Omslagafbeelding van de show Los Angeles Fishing Report Today

Los Angeles Fishing Report Today

Podcast door Inception Point AI

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Over Los Angeles Fishing Report Today

Los Angeles Fishing Report Today - the podcast that's got its finger on the pulse of your local waters. Whether you're a weekend warrior or a seasoned angler, we've got you hooked!Every morning, we serve up a fresh batch of fishing goodness straight to your earbuds. In just 10 minutes, you'll be armed with everything you need to know for a successful day on the water: - Hot spots: Where the fish are biting, from piers to deep sea - The day's catch: What's being reeled in and where - Tide tables: High, low, and everything in between - Weather watch: Conditions that could make or break your trip - Bait buzz: What the fish are hungry for today - Lure lowdown: Top artificial choices for target species - Pro tips: Daily advice from local fishing legends Plus, we'll keep you up to date on regulations, tournaments, and the latest gear hitting the market.Don't let the big one get away! Subscribe to "Reel Talk: Your Daily Catch Report" and turn the tide in your favor. Available on all major podcast platforms - just search, subscribe, and start catching!New episodes drop daily at 5 AM, so you're always ready to cast off with confidence. Tight lines, anglers! This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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aflevering Early Summer LA Fishing: Perch, Bass, and Bonito on the Rise artwork

Early Summer LA Fishing: Perch, Bass, and Bonito on the Rise

This is Artificial Lure with your Los Angeles fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer setup along the LA coast. Marine layer in the morning burning off to sunny skies, light onshore breeze building this afternoon, and temps along the beaches in the upper 60s to low 70s. Inland lakes will push mid‑80s by mid‑day, so plan your freshwater missions early or late. Sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m., with sunset close to 8:10 p.m., giving you a long, workable window. The usual mixed semi‑diurnal tides mean a higher morning tide and a dropping tide through late morning into early afternoon, then a push again toward evening. Inshore, surf fishing from Malibu down through Dockweiler has been solid. Anglers are picking up barred surfperch, yellowfin croaker, and some chunky spotfin near river mouths and structure. Sand crabs are the MVP bait right now, with bloodworms and lugworms close behind. For artificials, 2–3 inch motor oil or camo grubs on a Carolina rig are getting bit, especially on the first hour of the incoming. Light line and long casts are key with the clear water. Around the LA breakwall and nearshore stones off Palos Verdes, calico bass and sand bass are waking up. Plastics in brown, red flake, and baitfish colors fished on 1/2–1 oz leadheads are producing, and the night bite on the squid grounds is kicking out a mix of bass and some legal halibut. Live sardines, when you can get them from the barge or landing receivers, are still top tier for quality fish. Offshore and outer banks within range of the local fleet have seen regular counts of bonito, barracuda, and school‑size yellowtail on the kelp lines, with a few early-season bluefin spotted farther out. Surface iron in mint or blue/white and flashy 1–2 oz colt snipers are the go‑tos. Fly‑lined sardines on 20–30 lb fluorocarbon are getting the better grades when they pop up on breezers or sonar marks. Local freshwater is worth a look too. Castaic and Pyramid are seeing steady action on largemouth and smallmouth at first light on topwater—walking baits, poppers, and small whopper ploppers—then transitioning to finesse worms and dropshots once the sun gets high. Panfish are stacked tight to docks and shaded structure; mini jigs tipped with a waxworm will keep the rod bent for kids and casual anglers. Couple of local hotspots to circle today: 1. Santa Monica Bay surf, especially near the Venice Pier and north toward Will Rogers, for perch and croaker on sand crabs at first light and the evening push. 2. Palos Verdes Peninsula, working the kelp edges and boiler rocks for calico bass on swimbaits and leadhead/strip combos, with a shot at a halibut on slow‑rolled plastics over sand pockets. Focus on the tide changes, keep an eye on the wind line creeping in by early afternoon, and remember that the best window is usually that gray light to mid‑morning, then again the last couple hours before sunset. 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

Gisteren - 3 min
aflevering LA Coastal Fishing Report: Clear Water, Moderate Swells, Prime Tide Windows Today artwork

LA Coastal Fishing Report: Clear Water, Moderate Swells, Prime Tide Windows Today

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. Marine layer’s hanging in this morning along the LA coast with light onshore breeze, cool low 60s early, pushing into the low 70s on the sand this afternoon. According to the National Weather Service discussion, winds stay mostly under 10–15 knots nearshore with a small west swell, generally 2–3 feet, maybe a touch more on open beaches by midday. That means very workable conditions for both surf casters and boat anglers. Tides today are running a moderate swing, with a pre‑dawn high dropping to a late‑morning low, then building again into a solid afternoon high. Pulled from NOAA’s LA area tables, that gives you classic structure windows: outgoing tide at first light and a nice push later for the evening bite. Work those tide changes; that’s when things have been turning on. Sunrise is just after 5:40 a.m. with sunset a little after 8 p.m., so you’ve got a long light window. Low light around dawn has been key for finicky inshore species, especially in the clear water we’ve had most of this week. Recent coastal catches up and down the Santa Monica Bay and South Bay have been steady rather than spectacular. Local landings and pier chatter report mixed bags of **barred surfperch**, **yellowfin croaker**, **spotfin croaker**, **walleye surfperch**, and the odd **corbina** sliding into the shallows. South toward Palos Verdes and Long Beach breakwalls, boats and kayakers are picking away at **calico bass**, **sand bass**, **sheepshead**, and some **short halibut** with a few legals in the mix. Offshore a bit, the sportboats running out of San Pedro and Marina del Rey have been seeing good counts of **rockfish**, **whitefish**, and **sculpin**, with a slow pick on **barracuda** when the schools push in. On bait, the consistent producers in the surf have been **sand crabs**, lugworms, and fresh mussel. If you can find small, soft shell sand crabs, thread two or three on a size 4–6 hook and fish them on a light Carolina rig right in the first and second trough. For croaker and perch, a 6–10 lb fluorocarbon leader really helps; the water’s clear and they’re line shy. Artificial‑wise, this week has leaned toward natural presentations. In the surf, **1/2–3/4 oz Kastmasters** in chrome or chrome/blue, **3-inch swimbaits** in smelt or anchovy colors on 1/4 oz heads, and small **Gulp sandworms** in camo or blood red have all been getting bent. Around structure and the kelp edges, anglers are doing well on **5-inch weedless swimbaits**, brown/back or sardine patterns, and **leadhead plus squid strip** combos for bass and rockfish. If you’re chasing halibut along the harbor mouths and sandy points, slow‑rolling a **3–4 inch paddle tail** in baitfish patterns tight to the bottom has been the ticket. Fish activity has been best in two windows: that gray‑light dawn period through about 8 a.m., and then again on the afternoon high, especially if the wind doesn’t blow the surface to froth. Midday has been scratchy unless you’re dropping deeper for rockfish. A couple of local hot spots to circle: • **Dockweiler to El Segundo stretch**: That long, gently sloping beach has been putting out quality barred surfperch and some chunky yellowfin croaker on sand crabs and Gulp sandworms fished in the inside trough. Look for bird activity and slightly darker seams of water; that’s your deeper cut. • **Palos Verdes Peninsula area**: Both from kayak and private boat, working the kelp edges and rocky pockets with swimbaits and whole squid has produced solid calico bass and a few halibut. Keep a heavier setup handy; there have been sheepshead hanging tight to the hard structure. If you’re limited to the piers, Santa Monica and Manhattan Beach piers have seen a mix of mackerel, jacksmelt, perch, and the occasional legal halibut on live bait rigged on sliding setups. Travel light, fish smart around those tide swings, and scale down your gear if the bite seems off — lighter line and smaller hooks have been making all the difference in this clear, calm stretch. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for mor Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21 jun 2026 - 4 min
aflevering LA Coastal Bite: Bass, Halibut, and Moving Water This Afternoon artwork

LA Coastal Bite: Bass, Halibut, and Moving Water This Afternoon

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. MarineWeather and NOAA show a weak morning high followed by a mid‑day drop and a modest afternoon push, so expect the better bites to line up with that late‑morning to afternoon moving water. Light onshore breeze building to 10–15 knots, typical June marine layer burning off late morning with highs in the 70s along the beach. Time and Date reports sunrise around 5:42 a.m. and sunset near 8:08 p.m., so you’ve got long low‑light windows to work with. Water temps along the Santa Monica Bay buoy line are riding in the low to mid‑60s, just warm enough that the summer life is creeping in but not full throttle yet. Local shop chatter around Redondo and Marina del Rey is that bass and halibut are doing the heavy lifting right now, with the offshore game still ramping. Inshore, pier and surf anglers from Malibu down through Dockweiler are seeing a steady pick on barred surfperch, yellowfin croaker, corbina, and the occasional legal halibut. Best numbers have been on Carolina‑rigged sand crabs and lugworms, with a fair number of fish coming on 2‑inch motor‑oil grubs and small swimbaits slow‑rolled just outside the first trough. Reports out of the Hermosa and Manhattan Beach piers mention several halibut in the 20–24 inch class this week, plus lots of short flatties keeping rods bent. Inside Marina del Rey and King Harbor, spotted bay bass and sand bass have been biting around rock walls and harbor mouths on the incoming. Local skippers are talking about half‑day trips bringing back mixed bags of rockfish, whitefish, a few sculpin, and a sprinkle of legal calico. Most of those are falling for squid strips on double‑dropper loops in 150–250 feet, with leadheads and swimbaits getting the bass higher in the column. Offshore and just outside the bay, private boaters working paddies and temperature breaks are marking bait, birds, and a few early‑season yellowtail, but landings haven’t reported big counts yet. It’s more of a “one‑here, one‑there” game for the guys who are willing to burn fuel and hunt. For lures, this is prime time for **3–4 inch swimbaits** in sardine, smelt, and anchovy patterns on 3/8 to 1/2‑ounce heads for bass and halibut along the beaches and harbor mouths. A **Krocodile** or small **Castmaster** is money when the wind comes up and fish push bait to the surface. In the surf, keep it simple: sand crabs, mussel, and lugworms for croaker and corbina, and switch to a white or smelt‑colored jerk shad on a light jighead if you’re hunting halibut. If you’re bank‑bound, two hot spots to circle today: 1. **Dockweiler State Beach:** Long stretches of sand with defined bars and troughs. Fish the first and second trough at first light with sand crabs for corbina and perch, then drag swimbaits for halibut as the sun gets higher and the tide starts moving. 2. **Marina del Rey North Jetty and harbor mouth:** Work the rocks with swimbaits, small hardbaits, and live bait if you can get it. Bass, halibut, and the odd sheephead hang tight to that structure. Time it with the incoming tide for your best shot. Boat guys, consider sliding just outside Palos Verdes to pick at rockfish and whitefish in 180–220 feet with squid on droppers, then move shallow for bass on swimbaits and plastics as the afternoon breeze kicks up. That’s your Los Angeles fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. 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 jun 2026 - 3 min
aflevering LA Coastal Fishing: Perch, Halibut, and Harbor Bass in the Morning Light artwork

LA Coastal Fishing: Perch, Halibut, and Harbor Bass in the Morning Light

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. Marine weather first. Along the Santa Monica Bay and down toward Long Beach, the marine layer is hanging in early with low clouds and patchy fog, light wind under 10 knots in the morning, bumping up with a westerly breeze this afternoon. Air temps are running mid‑60s at first light, pushing into the low 70s near the water and warmer inland by afternoon. Swell is modest: mixed south and west, 2 to 3 feet on most open beaches, a little more energy on south‑facing points. Sunrise is right around 5:40 a.m., sunset close to 8:05 p.m., so you’ve got a long window of low‑light bites on either end of the day. Tides today are running a pre‑dawn high dropping to a late‑morning low, then building to an evening high. That falling tide mid‑morning can spark the surf bite as water drains off the bars and troughs, and the evening push is prime around docks and harbor mouths. Nearshore fish activity has been solid. Anglers along Dockweiler, El Porto, and up toward Malibu have been reporting steady barred surfperch, yellowfin croaker, and a few corbina in the skinny water tight to the foam. Halibut are still around in the cuts and along the inside edges of deeper troughs, especially where bait is stacking up in the current seams. Best surf baits right now: sand crabs dug on the spot, lugworms, and ghost shrimp where you can get them. For artificials, a 3‑inch to 4‑inch swimbait in sardine or smelt pattern on a light ball head has been putting halibut on the sand, and a Carolina‑rigged Gulp! sandworm in camo or bloodworm is money on perch and croaker. Keep it light: 6‑ to 10‑pound fluoro, small sliding egg sinker, and work those inside lanes. Inside the harbors, both Marina del Rey and Long Beach have been giving up mixed bags: spotted bay bass, sand bass, short barracuda, mackerel, and the usual smelt. Night and first light around lighted docks, bridges, and rock walls have been best. Live anchovies or small sardines—if you can find a receiver with good bait—are still the top ticket. When you’re throwing artificials, 3‑ to 5‑inch paddle‑tail swimbaits in olive, baitfish, or plain white, plus small metal jigs and Krocodile‑style spoons, are drawing strikes from bass and cuda. Drop‑shot with a small fluke or jerk shad along pilings can be deadly when the tide starts to move. Offshore and local islands are seeing a mix of calico bass, rockfish, and occasional yellowtail when the water temps bump up and bait balls show. Party boats out of San Pedro and Long Beach have been reporting limits or near‑limits of rockfish on the deeper stones, with a few lingcod mixed in. Best offerings out deep remain squid strips, cut anchovy, or sardine on a double‑dropper loop with 8‑ to 12‑ounce sinkers, depending on current. If you’re hunting yellowtail or surface biters on sport boats, bring surface irons in mint, blue‑and‑white, and scrambled egg, plus flyline setups with 20‑ to 30‑pound fluorocarbon. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: Santa Monica Bay, especially the stretch from Venice Pier up to Santa Monica Pier, has been quietly consistent on perch, halibut, and the occasional legal seabass cruising edges in the gray light. Work the low‑tide structure: rips, deeper holes, and any patch of darker, nervous water. Inside Long Beach Harbor and the breakwall is another strong bet. Fish the up‑current sides of the rocks on the incoming tide, or tuck into the marinas and target shadow lines after dark. Calicos and sand bass stack in tight, and a slowly crawled swimbait or live bait just off the bottom can turn that graph into bent rods. Overall, fish activity is good if you time the tide and lean into that early and late light. Midday can get slow and crowded, so either fish deeper, fish the shade, or take a break and wait for that evening tide swing. 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 jun 2026 - 4 min
aflevering Early Summer Corbina and Perch: Light Lines and Sand Crabs Rule the LA Coast artwork

Early Summer Corbina and Perch: Light Lines and Sand Crabs Rule the LA Coast

This is Artificial Lure with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up along the LA coast. Light marine layer in the morning, burning off to sunny skies and mid‑70s to low‑80s along the beaches, with typical west to southwest breeze picking up in the afternoon. Overnight and early morning winds stay on the lighter side, so that’s your best window for both surf and boat fishing. Sunrise comes early and the bite has been best from first light through mid‑morning, then again on the evening push into sunset when that wind eases and the current flattens out. Midday has been slower and a bit scratchy unless you’re fishing deeper structure or kelp. Tides are running a decent swing: a higher water period in the morning setting up a nice push for surf species, then backing off mid‑day before another bump later in the afternoon and evening. Think classic “bite on the incoming,” especially around rocky pockets, harbor mouths, and pier pilings where the water funnels. Inshore, anglers have been finding solid mixed bags of **barred surfperch, corbina, yellowfin croaker,** and the occasional **spotfin** on the beaches from Dockweiler down through Bolsa and up around Ventura-facing stretches. Sand crabs are thick in the skinny water and remain the number one natural bait for corbina and perch. Bloodworms, lugworms, and fresh mussel are producing croaker and spotfin. For artificials, 2–3 inch sand-colored grubs, small swimbaits, and Carolina‑rigged Gulp! sandworms have been doing damage when there’s a little chop and color to the water. Harbors and breakwalls from Marina del Rey to Long Beach are giving up **calico bass, sand bass, sculpin,** and a few **legal halibut.** Fish are tight to structure: rocks, pilings, and dock edges. Top lures have been 3–5 inch swimbaits in sardine or baitfish patterns, leadheads with brown or red flake plastics, and small jerkbaits slow‑rolled near bottom. Live sardines, anchovies, or even a lively smelt on a dropper loop or sliding sinker rig are your best bet for halibut. Just outside, the local half‑day and three‑quarter‑day boats have been picking away at **calico bass, barracuda, bonito,** and occasional **yellowtail** on the stones and kelp lines when conditions line up. Surface iron in mint, scrambled egg, or blue/white, along with small colt snipers, has been productive on the toothy stuff. Calicos are chewing on weedless swimbaits and 1/2 oz leadheads with 4–5 inch plastics in brown, red, and baitfish colors. Bring fluorocarbon leaders—pressured fish are picky on the clearer days. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: • **Santa Monica Bay beaches** around Perry’s and down toward Venice: good corbina and perch action in the first two troughs on sand crabs and small grubs when the morning high is pushing in. • **Long Beach Breakwall and inside the harbor**: solid bass action with a shot at halibut and the odd yellowtail or barracuda on the outside edges when the current’s moving. Fish the shadows and current seams hard. Overall fish activity has been “pick but steady” rather than wide‑open—anglers putting in the time at prime tide windows with lighter line and natural presentations are the ones going home with the better counts. That’s your Los Angeles fishing wrap 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

18 jun 2026 - 3 min
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