Florida Keys Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Florida Keys fishing report. We’ve got a light summer pattern rolling across the island chain this morning. Around Key Largo through Key West, winds are generally light southeast, 5–10 knots, with seas calm to a light chop on the reef. Air temps are running mid‑70s at daybreak, pushing upper‑80s by afternoon, with that classic humid Keys feel. A mix of sun and scattered clouds, and the usual chance of a brief shower in the afternoon sea breeze. Sunrise hit right around 6:35 a.m., with sunset coming in about 8:15 p.m., so you’ve got a nice wide window, but the best bites are still clustered around low‑light and tide changes. We’re sitting on a typical mid‑June tide: moderate morning incoming, easing into a slack early afternoon, then a stronger outgoing pushing bait off the flats and edges before dark. That outgoing water late in the day has been the money tide for a lot of folks the last few days. Inshore, the backcountry and bridges have been doing the heavy lifting. Anglers working the channels and bridge shadows are reporting good numbers of schoolie **tarpon** with a few fish in the 60–80‑pound class still around. Most were jumped on **live mullet**, **pinfish**, and **big shrimp** drifted under a float, with DOA Bait Busters, 5‑inch paddletails, and black‑and‑purple swimbaits taking fish for the artificials crowd. The flats and mangrove edges from Islamorada to Big Pine have been steady on **bonefish**, **permit**, and **snook**. Bonefish are chewing best on the morning incoming tide: small live shrimp, live crabs, or tan and olive shrimp flies. Permit guys are seeing decent schools on the oceanside flats; live crabs are king, but crab‑pattern jigs and salty crab flies are getting eats if you place it right. Snook and juvenile tarpon in the mangrove creeks are hitting white flukes, gold spoons, and live pilchards. On the reef, the **yellowtail snapper** bite has been strong in 50–80 feet. Recent catches have included solid limits of 12–16‑inch tails, with a few bigger flags mixed in, plus plenty of **mangrove snapper** and some keeper **muttons** for the folks willing to drop bigger baits on the bottom. Chum hard, drift back small pieces of cut ballyhoo or squid on light leader, and keep those baits looking natural. A few **grouper** are still coming over the rail on live pinfish and large baits dropped to the bottom on the deeper edges. Offshore, when the weedlines set up, **mahi‑mahi** fishing has been fair to good. Schoolies in the 5–10‑pound range, with the odd 20‑pound bull. Trolling small feather jigs, skirted ballyhoo, and bright diving plugs around birds and weed patches has been the ticket, and once you find them, chunking cut bait or pitching live baits keeps the school around. Mix in some blackfin tuna around the humps early and late on vertical jigs and pilchards. Best **lures** right now: - 3–5 inch paddletail swimbaits in natural baitfish colors - Gold or copper spoons for snook and reds up the bayside - Shrimp and crab‑pattern jigs for bones and permit - Small trolling feathers and skirted ballyhoo for mahi Best **baits**: live shrimp, pilchards, pinfish, mullet, and small live crabs. A couple of hotspots to circle on your mental chart: - **Seven Mile Bridge area**: tarpon and snapper in the bridge shadows on moving water. - **Islamorada reefs and patches in 40–80 feet**: steady yellowtail and mixed snapper action. If you’re more into skinny water, the **oceanside flats off Marathon and Big Pine** have been giving up quality bonefish and permit on the right tides. That’s the word from the water. 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
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