Omslagafbeelding van de show Rio Grande Texas Fishing Report Today

Rio Grande Texas Fishing Report Today

Podcast door Inception Point AI

Engels

Cultuur & Vrije Tijd

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Over Rio Grande Texas Fishing Report Today

Join the "Rio Grande, Texas Fishing Report Today" for the latest tips, hotspots, and expert insights on fishing in the Rio Grande region. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a beginner, our daily updates cover local weather, water conditions, and the best catches of the day, ensuring you have all the information you need for a successful fishing trip. Don't miss out—tune in and reel in more fish with us! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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aflevering Rio Grande Early and Late: Trout, Reds, and Drum Biting on the Tide artwork

Rio Grande Early and Late: Trout, Reds, and Drum Biting on the Tide

Morning, folks — Artificial Lure here with your local fishing rundown for Rio Grande, Texas. Around the lower Rio Grande Valley, the bite has been leaning toward early and late windows, with the biggest action coming when the wind lays down and the water clears a bit. For today, May 21, the weather looks warm, humid, and classic South Texas: expect a good dose of sunshine, a chance of passing clouds, and enough breeze to keep the surface moving. If you’re on the water at daybreak, Sunrise is around 6:37 AM, and Sunset lands near 8:12 PM, giving you a long evening window to work the shoreline. Tides for the Laguna Madre and nearby Lower Texas Coast are working on a modest rhythm today, with small tide swings rather than big surges. That usually means the fish are staged tight to structure, drains, potholes, grassy edges, and any moving water. When the tide starts easing out, that’s when the bait gets flushed and the predators turn on. If you can find clean water with a little current, you’re in business. Recent action has been steady on speckled trout, slot redfish, and a few black drum mixed in. Folks have also been tangling with sheepshead around rock and dock structure, and some smaller flounder have been showing up along sandy cuts and transition zones. Most of the better reports have trout and reds coming on live shrimp, small croaker, and paddle tails worked slow. In the back lakes and marsh drains, the redfish have been cruising in singles and small pods, especially first light and near sunset. Trout have been most active when worked over grass flats and potholes with a soft, subtle presentation. Best lure picks for today: a 3-inch paddle tail in pearl, silver, bone, or chartreuse; a weedless gold spoon for covering water and finding active reds; and a suspending twitch bait if you’ve got cleaner water and want to tempt trout. If you’re fishing around structure, a jighead tipped with shrimp imitation or a soft plastic shrimp can save the day. Work everything slower than you think — this time of year, a lot of bites come on the fall. Best bait? Live shrimp is still the money bait, plain and simple, especially under a popping cork around grass and drains. Cut mullet, fresh shrimp, and live croaker are all producing when the trout are feeding heavier. For reds, cracked crab, shrimp, and cut bait can all get it done. If you’re targeting drum, shrimp on the bottom is hard to beat. A couple hot spots to check: the back lakes and marsh drains off the lower Laguna Madre, where outgoing water concentrates bait; and the channels, spoil islands, and grass edges near the lower valley bay systems where current meets structure. If you find muddy water, slide to a cleaner edge and fish the seam — that’s where the better fish tend to sit. Bottom line, the bite is there if you stay mobile, fish early, and match the tide movement. Keep it simple, keep it natural, and don’t ignore the drains. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. 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 mei 2026 - 4 min
aflevering Rio Grande and Lower Laguna Madre: Wind Picks Up, Bite Best at First Light artwork

Rio Grande and Lower Laguna Madre: Wind Picks Up, Bite Best at First Light

This is Artificial Lure with your Rio Grande and Lower Laguna Madre fishing report. We’ve got light to moderate southeast wind early, building by late morning into the 15–20 mph range, with gusts a little higher on open water. Air temps running mid‑70s at first light, climbing to the upper‑80s by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, humid, and it’s that sticky south Texas heat you know well. Sunrise hit right around 6:40 a.m., sunset will be just after 8:10 p.m., so you’ve got a nice, long day to work the water. The bite window’s lining up best around low light and tide turns. Tides along the lower coast near Boca Chica and the mouth of the Rio Grande are on the softer side today, with a modest morning incoming pushing a little higher water into the mangroves and then easing back early to mid‑afternoon. Not big swings, but just enough current to get bait moving along the edges of drains and guts. Water inshore is a stained green‑brown mix, especially closer to the river mouth where that Rio Grande flow muddies things up. Farther up into the Lower Laguna Madre proper, you’ll find clearer grass flats, especially on the east side when the wind allows. According to regional coastal fishing reports and recent local chatter from Brownsville and Port Isabel tackle shops, trout catches have picked up on the deeper edges of the flats and in the ICW, with slot fish mixed in with a lot of 15–17 inch schoolies. Redfish are roaming shallow, tight to the grass and shorelines when the wind lays, and some nice slot drum are hanging deeper near the old channels and around structure. Fish activity has been strongest at daybreak and then again late evening when the wind backs off and the water smooths out. Midday, you’ll still pull fish but you’ll need to go deeper and slower—think channels, drop‑offs, and the windward shorelines where bait gets pushed. On artificials, keep it simple. For speckled trout and schoolie reds, a 1/8 to 1/4 oz jighead with a paddle tail in bone, chicken‑on‑a‑chain, or opening night is money in that off‑color water. Topwaters like a Super Spook Jr. or Skitter Walk in bone or chrome/black are getting crushed right at first light over the grass and along potholes—walk them slow with long pauses. When the sun gets higher, switch to soft plastics or a slow‑rolled swimbait. For bait soakers, live or fresh‑dead shrimp under a popping cork is still king, especially around the edges of the ICW and along drop‑offs. Cut mullet or cut menhaden on the bottom will pick up reds, black drum, and the occasional oversize loner. If you’re fishing the actual river mouth or jetties, don’t be shy about tossing heavier spoons or swimbaits and soaking cut bait—there’ve been reports of jack crevalle, some sharks, and a few bull reds cruising those areas when the water cleans up. A couple of hotspots to put on your list: 1. Mouth of the Rio Grande and adjacent surf: When the wind isn’t blowing it out too hard, work the current seams where that brown river water meets the greener Gulf water. Cast spoons, swimbaits, or big paddle tails into the color change. Watch for birds and nervous bait—if you see showers, get a lure in there quick. 2. Lower Laguna Madre grass flats between South Bay and the ICW: Wade or drift these flats early, throwing topwaters and paddletails in 2–4 feet over grass with scattered potholes. Focus on any slight depth change or sand pocket. As the sun climbs, slide a little deeper and work soft plastics slower near the bottom. Boat anglers: mind the wind and watch that skinny water—lots of prop‑eaters out there. Shore and wade anglers: shuffle your feet and keep an eye out for rays in the shallows. 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

20 mei 2026 - 5 min
aflevering Early Summer Rio Grande: Trout, Reds, and Cats on the Bite artwork

Early Summer Rio Grande: Trout, Reds, and Cats on the Bite

This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report. We’ve got early-summer patterns settling in along the lower Rio Grande and nearby Laguna Madre. Weather’s warm and sticky: overnight lows in the low 70s, afternoon highs pushing upper 80s to near 90, light to moderate southeast breeze building by late morning. Humidity is high, skies partly cloudy with a decent Gulf breeze kicking up a light chop on open water. Along the coast near Boca Chica and South Bay, NOAA’s Brownsville/Port Isabel data shows a pre‑dawn low tide, a strong incoming push through mid‑morning, then a higher afternoon tide easing off toward night. That incoming morning water has been the sweet spot, stacking bait and feeding reds and trout along drains and channel edges. Sunrise is right around 6:40 a.m., sunset near 8:10 p.m. The bite has been best in two windows: the gray‑light first hour of sun and then that late‑afternoon period when the wind lays a bit and tide is still moving. In the river itself, water is a little stained with decent current. Catfish and drum are active on the deeper bends, especially where there’s brush and rock. Folks soaking cut shad, chicken liver, and stink bait have been reporting steady channel cats in the 2–5 pound range with an occasional blue cat mixed in. A few nice freshwater drum and the odd gar are showing up on cut bait near structure. Closer to the coast, anglers running out of the Brownsville Ship Channel toward South Bay and the jetties have been into solid speckled trout and slot reds. Local bait shops in Brownsville and Port Isabel are reporting recent catches of specks from 15–22 inches, some limits taken early when that incoming tide lines up with sunrise. Reds have been running mid‑slot, 22–26 inches, with a couple of heavier bruisers hanging on the edge of the channel. Best artificial lures have been: - 1/8 to 1/4 oz jigheads with paddle‑tail plastics in white, opening night, and new penny - Topwaters at first light: bone or chrome/black “walk‑the‑dog” plugs for trout over shallow grass and sand pockets - Gold spoons slow‑rolled along edges for reds and schoolie jacks Live bait is still king for numbers. Live shrimp under popping corks along channel drops and bay grasslines have been hot, especially on that rising tide. Finger mullet and mud minnows freelined or on light Carolina rigs are producing reds and the occasional snook tight to mangroves and docks. For pure numbers on the river side, stink bait or punch bait on small circle hooks with just enough weight to hold bottom will keep you busy with channel cats all morning, particularly just downstream of logjams and outside river bends. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: 1. Ship Channel to South Bay edges Work the channel breaks and adjacent flats on an incoming tide. Drift with plastics or anchor and throw live shrimp under corks. Watch for slicks and nervous mullet. 2. Lower Rio Grande deep bends near town access points Look for sharper outside bends with visible current seams. Drop cut shad or prepared baits right on the seam for cats and drum. Early and late are best, especially when the wind isn’t howling. Water temps are warm enough now that mid‑day bites get sluggish, so plan around tide and low light. Downsizing leaders and going a little more natural on colors helps in the clear bay water, while in the river’s murkier flow you can get away with heavier gear and louder baits. That’s the rundown from Artificial Lure—hope it puts more bend in your rod next trip. 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

19 mei 2026 - 4 min
aflevering Rio Grande Spring Bite: Reds, Trout, and Drum Limits Sunday artwork

Rio Grande Spring Bite: Reds, Trout, and Drum Limits Sunday

Hey y'all, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' atcha with your Rio Grande, Texas fishin' report for Sunday, May 3rd, 2026. Dawn's breakin' over the border waters, and it's lookin' prime out there. Weather's holdin' steady at 72°F this mornin', light southeast breeze at 5-8 mph, partly cloudy skies with a low chance of showers—perfect for a full day on the water, per NOAA forecasts. Sunrise hit at 6:52 AM, sunset's 8:12 PM, givin' us 13+ hours of light to chase 'em. Tides are risin' strong today: high at 7:21 AM and 7:48 PM, low at 1:02 PM, accordin' to NOAA tide charts. That incoming tide's stirrin' up the mullet and baitfish, makin' the reds and specks hungry. Fish activity's hot right now—spring patterns have **redfish** drummin' in the shallows, **speckled trout** pushin' 18-25 inches, and **black drum** bulkin' up to 30 pounds. Recent reports from Texas Parks & Wildlife show anglers pullin' limits yesterday: 15 reds over 20 inches, a dozen trout per boat, plus flounder startin' their summer migration. Limits on blacktip sharks too, runnin' 4-6 feet offshore. Best lures? Go with **gold spoons** like the Johnson Sprite for twitchin' through grass beds—reds can't resist. **Soft plastics** on 1/4-oz jigheads, chartreuse or shrimp imitators, for trout in 2-4 feet. Live **shrimp** under a poppin' cork or **mullet chunks** on circle hooks for drum and flounder. Fish the falling tide for aggressive bites. Hot spots: Hit the **Boca Chica jetties** for trout and reds slingin' bait, or drift the **South Bay flats** near the cuts—knee-deep water's loaded with tailin' reds. Stay safe, check regs, and wear your PFDs. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

3 mei 2026 - 2 min
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