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San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today

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Les mer San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today

Dive into "San Francisco Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing adventures, tips, and local insights. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a curious beginner, join us each day to stay updated on the latest catches, hotspots, and fishing conditions in the vibrant waters of San Francisco Bay. Tune in and reel in the excitement! 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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episode Early Summer Bay Bite: Stripers and Halibut on the Afternoon Flood cover

Early Summer Bay Bite: Stripers and Halibut on the Afternoon Flood

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool early‑summer pattern. The National Weather Service has light morning marine layer along the coast, breaking to sun inland, with highs in the low to mid‑60s around the Central and South Bay and mid‑50s near the Golden Gate. Winds are light early, building to 10–15 knots west in the afternoon with the usual stronger gusts under the bridge. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., sunset close to 8:30 p.m., giving you a long fishing window. Tides are running a decent swing today: a pre‑dawn high, dropping to a mid‑morning low, then a solid afternoon flood. That means your best bite windows are the last two hours of the outgoing and the first two of the incoming, especially anywhere you’ve got current pinching around points, bridge pilings, or rock piles. Striped bass are still the main headliner in the Bay. Local reports from party boats and kayak anglers say plenty of schoolies with a fair mix of legal fish, especially around the South Bay flats and the rock walls in the Central Bay. Shore anglers have picked up linesides off Alameda rockwall and Crissy Field on the evening push, mostly 18–26 inches with the occasional bigger fish. Halibut action stays solid, though not quite the red‑hot wide‑open bite from peak spring. Boat crews are still putting together limits or near‑limits on the right tide in Central and South Bay, with fish mostly 22–30 inches and a few larger doormats mixed in. Drift live bait over sandy bottom in 10–25 feet near channel edges and you’re in the game. On the lure side, for stripers, think **swimbaits** and **topwater**. White or chartreuse paddle‑tails on 3/8–1 oz heads, plus walking baits or pencil poppers at first and last light. A 4–5 inch soft plastic jerkbait in baitfish colors also plays well around rock and current breaks. For halibut, slow‑rolled **spoons**, 4–6 inch paddletails, and small trolling plugs that mimic anchovy are good bets if you don’t have live bait. For bait, the usual suspects: live **anchovy**, **sardine**, or **shiner surfperch** if you can get them. Frozen anchovy still works on a slider rig when the live tanks are empty. Bloodworms or pile worms will pick up schoolie stripers and mixed bay species around piers if you’re just looking for action. A couple of hot spots to think about: - **South Bay / Oyster Point to Coyote Point:** Good drifting lanes for halibut on the edges of the channel on the afternoon flood, plus roaming schoolie stripers on the flats. Work the drop‑offs where the grass meets the sand. - **Central Bay / Berkeley Flats and Alameda Rockwall:** Halibut drifts on the sandy stretches, with linesides around the rock and structure. Hit first light with swimbaits or live bait, and swing back in the evening for a topwater striper shot if the wind lays down. As always inside the Bay, watch that wind‑against‑tide in the afternoon; it can stack up some nasty chop, especially near the Golden Gate and the Slot. Early launches and mid‑day breaks are your friend. That’s the Bay 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

9. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Halibut and Stripers: Ride the Afternoon Ebb on the Bay cover

Early Summer Halibut and Stripers: Ride the Afternoon Ebb on the Bay

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early summer pattern setting up. According to NOAA’s tide tables for the Golden Gate, we’re looking at a strong morning flood pushing in from the ocean, then a mid‑day high, followed by a draining afternoon ebb that really gets the current moving. That afternoon outgoing is what you want to key on for stripers and halibut along the channels and edges. Weather from the National Weather Service shows a cool, typical Bay mix: marine layer hugging the coast early, light west winds building to 10–15 knots by afternoon, and temps topping out in the low 60s near the water. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., with sunset near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long window to work that morning calm and the evening glass-off. Fish activity has been solid. Local reports out of Berkeley and Oyster Point say the California halibut bite has picked up with more legals in the box than shorts the last few days, especially on the Berkeley Flats and around the Alameda Rockwall. Party boats and private boaters are bringing in mixed scores—anywhere from a couple fish per rod on the slow days to near limits when the tide, current speed, and bait all line up. Striped bass have been cruising the South Bay and central Bay shorelines. Shore casters around Crissy Field and along the Berkeley Pier area have been sticking schoolies with the occasional keeper. Kayakers and boaters working the rock piles and channel edges are reporting steady action when they stay mobile and hunt for bait schools. Best baits right now: live anchovies and shiners are king for halibut, drifted just off the bottom on a three‑way rig. Frozen herring will still produce if you work it slow and keep it spinning true. For stripers, bloodworms and pile worms under a slider rig are getting bit, especially around current seams and bridge pilings. Best lures: for halibut, hoochie‑style spinner rigs behind a small dodger, or swimbaits in the 4–6 inch range—think pearl, anchovy, or smelt colors—bounced tight to the bottom. For stripers, local sharpies are throwing white or chartreuse paddle‑tail swimbaits, SP Minnow‑style jerkbaits in bone or sardine patterns, and bucktail jigs sweetened with a strip of squid. Low light and a little chop really help those reaction baits. A couple hot spots to circle on your chart: • Berkeley Flats: classic halibut drift water from the Berkeley Pier area out toward the shipping channel. Work the edges on the moving tide, especially the first part of the outgoing. • Alameda Rockwall and Encinal area: good mix of halibut and stripers. Drifters running live bait along the wall edges and channel drops have been putting fish on deck. If you’re on foot, don’t sleep on Crissy Field in the evening—tossing swimbaits on that last light can turn up a surprise linesider when the tide is moving. That’s the latest from around the Bay. 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

I går - 3 min
episode Early Summer Halibut and Stripers: Mid-Morning Floods and Berkeley Flats Gold cover

Early Summer Halibut and Stripers: Mid-Morning Floods and Berkeley Flats Gold

This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up around the Bay. Weather from the National Weather Service calls for cool, gray mornings with a marine layer, light west winds building to about 10–15 knots in the afternoon, and mild temps topping out in the mid 60s near the water. Mornings will be your calmest window. Sunrise is around a quarter to six, sunset just after 8:30, giving you a long day to work the tides. Tides from NOAA for the central Bay are running a solid mixed cycle today: a pre‑dawn low, a strong mid‑morning flood, then an afternoon high dropping back to an evening outgoing. That mid‑morning flood is the prime striper and halibut window, especially where current pushes bait along edges and structure. Fish activity has been good for early June. Local reports from Bay tackle shops and party boats say California halibut are still the headliners, with limits or near‑limits coming off the Berkeley Flats, Alameda Rockwall, and the South Bay channels on the right tide. Most keepers are running 22–30 inches, with the occasional doormat over 30. Striped bass action has picked up again in the North Bay and the central Bay flats, with a mix of schoolies and the odd 30‑inch fish. A few halibut and schoolie bass are also coming right inside the Gate on the bar when the swell lays down. Surf casters are still finding barred surfperch and the odd schoolie striper along Ocean Beach and Fort Funston when the wind backs off. Best baits in the Bay right now are still live anchovies and live shiner perch for halibut, fished on three‑way rigs drifted slow and close to bottom. If you can’t get live bait, frozen anchovies and tray herring are doing work, but you’ll want to pay attention to scent and keep baits fresh. For stripers, pile worms and anchovy chunks on a sliding sinker rig are producing around current seams and channel edges. Artificial‑wise, halibut are chewing on white or glow swimbaits with paddle tails in the 4–5 inch range, pinned to 1–2 oz jigheads, slow‑rolled just off the mud. Drifting hoochies over a herring strip has also been putting fish in the box. Stripers are responding to 4–6 inch soft plastics in white, chartreuse, or baitfish patterns, as well as bucktail and hair jigs with a little flash. At first and last light, topwater walkers and pencil poppers around current breaks or bird activity can be deadly if the wind hasn’t come up yet. A couple local hot spots to circle on your chart: Crissy Field to Fort Point on the city front has been a solid early‑morning run‑and‑gun stretch for schoolie stripers on swimbaits and topwater when the tide starts pushing in and the birds start working. Work the edges of the weed lines and the drop‑off into deeper water. Farther across the Bay, the Berkeley Flats continue to be a halibut factory on a good drift. Line up on the edge of the flat in 15–30 feet, keep your baits ticking bottom, and adjust your sinkers to stay near the mud without dragging too hard. If you’re shore‑bound, the rockwall at Alameda and the piers along the Embarcadero and in South SF are turning out a mix of halibut, stripers, and jacksmelt on bait and swimbaits, especially when the incoming tide starts to roll. 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

7. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bay Bite: Stripers and Halibut on the Move cover

Early Summer Bay Bite: Stripers and Halibut on the Move

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early summer pattern setting up around the Bay. Weather’s starting cool and gray with that marine layer, light west to southwest breeze building to 10–15 knots in the afternoon, and a pretty steady high in the low to mid‑60s. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., with sunset close to 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work with light and tide changes. Tide-wise, we’re seeing solid movement: a good incoming through the morning into midday, then a draining outgoing in the afternoon. Think of that last hour of the flood and first part of the ebb as prime time—especially on the edges of the flats and around the bridge pilings where bait stacks up. Striped bass continue to be the headliner. Inside the Central Bay, anglers are finding schoolies with a few bigger models mixed in, mostly mid‑20s inches, with the occasional fish pushing 30+. South Bay boaters working current lines and channel edges are reporting decent action when the water’s moving. Shore guys along the Embarcadero, Crissy, and the rock walls from Fort Point down toward Fort Mason are picking off bass at first and last light. Halibut fishing has been solid, not on absolute fire but consistently good. Drifters dragging live anchovies or herring over the flats between Alcatraz, Angel Island, and the Berkeley flats are putting some nice keepers in the box—think 22–30 inches, with a few bigger doormats here and there. Inside the South Bay, the deeper edges of the main channel are worth a slow pass on the incoming. Best offerings right now: - For stripers from shore: 4–5 inch soft plastics in baitfish patterns, white or smelt colors on 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads, plus classic 1–1.5 oz bucktail jigs. Topwater walkers and pencil poppers can shine right at gray light when the wind is down. - For stripers by boat: swimbaits on heavier heads in the rips, trolling broken‑back plugs or hair raisers along current seams. - For halibut: live anchovies, herring, or shiners on three‑way rigs are king. If you’re fishing artificials, slow‑rolled 4–5 inch paddle‑tails in glow, white, or root beer with a strip of squid as a teaser can turn lookers into biters. Bait-wise, you can’t go wrong with fresh anchovies if you’re fishing the bay proper. A bit of squid added to a trap‑rig for halibut or on a hi‑lo for bycatch rockfish near structure still produces. Bloodworms and pile worms will tempt schoolie bass and surfperch along the beaches when the swell is down. A couple local hot spots to circle: - Crissy Field and Fort Point: Work the rock edges and current lines on the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing for stripers, especially at dawn. Cast parallel to the rocks and keep those plastics low and slow. - Berkeley Flats and the Triangle between Alcatraz and Angel Island: Drift live bait for halibut on the flood. Watch your sonar for bait balls; if you see bird life and a little chop, you’re in the zone. Action isn’t lights‑out everywhere, but if you line up tide, low light, and moving water, there are definitely bass and halibut to be had. Travel light on shore, keep moving until you find bait and current, and on the boat, don’t be afraid to reset your drifts until you trace a line that produces. 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

6. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bay: Stripers and Halibut on the Flood cover

Early Summer Bay: Stripers and Halibut on the Flood

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

5. juni 2026 - 3 min
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