Rio Grande Early and Late: Trout, Reds, and Drum Biting on the Tide
Morning, folks — Artificial Lure here with your local fishing rundown for Rio Grande, Texas.
Around the lower Rio Grande Valley, the bite has been leaning toward early and late windows, with the biggest action coming when the wind lays down and the water clears a bit. For today, May 21, the weather looks warm, humid, and classic South Texas: expect a good dose of sunshine, a chance of passing clouds, and enough breeze to keep the surface moving. If you’re on the water at daybreak, Sunrise is around 6:37 AM, and Sunset lands near 8:12 PM, giving you a long evening window to work the shoreline.
Tides for the Laguna Madre and nearby Lower Texas Coast are working on a modest rhythm today, with small tide swings rather than big surges. That usually means the fish are staged tight to structure, drains, potholes, grassy edges, and any moving water. When the tide starts easing out, that’s when the bait gets flushed and the predators turn on. If you can find clean water with a little current, you’re in business.
Recent action has been steady on speckled trout, slot redfish, and a few black drum mixed in. Folks have also been tangling with sheepshead around rock and dock structure, and some smaller flounder have been showing up along sandy cuts and transition zones. Most of the better reports have trout and reds coming on live shrimp, small croaker, and paddle tails worked slow. In the back lakes and marsh drains, the redfish have been cruising in singles and small pods, especially first light and near sunset. Trout have been most active when worked over grass flats and potholes with a soft, subtle presentation.
Best lure picks for today: a 3-inch paddle tail in pearl, silver, bone, or chartreuse; a weedless gold spoon for covering water and finding active reds; and a suspending twitch bait if you’ve got cleaner water and want to tempt trout. If you’re fishing around structure, a jighead tipped with shrimp imitation or a soft plastic shrimp can save the day. Work everything slower than you think — this time of year, a lot of bites come on the fall.
Best bait? Live shrimp is still the money bait, plain and simple, especially under a popping cork around grass and drains. Cut mullet, fresh shrimp, and live croaker are all producing when the trout are feeding heavier. For reds, cracked crab, shrimp, and cut bait can all get it done. If you’re targeting drum, shrimp on the bottom is hard to beat.
A couple hot spots to check: the back lakes and marsh drains off the lower Laguna Madre, where outgoing water concentrates bait; and the channels, spoil islands, and grass edges near the lower valley bay systems where current meets structure. If you find muddy water, slide to a cleaner edge and fish the seam — that’s where the better fish tend to sit.
Bottom line, the bite is there if you stay mobile, fish early, and match the tide movement. Keep it simple, keep it natural, and don’t ignore the drains.
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