Super-sized striped bass pounding pogies
July 25, 2024 Scituate 1 photo
Bass (Striped)
Bass (Striped)

Trip Summary

It’s been looking like a boat show over much of the South Shore with sizable schools of super-sized striped bass pounding pogies. Captain Mark Rowell of Legit Fish Charters sent me a video of a scene just beyond his backdoor that looked like a mooring field as boat after boat jockeyed for position over pogy schools. The mob of menhaden as well as their pursuers have been moving back and forth from Plymouth through Scituate with no rhyme or reason as to where they will appear next. I guess something can be said for an even playing field. Manomet Point has been mentioned as one of the more consistent spots with honorable mention going to White Cliff. The bass on the bunker are beasts with most begin caught on what drew the predators in – pogies. While interesting, the captain has been steering clear of the flotilla and taking a short sprint out to Stone Ledge where he’s been limiting out on haddock in record time. The fish are there for small shrimp and sand eels making 3” pink/white Gulp lethal. While in the can’t-touch-this-status until September, cod on higher sections of the ledges are numerous and impressive. The sweet spot for the haddock is 200’, while the cod are shallower in about 185’. "On The Water"
Mark Rowell
Scituate, Massachusetts, United States
Legit Fish Sport Fishing thumbnail
Legit Fish Sport Fishing is based in Massachusetts Bay in Downtown Scituate. The crew knows all the hot fishing spots in the area and thrives to provide excellent service and outstanding catches to all its guests and friends. Separating us from the rest o...

Other reports from this charter

The Legit Fish crew is still finding big
The Legit Fish crew is still finding big
September 20, 2025
The deep offers a level of excitement unmatched by most of what happens inshore. During a recent haddock excursion in Cape Cod Bay, the Legit Fish Charters crew boated a monstrous whiting in the middle of a solid haddock bite. While for many a 36” whiting would be the catch of the day, Captain Mark Rowell had other designs for the big groundfish. Out came a magnum-sized outfit with the whiting deployed 60 feet down in the hopes of attracting a sea monster of sorts. Not long after the bait was set, the rod went off with a thunderous bang as something wicked took down the whiting. After briefly pulling drag, the fish reversed direction and charged the boat. Slack is kryptonite to the best laid plans, and despite a furious attempt to take up the line, the angler found it impossible to keep tight, and the hook popped out. When asked if his group was devastated, Captain Rowell said the feeling was just the opposite. To an angler, the crew was awed by the spectacle and the brief fury of the fight. There really is no substitute for a trip offshore. When not mixing up with monsters of the deep, Legit Fish is finding a solid haddock bite in 185’ of water on Stone Ledge. If you’re pounding mud with your jigs/sinkers, then you’re in the haddock zone. If you’re wares are coming up chipped and dented, expect to be catching cod and cusk. Heavily scented Gulp Alive grubs on the top hook are working really well, while clams are what the haddock are hitting on the bottom hook. The blitzkrieg of blues inshore has made finding mackerel a dicey proposition. Three to four miles out, the macks are common, but they are avoiding what would surely be an inshore massacre. The stripers are often hit or miss, depending on which bait they are feeding on. When sand eels are on the menu, and unless you’re offering matches the forage, you may find more frustration than fun. When pushing herring, pogies, or mackerel, the bass are usually less fussy. Hummock and Rexhame Beach have been two of the best bets, with even shore anglers getting into it. "On The Water"
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