Florida Keys Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Keys fishing report. We’ve got a light early breeze and classic summer muggy air across the Florida Keys this morning, with southeast winds around 5–10 knots building to 10–15 later, and only a slight chop on the reef and the bayside. Skies are partly cloudy with a decent chance of a midday shower or two, then clearing toward the evening. Water temps are running warm in the mid‑80s, so think early and late for your best bite. Sunrise comes just after 6:30 a.m. local, with sunset a bit after 8:15 p.m., giving us a long daylight window. High tide is mid‑morning on the Atlantic side with a solid falling tide through early afternoon, then a weaker high again around dark on the Gulf side. That mid‑morning peak and the first part of the outgoing have been the sweet spot on the flats and the bridges. Offshore, dolphin/mahi action has been steady in 400–900 feet, especially south of Islamorada and Marathon. Boats working weedlines and scattered birds have been putting 10–20 schoolies in the box, with a few gaffers mixed in. Small skirted lures in pink/white, blue/white, and naked ballyhoo have been the ticket. Keep a pitch rod ready with a chunk of bonito or a live pilchard for the bigger fish that slide in behind the schoolies. On the reef edge in 60–90 feet from Tennessee Reef down toward Alligator, yellowtail snapper have been chewing good on the evening bite. A mix of limits and near‑limits coming in, with some 2–3 pound flags. Best setup is a steady chum slick, 12–20‑pound fluorocarbon, and small J hooks with pieces of squid or cut ballyhoo. If they’re finicky, drop to lighter leader and smaller hooks and let the bait drift naturally. Inshore around the bridges—Seven Mile, Channel 5, and Long Key—tarpon are still around at first light and into the evening, though the bite’s more tide‑dependent now. Crabs and big live mullet or pinfish are outfishing dead baits. Expect a few hookups if you fish the shadow lines on the start of the outgoing. Plenty of mangrove snapper mixed in, plus a few keeper groupers for those soaking live baits tight to the pilings. On the flats, early‑morning bonefish and permit are active on the oceanside from Key Largo down through Big Pine. Look for clean moving water on the last of the incoming. Bonefish are taking shrimp on light jigs and small, tan shrimp patterns; permit are all about a well‑placed live crab or a crab‑style jig. Redfish and snook are better up the backcountry near Flamingo and the Gulf side banks, with soft plastics in gold or new penny and live shrimp doing work along the mangrove edges. Best lures right now: - Small bucktail jigs tipped with shrimp for bridge snapper and mixed reef fish. - Paddle‑tail soft plastics on 1/8–1/4‑ounce jigheads for snook, reds, and trout. - Skirted trolling lures and rigged ballyhoo offshore for dolphin, with a few wahoo on deeper divers early. Best natural baits: - Live pilchards, mullet, and pinfish for tarpon, snook, grouper. - Live shrimp for just about everything inshore. - Ballyhoo strips and squid for reef snapper and mixed bottom fish. Couple of hotspots to keep on your list today: - The **Seven Mile Bridge** edges and fender lines for tarpon at dawn and dusk, plus mangrove snapper and grouper in the daytime. - **Alligator Reef** out of Islamorada for a mix of yellowtail, mutton snapper, and the occasional sail or mahi just outside the drop. That’s your on‑the‑water scoop 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
340 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Florida Keys Fishing Report Today!