Florida Keys Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Keys fishing report. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions across the Florida Keys this morning. Light southeast breeze around 5–10 knots, building to 10–15 by midday, with a typical muggy feel and only a slight chance of a passing shower. Skies are partly cloudy, seas inside the reef 1–2 feet, 2–3 outside. Sunrise came in right around 6:30 a.m. local, with sunset close to 8:15 p.m., giving you a long window to work the tides. Tides today are running a mid-morning high on the Atlantic side with a good falling tide through early afternoon, then a weaker evening push. That falling water is your money tide on the flats and around the bridges. You’ll see bait flushing off the oceanside flats and through the channels, and that’s when things should light up. Inshore, bonefish and permit have been happy on the oceanside flats from Ocean Reef down to Big Pine. Anglers have been bringing a handful of bones to hand per tide cycle, with a mix of shots at tailing permit. Best offerings: live shrimp on a small jighead, small blue crab, or soft plastic shrimp in a natural tan or clear pattern. Fly folks are doing well with tan and olive mantis shrimp and small crab patterns on long leaders. The bridges and channels are holding plenty of mangrove snapper and jack crevalle, with a few legal grouper still chewing early and late. Expect a dozen or more keeper mangroves if you set up right with good current. Use live pilchards, small pinfish, or chunks of ballyhoo. For artificials, 3–4 inch paddle-tail swimbaits on 1/4-ounce jigheads in pearl or greenback patterns are getting smoked. Offshore, dolphin are still the main draw. Boats working weedlines in 400–800 feet have been picking off schoolie mahi with some gaffers mixed in, a half-dozen to a dozen fish on a decent trip. Trolling small lures, feathers, and rigged ballyhoo in blue-and-white or green-yellow has been the ticket. Keep a spinning rod rigged with a chunk or live bait to pitch at followers. Blackfin tuna are hanging on the humps; vertical jigs and live pilchards are your best bet early and late. Tarpon action around the Keys bridges has been solid around the evening and predawn tides. A few fish are being jumped each tide on live mullet, crabs, and big soft plastics. Fish the shadow lines and edges of the current. Use heavy leader and be ready to bow when they jump. For hot spots, put these on your list: - Bahia Honda Bridge: prime for tarpon on the tide swings and steady mangrove snapper along the pilings with live shrimp and small pilchards. - Seven Mile Bridge and surrounding channels: hard-running current, mixed bag of snapper, grouper, jacks, and the occasional cobia; work live baits on the bottom and jig the edges. In the backcountry, out of Islamorada and Marathon, the bayside banks are holding seatrout, ladyfish, and a few snook along the mangroves. Popping corks with shrimp or Gulp-style baits in new-penny or white are filling coolers with trout and mangroves. Overall fish activity is best early and late around that stronger moving water. Midday is still fishable, but scale down leaders, go natural with your colors, and fish deeper edges, channels, and shady structure. That’s your Keys 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
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