Virginia fishing reports
188 reports for Virginia — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Potomac at 4,110 cfs as post-spawn stripers push into Chesapeake tributaries
On The Water's May 1 striper migration map signals that large post-spawn females are now leaving the Chesapeake and pushing into major tributaries — putting tidal Potomac stripers squarely in play for early May. USGS gauge 01646500 recorded Potomac flow at 4,110 cfs early this morning, a moderate level that keeps launch ramps accessible and current breaks fishable. No water temperature was logged at the gauge, but early-May regional patterns typically place the Potomac in the low-to-mid 60s°F — prime territory for largemouth and smallmouth bass moving toward the spawn. Wired 2 Fish highlights a swimbait-to-finesse-bait sequence for targeting bed fish in shallow water, a technique directly applicable to Potomac coves and Shenandoah flats right now. On the Shenandoah, Hatch Magazine's seasonal caddis coverage points to evening emergences picking up across mid-Atlantic limestone rivers this week. Waning gibbous moon may ease the midday surface bite; target low-light windows at dawn and dusk for the most consistent action.
Crappie Spawn Peaks on SML and Buggs Island; Stripers in Post-Spawn Feed
The Roanoke River above Buggs Island is running a moderate 443 CFS as of May 3 (USGS gauge 02075045), keeping lake levels stable and shallows in fishable condition. No direct water-temperature reading was available from local sensors, but early May typically puts both Smith Mountain Lake and Buggs Island in the low-to-mid 60s°F — textbook crappie spawn territory. Wired 2 Fish reported crappie staging heavily for spawn at Grenada Lake on April 24, with guide Trent Goss describing heavyweight-limit catches as fish moved to spawning structure; the same post-full-moon congregation pattern is expected at VA flatwater reservoirs this week. On The Water's May 1 striper migration map highlights a post-spawn feeding surge underway across the mid-Atlantic — landlocked stripers at SML and Buggs Island typically mirror this active feeding window. Look for largemouth on spawning beds and catfish working current seams in the main-lake channel.
Post-spawn stripers moving through Chincoteague as water hits 51°F
NOAA buoy 44014 logged 51°F water temperature off the Virginia coast on May 3rd — right in the sweet spot for the spring striper migration push. On The Water's May 1st migration update confirms the timing: "the striper migration really snowballs once the large post-spawn females leave the Chesapeake," placing Chincoteague's Atlantic inlets and back bays squarely in the northbound corridor. Further up the coast, The Fisherman (Northeast) reports stripers from 25 to 40 inches hitting aggressively from NJ to New England, a strong signal that this migration lane is fully activated. The Fisherman (Northeast)'s NJ/DE Bay region report also notes Delaware's black sea bass season opened May 1st and NJ fluke opens May 4th — a clear regional indicator that bottom species are arriving along the entire Mid-Atlantic coast. A full moon on May 3rd is driving the month's strongest tidal swings; working current-driven rips at tidal transitions should be the primary tactic for stripers in the inlets and along the barrier island beaches this week.
Spring Spawn Peaks at Smith Mountain & Buggs Island Under May Full Moon
The Roanoke River is running at 949 cubic feet per second (USGS gauge 02075045 as of this morning), feeding moderate current into the upper arms of Smith Mountain Lake as early May's full moon marks the traditional peak of the spring spawn window across both reservoirs. No water temperature data is currently available from local gauges, but typical VA highland lake readings at this stage of the season run 62–68°F — prime territory for crappie bedding and largemouth staging on secondary points. On The Water's May 1 striper migration update notes post-spawn females beginning to push out of the Chesapeake system, a regional signal that striped bass are advancing through their reproductive cycle. At Smith Mountain Lake and Buggs Island, landlocked stripers typically feed aggressively in the days bracketing the full moon before dropping toward summer depth. Crappie are the top target this weekend — work shallow brush piles, dock pilings, and any stained-water coves that warm fastest.
Post-spawn stripers clearing the Chesapeake as water temps reach 51°F
Water temps registered 51°F at NOAA buoy 44009 on the morning of May 3, placing the Chesapeake mouth at the heart of the post-spawn striper departure window. On The Water's May 1 striper migration map puts it directly: the run "really snowballs once the large post-spawn females leave the Chesapeake" — and that timing is now. The Fisherman (Northeast) is tracking that leading edge up the coast, with Long Island reporting stripers into the 30-inch class and beyond, fish holding on bunker schools and responding to soft plastics, bucktails, and fresh chunks. New England is seeing fish from 25 to 40 inches described as "abundant and aggressive." Winds from buoy 44009 are running near 21 knots, creating marginal small-craft conditions, but the full moon is amplifying tidal exchange — the outgoing rips at the mouth are your prime window to intercept transitioning fish right now.
Striper Migration Peaks on Potomac; Flow at 3,920 cfs and Fishable
On The Water's May 1 striper migration map confirms post-spawn females are clearing the Chesapeake and pushing into tidal tributaries — including the lower Potomac — making this the prime window to intercept migrating rockfish before they scatter upstream. USGS gauge 01646500 puts Potomac flow at 3,920 cfs as of Sunday morning, a low-moderate reading that keeps water clarity favorable and wading accessible in upper reaches. Outdoor Hub reports that a 15-year-old angler broke West Virginia's golden trout state record on the South Branch of the Potomac on April 2, a signal that Potomac headwater tributaries have been holding trout solidly through late spring. With the Full Moon peaking today, feeding windows at dawn and dusk are historically strong — especially for smallmouth bass staging on riffles and transition edges in the Shenandoah Valley. The next 48–72 hours shape up as among the most productive of the early-May calendar for both trout and bass anglers working Virginia's freshwater river corridors.
Potomac at 3,630 cfs: Full Moon Opens Prime May Smallmouth & Crappie Window
The USGS gauge at Little Falls (01646500) logged 3,630 cfs on the Potomac River as of early May 1 — a moderate, fishable flow that keeps wading access open on most gravel bars and sets the river up well for spring smallmouth. Tonight's full moon is the headline trigger: full moons in late April through mid-May typically push crappie onto shallow spawning flats in Potomac and Shenandoah tributaries, a pattern Wired 2 Fish documented this week on Southern impoundments where fish are "staging for spawning and heavyweight-limit catches are common." That same pre-spawn pressure is typical for VA river systems right now. No water temperature came through on the gauge this cycle; historically, the Potomac runs 58–65°F in early May — a range that activates smallmouth, crappie, channel catfish, and largemouth bass concurrently. Plan early-morning and dusk sessions while the full-moon bite window is at its strongest.
51°F Water and Full Moon Set the Chesapeake Mouth for Striper Arrivals
NOAA buoy 44009 recorded 51°F water at the Chesapeake mouth this morning — right at the threshold where spring striper migrations historically accelerate through Virginia inlets. Confirmation that the front is moving comes from The Fisherman (Northeast), whose April 23 NJ/DE Bay forecast documents active night striper action along the Jersey Shore and early black drum sightings in the Delaware corridor, both indicators that the coastal push is now squarely in motion. Schoolie stripers expanded into slot and over-slot fish across the Northeast over just the past week, per The Fisherman (Northeast)'s New England coverage, underscoring how quickly size classes upgrade at this stage of the season. Tonight's full moon amplifies tidal current through the inlet, concentrating baitfish and priming rip edges for aggressive feeding. Wind is running at 8 m/s (~18 mph) per buoy 44009, putting moderate chop on the bay face — manageable for most bay boats with attention to entry and exit timing.