Striper migration reaches Narragansett Bay as water cools to 47°F
Fresh waves of striped bass are moving into southern New England, with water temperatures holding at 47–48°F across NOAA buoys 44097 and 44085 in Narragansett Bay. Per On The Water, the first wave of migratory fish has reached Rhode Island, following a broader Northeast striper push that The Fisherman reports is in rapid expansion phase—quality bass to the mid-30-inch class are now common in adjacent waters like Buzzards Bay. Moderate swells of 3–5.6 feet add texture to the bay, typical for late April. This is prime timing for targeting fresh migrators along rip lines and shallow structures before the main May push.
Current Conditions
- Water temp
- 47°F
- Moon
- Waxing Gibbous
- Tide / flow
- Bay swells 3–5.6 feet; strongest action during slack-water periods when baitfish concentrate.
- Weather
- Check local forecast before heading out; moderate bay swells and typical late-April conditions.
New to these readings? What do water temp, cfs, tide, and moon phase actually mean for fishing?
What's Biting
Striped Bass
topwater and soft plastics on rips and points
Scup (Porgy)
small jigs and clams on bottom structure
Flounder
deep channels as water warms
What's Next
Striper activity should intensify considerably over the next 2–3 days as water temperatures climb from today's 47–48°F toward the 50–52°F range typical of early May. The Fisherman's recent Northeast forecast documents rapid expansion of quality bass into the 30–36-inch slot—a signature marker of this critical migration phase. Expect peak action during slack-water windows when baitfish move into shallow flats and structure. Wave action will gradually subside; the outer buoy (44097) shows 5.6 feet today, but interior bay readings (buoy 44085 at 3 feet) suggest conditions should settle further as systems pass.
Baitfish activity should increase substantially as water temperatures rise, pulling more quality migratory fish into the bay's rocky points, channels, and sandy structure. Early morning and dusk window fishing will remain most productive—target the first 1–2 hours after sunrise when fresh migratory fish feed aggressively on shallow presentations and topwater. Night fishing around rip lines and rocky structure also produces, as stripers hunt in lower light. Focus on points, current breaks, and structure edges where baitfish funnel and staging fish ambush prey.
For weekend planning: monitor buoy reports for wave settlement—conditions should improve considerably by Sunday for both boat and shore access. Tidal flow remains strong; time presentations for slack-water periods when baitfish congregate. The combination of fresh migratory fish, warming water, and strong tidal dynamics creates an ideal fishing window extending through next week. Small topwater and soft-plastic offerings matched to local baitfish will capitalize on the aggressive feeding typical of newly arrived stripers.
Context
Late April is right on schedule for the spring striper migration into Rhode Island waters. The pattern The Fisherman describes—rapid expansion from schoolies into quality fish in the 30+ inch range over just a few days—is textbook for this critical phase. Water temperatures in the 47–48°F range are normal for Narragansett Bay in late April; historically this cold-water phase precedes the peak May push by 1–2 weeks.
This year's timing aligns precisely with regional reports of fresh migratory fish reaching Massachusetts and Rhode Island, per On The Water. The angler intel suggests quality bass are already staged in nearby systems (Buzzards Bay reports confirm active fish), so arrival in Narragansett Bay proper should follow within days. The Waxing Gibbous moon phase adds to favorable conditions, as lunar stages often correlate with increased feeding activity during migration windows.
Compared to typical seasonal patterns, conditions are on-schedule rather than early or late—a strong indicator for a robust spring bite as the calendar turns to May. Anglers who target this specific window when fresh fish first arrive often experience the most consistent action before the peak May push.
This report is synthesized by Hooked Fisherman from real-time NOAA buoy data, USGS stream gauges, and current reports across regional fishing blogs, captain updates, and angler forums. Source names are cited inline where they appear. Check local regulations before keeping fish. Never trust a single source for a trip decision.