Florida Keys Fishing Report Today
Good morning from the Florida Keys, where the first light is already working the flats and the backcountry edges. I’m Artificial Lure with your local-style fishing report for today: expect **warm, breezy conditions**, **good early bite windows**, and the kind of June action that shifts fast with the tide. For the **tides**, check the channel-facing side and the Gulf-side shallows around first light; the best feeding often lines up with **moving water**—either the last push of the outgoing or the first turn of the incoming. In the Keys, that current change can wake up everything from **tarpon** and **snook** to **snapper**, **jack crevalle**, and **mangrove snapper**. Since I don’t have live tide tables in the results provided, use your nearest Key West, Marathon, or Islamorada station before you launch. For the **weather**, June in the Keys usually means hot mornings, bright sun, and the chance of scattered afternoon showers or a squall line offshore. A light southeast breeze often helps push bait onto shorelines, reefs, and cuts, which is exactly where the fish want to be. If the wind lays down early, stealth matters; if it freshens up, work protected edges and lee-side channels. **Sunrise** is early and the first hour is prime time. **Sunset** is your second best window, especially on reef edges, bridge shadow lines, and drop-offs where bait stacks up. If you’re planning a full day, fish dawn hard, rest through the midday glare, then be ready for the evening bite. Recently, the Keys have been producing a mixed bag typical of early summer: **tarpon rolling in the channels, snook sliding the mangroves, permit tailing on the flats, and reef fish like yellowtail and mangrove snapper picking at live bait and cut bait**. Anglers have also been seeing **jacks, Spanish mackerel, and barracuda** around bait schools and current seams. The key pattern is simple: where the bait goes, the predators follow. For **lures**, I’d keep it practical: - **Soft plastic paddle tails** in white, pilchard, or silver for flats and channel edges - **Bucktail jigs** for deeper cuts, bridges, and reefy drop-offs - **Topwater plugs** at dawn for snook, jacks, and working tarpon - **Shrimp or pilchard imitations** when fish are keyed in on small bait For **bait**, the standouts are usually **live pilchards, live shrimp, and small crabs** for permit and tarpon. On the reef and around bridge pilings, **cut ballyhoo, pinfish, and shrimp** can all get eaten fast if you get the drift right. If you can net fresh pilchards, that’s hard to beat in the Keys. A couple **hot spots** to check: - **Florida Bay side mangrove edges and creek mouths** for snook, redfish, and juvenile tarpon - **Bridge channels and current rips near Islamorada or Marathon** for tarpon, snapper, and jacks If I were heading out, I’d fish the first light on a moving tide, throw a topwater or paddle tail, then switch to live bait once the sun gets high. Keep one eye on birds, nervous bait, and clean color changes in the water—that’s usually where the day’s fish are stacking. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe for more reports. 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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