Coverbild der Sendung Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today

Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today

Podcast von Inception Point AI

Englisch

Kultur & Freizeit

Begrenztes Angebot

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / MonatJederzeit kündbar.

  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts
Loslegen

Mehr Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today

Dive into the "Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today" your go-to podcast for the latest updates on fishing conditions in the Pacific Ocean off California's coastline. Stay informed about daily weather forecasts, ocean conditions, and expert tips from seasoned anglers. Perfect for fishing enthusiasts and professionals looking to plan successful outings, this podcast offers valuable insights on fish species, hotspots, and strategies to enhance your fishing experience. Tune in each day to stay ahead and make the most of your time on the water. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock Also check out https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/time-in-city-news-info/id6692631879 and https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/what-to-do-in-city-guides/id6615091666 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Alle Folgen

346 Folgen

Episode Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Rockfish Limits, Halibut Action, and Prime Tide Windows from Eureka to San Diego Cover

Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Rockfish Limits, Halibut Action, and Prime Tide Windows from Eureka to San Diego

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Pacific Coast fishing report for coastal California, from about Eureka down through San Diego. Let’s start with conditions. Along most of the coast we’ve got a cool marine layer early, light onshore breeze, and afternoon winds bumping up with a typical northwest flow. Nearshore water is running cool from that late-spring upwelling, which is great for **rockfish, lingcod, and halibut**. Inland valleys heat up later, so expect that wind to fill in by midday. Tides today run an early **morning high**, a **midday drop**, and an **evening push**. The best bite windows are that last hour of incoming before the morning high, and again the first couple hours of the afternoon flood. Sunrise is early; you’ll have usable gray light well before the sun clears the marine layer. Sunset gives you a solid power hour for halibut and surf perch right up against the beach. Fish activity has been solid the past few days. Party boats out of **Bodega Bay, Half Moon Bay, and Monterey** are reporting **limits or near-limits of mixed rockfish** with a sprinkling of **lingcod** on the deeper structure. Private boaters drifting sandy edges off Santa Cruz and inside Monterey Bay have been finding **legal halibut** with some shorts mixed in. Farther south, out of **Morro Bay and Port San Luis**, similar story: good reds and coppers on the hard bottom, with lings hanging just off the rock piles. Down in **SoCal**, from **Dana Point to San Diego**, the half-day trips have been picking away at **calico bass, sand bass, sculpin, and some mixed rockfish**. When the water bumps up a degree or two, the bass chew better around the kelp lines and hard-bottom spots. A few **yellowtail** have been snooping around the offshore banks and islands, but it’s still hit and miss—more of a bonus fish than a target right now. For **lures**, think local and simple: - For rockfish and lingcod: 4–6 ounce **metal jigs** in chrome, blue, or scrambled-egg, plus soft plastics on 4–8 ounce leadheads. Tip plastics with a strip of squid or belly meat if you can. - For halibut: **swimbaits** in sardine or anchovy patterns, 4–6 inch, slow-rolled along sandy bottom or channel edges. Drift them on three-way rigs with just enough weight to tick bottom. - For surf perch: 2–3 inch **grubs** in motor oil, camo, or red/clear, on a hi–lo rig with a 1–2 ounce sinker. - For calico and sand bass: **swimbaits** and **leadheads with plastic trailers**, plus small surface irons or Kroc-style spoons when the fish move up in the column. For **bait**, it’s hard to beat **live anchovies or sardines** where available, especially for halibut and bass. Squid strips and cut anchovy are getting plenty of rockfish. In the surf, **sand crabs, fresh mussel, or bloodworms** will out-fish hardware when the water is a little off-color. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Monterey Bay edges**: The halibut drifts outside the harbor and along the canyon edges have been producing fish for folks willing to grind it out on the tide swings. Work the low-relief sand with swimbaits or live bait right on the bottom. - **Point Loma kelp and hard bottom**: Out of San Diego, the kelp line and nearby reefs are coughing up calicos and mixed bottom fish. Fish tight to structure early, then slide a bit deeper as the sun gets high and the wind comes up. If you’re heading out, watch the afternoon wind forecast and plan to be on your best spot during those prime tide windows. Light gear works, but don’t go too light—there are plenty of rocks down there that would love to keep your favorite jig. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

Gestern - 3 min
Episode Early Summer Bite: Yellowtail, Bass, and Perfect Morning Tides Along the California Coast Cover

Early Summer Bite: Yellowtail, Bass, and Perfect Morning Tides Along the California Coast

This is Artificial Lure with your Pacific Coast California fishing report. Along the outer coast from San Diego up through the Central Coast, a solid early-summer pattern has settled in. National Weather Service marine forecasts call for a light morning wind, picking up to 10–15 knots in the afternoon with a moderate west swell and a pretty standard onshore chop. Coastal clouds are hanging in early, burning off by late morning. According to the U.S. Naval Observatory tables, first light is just after 5:20 a.m. with sunrise around 5:45, and sunset near 8:10 p.m., so you’ve got long windows to work those tides. NOAA tide predictions for the central and southern California coast show a pre‑dawn high followed by a good falling tide through the morning, then a modest afternoon flood. That morning outgoing has been the money tide for both surf and nearshore structure—current is just strong enough to move bait without making it unfishable. Near San Diego and Oceanside, recent landings reports out of the local sportboats have been showing steady **yellowtail**, mixed **bonito**, and schools of **calico bass** tight to kelp and boiler rocks. Private boaters have been picking off a few early **bluefin tuna** on the outer banks, but the more consistent game has been inshore. Best producers: 1/2–1 oz leadheads with 4–5 inch swimbaits in sardine or anchovy patterns, slow-rolled along kelp edges, and live sardines fly‑lined on 20–25 lb fluorocarbon when you can get them from the barge. Up toward Dana Point and Newport, harbor and jetty anglers are reporting good numbers of **spotted bay bass**, **sand bass**, and the usual short but fun **halibut**. Night and gray light have been best, with small paddle tails and Carolina‑rigged whole anchovies or squid strips. Local tackle shops are saying natural browns and olive‑green swimbaits are out‑fishing the loud colors in the clearer water. From Long Beach up through the Channel Islands, recent counts out of the landings show strong **rockfish**, **whitefish**, and **sheephead** action on the deeper stones, plus kelp‑line **calicos** when the wind stays down. Dropper‑loop rigs with squid, strips of mackerel, or whole anchovies are still the go‑to on rock piles, while 1/2 oz weedless swimbaits and 5–6 inch stickbaits in mackerel or sardine patterns shine in the kelp lanes. Keep a surface iron tied on—mint and blue/white Tady‑style jigs have been getting picked off by cruising yellows when the birds start working. Farther north around Morro Bay and Monterey, cooler water has the offshore stuff a little quiet, but the bottom bite is strong. Party boats are reporting limits or near‑limits of assorted **rockfish** with some nice **lingcod** mixed in. Squid strips, jigs like metal knife‑style irons, and big curl‑tail grubs on heavy leadheads are putting the better fish on deck. Surf anglers along the Central Coast are finding good **barred surfperch** with the odd **striper** on the open beaches. Best bets: Gulp sandworms on Carolina rigs, small metallic Kastmasters, and natural color grubs slow‑rolled just past the first trough. A couple of hot spots to circle today: - **La Jolla kelp beds**: Early high and falling tide, glassy conditions if the wind holds off. Great shot at calicos and possibly yellowtail on live bait and swimbaits. - **Oceanside to Carlsbad surf line**: That morning outgoing tide has been lining up some nice perch and the occasional halibut. Bring sandcrabs, Gulp sandworms, and a few 1/2 oz spoons. - **Santa Monica Bay breakwalls**: Good mixed‑bag action on bass, sculpin, and the odd keeper halibut with swimbaits and live bait fished tight to the rocks. Overall fish activity is moderate but very tide‑driven: the best windows have been the gray light high spilling into the first couple hours of the drop, and then again late evening as that incoming pushes bait tight to the beach and structure. Scale your leaders to the water clarity—15–20 lb fluoro inshore, 25–40 lb when you’re around yellows or rockfish—and don’t be afraid to downsize hooks when the bite gets picky. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide change or a hot bite. This has been a quiet pleas Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

7. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Episode California Coast Pacific Fishing Report: Gray Light Bite, Mixed Swell, and Hot Rockfish Action Cover

California Coast Pacific Fishing Report: Gray Light Bite, Mixed Swell, and Hot Rockfish Action

This is Artificial Lure with your California coast Pacific fishing report. Along most of the California coast this morning, we’ve got a cool **marine layer**, light winds early, and a typical afternoon **northwest sea breeze** building 10–20 knots. Coastal temps are sitting in the 50s and low 60s, with patchy fog offshore burning back late morning. According to the National Weather Service marine outlook, expect a relatively **mixed swell**, west-northwest around 3–6 feet with some shorter-period local wind chop in the afternoon. Sunrise hit the water just after **5:40 AM** up north around Eureka and closer to **5:45–5:50 AM** around the central and southern coast, with sunset lining up roughly **8:35–8:30 PM** from north to south. Those early gray-light hours and the last hour before dark are lining up with the best action. Tides today are running on a classic **morning flood, afternoon ebb** pattern along much of the coast. Surf anglers will find the **first half of the incoming** lining up nicely with corbina, barred surfperch, and spotfin croaker in the troughs. Rock and jetty anglers will want to key into the top of the high for calico bass and rockfish tight to structure. Recent reports from local landings and tackle shops up and down the coast say **rockfish and lingcod** are still the main game offshore: limits of mixed rockfish and a decent pick on lings from Morro Bay to Bodega, with the better grades coming off deeper hard-bottom in 120–200 feet. Private boaters around the Channel Islands are still seeing solid **white seabass** in the dark and gray light on squid, plus some yellows when the current pushes bait tight to the islands. Inshore, West Coast surf shops are reporting good numbers of **barred surfperch** from Humboldt down through Santa Cruz on the smaller swells, with more **corbina and croaker** showing from Huntington down through San Diego as the water continues to warm. Calico bass fishing along kelp edges from Malibu south has been steady, especially when the wind lays down in the evenings. Best producers right now: - For **rockfish and lingcod**: 4–8 oz lead-heads with **swimbaits** in sardine or anchovy patterns, plus standard **p-strip bait**—squid strips or cut mackerel. - For **white seabass**: live or fresh-dead **squid on dropper loops**, and sliding egg sinker rigs around squid nests. - For **surf species**: Carolina-rigged **sand crabs**, bloodworms, lugworms, or small gulp-style sandworm plastics in camo and red. - For **calico bass and inshore structure fish**: 3–5 inch **weedless swimbaits** in mint, sardine, or brown bait colors; small jerkbaits along kelp edges at dawn and dusk. A couple of current hot spots: - **Channel Islands / Santa Cruz–Santa Rosa zone**: Party boats and private skiffs continue to rack up quality rockfish and lingcod, with a shot at seabass on squid in the dark. Focus on rocky ridges and pinnacles where the current is moving but still fishable. - **Oceanside to Carlsbad beaches**: The combination of moderate swell and clean pockets has been producing good barred surfperch with increasing corbina numbers; fish the inside troughs on the first half of the incoming tide with sand crabs or small grubs. If you’re heading out today, plan around the tides, hit that gray-light window, and bring a mix of natural bait and artificials so you can adjust to water color and current. Keep an eye on that afternoon wind; the ride home can get bumpy. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

6. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Early Summer Salt: Low Light, Moving Water, and Stacked Bait – Central to Southern California Cover

Early Summer Salt: Low Light, Moving Water, and Stacked Bait – Central to Southern California

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal California salt report, from the outer Pacific in to the beaches, bays, and nearshore reefs. We’ve got a stable early–summer pattern lining up. Along most of the Central and Southern California coast, marine layer is hanging in the mornings with light onshore breeze, then clearing to sun and 60s–70s by afternoon. Typical late–spring/early–summer northwest wind builds in the afternoon, so the cleanest water and easiest rides are still at gray light and into mid‑morning. Offshore a bit, plan on a stiff breeze and some afternoon chop. Sunrise is landing right around the very early 5 o’clock hour, with sunset near 8 in the evening. That gives a prime low‑light window: one hour either side of sunrise, and the last hour before dark. Those two windows have been the bite movers this week, especially for coastal gamefish. Tides are cycling through decent morning movement right now. Think medium morning highs easing to a dropping tide late morning, then a building flood into the evening. Fish have been responding best to that falling mid‑morning water on the beaches, and to the first push of the evening flood inside the bays and harbors. Water temps are running in the high 50s to low 60s nearshore depending on upwelling pockets. Cooler, greener water has pushed bait tight to the beach in spots, and that’s stacked surf species and inshore predators. Surf side, anglers this week have been reporting steady barred surfperch, yellowfin croaker, and a smattering of corbina from Ventura down through Orange County. Light line and natural presentations are still king: - Best **bait**: sand crabs dug at the edge of the swash, ghost shrimp, lug or blood worms, and fresh mussel. - Best **lures**: 1/2–1 oz Carolina‑rigged Gulp sandworms in camo or blood red, and small metal spoons in the 1/4–1/2 oz range for covering water. Around the rocky stretches and boiler zones, calico bass and mixed rockfish have been chewing when the wind lays down. Boaters and kayak anglers just offshore have been picking off legal calicos, blue rockfish, and a few lingcod in 60–120 feet. Productive offerings: - Swimbaits in sardine, anchovy, or red crab colors on 1–2 oz heads. - Dropper‑loop rigs with squid strips or cut mackerel for the rocks and lings. Down toward the offshore banks and islands, the early bluefin and yellowtail game has been slowly building. Anglers running long have reported scattered schools of bluefin tuna and pockets of yellowtail on paddies and current edges. Quantity hasn’t been wide‑open yet, but the quality fish that are being caught are mostly on: - 100–200 g knife and flutter jigs in blue/silver or glow run deep on sonar marks. - Colt Sniper‑style irons and surface irons in mint and scrambled egg on breezing fish or paddies. - For bait, lively sardines and mackerel fished fly‑line on 25–40 lb, plus sinker rigs when the fish sound. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Santa Monica Bay to Malibu reefs**: Inshore stones and kelp edges have been giving up a mix of legal calicos, sand bass, and shallow rockfish early before the wind. Target 40–80 feet with swimbaits and dropper‑loops tipped with squid. Work the up‑current side of structure and any bait balls you see on the meter. - **La Jolla and Point Loma kelp line, San Diego**: Solid calico life, with the occasional yellowtail pushing bait along the outer kelp edge. Start with a 5–6 inch weedless swimbait tight to the stringers at first light, then shift to fly‑lined sardines or surface iron when the sun gets up and breezers show. For the surf crew, a bonus call‑out is the **Oceanside to Carlsbad stretch**: good perch and croaker action reported on the late‑morning outgoing, especially where the sandbars create defined troughs. Fish sand crabs or Gulp worms on light fluorocarbon, 6–8 lb, and stay mobile. Overall fish activity has been “typical early summer”: not lights‑out everywhere, but if you line up low‑light, moving water, and clean-ish edges around bait, you can put together a solid box of perch, bass, rockfish, and the occasional trophy pelagic if you’re willin Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

5. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Episode Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Late Spring Bass Bite and Offshore Bluefin Action Cover

Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Late Spring Bass Bite and Offshore Bluefin Action

Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Coast California fishing report. We’re working off a mellow late‑spring pattern this morning. Along most of the coast from San Diego up through the Central Coast, winds are light early, building to a typical 10–15 knots westerly by afternoon with a modest wind swell. Nearshore temps are running in the low 60s down south, sliding cooler as you move north. Skies are a mix of marine layer and broken sun; classic “June gloom” mornings burning off by midday. Tides today are running a medium exchange: a predawn high, dropping into a mid‑morning low, then filling back in through the afternoon and another smaller high late evening. That sets up good current around the low‑to‑flood window, especially on points, harbor mouths, and kelp edges. Sunrise is roughly just after 5:40 a.m. on the Southern California coast, with sunset a bit after 8:00 p.m., giving you a long crepuscular bite at both ends. Inshore, the bass bite has been steady. Anglers working kelp lines and rocky boiler zones are reporting solid **calico bass** and **sand bass** counts, with a by‑catch of short to legal **white seabass** and a few **halibut** on the outside edges of the eelgrass and sandy pockets. Swimbaits in sardine and anchovy patterns, 3–5 inch, on 1/2–1 oz lead heads, have been doing damage, especially slow‑rolled just above the structure. For bait, fly‑lined **live sardines** and anchovies remain king; when bait’s scarce, fresh dead or well‑soaked cut squid is the next best thing. On the beaches, **spotfin croaker**, **yellowfin croaker**, and **barred surfperch** are taking natural baits in the troughs. Best bets are **sand crabs**, lug or blood worms, and ghost shrimp on light Carolina rigs. Grub‑style plastics in motor oil or camo on small jigheads are picking off perch when the water’s a bit cleaner on the late‑flood. Offshore, the early summer **bluefin tuna** game continues to grind along. Counts have been mixed, but private boaters working temp breaks and bird life are still hanging fish from 60 to over 150 pounds on the outer zones. Heavy knife jigs in the 200–300 gram range fished deep at night and flat‑fall style during gray light are the top artificial, while live sardines on 40–80 lb fluorocarbon and sinker rigs are producing daytime bites when the fish are up and willing. A few **yellowtail** are also showing on kelp paddies and high‑spots, especially where the current is pushing clean, warmer water over structure. Up around the Channel Islands and Central Coast, rockfish limits have been common when weather allows. Anglers are bringing in a mix of **vermillion rockfish**, **bocaccio**, **chilies**, and assorted mixed bag, with some **lingcod** in the mix. Standard two‑hook gangions with squid strips or live anchovy get it done, while heavy metal jigs and large plastics in glow, root beer, and squid patterns work well for those who want to fish artificials and pick off the larger models. A couple of hot spots to consider: 1. **La Jolla Kelp and Point Loma Kelp** – Great for calico bass, sand bass, the odd yellowtail and halibut. Work the edges of the kelp on the incoming tide with swimbaits, weedless plastics, and fly‑lined live bait. Focus on that low‑to‑flood window and early gray for your best shot. 2. **Catalina Island front side and East End** – When the current is right, this zone has been giving up good calico bass, some bonito, and the chance at seabass or yellowtail. Slow‑troll live squid or sardines, or fish them on sliding sinker rigs over hard bottom and along the kelp stringers. If you’re heading out, keep an eye on the afternoon wind and plan to make your run home before it really stands up. Fish the gray light, work the tide turns, and match the hatch with bait‑style lures and natural baits for best results. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

4. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

Wähle dein Abonnement

Am beliebtesten

Begrenztes Angebot

Premium

20 Stunden Hörbücher

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo

  • Keine Werbung in Podimo Podcasts

  • Jederzeit kündbar

2 Monate für 1 €
Dann 4,99 € / Monat

Loslegen

Premium Plus

100 Stunden Hörbücher

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo

  • Keine Werbung in Podimo Podcasts

  • Jederzeit kündbar

30 Tage kostenlos testen
Dann 13,99 € / monat

Kostenlos testen

Nur bei Podimo

Beliebte Hörbücher

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Weitere Fragen und Antworten
Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €. Dann 4,99 € / Monat. Jederzeit kündbar.