Florida Keys, Miami Fishing Report Today

Summer Slick: Early and Late Bites Dominate South Florida Keys and Miami

3 min · 22 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Summer Slick: Early and Late Bites Dominate South Florida Keys and Miami

Descripción

This is Artificial Lure with your South Florida fishing report for the upper and middle Keys and the Miami area. We’ve got classic summer conditions this morning. Light southeast breeze, generally 5 to 10 knots, building to 10 to 15 in the afternoon with a light chop outside the reef and slicked-out water in the backcountry. Air temps are running upper 70s at first light, climbing to near 90 by midafternoon, with high humidity and a decent chance of a passing shower or thunderstorm late day. Sunrise was right around a quarter after 6, with sunset just after 8. The bite has been best at that early low-light window and again the last hour of daylight. Tides around the Keys and Miami are on a typical summer cycle: a morning incoming pushing toward midday, then an afternoon fall. That incoming has been key on the flats and bridges, while the first push of outgoing is firing up the inlets and channels. Inshore and backcountry, anglers poling the flats from Biscayne Bay down through Islamorada have been seeing good numbers of bonefish and permit on the higher stages of the tide. Live shrimp or small blue crabs on light fluorocarbon leaders have been the ticket, while artificial guys are doing well with 1/8‑oz skimmer jigs and small shrimp imitations in natural hues. Snook and redfish have been chewing around mangrove edges and creek mouths on the falling water; paddle-tail swimbaits in new penny and gold, plus live pilchards and pinfish, are producing solid numbers. Around the bridges and channels, night and early-morning have been strong. Plenty of schoolie mangrove snapper with some keepers mixed in on cut ballyhoo, squid, and shrimp, plus 1/4‑oz yellow jigheads. Tarpon are still around Seven Mile, Channel 2 and 5, and the Miami inlets, especially on that outgoing tide after dark. Live mullet, crabs, and big swimbaits or soft-plastic eels have been getting eats; most fish are in the 60–100‑pound class with a few bigger silver kings still cruising. Offshore, boats running out from Key Largo, Islamorada, and Miami are finding decent mahi action in 400–800 feet, with scattered weedlines and debris holding schoolies and some gaffers. Trolling small skirted ballyhoo, chuggers, and dolphin-colored feathers has been productive, and once you find a school, switching to chunked ballyhoo or live pilchards keeps them behind the boat. A few blackfin tuna are hanging around the outer edge of the reef and humps; vertical jigs and live baits fished deep are working. On the reef line itself, yellowtail snapper fishing has been steady in 60–90 feet with chum, cut baits, and small jigs. For hot spots, check out: • The Channels around Islamorada – Channel 2 and 5 bridges for tarpon, snapper, and the occasional grouper on the tide changes. • Biscayne Bay flats from Stiltsville down toward Elliott Key – solid shots at bonefish, permit, and cruising sharks on the higher water. Best overall bets today: fish early and late, key on moving water, and match small, natural baits. Keep an eye on the sky this afternoon for building storms and be ready to run in if it pops. 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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episode Summer Slick: Early and Late Bites Dominate South Florida Keys and Miami artwork

Summer Slick: Early and Late Bites Dominate South Florida Keys and Miami

This is Artificial Lure with your South Florida fishing report for the upper and middle Keys and the Miami area. We’ve got classic summer conditions this morning. Light southeast breeze, generally 5 to 10 knots, building to 10 to 15 in the afternoon with a light chop outside the reef and slicked-out water in the backcountry. Air temps are running upper 70s at first light, climbing to near 90 by midafternoon, with high humidity and a decent chance of a passing shower or thunderstorm late day. Sunrise was right around a quarter after 6, with sunset just after 8. The bite has been best at that early low-light window and again the last hour of daylight. Tides around the Keys and Miami are on a typical summer cycle: a morning incoming pushing toward midday, then an afternoon fall. That incoming has been key on the flats and bridges, while the first push of outgoing is firing up the inlets and channels. Inshore and backcountry, anglers poling the flats from Biscayne Bay down through Islamorada have been seeing good numbers of bonefish and permit on the higher stages of the tide. Live shrimp or small blue crabs on light fluorocarbon leaders have been the ticket, while artificial guys are doing well with 1/8‑oz skimmer jigs and small shrimp imitations in natural hues. Snook and redfish have been chewing around mangrove edges and creek mouths on the falling water; paddle-tail swimbaits in new penny and gold, plus live pilchards and pinfish, are producing solid numbers. Around the bridges and channels, night and early-morning have been strong. Plenty of schoolie mangrove snapper with some keepers mixed in on cut ballyhoo, squid, and shrimp, plus 1/4‑oz yellow jigheads. Tarpon are still around Seven Mile, Channel 2 and 5, and the Miami inlets, especially on that outgoing tide after dark. Live mullet, crabs, and big swimbaits or soft-plastic eels have been getting eats; most fish are in the 60–100‑pound class with a few bigger silver kings still cruising. Offshore, boats running out from Key Largo, Islamorada, and Miami are finding decent mahi action in 400–800 feet, with scattered weedlines and debris holding schoolies and some gaffers. Trolling small skirted ballyhoo, chuggers, and dolphin-colored feathers has been productive, and once you find a school, switching to chunked ballyhoo or live pilchards keeps them behind the boat. A few blackfin tuna are hanging around the outer edge of the reef and humps; vertical jigs and live baits fished deep are working. On the reef line itself, yellowtail snapper fishing has been steady in 60–90 feet with chum, cut baits, and small jigs. For hot spots, check out: • The Channels around Islamorada – Channel 2 and 5 bridges for tarpon, snapper, and the occasional grouper on the tide changes. • Biscayne Bay flats from Stiltsville down toward Elliott Key – solid shots at bonefish, permit, and cruising sharks on the higher water. Best overall bets today: fish early and late, key on moving water, and match small, natural baits. Keep an eye on the sky this afternoon for building storms and be ready to run in if it pops. 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

22 de jun de 20263 min
episode Keys to Miami Summer Bite: Snapper, Tarpon, and Offshore Action in the Heat artwork

Keys to Miami Summer Bite: Snapper, Tarpon, and Offshore Action in the Heat

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Keys-to-Miami fishing report. We’ve got classic summer conditions lining up. Offshore and nearshore winds are light out of the southeast this morning, building into a modest sea breeze by afternoon, with scattered clouds and the usual shot at a passing shower or thunderstorm later in the day. Air temps run mid‑70s early, pushing high‑80s to near 90 with that heavy South Florida humidity. Seas are generally calm to a light chop inside the reef, a little bumpier once you’re out past the edge. Sunrise over the Atlantic comes just after 6 a.m., with sunset a bit after 8 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those low‑light bites. The early morning incoming and the late‑afternoon falling tides have been the most productive, especially around bridges, inlets, and the ocean side of the flats. Down in the Upper Keys – Key Largo through Islamorada – the reef and wreck bite has been lively. Snapper fishing has been strong: plenty of keeper yellowtail on the edge in 60–90 feet, with some bigger mangroves and the odd mutton mixed in on the deeper structure. A simple chum slick and light fluorocarbon leaders are putting fish in the box. Best baits have been **cut ballyhoo**, **silversides**, and **small chunks of sardine or squid**. For artificials, downsized **1/8–1/4 oz jigheads** tipped with Gulp! or soft plastics in natural colors are getting chewed. Dolphin (mahi) action offshore from the Upper Keys and off Miami has been fair but improving. Anglers working weedlines and scattered birds in 600–1000 feet have found schoolies with a few gaffers. Trolling **small skirted ballyhoo**, **chugger heads**, and **dolphin‑colored feathers** at 6–7 knots is getting the first fish, then pitching **cut bait** or **small live pilchards** keeps the school around the boat. Keep a pitch rod rigged with a **bucktail jig** or **5–6 inch soft plastic** for those fish that just cruise by. Closer to Miami, the nearshore reef line in 80–150 feet has produced steady **kingfish**, some **blackfin tuna**, and a few **sailfish** for boats slow‑trolling live baits. If you can find **live pilchards, threadfin herring, or goggle‑eyes**, slow‑troll them on light wire stinger rigs for kings, or on straight mono/fluoro for tuna and sails. Be ready for a shot at a cobia around the wrecks as well. Inshore and around the bridges, the **tarpon** bite remains solid in the low light. At Haulover, Government Cut, and the Channels around Islamorada, drifting **live crabs** or **large shrimp** on circle hooks during the moving tide has been the ticket. For artificials, big **swimbaits**, **paddle tails**, and **suspending twitchbaits** in bone, silver, and mullet patterns are drawing eats when the fish are rolling but picky. On the flats and backcountry, summer **bonefish** and **permit** are on the move. Look for tailers on the early rising tide over hard sand and turtle grass. For bones, small **live shrimp**, **crabs**, and **pink or tan shrimp‑pattern flies** are working. Permit are favoring **small live crabs** and crab‑imitation jigs or flies in olive and tan. A couple of hotspots to circle on your mental chart: - **Islamorada Humps and nearby wrecks** for blackfin, mahi passing through, and strong snapper action beneath them. - The **outer reef line off Key Biscayne and Fowey Rocks** for kings, sails, and tunas when you’ve got clean blue water pushing in. Overall fish activity is classic summer Keys/Miami: best at dawn and dusk, with mid‑day slowing unless you’re offshore chasing pelagics or dropping on deeper structure. Scale down leaders in the clear water, keep baits lively, and don’t be afraid to switch from bait to artificials when the current slows. 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

21 de jun de 20264 min
episode Early Summer Bite: Tarpon at Dawn, Dolphin on the Edge - Florida Keys and Miami Report artwork

Early Summer Bite: Tarpon at Dawn, Dolphin on the Edge - Florida Keys and Miami Report

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Florida Keys and Miami fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up. Down through the Upper Keys and off Miami, the morning started warm and sticky with light southeast breeze, building to a steady 10–15 knots by mid‑day. Skies are partly cloudy with the usual chance of a passing shower offshore. Air temps are running mid‑70s at first light, pushing upper‑80s by afternoon. Seas outside the reef are a light chop, 1–3 feet, a little tighter where the Gulf Stream pushes in close off Miami. Tides around the Upper Keys and Biscayne Bay are on the smaller side, but the key windows are still that pre‑sunrise incoming and the afternoon outgoing around the channels and bridges. Sunrise came early with a soft glow over the Atlantic, and sunset will give you one more prime change of light; plan to be set up and fishing at least 30 minutes on either side of those. Offshore, the bluewater bite has been respectable. Boats running out of Key Largo and Islamorada are finding schoolie and the occasional gaffer dolphin along weedlines and bird activity in 400–800 feet. A mix of small ballyhoo, squid strips, and bright trolling feathers in chartreuse and pink has been doing the work. Keep a spinning rod rigged with a chunk or live pilchard ready for fish that slide in behind the boat. On the edge of the reef in 60–120 feet, yellowtail snapper and muttons are chewing when the current cooperates. A steady chum slick, 12–20‑pound fluorocarbon, and small hooks with cut ballyhoo, squid, or silversides are the ticket. Muttons and groupers are responding to live pinfish and big pilchards fished on the bottom around ledges and patch reefs. Inshore around the Keys bridges and flats, the tarpon bite is still alive at dawn and dusk, especially on the shadow lines of the big spans. Live mullet, crabs, and big shrimp get the nod, but for the lure crowd, work heavy swimbaits and soft plastics in natural baitfish colors. Snook and mangrove snapper are holding tight to pilings and rocky edges; free‑lined pilchards, shrimp, and small bucktail jigs will bend rods. On the flats, early‑morning bonefish are cruising the edges on that incoming tide; think small shrimp patterns, light jig heads, and very quiet presentations. Up off Miami, reef and wreck fishing has been solid with mixed muttons, vermilion snapper, and a few amberjack on deeper structure. Vertical jigs in blue and silver and live baits dropped to the marks are producing. Closer to shore, inlets and rock piles are giving up jacks, snook, and a few tarpon on live bait and topwater plugs at first light. Best lures right now: - For offshore dolphin: small skirted trolling lures in chartreuse, pink, and blue/white, plus shiny spoons. - On the reef and wrecks: 2–4 oz vertical jigs and bucktails tipped with cut bait. - Inshore: walk‑the‑dog topwaters at dawn, paddle‑tail swimbaits on 1/4–3/8 oz jig heads, and shrimp‑imitating soft plastics. Best natural baits: live pilchards, mullet, pinfish, crabs, and shrimp, plus fresh cut ballyhoo and squid. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: - Around Islamorada, the reefs and wrecks off Alligator Reef and the nearby ledges are giving up good snapper and grouper when the current and chum line set up. - Off Miami, the wrecks and reef line east of Government Cut and Haulover, especially along the 90–200‑foot contour, have been holding snapper, kingfish, and the occasional sail early and late. That’s your on‑the‑water 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

20 de jun de 20263 min
episode South Florida Salt: Keys to Miami Mahi, Snook, and Tarpon on the Rise artwork

South Florida Salt: Keys to Miami Mahi, Snook, and Tarpon on the Rise

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Florida salt report from the Keys up through Miami. We’re sitting on a light east to southeast breeze this morning, 8–12 knots, bumping to 15 in the afternoon, with seas inside the reef 1–3 feet and a light chop on the bay. Air temps running mid‑70s at first light, pushing upper‑80s later, with that classic steamy Keys humidity and a few fast‑moving showers possible along the sea breeze line. Sunrise slid in right around 6:30 a.m., with sunset coming in about 8:15 p.m. That gives you a long window to work the low‑light bites. Tides around Key Largo and Islamorada are on a moderate cycle today, with an early morning incoming and a mid‑afternoon outgoing on the ocean side; the bay side lags a bit, so flats and backcountry creeks will dump later in the day. Around Miami and Biscayne Bay, expect a predawn low turning to a strong incoming through mid‑morning, then falling water late afternoon through dusk. Offshore out of the Upper Keys, boats this week have been putting together decent boxes of schoolie and gaffer **mahi** along with a few nicer 20‑plus‑pound fish when they find the right weedlines and bird plays in 600–900 feet. Blackfin **tuna** are still hanging on the humps early and late, and a few wahoo are sneaking into the mix on the darker edges. Inshore on the reefs, folks have been doing well on **yellowtail snapper**, mangroves, and a mix of muttons when the current lines up. Inshore from Key Largo down through Islamorada, the backcountry’s been giving up **snook**, **redfish**, and a good number of **seatrout** on the edges of the banks and creek mouths, especially on that first of the falling tide. Tarpon are still around the bridges and channels, mostly smaller fish now, but enough 60–100‑pounders to keep things interesting at dawn and dusk. Around Miami and Biscayne Bay, there’s been solid action on **mangrove snapper** on the bridges, cuts, and north bay structure, with mixed jacks, ladyfish, and a few keeper trout on the grass edges. Early‑morning shoreline cruisers are holding snook and the odd tarpon along Government Cut, Haulover, and the beaches when the water’s clean. Best producers offshore have been small to medium **chuggers and bullet‑head trolling lures** in blue/white, dolphin, and pink/white for mahi, with skirted ballyhoo if you’ve got the patience to rig them. For blackfin tuna on the humps, vertical jigs in 80–150 grams, natural sardine or pilchard colors, worked fast through the water column have been money, and a deep‑trolled diving plug is still a good wahoo play on the edges. On the reef and patch reefs, **cut ballyhoo**, squid strips, and small chunks of pilchard or sardine on light leaders have been the ticket for yellowtail and mangroves. Chum hard, fish back in the slick with small hooks and plenty of patience. A live pinfish or ballyhoo down on a knocker rig will find those muttons if they’re around. Backcountry and bay anglers are doing well on **3–4 inch soft plastics** in pearl, new penny, and natural baitfish patterns on light jig heads, plus suspending twitchbaits and topwaters at first light. Live shrimp, pilchards, and finger mullet under a cork or free‑lined are still your best all‑around baits for snook, reds, and trout. Around the bridges and channels for tarpon, big live mullet or crabs drifted on the tide are producing, with heavy‑duty fluorocarbon leaders. Couple hot spots to circle today: • **Islamorada Bridge and Channel Complex** – Fish the shadow lines at dawn for tarpon, then slide off to the nearby flats and banks on the first of the fall for snook, reds, and trout. • **Biscayne Bay Grass Flats from Matheson Hammock to Stiltsville** – Work the early incoming for trout and snapper on the edges, then slide shallow to look for cruising bonefish and permit when the sun gets up and the water clears. That’s the word from your local water. This is Artificial Lure saying 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

19 de jun de 20264 min
episode South Florida Summer Fishing: Upper Keys to Miami - Tides, Tarpon, and Dolphin artwork

South Florida Summer Fishing: Upper Keys to Miami - Tides, Tarpon, and Dolphin

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Florida fishing rundown from the Upper Keys through Miami. We’re sitting on a light southeast breeze this morning, around 5 to 10 knots, building a bit in the afternoon with typical summer heat, muggy air, and a good shot at scattered thunderstorms after lunch. Nearshore seas are running about 1 to 2 feet, maybe a light chop on the bay. Skies start mostly clear, clouding up as that sea breeze kicks. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m. on the Atlantic side, sunset close to 8:15 p.m., so you’ve got long low‑light windows to play with. Tides around the Upper Keys and Biscayne Bay are running a standard mixed semidiurnal pattern: higher water pushing in mid‑morning, with a decent outgoing through early afternoon, then a smaller evening flood. In plain language: moving water most of the morning and again toward sunset, which is when you want to be on your spots. Fish the first couple hours of the incoming on the oceanside flats and the start of the outgoing around the bridges and channels. Inshore, bonefish and permit have been active on the oceanside flats from Key Largo down through Islamorada. Clear water, light wind, and strong sun mean you’ll want to scale down: 8–10 lb fluoro, small skimmer jigs and shrimp patterns, or live shrimp and small crabs. Early morning tailers have been showing on the slick‑calm flats; once the sun gets high, they’re spooky, so long casts and quiet feet. Back in Florida Bay and around Biscayne Bay, snook and redfish have been chewing around mangrove points, creek mouths, and potholes on that higher water. Pilchards and small pinfish are the top natural baits, but an artificial junkie can get it done with 3–4 inch paddle tails in pearl, new penny, or greenback, and weedless jerk shads bumped along the edges. Low‑light topwater has been good: walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or mullet patterns, especially if you see finger mullet or glass minnows flipping. Tarpon are still around the bridges and in the channels at night and dawn. Think Islamorada bridges, Channel 5 and 2, and the stretches around Marathon. Heavy swimbaits, big soft‑plastic eels, or live mullet and crabs drifted back on the tide have all been getting eats. In Miami, nighttime tarpon around Government Cut, Haulover, and the river mouth have been pretty steady when the water’s moving. Work big profile plugs or live pilchards along the edges of the channel lights. Offshore, the early summer dolphin bite has been decent but not automatic. Smaller schoolies with a few gaffers mixed in are being found from 8 to 15 miles off, around weedlines, birds, and any floating debris. Trolling small chuggers, feathers, and naked ballyhoo in blue/white or pink/white has been the go‑to. Keep a couple spinning rods rigged with chunk baits or cut ballyhoo for when the school shows up behind the boat. You’ll also see the odd blackfin tuna on the humps and deeper edges—vertical jigs and live pilchards doing work there. Mutton snapper and yellowtail have been solid along the reef line in 60 to 100 feet. Anchor on good structure with a steady chum slick, then send down small chunks of ballyhoo or squid on long, light leaders for the tails. For muttons, think bigger baits—live pinfish or ballyhoo on the bottom, nice long fluorocarbon leaders, and be patient. You’ll also pick up mangroves and the occasional grouper on the same program. A couple hot spots if you’re heading out: • Around Islamorada, hit the bridges at first light for tarpon, then slide to the nearby reef in 60–80 feet for yellowtail and muttons once the sun’s up. • Off Miami, work the edge of the reef off Haulover and Government Cut for mixed snapper and kingfish, then push offshore to any weedline that looks alive for schoolie dolphin. Best all‑around artificials right now: 3–4 inch paddle tails on 1/8–3/8 oz jig heads, bone‑colored topwater walkers, small bucktail jigs tipped with shrimp for the bridges, and medium diving plugs in natural baitfish patterns for tarpon and snook. For bait, you can’t beat lively pilchards, mullet, shrimp, and small crabs. That’s your on‑the‑water scoop from Artificial Lure. Thank Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

18 de jun de 20264 min