St Augustine Fishing Report Today
Good morning, this is **Artificial Lure** with your St. Augustine fishing report for today. With no live feed pulled in right now, I’m sticking to the usual early-June playbook: expect a **warm, building day**, a **strong morning bite**, and the best action lining up around **moving water** near the inlets, creeks, and the beach troughs. Around St. Augustine, the **tide timing** is the big deal today. On days like this, the bite usually turns on best when the tide is **slack-to-starting flow**, especially the last part of the outgoing and the first push of incoming water. That’s when bait gets flushed, predators set up tight, and you’ll find more willing **redfish, speckled trout, flounder, black drum, ladyfish, and the occasional snook** in the mix. For **weather**, June in northeast Florida usually means **hot, humid, and breezy**, with a real chance of afternoon pop-up storms. The smarter move is to fish **early and late**, and keep an eye on that wind once the sun gets up. The **sunrise** is around **early daylight near 6:25 a.m.**, and **sunset** is around **8:20 p.m.**, giving you a long window if the weather holds. Recent fish activity in these waters has been centered on **bait schools, dock edges, creek mouths, and inlet current seams**. The better reports lately have been a mix of **slot redfish**, **trout on grass edges**, and **flounder holding on sand-and-rock transitions**. If the water is clean, topwater can still get a morning blowup. If it’s a little stained, slow down and fish deeper edges. Best **lures** right now: - **Soft plastic paddle tails** in white, pearl, new penny, or root beer - **Topwater plugs** at daylight for trout and reds - **Suspending twitch baits** for cleaner water and deeper edges - **Jigs with scented soft plastics** around docks, oysters, and creek mouths Best **bait**: - **Live shrimp** is hard to beat for just about everything - **Mud minnows** for flounder and reds - **Small finger mullet** if you can find them - **Cut bait** for drum and opportunistic reds If you want a couple of **hot spots**, I’d start with **the St. Augustine Inlet** for moving-water action, then slide over to **Creek mouths and the Matanzas side edges** where bait funnels hard on tide changes. **Dock lines and bridge shadow lines** can also fish well once the sun gets higher and the bite gets tougher. If you’re on foot, work the **first gut at the beach** early. If you’re in a skiff or kayak, focus on **current breaks, oyster edges, and little drains emptying into bigger water**. That’s where the fish stack up when the tide starts moving. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to **subscribe** for more local fishing reports. 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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