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San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today

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Dive into "San Francisco Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing adventures, tips, and local insights. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a curious beginner, join us each day to stay updated on the latest catches, hotspots, and fishing conditions in the vibrant waters of San Francisco Bay. Tune in and reel in the excitement! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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326 episodios

episode Bay Bite Heating Up: Early Summer Halibut and Stripers on the Tide artwork

Bay Bite Heating Up: Early Summer Halibut and Stripers on the Tide

Artificial Lure here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a mild early-summer pattern on the Bay. Marine forecasts from the National Weather Service call for morning low clouds, afternoon clearing, and a light to moderate west wind building to 10–20 knots later in the day, especially in the Central and North Bay. Expect cool, damp mornings in the low to mid‑50s around the water, warming into the low 60s to near 70 inland once that sun punches through. Sunrise over the City is right around 5:45 a.m., with sunset close to 8:35 p.m., giving you a long, workable window. The best bite lately has lined up with the first light and the couple hours around the stronger tide swings, so plan to be set up early. Tides today inside the Gate are running a decent mixed cycle. Look for a pre‑dawn high, a late‑morning drop, then an afternoon flood that really starts to push around mid‑day. When that incoming starts rolling past Alcatraz and Angel Island, the stripers and halibut have been waking up, especially along current seams and edges. Recent action: party boats out of Fisherman’s Wharf and Berkeley have been reporting steady California halibut with some striped bass mixed in on the Berkeley Flats, Paradise, and the South Bay channels. On better days, boats are seeing a dozen to a few dozen legal halibut, plus bass limits possible when the tide and drift line up. Pier anglers at Fort Point, Muni Pier, and along the Embarcadero have picked up schoolie stripers and the occasional keeper halibut on live bait and soft plastics. A few leopard sharks and bat rays are also showing around the deeper channel edges and by Oyster Point. Best baits: live anchovies and shiners are still king for halibut and bay stripers. If you can’t get live bait, frozen anchovies, herring, or sardine fillets on a three‑way or sliding sinker rig have been doing work on the drift. For shore casters, pile worms and ghost shrimp are solid for sharks and rays. Best lures: 4–6 inch swimbaits in anchovy, sardine, or smelt patterns, on 1–2 oz jig heads, bounced slowly along the bottom, have been taking both halibut and bass. White, chartreuse, and root beer have been the go‑to colors. Metal spoons and Kastmaster‑style lures in chrome or chrome‑blue are a good call around the rocks and bridge pilings when the bass are pushing bait. For a more finesse approach, try small paddle tails or flukes on light jig heads along the pier pilings at first light. Couple of local hot spots to consider: 1. Berkeley Flats and the east side of Angel Island: drifting live anchovy or swimbaits along the contour lines has produced consistent halibut with bonus stripers on the flood. 2. Crissy Field to Fort Point: early and late in the day, working swimbaits and spoons along the beach and rock edges on a moving tide has turned up some quality stripers, with an outside shot at a halibut in the troughs. Water clarity’s been a bit variable with the wind and recent tides, so adjust color and profile to match: go brighter and larger in the murk, more natural when it cleans up. Keep an eye on that wind line; once the afternoon breeze really kicks, the drift speeds up and the bite usually tapers off. That’s it from your buddy Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next Bay 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 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bay Bite: Stripers and Halibut on the Incoming Tide artwork

Early Summer Bay Bite: Stripers and Halibut on the Incoming Tide

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early summer pattern setting up around the Bay. Weather today is cool to mild: morning marine layer and patchy fog, then clearing to the mid‑60s to low‑70s with a light west to southwest breeze stiffening in the afternoon. Typical June stuff, so expect more chop and wind after lunch. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., sunset about 8:35 p.m., giving you a big window to work the tides. Tides are running a solid mixed cycle. Early morning brings a good incoming push, with a decent high mid‑morning, then a draining outgoing through the afternoon, and another flood building into the evening. On this kind of pattern, the bite usually turns on at the start of the incoming and again on the first part of the outgoing when that water starts to move sideways off the flats and points. Striped bass are still the headliners. Anglers inside the Central Bay and around the South Bay channels have been picking up schoolie to mid‑slot fish, with a few bigger models in the mix. Shore guys tossing swimbaits and bucktail jigs along Crissy Field, Fort Point, and the rock walls near Pier 32 have been seeing steady action when the current is swinging. Boat anglers drifting live anchovies or shiners around Alcatraz, Angel Island, and the Berkeley Flats are reporting decent counts, especially early on the flood. Halibut fishing has been solid but not wide‑open. Drifters pulling live anchovies, herring, or shiners along the edges of the shipping channel, the Oyster Point area, and the Alameda Flats are putting a handful of keepers on deck when they stick with it through the tide changes. Plastics like 4–5 inch paddle tails in smelt or anchovy patterns, or white gulp‑style grubs on a dropper loop, are getting bit when the bait’s scattered. Think slow, near‑bottom, and keep that bait just ticking the mud. Leopard sharks and bat rays are making a strong showing in the usual mudflat haunts. Soaking squid, anchovies, and oily baits off Candlestick, Brisbane, and the San Mateo shoreline has been good fun, especially for folks fishing from shore. Not a bad backup plan when the bass and halibut get finicky. For lures, keep it simple: – For stripers, go with 4–6 inch white or pearl paddle‑tail swimbaits on 1/2 to 1 oz jigheads, chrome or bone topwaters at first light in calmer pockets, and bucktail jigs with a strip of squid or gulp. – For halibut, 4–5 inch glow or white swimbaits, gulp jerk shads, and slow‑rolled spoons near bottom do work when the live bait bite slows. For natural bait, live anchovy is king in the Bay right now, followed by live shiner perch or smelt if you can net them. Frozen anchovies, sardines, and squid will still produce, especially for sharks and rays, but the fresher the better. Couple of hot spots to put on your short list: – The Berkeley Flats and the edges toward the Emeryville and Richmond channel for a mixed halibut and striper shot on the drift during the incoming. – Crissy Field to Fort Point for shore‑based stripers at first light, tossing swimbaits and topwater into that current seam when the tide starts to move. Work the moving water, keep an eye on that afternoon wind, and you’ll give yourself a good shot at some quality Bay fish today. 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

21 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Summer Halibut Bite Heats Up: Your SF Bay Fishing Game Plan artwork

Summer Halibut Bite Heats Up: Your SF Bay Fishing Game Plan

This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic summer pattern around the Central and South Bay. NOAA’s tide tables show a pre-dawn low followed by a strong mid‑morning flood and an afternoon ebb, so plan around that incoming water for your prime bite window. Light morning wind under 10 knots with patchy bay fog giving way to 60s and low 70s by afternoon, according to the National Weather Service. Sunrise is just after 5:45 a.m., sunset a little after 8:30 p.m., giving you a long glow period at both ends of the day. Halibut are still the headliner. Local party boats reporting in the last few days have been steady on keeper California halibut inside the Bay, with some boats hanging limits or near limits for a light load and a decent pick on stripers mixed in. Most of the action has been on the usual drifting program: tray herring, anchovies, or shiner perch on three‑way rigs in 15–40 feet. Add a chartreuse or glow hoochie over the bait if the water dirties up. Striped bass remain spread from Ocean Beach inside to the Oakland Flats and up toward the San Rafael Bridge. Private boaters and shore casters have been scoring schoolies with a few legal fish tossing white or bone SP Minnows, 4–5 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits on 3/8–1 oz heads, and small hair jigs. At night, the bridge pilings and lit piers have kicked out fish on bloodworms, pile worms, and cut anchovy. On the rockfish and lingcod front, the bite just outside the Gate along the Marin Coast and down toward Pacifica has been solid when the swell lays down. Party boats are reporting full rockfish limits with a handful of lings. Shrimp flies tipped with squid strips, small scampis, and metal jigs in blue/white or chrome are doing damage in 60–150 feet. Best lures and baits right now: - For halibut: live anchovy, shiner perch, or herring on a three‑way; drifting swimbaits like Big Hammers or similar in smelt or sardine patterns when you’re short on bait. - For stripers: white/bone minnow plugs, 4–6 inch paddle tails in white, pearl, or chartreuse, bucktail jigs, plus bloodworms, pile worms, sardine and anchovy chunks for soakers. - For lings and rockfish: shrimp flies, 4–6 inch rubber swimbaits in root beer or motor oil, metal jigs like diamond or knife‑style iron. A couple of local hot spots to key on: - **Alameda Rockwall / South Bay Flats** – Consistent halibut drifts on the flood, plus bass cruising the edges. Focus on 15–30 feet and keep that bait just off the bottom. - **Berkeley Flats / SF Waterfront** – Classic summer area for both halibut and stripers. Work the edges of the flats into deeper water, and don’t be afraid to grind through the tide changes here. If you’re shorebound, hit Fort Point, Fort Mason, or the piers along the Embarcadero with pile worms or swimbaits on the early flood and last light. That’s your Bay report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. 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 2026 - 3 min
episode June Tides and Bay Edge Bite: Stripers, Halibut, and the Golden Hour Window artwork

June Tides and Bay Edge Bite: Stripers, Halibut, and the Golden Hour Window

Good morning, anglers—**Artificial Lure** here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for today. The bay is waking up under a **June tide swing**, with the best action lining up around the moving water, especially the first push of daylight and the evening ebb. For exact tides, check your local tide app before you launch, because the bay’s bite can flip fast with a hard current. Weather-wise, expect classic Bay Area summer conditions: **cool mornings, breezy afternoons, and patchy fog near the Gate and the city front**. That usually means the best window is the early run before the wind gets honest. Sunrise is right around the early-morning edge, and sunset comes late enough to give you a solid evening bite if the wind settles. Recent local reports have been pointing to a mixed bag of **striped bass, halibut, jacksmelt, staghorn sculpin, and scattered leopard shark** activity around the bay edges. The better fish are showing where bait is stacking—anchovies, sardines, and small baitfish pushing along current seams, channel edges, and the shadow lines near structure. The striped bass have been most willing to chase, while halibut are more likely to pin a bait on the bottom in the calmer stretches. If you’re throwing artificials, the hot setup is still a **3- to 5-inch swimbait** on a 1/2-ounce jighead, or a **paddle-tail with a slow, steady retrieve** along the drop-offs. For bass, a **soft plastic grub** or a **jerk shad** worked with short pauses can trigger reaction strikes. If you want to fish bait, go with **fresh anchovy, pile worm, or cut bait** on a sliding sinker rig for halibut and bass; for sturgeon water, *if you’re targeting them where legal*, eel and ghost shrimp are the classic names in the game. Smell and freshness matter more than fancy presentation when the current is moving. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: **the shoreline around Candlestick/India Basin on the right tide** and **the Alameda/Oakland flat edges and channel mouths** for halibut and bass. If you want a more classic city-side play, **the north and east sides of the Bay Bridge approaches** can produce when bait schools tuck in and the tide starts to run. The key is simple: fish the edges, fish the moving water, and don’t stay married to one spot if the bait isn’t there. So rig light enough to feel the bottom, watch the birds, and work the tide instead of fighting it. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. 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 2026 - 2 min
episode Bay Summer Bite: Tide and Current Are Your Best Friends in Early June artwork

Bay Summer Bite: Tide and Current Are Your Best Friends in Early June

Good morning from **Artificial Lure** with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for today. The Bay is lining up for a classic early-summer bite: expect **good moving-water action**, with the best windows around the **first push of tide and the last of the outgoing**, when bait gets funneled along the edges of the channel and the fish get active. For **tides**, check the local tide table before you launch or shore-cast, because the Bay is all about timing; the bite usually sharpens when current starts to move and softens on slack. For **weather**, the pattern for mid-June in San Francisco is usually a cool marine morning, a bit of wind, and clearer conditions later in the day, so dress in layers and be ready for fog near the Gate and the Central Bay. **Sunrise and sunset** are working in your favor right now with long daylight and a solid early bite window at dawn and again near dusk. If you’re fishing before work, get on the water early and fish the skinny edge, rips, and current seams. Recent local action in and around the Bay has been strongest on **striped bass**, with mixed catches of **halibut**, **shakers**, and the occasional **starry flounder** in the right back-bay mud and channel edges. On the rock and bridge side, anglers have also been picking up **surf perch** and scattered **rockfish** where the rules and seasons allow. The fish have been keying on bait schools, so when you find birds, nervous water, or flickering anchovies, you’ve found the strike zone. For **lures**, the best producers are usually: - **5–7 inch soft plastics** on a jig head, worked slow near structure - **Swimbaits** in anchovy, smelt, or motor-oil colors - **Metal jigs** when bait is stacked and the current is moving - **Bucktails** or **paddle tails** for halibut along sandy edges For **bait**, keep it simple: - **Live anchovies** if you can get them - **Pile worms** for perch and mixed bay species - **Ghost shrimp** or **market shrimp** for halibut and bottom fish - **Pile worms and bloodworms** when the bite gets finicky in shallow water If you want a couple of **hot spots**, I’d start with **the Berkeley Flats** for halibut and bass on the moving tide, and **Candlestick / the South Bay shoreline** for stripers and mixed action when bait is pushing through. If the wind lays down, **around the Golden Gate edges** can light up for stripers and bait-feeding fish, especially where current stacks up hard. My local read: fish the **current**, not the clock. Keep your retrieve natural, stay mobile, and don’t leave bait unless you’ve fished both sides of the tide. If one edge goes quiet, slide 50 yards and keep hunting. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to **subscribe** for 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

18 de jun de 2026 - 2 min
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