Islamorada, Florida Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from Islamorada with your dawn fishing rundown. We’re sitting under a typical June Keys pattern: light southeast breeze around 5–10 knots early, bumping 10–15 by midday, scattered clouds, muggy and warm with highs in the upper 80s and heat index pushing mid‑90s. The nearshore water’s bathtub‑warm, flirting with the low to mid‑80s. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m., sunset close to 8:15 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work the low‑light bites. Tides around Islamorada today are on the weaker side but still worth timing. Inside on the bay and around the bridges you’re seeing an early morning incoming, swinging to outgoing late morning into midday, then a softer push again this evening. On the oceanside patch reefs and wrecks, that first good moving water this morning and the start of the afternoon fall have been sparking the best activity. Inshore, the backcountry and the edges of Florida Bay have been lively. Anglers working early incoming water along mangrove shorelines and creek mouths have been picking off decent **snook** and **redfish**, plus a mix of **sea trout** and **mangrove snapper**. Most boats are reporting a half‑dozen to a dozen reds and snook combined on a solid morning, with plenty of smaller trout and snappers to keep rods bent. Best bets: live shrimp, pilchards, or small pinfish under a popping cork, and artificial shrimp or paddle‑tails in natural hues. Gold spoons and bone‑colored topwaters have been drawing explosive snook strikes at first light. On the oceanside flats, bonefish and permit have been sliding up on the rising water. Sight fishermen poling skinny have been getting a handful of legitimate shots per tide window, with a couple of bones to hand a morning on the better days. Small pink or tan shrimp patterns on fly, and 1/8‑ounce flats jigs tipped with shrimp, are doing work. Permit are snubbing most artificials but still falling for small blue crab and well‑placed live shrimp. Out on the reefs, the humps, and the edge of the blue water, the summer pattern is in full swing. Charter reports from this week have been strong on **mahi‑mahi**, with many boats boxing 10–20 schoolies and a few gaffers when they commit to running and gunning weedlines and birds. Trolling small skirted ballyhoo, naked ballyhoo, and dolphin‑colored chuggers has been the ticket, with the occasional **blackfin tuna** and **skipjack** mixed in around the humps. Have a pitch rod ready with a chunk of ballyhoo or a white bucktail when the mahi swim up on the teasers. Closer to the reef edge, yellowtail and mangrove snapper have been steady. Chumming hard in 40–80 feet is producing limits of keeper yellowtail for patient crews, with **mutton snapper** showing for those dropping live baits on the bottom on the edges of the current. Frozen ballyhoo chunks, squid, and live pilchards are the staples here; if you prefer artificials, small jigs tipped with cut bait drifted back in the chum line will get crushed. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: – **Islamorada Hump** for mahi and blackfin when the current is pushing and the birds are working. – **Alligator Reef and its surrounding patch reefs** for a mixed bag of yellowtail, mangroves, muttons, plus the odd kingfish or cobia cruising the edge. Best overall lures right now: white or pearl paddle‑tails on 1/4‑ounce jig heads for the backcountry, gold spoons for snook and reds, bone or chartreuse topwater plugs at first light, and small dolphin‑pattern skirted lures offshore. For bait, you can’t beat live pilchards, shrimp, and pinfish inshore, and ballyhoo—live or rigged—offshore. That’s the word on the water from Artificial Lure here in Islamorada. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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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