St Augustine Fishing Report Today

St. Augustine Early Summer: Reds and Trout on the Morning Incoming Tide

3 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio St. Augustine Early Summer: Reds and Trout on the Morning Incoming Tide

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern settling in. Offshore winds have been light, with a gentle southeast sea breeze most afternoons. Air temps are running in the mid‑70s at first light, climbing into the upper 80s by midday, with humidity you can about chew on. Skies have been mostly partly cloudy with a shot at a pop‑up thunderstorm late in the day, so keep an eye on the horizon and the radar. On the water side, tide charts from NOAA for the St. Augustine Inlet show a pre‑dawn low and a strong incoming through the morning, then a mid‑afternoon high and a falling tide toward evening. That incoming morning tide has been the money window, especially around the inlet rocks and the ICW creek mouths. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., sunset about 8:30 p.m., giving you a long, fishy day to work the moving water at both ends. Inshore, the bite has been solid. Local shop reports out of St. Augustine Bait & Tackle and Avid Angler say slot redfish and upper‑slot specks are chewing early and late, especially on the cooler, darker parts of the tide. Anglers working the docks and grass edges along the ICW have been picking off reds in the 18–26 inch range, with a few big overslot bruisers mixed in. Trout have been coming from deeper bends and drop‑offs, with some 20‑plus‑inch fish showing up on the first couple hours of the incoming. Best baits inshore have been live shrimp, mud minnows, and finger mullet under a popping cork or on a light jighead. For artificials, a 3–4 inch paddle‑tail in natural mullet or new penny on a 1/8 oz jig has been hard to beat, and a small topwater plug at daybreak has produced some explosive trout and redfish strikes. Folks throwing gold spoons along the grass on the higher part of the tide are also finding roaming reds. Around the inlet and beaches, recent reports from local charters at the Conch House Marina say the tarpon are starting to show along the pogie pods just off the sand. Sharks and big jacks are mixed in, so bring stout gear. Free‑lined live menhaden or mullet have been the ticket. Whiting, Spanish mackerel, and the occasional pompano are still coming from the surf on shrimp, sand fleas, and small shiny spoons. Offshore, captains running out of Camachee Cove have been bringing back decent numbers of mahi, a few blackfin tuna, and scattered sailfish from the bluewater when the weedlines set up right. Bottom fishing on the local wrecks and ledges has produced red snapper (mostly catch‑and‑release if regs are closed), vermilion snapper, and triggerfish on cut bait and squid. Couple of local hot spots to circle on your map: – The St. Augustine Inlet rocks and the nearby ICW junctions: great on the first two hours of the incoming for reds, trout, and flounder with live bait and soft plastics. – The creek mouths and dock lines between the 312 bridge and the Vilano Bridge: work those areas on a moving tide with live shrimp under a cork for mixed trout, reds, and the occasional flounder. If you can, be on the water before first light, fish that sunrise incoming, then take a break mid‑day and slide back out for the last couple hours of daylight. Summer traffic and boat wakes are picking up, so be patient, be courteous, and watch those afternoon storms. 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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episode St. Augustine Summer Redfish: Ride the Morning Tide for Slot Fish and Topwater Action artwork

St. Augustine Summer Redfish: Ride the Morning Tide for Slot Fish and Topwater Action

This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic North Florida summer pattern on tap around the Ancient City. Local marine forecasts are calling for light southwest winds early, turning onshore with the sea breeze this afternoon, highs pushing into the upper 80s, and a mix of sun and building clouds with a chance of a stray storm later. NOAA tide tables show a predawn high tide rolling through the inlet with a good fall through the morning, then another flood building mid‑afternoon. First light comes early, with sunrise right around six, and sunset landing near eight‑thirty, so you’ve got a long window to work those moving waters. Inshore, the falling tide this morning is your money shot. Redfish and speckled trout have been chewing along the grass edges and creek mouths off the Tolomato and Matanzas systems, especially where that clean ocean water pushes in and drags bait back out. Local tackle shops report solid numbers of slot reds and a mix of keeper trout with a few gator‑class fish taken at first light on topwater plugs. Live shrimp and mud minnows under a popping cork have been steady producers, with anglers bringing in half‑dozen to ten fish on a good tide. Flounder action has quietly picked up around docks, rock piles, and the inlet jetties. Folks drifting finger mullet or mud minnows on jig heads are putting a handful of flatfish in the box, with the occasional doormat mixed in. Sheepshead are still hanging around the bridges and pilings, eating fiddler crabs and barnacle‑scraped offerings, though not as thick as winter. Off the beach, the surf bite has been a mix of whiting, occasional pompano, and some nice slot‑size black drum. Fresh dead shrimp, sand fleas, and Fishbites strips have been the ticket on double‑drop rigs, especially on the last of the incoming and first of the fall when the water cleans up. King mackerel and big jacks have been cruising the bait pods just outside the breakers and off the end of the St. Augustine Pier and inlet, with slow‑trolled live pogies turning heads. For lures, keep it simple and local: – At first light, walk‑the‑dog topwaters in bone or mullet patterns for trout and reds on the flats. – Once the sun’s up, 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads with paddle‑tail plastics in new penny, natural mullet, or smoky silver have been getting thumped. – Around structure, go with a heavier jig and a Gulp shrimp in white or nuclear chicken for flounder and bonus reds. Hot‑spot wise, two areas stand out right now. The first is the Vilano to Palm Valley stretch of the Intracoastal, working the oyster bars and creek mouths on the last of the outgoing. The second is the Matanzas Inlet area, especially the deeper bends and channels just inside the bridge, where that mixed tide pulls bait and stacks predators. Work those edges, keep an eye on the birds and bait flips, and be ready when the current shifts. That’s the word on the water from St. Augustine. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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 20263 min
episode St. Augustine Early Summer: Reds and Trout on the Morning Incoming Tide artwork

St. Augustine Early Summer: Reds and Trout on the Morning Incoming Tide

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern settling in. Offshore winds have been light, with a gentle southeast sea breeze most afternoons. Air temps are running in the mid‑70s at first light, climbing into the upper 80s by midday, with humidity you can about chew on. Skies have been mostly partly cloudy with a shot at a pop‑up thunderstorm late in the day, so keep an eye on the horizon and the radar. On the water side, tide charts from NOAA for the St. Augustine Inlet show a pre‑dawn low and a strong incoming through the morning, then a mid‑afternoon high and a falling tide toward evening. That incoming morning tide has been the money window, especially around the inlet rocks and the ICW creek mouths. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., sunset about 8:30 p.m., giving you a long, fishy day to work the moving water at both ends. Inshore, the bite has been solid. Local shop reports out of St. Augustine Bait & Tackle and Avid Angler say slot redfish and upper‑slot specks are chewing early and late, especially on the cooler, darker parts of the tide. Anglers working the docks and grass edges along the ICW have been picking off reds in the 18–26 inch range, with a few big overslot bruisers mixed in. Trout have been coming from deeper bends and drop‑offs, with some 20‑plus‑inch fish showing up on the first couple hours of the incoming. Best baits inshore have been live shrimp, mud minnows, and finger mullet under a popping cork or on a light jighead. For artificials, a 3–4 inch paddle‑tail in natural mullet or new penny on a 1/8 oz jig has been hard to beat, and a small topwater plug at daybreak has produced some explosive trout and redfish strikes. Folks throwing gold spoons along the grass on the higher part of the tide are also finding roaming reds. Around the inlet and beaches, recent reports from local charters at the Conch House Marina say the tarpon are starting to show along the pogie pods just off the sand. Sharks and big jacks are mixed in, so bring stout gear. Free‑lined live menhaden or mullet have been the ticket. Whiting, Spanish mackerel, and the occasional pompano are still coming from the surf on shrimp, sand fleas, and small shiny spoons. Offshore, captains running out of Camachee Cove have been bringing back decent numbers of mahi, a few blackfin tuna, and scattered sailfish from the bluewater when the weedlines set up right. Bottom fishing on the local wrecks and ledges has produced red snapper (mostly catch‑and‑release if regs are closed), vermilion snapper, and triggerfish on cut bait and squid. Couple of local hot spots to circle on your map: – The St. Augustine Inlet rocks and the nearby ICW junctions: great on the first two hours of the incoming for reds, trout, and flounder with live bait and soft plastics. – The creek mouths and dock lines between the 312 bridge and the Vilano Bridge: work those areas on a moving tide with live shrimp under a cork for mixed trout, reds, and the occasional flounder. If you can, be on the water before first light, fish that sunrise incoming, then take a break mid‑day and slide back out for the last couple hours of daylight. Summer traffic and boat wakes are picking up, so be patient, be courteous, and watch those afternoon storms. 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

Ayer3 min
episode St. Augustine Summer Bite: Topwater at Dawn, Storms Inland, Tarpon on the Beach artwork

St. Augustine Summer Bite: Topwater at Dawn, Storms Inland, Tarpon on the Beach

Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic Northeast Florida summer pattern setting up. Light southwest breeze early, building to a 10–15 knot sea breeze this afternoon with scattered storms pushing in from inland. Air temps are running mid 70s at dawn, climbing to near 90 by mid‑afternoon, and the nearshore water temp is sitting in the low 80s according to recent NOAA coastal observations. First light is right around 6:20 a.m., with sunrise just a few minutes after that and sunset close to 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got long low‑light windows to work the bite on both ends of the day. Tides around the St. Augustine Inlet are on a mid‑range cycle today. High tide hits shortly after sunrise, with low tide early afternoon, then another evening high pushing up around sunset based on the latest NOAA tide tables for the St. Augustine station. That means a nice outbound flow late morning and a good incoming push for the dusk bite. Inshore, the creeks off the ICW — especially around Salt Run, the Vilano side creeks, and down toward Matanzas — have been giving up mixed bags. Local bait shops report decent numbers of slot redfish, plenty of speckled trout, a few upper‑slot snook in the deeper mangrove edges, plus the usual jacks and ladyfish. Flounder numbers are picking up around docks and rip‑rap, with a few keepers each tide cycle. On lures, keep it simple. At first light, walk‑the‑dog topwaters in bone or mullet patterns are drawing trout and cruising reds over shell bars and grass points. As the sun gets up, switch to 3–4 inch paddle‑tail soft plastics on 1/8 to 1/4 ounce jig heads in new penny, silver mullet, or opening night colors. Gold spoons are still a local favorite for covering water on the flats and around flooded grass. For snook around dock pilings and bridge shadows, soft jerkbaits and small swimbaits in natural baitfish colors are getting crushed on the outgoing. If you’re fishing bait, live shrimp, finger mullet, and mud minnows are the ticket. Fish them on Carolina rigs or under a popping cork along current edges. Live mullet or pinfish around bridge pilings and inlet rocks are producing some solid reds, drum, and the occasional tarpon roll. Speaking of tarpon, the beach run is starting. Just outside the breakers, glass minnows and pogies are drawing in tarpon, sharks, and big jacks. Slow‑trolled live pogies or free‑lined baits around bait pods are your best shot, with heavy spinning tackle and plenty of line. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map today: Salt Run and the nearby flats: Great early‑morning topwater and soft‑plastic bite for trout and reds on the edges of the channel and over scattered shell. St. Augustine Inlet and the Vilano Bridge area: Work the rocks and pilings on the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming for reds, drum, and snook with live bait and jigs. Overall fish activity has been best during the first two hours of moving water on either side of the turns, especially under low light and just before those afternoon storms build. Midday slack water has been predictably slow, so plan to scout, move, and hydrate during that window and hit it hard again for the evening push. That’s your St. Augustine fishing rundown 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

19 de jun de 20263 min
episode St. Augustine Summer Bite: Beat the Heat and Catch Early Morning Trout, Reds, and Offshore Action artwork

St. Augustine Summer Bite: Beat the Heat and Catch Early Morning Trout, Reds, and Offshore Action

This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic Northeast Florida summer pattern setting up. Offshore, nearshore, and the river are all waking up early, then slowing once the sun gets high, so plan on beating the heat and the boat traffic. Around St. Augustine Inlet and the beaches, the morning incoming tide has been the sweet spot. Surf’s running light, with a gentle chop and scattered bait pods along the sandbars. Local beach anglers report steady whiting and a few pompano in the early hours, with sharks and the occasional redfish cruising the outer bar once the light comes up. Fresh dead shrimp on small circle hooks, Fishbites in sandflea or clam, and small sand fleas dug right in the wash are doing the work. Inshore, the ICW, Salt Run, and the flats around Vilano and Matanzas are alive at first light. The lower light and moving water are pushing finger mullet and glass minnows up on the edges, and that’s where the trout and redfish have been posted up. Folks fishing topwater early are getting blow‑ups from speckled trout and slot reds on walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or mullet patterns. Once the sun’s high, switching to soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads in new penny or natural brown has been putting keeper reds and a few flounder on the deck. The backwater creeks off the ICW are holding decent numbers of smaller reds and some sneaky nice drum around deeper bends and shell. Live shrimp or small blue crab chunks on a Carolina rig, pitched tight to the oysters, are getting bit. Just remember: light leader, quiet boat, and let that bait soak on the edges of the current. Offshore and nearshore, the reefs and wrecks out front have been giving up mixed bags. Boats running out to the local numbers in 60–90 feet are finding vermilion snapper, lane snapper, and the usual sea bass, with a few grouper mixed in when you drop bigger baits. Sardines, cigar minnows, and cut squid on double‑drop bottom rigs are standard. Closer in, nearshore structure has seen kingfish cruising through when the bait stacks up; slow‑trolled live pogies and ribbonfish are your best bet for a smoker. For boat anglers looking to bend a rod quickly, two hot spots to consider: the shell bars and drop‑offs just north of the Vilano Bridge on the ICW for morning trout and reds, and the Matanzas Inlet area, working the points and creek mouths on a moving tide with live shrimp under popping corks. Both have been producing consistent inshore action when the water’s moving and boat pressure isn’t too heavy. Best artificial choices right now: – Topwater plugs at daybreak for trout and reds. – 3–4 inch paddletails and shrimp imitations in natural colors on light jig heads for working the creeks and docks. – Silver spoons and small diving plugs along the beach if you see bait getting nervous near the surface. Natural bait still rules in this heat: live shrimp, mullet, and mud minnows inshore; pogies, sardines, and squid offshore. Keep your leaders fluorocarbon and your presentations simple. That’s your local St. Augustine fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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 20263 min
episode St. Augustine Morning Bite: Tide Changes and Low Light Windows artwork

St. Augustine Morning Bite: Tide Changes and Low Light Windows

Good morning, anglers—**Artificial Lure** here with your St. Augustine fishing report for today. The tide has been running strong around the inlets and the back creeks, so moving water should be the name of the game for the morning bite. For **weather**, expect a classic early-summer Florida setup: warm air, humidity, and a decent chance of passing afternoon showers and storms. If you’re headed out early, that first light window should be your best shot before the heat and boat traffic build. **Sunrise** is right around the early-morning hours, and **sunset** will give you a long fishing day, so plan to fish the tide changes and the low-light periods hard. Around St. Augustine, the bite often tightens up near dawn and again in the last hour before dark. On the **fish activity** side, the local nearshore and inshore waters have been good for **redfish, speckled trout, flounder, black drum, mangrove snapper, and a few ladyfish and jacks** when the bait is moving. In the surf and around the inlet, anglers are also likely to find **whiting, pompano, bluefish, and Spanish mackerel** depending on water clarity and current. The best action usually comes when bait schools push through—glass minnows, mullet, and shrimp are what you want to see. For **best bait**, live shrimp is still hard to beat in these waters. Pinfish, mud minnows, finger mullet, and fresh cut bait are all solid choices too, especially for reds, drum, and flounder. If you’re fishing the surf, sand fleas and shrimp-style baits can be money when the pompano are around. For **lures**, keep it simple and natural: - Soft plastics on light jig heads in white, pearl, or root-beer - Topwater plugs at daybreak for trout and reds - Suspended twitch baits around grass lines and dock lights - Gold spoons or paddletails when the water’s a little stained - Small jigs and swim baits around the inlet for Spanish mackerel and bluefish A couple of **hot spots** to watch today: the **St. Augustine Inlet jetties** for moving water and mixed species, and the **backwaters around Salt Run and the Matanzas River edges** for redfish, trout, and flounder. If the surf lays down, the **beachfront near the piers and troughs** can also light up for pompano and whiting. My local read is this: fish the tide, fish the shade, and don’t overthink it. Get bait in front of current breaks, dock corners, grass edges, and shell bottoms, and you’ve got a real shot at a solid mixed bag. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to **subscribe** for more local fishing updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

17 de jun de 20262 min