers through early May; fish still in the system tend to concentrate in deeper pools and velocity breaks rather than shallow riffles. The waning gibbous moon typically shifts peak feeding activity toward daylight hours. Anglers targeting holdover steelhead should work swing flies or beads through tailouts and deep current seams.
Hudson hits 58°F as walleye opener and spring trout stocking peak
Water temperature at USGS gauge 01357500 on the Hudson River system reached 58°F on May 6 — right in the prime spring transition window. NY DEC The Fishing Line (April 24 issue) confirms hatchery crews are actively stocking brook, brown, and rainbow trout across the state, making this one of the most accessible trout windows of the spring calendar. The coolwater sportfish season, including walleye and northern pike, opened statewide May 1 per NY DEC — anglers are getting their first legal shots at these species after a long off-season. On the striper front, On The Water's May 1 migration map notes the run is snowballing as large post-spawn females push north out of the Chesapeake, suggesting Hudson River stripers are beginning to build in tidal reaches. With multiple freshwater seasons freshly opened and water temps locked in at 58°F, Hudson Valley and Finger Lakes anglers are sitting on one of the better multi-species windows of the year.
Walleye Season Debuts at 58°F: Hudson Valley Spring Fishing Window Is Open
Readings of 58°F at USGS gauge 01357500 on May 6 put the Hudson Valley's spring fishing window firmly in play. NY DEC's Fishing Line (April 24 issue) confirmed hatchery crews have been actively transporting and stocking brook, brown, and rainbow trout statewide — many streams are holding fresh fish right now. The bigger milestone: the coolwater sportfish season opened May 1 per NY DEC, unlocking walleye, northern pike, and muskellunge in many regulated waters for the first time this year. On the Hudson, striped bass have been in play since the April 1 opener, and On The Water's May 1 Striper Migration Map notes that the post-spawn push of large females out of the Chesapeake is snowballing — timing that bodes well for the Hudson River. Flow is elevated at USGS gauge 01358000 (10,700 cfs), suggesting active spring runoff and potentially off-color water in main-stem sections; wade carefully in smaller tributaries.
Walleye Season Opens as Hudson Valley Water Climbs to 58°F
Water at USGS gauge 01357500 reached 58°F on May 6 with flows at 2,600 cfs — a meaningful milestone as the statewide coolwater sportfish season, walleye included, officially opened on May 1 per NY DEC The Fishing Line. Hatchery crews have been running hard all spring, transporting and stocking brook, brown, and rainbow trout across Hudson Valley and Finger Lakes tributaries, making stocked-stream fishing one of the stronger near-term bets. The main-stem gauge (01358000) is reading a hefty 8,750 cfs, pointing to elevated but manageable conditions on larger water. On The Water's May 1 striper migration map notes post-spawn females are now pushing north out of the Chesapeake, which typically heralds improving striped bass action on the tidal Hudson in the weeks ahead. With mid-to-upper 50s water temps and a waning gibbous moon dampening overnight light, early-morning windows on DEC-stocked streams and walleye structure edges look like the best plays this week.
59°F Water and Active DEC Stockings Set Up Hudson Valley Trout Bite
Water at USGS gauge 01357500 is reading 59°F on the upper drainage — right in the prime zone for recently stocked trout. NY DEC The Fishing Line (April 24th issue) confirms hatchery crews are actively transporting and stocking brook, brown, and rainbow trout across the state, making stocked streams and ponds in the Hudson Valley and Finger Lakes region the obvious first stop this week. The statewide coolwater sportfish season also opened May 1, per NY DEC, unlocking walleye, northern pike, and other coolwater species after a winter hiatus. On the lower Hudson, the striper picture is building: On The Water's May 1 migration map reports the post-spawn push of large female striped bass moving north out of the Chesapeake, and the tidal Hudson is a proven waypoint on that corridor. Flow at USGS gauge 01358000 is running 7,700 cfs — elevated but fishable from shore at many access points. A waning gibbous moon supports active feeding through the early-morning window.
DEC Stocking Surge + 56°F Water: NY Trout and Walleye Season Opens Strong
Water temps on the Schoharie Creek hit 56°F as of early May 5 (USGS gauge 01357500), landing Hudson Valley tributaries in the heart of the productive spring window. NY DEC's The Fishing Line (Freshwater) reports that hatchery crews are actively hauling and releasing brook, brown, and rainbow trout across the region — stocked streams should be well worth a visit this week. The coolwater sportfish season opened May 1, per NY DEC, putting walleye, northern pike, and muskellunge into legal play across the Finger Lakes and Hudson Valley reservoirs for the first time this year. Bass are beginning to work into spawn mode: Wired 2 Fish notes that anglers at New York latitudes should expect fish in or near spawning phases through May, with big fish pushing shallow. The Hudson River is flowing at 4,300 cfs (USGS gauge 01358000), a healthy spring level. Time the next two weeks well — conditions are lining up.
58°F Water and DEC Stockings Drive the Spring Bite in Hudson Valley
Water temperatures registered 58°F at USGS gauge 01357500 on May 4 — a sweet spot signaling prime spring conditions across the Hudson Valley and Finger Lakes. NY DEC The Fishing Line (April 24) confirms hatchery crews are actively stocking brook, brown, and rainbow trout throughout the region, and the statewide coolwater sportfish season — walleye included — opened May 1. On The Water's May 1 striper migration map notes the post-spawn push out of the Chesapeake is gaining momentum, which typically drives improving action along the Hudson River corridor in the weeks ahead. Wired 2 Fish's May 2026 lure guide notes that bass across the Northeast are entering or approaching the spawn, pointing anglers toward shallow presentations. The Schoharie Creek is flowing at 1,510 cfs and the Hudson at Green Island at 5,150 cfs — elevated spring levels, but within fishable range for most presentations.
Lake Erie Smallmouth and Walleye Poised as Water Hits 53°F
Water temps at 53°F recorded at USGS gauge 04231600 on the morning of May 4 put Western NY's Lake Erie and Niagara fisheries squarely in spring transition territory. On The Water's recent podcast featuring Captain Joe Fonzi covers Lake Erie's trophy smallmouth bass and what Fonzi describes as a 'booming' walleye fishery, crediting the goby-driven forage base as a primary growth engine. Wired 2 Fish confirms the regional picture: Great Lakes bass are in some phase of the spawn this month, with the recommendation to target big fish shallow near hard structure. At 53°F, smallmouth are staging near pre-spawn areas — rocky points, gravel bars, and emerging weed edges — while walleye, typically post-spawn by early May, are actively feeding before dispersing to summer structure. Flow at USGS gauge 04231600 registers 7,280 cfs, suggesting active runoff that may affect nearshore clarity. The current waning gibbous moon favors dawn and dusk feeding windows for both species.