San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up around the Bay. Weather from the National Weather Service calls for cool, gray mornings with a marine layer, light west winds building to about 10–15 knots in the afternoon, and mild temps topping out in the mid 60s near the water. Mornings will be your calmest window. Sunrise is around a quarter to six, sunset just after 8:30, giving you a long day to work the tides. Tides from NOAA for the central Bay are running a solid mixed cycle today: a pre‑dawn low, a strong mid‑morning flood, then an afternoon high dropping back to an evening outgoing. That mid‑morning flood is the prime striper and halibut window, especially where current pushes bait along edges and structure. Fish activity has been good for early June. Local reports from Bay tackle shops and party boats say California halibut are still the headliners, with limits or near‑limits coming off the Berkeley Flats, Alameda Rockwall, and the South Bay channels on the right tide. Most keepers are running 22–30 inches, with the occasional doormat over 30. Striped bass action has picked up again in the North Bay and the central Bay flats, with a mix of schoolies and the odd 30‑inch fish. A few halibut and schoolie bass are also coming right inside the Gate on the bar when the swell lays down. Surf casters are still finding barred surfperch and the odd schoolie striper along Ocean Beach and Fort Funston when the wind backs off. Best baits in the Bay right now are still live anchovies and live shiner perch for halibut, fished on three‑way rigs drifted slow and close to bottom. If you can’t get live bait, frozen anchovies and tray herring are doing work, but you’ll want to pay attention to scent and keep baits fresh. For stripers, pile worms and anchovy chunks on a sliding sinker rig are producing around current seams and channel edges. Artificial‑wise, halibut are chewing on white or glow swimbaits with paddle tails in the 4–5 inch range, pinned to 1–2 oz jigheads, slow‑rolled just off the mud. Drifting hoochies over a herring strip has also been putting fish in the box. Stripers are responding to 4–6 inch soft plastics in white, chartreuse, or baitfish patterns, as well as bucktail and hair jigs with a little flash. At first and last light, topwater walkers and pencil poppers around current breaks or bird activity can be deadly if the wind hasn’t come up yet. A couple local hot spots to circle on your chart: Crissy Field to Fort Point on the city front has been a solid early‑morning run‑and‑gun stretch for schoolie stripers on swimbaits and topwater when the tide starts pushing in and the birds start working. Work the edges of the weed lines and the drop‑off into deeper water. Farther across the Bay, the Berkeley Flats continue to be a halibut factory on a good drift. Line up on the edge of the flat in 15–30 feet, keep your baits ticking bottom, and adjust your sinkers to stay near the mud without dragging too hard. If you’re shore‑bound, the rockwall at Alameda and the piers along the Embarcadero and in South SF are turning out a mix of halibut, stripers, and jacksmelt on bait and swimbaits, especially when the incoming tide starts to roll. That’s the word on the water from Artificial Lure. 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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