Gulf Coast Fishing Report
This week on the Gulf Coast Fishing Report, Cactus Jack breaks down the June 6–7 weekend bite from Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, Fort Morgan, Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, Perdido Key, Pensacola, Pensacola Beach, and Navarre. If you are planning a Gulf Coast fishing trip this weekend, this report gives you the local fishing intelligence you need before you load the rods, bait, tackle, and cooler. The best early plan this weekend is walking the surf at daylight. The beach has fish, but grass is forcing anglers to stay mobile instead of sitting in one place. Surf anglers should be ready for speckled trout, Spanish mackerel, bluefish, jack crevalle, redfish, flounder, pompano, and whiting depending on water clarity, bait movement, and how much grass is in the wash. Small swim baits, flukes, spoons, jigs, and hard plastics are strong choices for anglers walking the beach and covering water. Where the grass allows bait fishing, sand fleas, shrimp, Fishbites, ghost shrimp, and small natural baits can keep pompano and whiting in play. Inshore and back bay anglers still have good options around cleaner water, bait, and moving current. Speckled trout and redfish are worth targeting around grass edges, oyster beds, docks, potholes, rocks, protected shorelines, and shoreline current. Start early with topwater, then shift to soft plastics, shrimp, popping corks, small jigs, and live bait as the sun gets up. Flounder are also part of the inshore mix around sandy drains, dock edges, grass-to-sand transitions, beach cuts, and current lanes. Nearshore, Spanish mackerel are one of the top action bites around passes, jetties, bait schools, diving birds, current seams, and clean green water. Spoons, Got-Cha style plugs, bucktails, small jigs, and fast shiny lures should be ready to go. Keep extra leader handy because Spanish mackerel have a bad habit of testing your knots and your patience. For offshore anglers, bottom fishing is the strongest boat plan when the weather window opens. Natural bottom, ledges, rocks, reefs, and wrecks are holding opportunity for red snapper, beeliners, scamp, grouper, almaco jacks, and other reef fish. Live bait, cigar minnows, cut bait, double-drop rigs, and heavier leader all deserve a spot in the offshore plan. Trolling and drift-line fishing are also worth watching in prettier water where bait, birds, floating grass, or clean edges could point toward mahi, king mackerel, wahoo, or cobia. Saturday looks like a start-early kind of day, with the afternoon more vulnerable to showers and thunderstorms. Sunday appears to be the better overall setup for nearshore Spanish mackerel and offshore bottom fishing if the morning weather clears. Whether you fish from the beach, a kayak, a bay boat, a center console, or an offshore boat, this week’s Gulf Coast Fishing Report helps you make a better plan from Dauphin Island to Pensacola. Less guessing and more catching — turn local knowledge into your next great fishing story.
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