San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’re sitting in a classic early–summer pattern on the Bay. Weather’s running cool and stable: morning marine layer, light west wind building in the afternoon, and that 60s‑to‑low‑70s sweet spot once the sun burns through. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., sunset close to 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got plenty of low‑light window to work with. Tides are running big this week, with strong morning ebb and a healthy afternoon flood. Think of that first light dropping water as your prime striper window along the rocks and flats, then the push of the afternoon flood for halibut on the edges and channels. Work your moves around the top and bottom of the tide when current eases a bit. Striped bass action has been solid all around the Central and North Bay. Anglers are picking up schoolies with the occasional legal and a few bigger models mixed in. Think numbers more than trophies, but there are enough mid‑20‑inch fish to keep it interesting. Halibut continue to be the headliners in the usual drifts, with boats putting steady fish in the box—mostly keepers in the low to mid‑20s inches, with a few doormats showing up for those who grind the tides. On lures, this has been a great week to fish like the name suggests. For stripers, soft‑plastic swimbaits in baitfish colors, 4–5 inches, on ½ to 1‑oz heads have been doing work, especially when bumped slow along the bottom through the current seams. Topwater and walk‑the‑dog plugs can pop fish in the first gray light tight to rock walls and pier pilings—short, sharp pauses get the eat. For halibut, rolling anchovy‑profile swimbaits or small spoons just off bottom during the flood is the play. If you’re trolling, small dodger with a hoochie or a plug‑cut style plastic behind it at a crawl is producing. Bait anglers are in the game too. Live anchovies and shiners are still king for halibut, nose‑hooked on a three‑way or slider rig, dragging just above the mud. For stripers from shore, pile worms, blood worms, and cut anchovy or sardine are all putting fish on the rocks, especially on the outgoing. Keep leaders short in the heavy tide, and don’t be shy about moving if 20–30 minutes goes dead. Couple of hot spots to circle: – Crissy Field to Fort Point has been a solid bet for early‑morning stripers on swimbaits and plugs, especially around that morning ebb. Fan‑cast the drop‑offs and current lines and be ready for a surprise halibut. – Oyster Point and the nearby flats are kicking out halibut for both trollers and drifters, with scattered bass mixed in. Work the edges of the channel on the flood and watch your speed—slow and low gets bit. Overall, fish activity has been best at dawn and the first couple hours of moving water, then again on the afternoon flood once the wind lets you hold a line. If it blows up mid‑day, tuck in behind structure or call it and save your energy for the evening push. That’s your Bay report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next bite window. 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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