St Augustine Fishing Report Today

St Augustine Late May Fishing: Reds, Trout, and Flounder on the Incoming Tide

4 min · 21. maj 2026
episode St Augustine Late May Fishing: Reds, Trout, and Flounder on the Incoming Tide cover

Description

Morning, folks—Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report. It’s been a pretty classic late-May setup along the First Coast: warm, muggy air, light coastal breeze, and enough cloud cover at times to keep the heat from getting mean too early. NOAA’s forecast for the St. Augustine area calls for a warm day with scattered showers possible, so keep an eye on the sky and give yourself a little rain gear. For tides, this morning is shaping up around a strong incoming phase, which is money around the inlets, creek mouths, and bridges. Around St. Augustine Inlet and the Matanzas area, that moving water should have bait stacking and predators feeding. If you can fish the first of the incoming or the last of the outgoing, that’s usually the sweet spot. Sunrise is around 6:27 AM, and sunset lands near 8:16 PM, so we’ve got plenty of daylight to work with and a good stretch of evening bite after the sun drops. Fish activity has been solid lately. According to local reports from area guides and bait shops, redfish are showing in good numbers on the flats and around dock lines, with a mix of slot fish and a few solid bulls. Trout have been picking up on grass shorelines and tidal drains, and flounder are starting to show better around ambush points near deeper cuts. Near the inlet and bridge pilings, anglers have also been hooking Spanish mackerel, bluefish, and the occasional ladyfish when the bait gets pushed through. Offshore, when the weather allows, reports have included kingfish, mangrove snapper, and a few cobia cruising structure and buoys. Recent catches have been looking like this: reds in the 18- to 26-inch range, trout mostly 14 to 20 inches, flounder from keeper size on up, and a decent mix of 2- to 5-pound Spanish mackerel on live bait and shiny stuff. A few backwater crews have been reporting double-digit redfish mornings when the tide is moving right. Best bait right now? Live shrimp is still hard to beat, especially under a popping cork for trout and reds. Mud minnows and finger mullet are excellent for flounder and bigger inshore reds. If you’re fishing the inlet or bridge shadow lines, live pilchards, cut mullet, or small menhaden are all strong choices. Best lures: a 3-inch paddletail on a jig head for the grass flats, gold spoons for cruising reds, and topwater plugs early and late if the water’s calm. Around deeper water and current breaks, try a bucktail or a twitch bait. For Spanish and bluefish, a small silver spoon or gotcha-style lure does the trick. Couple of hot spots to check: St. Augustine Inlet for moving-water action and mixed species, and the Matanzas River marsh drains and creek mouths for reds, trout, and flounder. If the wind lays down, the bridge pilings and nearby channel edges can be very productive too. That’s your local rundown—get out there early, fish the moving water, and don’t be afraid to change baits if the bite slows. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure you 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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318 episodes

episode St. Augustine Morning Bite: Tide Changes and Low Light Windows artwork

St. Augustine Morning Bite: Tide Changes and Low Light Windows

Good morning, anglers—**Artificial Lure** here with your St. Augustine fishing report for today. The tide has been running strong around the inlets and the back creeks, so moving water should be the name of the game for the morning bite. For **weather**, expect a classic early-summer Florida setup: warm air, humidity, and a decent chance of passing afternoon showers and storms. If you’re headed out early, that first light window should be your best shot before the heat and boat traffic build. **Sunrise** is right around the early-morning hours, and **sunset** will give you a long fishing day, so plan to fish the tide changes and the low-light periods hard. Around St. Augustine, the bite often tightens up near dawn and again in the last hour before dark. On the **fish activity** side, the local nearshore and inshore waters have been good for **redfish, speckled trout, flounder, black drum, mangrove snapper, and a few ladyfish and jacks** when the bait is moving. In the surf and around the inlet, anglers are also likely to find **whiting, pompano, bluefish, and Spanish mackerel** depending on water clarity and current. The best action usually comes when bait schools push through—glass minnows, mullet, and shrimp are what you want to see. For **best bait**, live shrimp is still hard to beat in these waters. Pinfish, mud minnows, finger mullet, and fresh cut bait are all solid choices too, especially for reds, drum, and flounder. If you’re fishing the surf, sand fleas and shrimp-style baits can be money when the pompano are around. For **lures**, keep it simple and natural: - Soft plastics on light jig heads in white, pearl, or root-beer - Topwater plugs at daybreak for trout and reds - Suspended twitch baits around grass lines and dock lights - Gold spoons or paddletails when the water’s a little stained - Small jigs and swim baits around the inlet for Spanish mackerel and bluefish A couple of **hot spots** to watch today: the **St. Augustine Inlet jetties** for moving water and mixed species, and the **backwaters around Salt Run and the Matanzas River edges** for redfish, trout, and flounder. If the surf lays down, the **beachfront near the piers and troughs** can also light up for pompano and whiting. My local read is this: fish the tide, fish the shade, and don’t overthink it. Get bait in front of current breaks, dock corners, grass edges, and shell bottoms, and you’ve got a real shot at a solid mixed bag. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to **subscribe** for more local fishing updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

17. juni 20262 min
episode St. Augustine Summer Fishing: Reds, Trout, and Inlet Action artwork

St. Augustine Summer Fishing: Reds, Trout, and Inlet Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a light pre‑frontal pattern hanging over the Ancient City this morning. Winds are generally out of the southwest around 5–10 knots nearshore, picking up sea breeze style to 10–15 by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, temps pushing into the upper 80s, and the humidity is classic North Florida—sticky but fishy. The National Weather Service notes only isolated coastal showers, so most of the day looks fishable. Tides around St. Augustine Inlet are running a typical summer two‑tide cycle. Low tide lines up early morning with a solid incoming through mid‑day, then a high mid‑afternoon followed by an evening fall. The best bite window has been that first half of the incoming and the start of the outgoing when the water’s moving but not ripping. Sunrise slid in just after 6 a.m., with sunset a little after 8:30 p.m., giving us a long day to work edges, docks, and creek mouths. Inshore, Matanzas River and the back creeks like Moses Creek and Pellicer have been giving up good numbers of **slot reds** and **trout**. Local anglers report pods of redfish tailing early on the flats, especially where there’s mixed shell and grass. The trout bite has been steady on the first drop off the flats and around current seams. Best baits inshore: live shrimp, mud minnows, and finger mullet under a popping cork or on a light jighead. If you’re throwing artificials, think local: - 3–4 inch paddle tails in new penny, silver mullet, or glow - Gold spoons bumped across the flats for reds - Topwater walkers at first light for trout and the occasional snook Speaking of snook, more linesiders are showing near the inlet rocks and ICW docks. Free‑lined finger mullet and live pilchards have been the ticket, with a few fish in the mid‑20s and some bigger ones lost in the structure. Nearshore off St. Augustine Beach, charter captains have been putting clients on **king mackerel**, **Spanish macks**, and the odd **cobia** around nearshore wrecks and bait pods. Slow‑trolled live pogies and menhaden on stinger rigs are producing kings, while small spoons and dusters are catching plenty of Spanish. Keep a pitch rod ready with a big jig or live bait for cobia cruising the rays or hanging near buoys. In the surf, folks walking the beach at Vilano and down toward Crescent are still seeing decent **whiting** and the occasional **pompano**, plus small sharks. Fresh dead shrimp, Fishbites strips, and sand fleas are your go‑tos here. Cast into the deeper troughs just outside the first bar. Couple of local hot spots to circle on the map: - The **St. Augustine Inlet jetties**: work live shrimp or mullet on the edges for reds, sheepshead, and snook, but mind the current and boat traffic. - The **Matanzas Bridge area**: fish the pilings and nearby drop‑offs on the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing for trout, reds, and mangrove snapper. Overall fish activity is classic early summer—nothing crazy, but consistent action if you move with the tide, keep an eye on the bait, and adjust when the sun gets high. Early and late are your best bets; mid‑day, slide deeper or tuck into the shade of docks and bridges. 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

Yesterday3 min
episode St. Augustine Summer Bite: Reds, Trout, and Long Light Windows artwork

St. Augustine Summer Bite: Reds, Trout, and Long Light Windows

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We woke up to a light southwest breeze this morning along the Ancient City, with temps starting in the low 70s and climbing into the upper 80s by mid‑day, humid and partly cloudy. Local marine forecasts are calling for 5–10 knot winds inshore, 2–3 foot seas just off the beach, and only a slight chop on the ICW as the day gets going. Sunrise hit right around 6:25 a.m., with sunset near 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long stretch of low‑light edges to work. Tides around the St. Augustine Inlet are running a typical summer pattern: morning incoming topping out mid‑morning, then a falling tide pushing water out the inlet early afternoon, with another flood building toward sunset. That first push of incoming water has been the money window in the creeks, while the start of the outgoing around the inlet has fired up the bite along the rocks and sandbars. Inshore, reds and trout have been the main story. Local anglers on the ICW between the 312 bridge and Vilano have been picking off slot reds, a few overs, and a scattering of rat reds along shell points and flooded spartina. Live shrimp and mud minnows under popping corks have produced steady action, with many boats reporting half a dozen to a dozen reds on a good tide. Topwater plugs at first light — think Skitter Walks and Spooks in bone or mullet patterns — have been draw­ing explosive strikes from both reds and gator trout on the grass edges. Speckled trout catches have been solid at dawn along the deeper bends of Salt Run and the Matanzas River. Soft plastic paddle tails on 1/8 to 1/4 ounce jigheads, in natural mullet or new penny colors, have out‑fished most hard baits once the sun gets up. Folks drifting the deeper holes with live shrimp on light Carolina rigs are bringing in a mix of trout, mangrove snapper, and the occasional flounder. Speaking of flounder, the flatfish bite is slowly waking up along the inlet rocks and dock lines. Anglers bouncing finger mullet and mud minnows on jigheads along the bottom are picking off a handful of keeper flounder each trip, mixed with undersized fish — not wide‑open yet, but worth targeting on that slower part of the tide. Around the St. Augustine Inlet, the jetties have been giving up good numbers of mangrove snapper, sheepshead, and drum. Fiddler crabs and small live shrimp tight to the rocks are the ticket. A few nice black drum have come from deeper pockets on blue crab chunks. Just off the beach, the nearshore bite has been centered on king mackerel and tarpon shadowing the bait pods. Slow‑trolled live pogies on stinger rigs are hanging kings, while free‑lined baits around nervous pods have drawn tarpon hookups for those willing to put in the time. Early morning glassy conditions are best before the sea breeze kicks up. Best lures right now: topwater walkers at dawn, 3–4 inch paddle tails on light jigs, gold spoons for covering shoreline, and shrimp‑imitating soft plastics around docks and bridge pilings. For bait, you can’t beat live shrimp, mud minnows, finger mullet, and pogies when you can net them. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your map: – The **Vilano to Usina stretch** of the ICW, working shell bars and creek mouths on the first of the incoming. – **Salt Run and the Conch House basin**, especially at daylight and the start of the fall, for trout, mangroves, and roaming reds. That’s your on‑the‑water scoop from St. Augustine. 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

15. juni 20263 min
episode Summer Tides and Shallow Bites: St. Augustine Inlet Report artwork

Summer Tides and Shallow Bites: St. Augustine Inlet Report

This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’re working a classic summer pattern this morning. Around St. Augustine Inlet you’ve got a pre‑dawn high tide rolling off into a mid‑morning fall, with the low tide late morning and another push coming in mid‑afternoon. That falling water is the money window: it pulls bait off the flats and pins it to creek mouths, oyster bars, and the edges of the ICW. Weather along the coast is warm and muggy, light southwest wind early shifting onshore by midday, with the sea breeze stacking up a little chop on the beach. Skies are partly cloudy. Sunrise is right around 6:25 a.m., sunset just after 8:25 p.m., giving you a long day but the best bite has been early and late. Water inshore is a bit stained from recent storms, with a light coffee tint in the creeks and greener water near the inlet and the beaches. That color has the predators comfortable up shallow. Finger mullet and glass minnows are thick around docks and marsh edges, with small pogies just off the beach when the wind lets you run. Inshore action has been solid. Local anglers around the Vilano and 312 bridges have been boxing good numbers of slot **redfish** and **speckled trout**, with a few upper‑slot fish caught at first light working current seams. There have also been scattered **flounder** off the rock piles and deep bends in the ICW. A few big **black drum** and **mangrove snapper** have come from bridge pilings on live shrimp and fiddler crabs. On the beaches and nearshore, the summer **tarpon** are starting to show around the pogy pods, with a mix of **king mackerel**, **jacks**, and a few **cobia** reported off the reefs and wrecks when the water cleans up. Surf casters working Matanzas Inlet and south toward Crescent Beach have picked up **whiting**, **pompano**, and the odd **bluefish** on shrimp and sand fleas. For lures, think bright and noisy. In the low light, a small topwater like a Skitter Walk or Spook Jr. in bone or mullet pattern worked along grass lines will draw trout and redfish. As the sun comes up, switch to 3–4 inch paddle tails in new penny, dark green, or purple on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads. Gold spoons slow‑rolled along oyster points are still one of the best producers for redfish here. If you’re soaking bait, the top choices are live shrimp, mud minnows, and small finger mullet. Shrimp under a popping cork around creek mouths and points has been deadly on trout and slot reds. For flounder, drag a live mud minnow on a jig or Carolina rig right along the bottom. Nearshore, slow‑trolled pogies or cigar minnows over the wrecks will give you a shot at kings and cobia, and a live pogy pitched to rolling tarpon off the beach is your best big‑fish ticket. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: - The ICW bends and creek mouths between the 312 bridge and the 206 bridge: working the falling tide around oyster points has been putting steady redfish and trout in the boat. - St. Augustine Inlet jetties: fish the inside edges and the tips on the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing for flounder, reds, and occasional sheepshead; bring heavier tackle for the rocks and current. Work the tides, fish early and late, and match your bait to the local mullet and shrimp and you’ll stay bent all day. 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 quietplease dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

14. juni 20263 min
episode St. Augustine Fishing Report: Money Tides and Moving Water - Chase the Reds and Trout Today artwork

St. Augustine Fishing Report: Money Tides and Moving Water - Chase the Reds and Trout Today

This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’re waking up to a classic First Coast morning: light southwest breeze early, building onshore sea breeze this afternoon. Air temps running mid‑70s at daybreak, pushing upper 80s by mid‑day with scattered clouds and the usual chance of a brief coastal shower. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., sunset near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long window to chase a tide. According to the NOAA tide tables for St. Augustine Inlet, we’ve got an early morning high followed by a strong outgoing, then a mid‑afternoon low and a decent evening push of water back in. That falling water this morning and the first couple hours of the flood late day are your money tides. Work those edges where bait is forced off the flats and into the drains. Inshore, the Matanzas River, the ICW north toward Vilano, and the back creeks off Salt Run have been giving up solid slot redfish, scattered upper‑slot specks, and a few keeper flounder. Local shop reports from places like Oldest City Bait & Tackle say shrimp and mud minnows on jig heads or Carolina rigs are putting most of the meat in the cooler. Live mullet schools are thick along the banks, and anywhere you see nervous bait getting pushed, you’ll find reds and trout shadowing them. Artificials are playing well early and late. Walk‑the‑dog topwaters in bone or mullet patterns are drawing blowups from trout and reds on the higher water at first light. Once the sun gets up, switch to 3–4 inch paddle‑tail plastics in new penny, root beer, or opening night on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads. For flounder, bounce a Gulp! swimming mullet or shrimp tight to docks, rock edges, and the mouths of small feeder creeks on the last of the outgoing. Off the beach and nearshore, local captains out of St. Augustine Marina and Camachee report good numbers of king mackerel on the wrecks and live bottom within 10–15 miles, with a few sailfish and cobia mixed in. Slow‑trolled live pogies and threadfins are the go‑to; if you’re running artificials, big diving plugs in blue/white or natural bunker patterns are getting bit. Bottom fishermen are still putting nice triggers, sea bass, and the occasional legal grouper on ice using cut squid, cigar minnows, and sardines on standard two‑hook rigs. Surf fishing along St. Augustine Beach and Vilano has been a mixed bag. There are still some pompano around but more whiting, jacks, and the odd slot red. Fresh peeled shrimp, sand fleas when you can find them, and Fishbites in shrimp or clam flavor have been the best producers on double‑drop rigs with 2–3 oz pyramid sinkers. Two hotspots to circle today: - The docks and oyster bars just north of the 312 bridge on the ICW during the last half of the outgoing and first of the incoming for reds, trout, and flounder. - The area just outside St. Augustine Inlet along the pogy pods for kings and cobia; look for diving birds and surface busts and get a live bait or big spoon in there quick. Overall fish activity has been good around the moving water windows. Mid‑day slack with bright sun is slow, so either go deep, fish shade around structure, or take a break and hit it again on the evening tide. 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

13. juni 20263 min