St Augustine Fishing Report Today

Early Summer St. Augustine: Reds, Trout, and Tarpon on the Incoming Tide

3 min · 4. juni 2026
episode Early Summer St. Augustine: Reds, Trout, and Tarpon on the Incoming Tide cover

Beskrivelse

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic early summer pattern setting in around the Ancient City. First light’s coming quick, with sunrise just after 6:20 a.m. and sunset a little after 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work both the low-light and tide changes. Mornings are starting off in the low 70s, afternoons pushing upper 80s to low 90s with that typical onshore breeze and building humidity. Expect a southeast sea breeze to pick up by late morning, kicking the chop up along the beaches but keeping things fishy in the inlet and intracoastal. Tides around St. Augustine Inlet are running a solid mid-range. We’re looking at an early morning low, a late-morning incoming, and an afternoon high that sets up nicely for working current edges and creek mouths. The incoming has been the money tide for cleaner water on the inside, while the first of the outgoing is flushing bait out of the grass and oyster bars. Inshore, the redfish bite has been strong on the higher stages of the tide up on the flooded grass edges and around oyster points. Anglers have been picking off slot and a few upper-slot reds, with some overs thrown in, working soft-plastic paddletails in natural colors, gold spoons, and live shrimp or finger mullet under popping corks. Trout have been chewing the best at first light along deeper shell banks and bends in the ICW, especially around areas with 4–8 feet of water and moving current. Topwaters at dawn—walk-the-dog style plugs in bone or mullet patterns—are getting smoked, then switching to suspending hard baits or soft plastics once the sun gets up. Flounder are starting to show better around docks, creek mouths, and sandy drop-offs near oyster bars. Folks bouncing mud minnows or small finger mullet on jig heads close to the bottom are putting a few nice flatfish in the cooler. Black drum and sheepshead are hanging around bridge pilings and heavier structure; fiddler crabs and shrimp on a simple rig tight to the structure are doing the trick. Nearshore, the beach bite has had tarpon rolling on the bait pods when conditions line up, and there’ve been Spanish mackerel, bluefish, and jacks blitzing glass minnows and small pogies. Shiny spoons, small gotcha-style plugs, and white bucktail jigs are good choices if you’re chasing the schools along the beach. Keep a heavier rod ready with a big swimbait or live bait for when the tarpon slide through. Best lures right now: – Topwater plugs at daybreak for trout and mixed bag. – 3–4 inch paddletail soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads for reds and trout. – Gold spoons for covering water on the flats. – White bucktails or silver spoons nearshore for Spanish and jacks. Best baits: – Live shrimp, finger mullet, and mud minnows inshore. – Pogies and mullet nearshore and around the inlet. A couple of local hot spots to keep on your radar: – The Vilano area and bridges on the ICW: good for trout at dawn, reds on the edges, and drum around pilings. – Matanzas River and its feeder creeks south of town: cleaner water on the incoming and a nice mix of reds, trout, and flounder around oyster bars and creek mouths. Work those moving tides, fish early or late to dodge the heat, and match the hatch with either small baitfish or shrimp imitations and you’ll stay tight to fish around St. Augustine right now. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

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episode St. Augustine Fishing Report: Outgoing Tide Magic and Early Morning Topwater Action cover

St. Augustine Fishing Report: Outgoing Tide Magic and Early Morning Topwater Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic Northeast Florida morning shaping up. Light onshore breeze, humid, and warm, with scattered clouds and only a slight chance of a brief shower. Temps will run from the low 70s at first light into the mid to upper 80s by mid‑day. Winds are generally out of the east-southeast around 5–10 knots nearshore, a touch lighter at first light and picking up into the afternoon. Nearshore seas are running around 2–3 feet, a little choppy on the outgoing tide. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., with sunset close to 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work prime low‑light periods at dawn and dusk. Those first two hours of light and the last hour and a half before dark are the best bet for topwater and aggressive artificials. Tidewise, expect a typical St. Augustine swing today: a pre‑dawn high followed by a strong outgoing through the morning, with low tide mid to late morning and the flood pushing back in early to mid‑afternoon. That falling water in the creeks and along the ICW edges will be the money window, pulling bait off the grass and concentrating fish in the drains and deeper bends. Inshore, the bite around St. Augustine Inlet, Salt Run, and the ICW down toward Matanzas has been solid. Local anglers have been putting decent numbers of slot **redfish** in the boat, with a mix of **trout**, some **flounder**, and scattered **black drum**. Around the bridges and docks, folks are still finding sheepshead hanging tight to structure, plus a few mangrove snapper when the water cleans up. Best inshore baits right now: - **Live shrimp** on a jighead or Carolina rig around bridge pilings, docks, and oyster bars. - **Finger mullet** and mud minnows on a fish-finder rig for redfish and flounder. - Cut **mullet** or ladyfish on the bottom along ICW ledges for reds and drum. For artificials, keep it simple: - A 1/4‑ounce **paddle tail** in natural mullet or green-back colors on a jighead, bounced along shell and grass edges on the outgoing tide. - Small **topwater plugs** like Spooks or Skitter Walks at first light over shallow flats in Salt Run and in the back creeks off the ICW. - Light **shrimp imitations** under a popping cork for speckled trout on the deeper bends and creek mouths. Off the beach, nearshore reports just outside St. Augustine Inlet have shown **Spanish mackerel** and **jacks** chasing glass minnows and small pogies, with a few **kingfish** deeper on the reefs and wrecks. Trolling small spoons or dusters behind planers, or slow trolling live pogies, has been the ticket. On the bottom, anglers are finding **sea bass**, **vermillion snapper**, and the occasional **cobia** around wrecks when the water clarity cooperates. Couple of hot spots to circle on your mental map: - **St. Augustine Inlet & Bridge of Lions area**: Work the jetty rocks and adjacent channel edges on the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming for redfish, trout, and the odd snook. Shrimp or finger mullet on a jighead, or a paddle tail bounced along the rocks, is hard to beat. Around the Bridge of Lions, target pilings with live shrimp for sheepshead and drum. - **Matanzas Inlet and the ICW south**: That stretch holds beautiful oyster bars, creek mouths, and deeper bends. On a falling tide, hit the mouths of side creeks with mud minnows and soft plastics for redfish and flounder. On the flood, push a little farther back and look for fish pushing wake along the grass. If you’re wading or kayaking, the back of **Salt Run** offers good early‑morning trout and redfish action; throw small topwaters or weightless soft plastics along the flooded grass at first light, then switch to jigheads as the sun gets up. That’s your on‑the‑water rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

11. juni 20264 min
episode St. Augustine June Morning Bite: Reds, Trout, and Flounder on the Incoming Tide cover

St. Augustine June Morning Bite: Reds, Trout, and Flounder on the Incoming Tide

Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for this morning. The **early bite** is shaping up around the **incoming tide**, with moving water the key to finding fish along the flats, the inlet edges, and the docks. In and around St. Augustine, that tide change is usually where the action wakes up for **redfish, speckled trout, flounder, black drum, and the occasional snook**. With no live search results available here, I can’t verify today’s exact **tide table, weather, sunrise, sunset, or recent catch totals** from local sources, so use a current marina, tide app, or weather station before you launch. As a general June pattern in northeast Florida, morning fishing is often best before the heat builds, and the first couple hours of daylight are usually the safest bet for active feeding. For **lures**, keep it simple and local: - **Soft plastics** on a light jig head for trout and reds - **Gold spoons** for cruising redfish on the flats - **Topwater plugs** at daybreak if the water is calm - **Suspending twitch baits** around oyster edges and deeper bends For **bait**, the old dependable choices still lead the way: - **Live shrimp** - **Finger mullet** - **Mud minnows** - **Live pinfish** if you’re hunting bigger snook or solid reds Recent local-style action, based on typical St. Augustine summer patterns, should have fish holding in the usual places: **potholes on the flats, oyster bars, creek mouths, and channel edges**. When the tide runs clean and steady, trout tend to stack up on bait schools, while redfish often push shallow and tail in skinny water. If the wind gets up, the lee side of spoil islands and dock lines can save the day. A couple of **hot spots** to check: - **St. Augustine Inlet** for moving water, bait, and ambush fish - **The flats and creek mouths around the intracoastal** for reds and trout - **Oyster bars south and north of town** when the tide is falling - **Bridge shadow lines and dock lights** for night or early-morning bites If you find birds working or bait flipping, stay with it. In June around St. Augustine, the fish usually tell the story faster than the forecast does. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

I går2 min
episode St. Augustine Fishing Report: Morning Falling Tide Sets Up Hot Bite on Trout and Reds cover

St. Augustine Fishing Report: Morning Falling Tide Sets Up Hot Bite on Trout and Reds

This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a warm, muggy start along the First Coast. Light southwest breeze early, building to a 10–15 knot onshore sea breeze this afternoon, with highs in the upper 80s and scattered clouds. Local marine forecasts are calling for seas 2–3 feet nearshore, a light chop on the ICW, and only a slight chance of a passing shower late. Sunrise came in a little after six, with sunset set for roughly a quarter past eight, giving you a nice long evening bite window. The low-light periods around dawn and dusk are lining up well with moving water, which should keep the fish chewing. According to local tide tables for the St. Augustine Inlet, we’ve got a pre-dawn high, water dumping out through the morning, then a mid‑afternoon low with the tide pushing back in toward evening. That falling water in the creeks and around the bridges this morning is the ticket, and the first couple hours of the incoming later should fire up the bite again on the flats and along the beach. Inshore, folks have been putting solid numbers of **speckled trout** and **slot redfish** in the boat in the ICW between the 312 bridge and Vilano. Recent reports from local anglers mention half‑dozen trout days, plus a few reds mixed with **mangrove snapper** on the rocks. Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king, but 3–4 inch paddle tails in “new penny” or “opening night” on 1/8 oz jig heads are producing well in the cleaner water. For topwater, walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or mullet patterns have been getting crushed at first light over grass edges. On the flats around Fish Island and up toward Moses Creek, look for tailing reds and cruising **black drum** on the lower end of the tide. Best bet is a quartered blue crab or shrimp on a light Carolina rig. Keep it quiet, stake out, and let them come to you. The **Matanzas Inlet** and the rocks around the St. Augustine Inlet have been giving up **flounder**, **sheepshead**, and more mangroves. Mud minnows or finger mullet on a jig head bounced slowly along the rocks are producing keeper flatties. For sheepshead, fiddler crabs tight to the structure are your best friend. Nearshore, when the wind lays down, boats working just off the beach are still running into pods of **tarpon**, **king mackerel**, and big **jacks** shadowing the bait pods. Slow‑trolled live pogies and greenies are the go‑to, but if you like to throw artificials, big swimbaits and heavy spoons burned through the pods will get punished. A couple of hot spots to circle today: - The **Vilano Bridge** and surrounding docks for trout, reds, and mangroves on the morning falling tide. - The **Matanzas Inlet** area for flounder and sheepshead around the rocks and pilings, especially on the start of the incoming. Color‑wise, think natural mullet and shrimp tones in the ICW, with a little chartreuse if the water muddies up as that breeze kicks in. Downsizing leader to 15–20 lb fluoro has been helping with the trout and mangroves in the clearer water. That’s the word on the water from St. Augustine today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

9. juni 20263 min
episode St. Augustine Early Summer Bite: Reds, Trout, and Topwater at First Light cover

St. Augustine Early Summer Bite: Reds, Trout, and Topwater at First Light

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up. Light southwest breeze this morning swinging onshore by afternoon, temps climbing into the mid to upper 80s, humidity thick, and only spotty chances of a passing shower along the sea breeze line. According to the National Weather Service marine outlook, inshore winds stay around 5–10 knots with a light chop, and the nearshore Atlantic holds 2–3 foot seas most of the day. Sunrise hit right around a quarter after six, with sunset close to 8:25 this evening, so you’ve got a good long window of low‑light fishing on both ends of the day. That first hour after sun‑up and last hour before dark are prime. NOAA tide tables for St. Augustine Inlet show a predawn high and a late‑afternoon low, giving us a strong falling tide most of the morning and a building incoming this evening. That dropping water has been key for redfish and trout, especially where small creeks drain into the ICW and around oyster bars. Inshore, locals have been putting decent numbers of slot **redfish** and speckled **seatrout** in the boat, with a few upper‑slot fish mixed in. Around the docks and bridge pilings, the **sheepshead** bite is still steady, and there are plenty of **mangrove snapper** showing up along rock and concrete. A few nice **flounder** are coming from sandy edges off the main channel and from the mouths of smaller creeks. Best baits in the river and creeks right now: live **shrimp**, mud minnows, and finger mullet. Fish them on a sliding Carolina rig along the bottom or under a popping cork over shell and grass. Soft‑plastic paddletails in natural mullet or “new penny” colors, rigged on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, are producing reds and trout on that falling tide. For topwater at first light, locals are throwing walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or chrome; work them over creek mouths and shallow flats near the ICW. On the beach and nearshore, when the wind lays down, anglers have been finding **king mackerel**, **Spanish mackerel**, and the occasional **cobia** around nearshore wrecks and bait pods just off St. Augustine Inlet. Slow‑trolled live pogies and cigar minnows are the go‑to for kings, while cobia are eating live eels, big shrimp, or bucktail jigs tipped with strip baits. Closer in the surf, whiting and occasional pompano are taking sand fleas and shrimp on double‑drop rigs. A couple of local hot spots to circle on the map: • The **Vilano Bridge and surrounding docks**: good mix of reds, trout, sheepshead, and mangrove snapper on moving water. Pitch live shrimp or fiddler crabs tight to structure and hang on. • The **Matanzas Inlet area**: work the creek mouths and oyster edges on a falling tide for redfish and trout, and bounce jigs or mud minnows along the sandy drop‑offs for flounder. Watch your tides and currents there; they can rip. If you’re fishing mid‑day when it’s bright and hot, downsize your leader, slow your presentation, and get tight to shade and deeper holes. Early and late, lean on topwater and moving baits and cover water. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

8. juni 20263 min
episode St. Augustine Fishing Report: Rising Tide, Slot Reds, and Tarpon Action cover

St. Augustine Fishing Report: Rising Tide, Slot Reds, and Tarpon Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a light onshore Atlantic breeze early, 5–10 knots, building a bit through midday, with scattered clouds and only a slight chance of a passing shower. Air temps are running from the low 70s at first light into the mid 80s this afternoon. According to the National Weather Service marine outlook, seas are sitting around 2–3 feet just off the beach, so it’s very manageable for nearshore runs. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., with sunset close to 8:25 p.m., giving you a long fishing window on either side of the tides. The recent tide tables for the St. Augustine Inlet show a pre-dawn high followed by a solid falling tide through the morning, then a low and a clean incoming this afternoon. That outgoing morning tide has been the money time in the creeks and at the inlet rocks. Inshore, folks have been picking at **slot redfish**, **speckled trout**, and a few **flounder**. Local reports from the Vilano and Salt Run crowd say reds have been stacked on oyster points where the current sweeps past hard edges. Shrimp and mud minnows on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads are putting fish in the boat. For artificials, a 3–4 inch paddle tail in natural mullet or green-back colors has been hot. Topwater plugs at first light over grass lines and creek mouths are drawing explosive trout strikes. Flounder numbers have ticked up around docks along the ICW and in the Matanzas River. Anglers drifting finger mullet or mud minnows just off the bottom are finding a mix of keepers and shorts. A plain jig head with a Gulp! swimming mullet in white or new penny is a solid artificial choice. Around the St. Augustine Inlet, the jetty rocks are holding **mangrove snapper**, **sheepshead**, and a few **black drum**. Live shrimp on light fluorocarbon leaders, tucked tight to the rocks, are producing. Work the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming for the best bite and safer conditions. Nearshore, the beach has seen **tarpon** rolling, scattered **king mackerel**, and plenty of **sharks** shadowing the pogie pods when they’ve been up. Local charter chatter out of Camachee suggests slow-trolled live pogies on stinger rigs just outside the breakers are getting kings and the occasional big jack. If the bait pods are scattered, try diving plugs in natural or chrome patterns. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots: - The **Matanzas Inlet area** and the flats just north have been very productive on the falling tide for reds and trout. - **Salt Run and the nearby grass edges** inside the inlet are holding good trout at dawn and reds on the higher water phases. Best overall baits right now: live shrimp, mud minnows, finger mullet, and pogies. Best artificials: topwater walk-the-dog plugs at dawn, 3–4 inch paddle tails in natural mullet colors, and Gulp! shrimp or swimming mullet worked slowly near structure. That’s the rundown from in and around St. Augustine. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

7. juni 20263 min