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Sea of Cortez, Mexico Fishing Report Today

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Tune in to the "Sea of Cortez, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world's aquarium—a nutrient-rich marginal sea renowned for its exceptional marine biodiversity and year-round big-game angling. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Sea of Cortez's unique ecosystem and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before 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 Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Tuna, Roosters, and the Best Tide Windows cover

Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Tuna, Roosters, and the Best Tide Windows

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We woke up to light morning breezes and typical early-summer heat building fast. Along much of the Baja side, winds are generally under 10–12 knots in the morning, stiffening in the afternoon with a bit of chop once the sun gets high. Skies are mostly clear, and the water’s warming nicely, which means the pelagics are pushing in tight. Tides today are running on a pretty standard mixed semi‑diurnal pattern: a decent pre‑dawn high, easing toward a mid‑morning fall, then another push late afternoon. That early high tide has been the money window inshore, especially on the sand beaches and rocky points, with another good bite as water starts moving again before sunset. Sunrise is right around the very early six o’clock hour local, with sunset in the ballpark of eight in the evening. The best action has been from gray light through the first two hours of sun, then again late afternoon into dusk once the wind lays down and the surface cools a touch. Offshore, boats out of San José del Cabo and La Paz have been finding solid yellowfin tuna mixed with skipjack on porpoise schools and under bird piles. Most reports are of school‑size tuna in the 15–30 pound range, with some nicer models in the 40s. Cedar plugs, small feathers in dark/green combos, and live sardina slow‑trolled or fly‑lined are doing the work. A few dorado are showing, mostly gaffers in the 10–20 pound class, taking trolled skirted ballyhoo and bright‑colored plastics when the sun gets higher. Inshore around rocky structure and reef edges, there’s been steady action on cabrilla, pargo, and a mix of jacks. Slow‑pitch and vertical jigs in 60–120 grams, natural bait colors or blue/silver, have been hot. Live bait—sardina, caballito, or small mullet—still outfishes hardware when the current’s moving. Around the estuary mouths and beaches, roosters have been cruising the surf, with a few quality fish caught on big surface poppers and live mullet right in the wash. For artificial lures, keep it simple: - For tuna and dorado: small tuna feathers, cedar plugs, and 4–6 inch skirted lures in green/black, zucchini, and pink/white. - For roosters and jacks: big topwater plugs, stickbaits, and shiny spoons you can bomb from the sand. - For bottom fish: slow‑pitch jigs, butterfly‑style irons, and 3–5 inch soft plastics on heavier jigheads. Bait‑wise, live sardina are still king offshore and nearshore, with caballito and mullet taking the bigger grade fish. If you’re stuck with dead bait, rig ballyhoo or chunk skipjack on fluorocarbon leaders; keep presentations natural and drifting with the current. Couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: - The Iman and Gordo Banks off San José del Cabo have been holding tuna and the occasional wahoo, especially when there’s good bait and current. - Around Espíritu Santo and Cerralvo Island near La Paz, look for bird life and color breaks for tuna and dorado, and work the east and south points for pargo and cabrilla on jigs and bait. Fish the moving water, be on the spot at gray light, and be ready to adapt—switching between live bait and irons has been the difference between a slow day and a full fish box. 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

22. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Sea of Cortez Heat Bite: Tuna, Roosters, and Golden Hour Fishing cover

Sea of Cortez Heat Bite: Tuna, Roosters, and Golden Hour Fishing

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We’ve got classic Gulf conditions right now: light to moderate morning breeze out of the northwest, building mid‑day, then easing off toward evening. Skies are mostly clear, with hot temps pushing well into the 90s by afternoon, so plan on that early‑morning or late‑afternoon bite. Sunrise is right around six a.m., sunset close to eight p.m. local time, giving you a long glow window at both ends of the day. Tides are running a decent swing on this moon, with a good moving-water window mid‑morning and again late afternoon. Around La Paz and the islands, the flood pushes bait tight to the points and reef edges, then the ebb drags it off into the channels. Work those transitions and you’re in the game. Pelagics are active. Boats running out of La Paz, Los Barriles, and down toward Cabo Pulmo have been into school‑size **yellowfin tuna**, scattered **dorado**, and a few **striped marlin**. Most tuna are footballs to 30 pounds, with the odd bigger model mixed in. Dorado have been small to medium, with the better fish on the current breaks and around buoy lines and weed patches. According to recent dock chatter from La Paz pangas, the **inshore** bite has been steady: **roosterfish** along the beaches, **jack crevalle** marauding bait balls, and solid **pargo** and **cabrilla** on the rocky structure. Roosters in the 10–30 pound class have been cruising sandy stretches with light chop and nervous mullet; jacks are smashing anything that moves when the bait stacks. Best lures right now offshore: - For tuna: small **cedar plugs**, compact **metal jigs**, and blue‑and‑white or zucchini **feather jigs** trolled a bit back. - For dorado: **bright skirted lures** in lime, orange, and pink, plus small hardbaits near flotsam. - For marlin: classic **lure chains** in blue/white or black/purple and rigged ballyhoo if you have them. Best bait: live **sardinas** are gold when you can get them; slow‑trolled or fly‑lined they’re producing tuna, dorado, and roosters. Mullet and caballito are the ticket for bigger roosters and jacks along the beach. For bottom fish, fish **cut squid** or chunked bait tight to the rocks with enough lead to stay pinned. Inshore artificials: - Roosters and jacks are crushing **surface poppers**, chugging plugs, and 4–6 inch **soft plastics** in white or bone on stout jigheads. - Pargo and cabrilla are chewing on **deep‑running cranks**, 2–4 ounce **butterfly jigs**, and heavy **swimbaits** slow‑rolled along the reef. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: - **Isla Espíritu Santo / Partida area (off La Paz)** – Current edges and reef drops are holding pargo, cabrilla, and the occasional wahoo, with dorado outside on temp breaks. Work the up‑current sides of points as the tide starts to move. - **East Cape beaches, from La Ribera toward Los Barriles** – Classic roosterfish highway. Walk the sand at first light with a big surface plug or live mullet, and be ready when that comb cuts the surface behind your bait. Midday, the bite slows with the heat and wind chop, so either go deep for grouper and snapper or take a siesta and save your energy for the evening run. That’s the Sea of Cortez report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. 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. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Sea of Cortez Heat Bite: Early Light and Evening Tides Firing for Roosters and Offshore Pelagics cover

Sea of Cortez Heat Bite: Early Light and Evening Tides Firing for Roosters and Offshore Pelagics

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We woke up to classic Gulf conditions: light predawn breeze, seas starting out around 1–2 feet and building just a bit by late morning, mostly calm inside the bays. Skies are mostly clear with a few coastal clouds and warm, sticky air pushing into the mid‑80s before noon and well into the 90s this afternoon. The heat is already driving the best bite to early and late. Tides along the central Sea of Cortez coast around La Paz–Loreto are running on a moderate cycle today, with a decent predawn high, a dropping tide through the morning, and a low late morning to midday. That falling water has been concentrating bait on the points and at the mouths of arroyos. Evening brings a gentle push back in, just enough current to set up a good sundown chew on the reefs and inshore humps. Sunrise cracked just after 5:30 local time, with first good light right before that, and you could feel life turn on: birds up, flying fish skipping, and scattered boils of jacks and small tuna pushing sardines tight to the surface. Sunset will be early evening, and that last golden hour is lining up perfectly with cooler air, softer wind, and the incoming tide. Offshore, boats working the 20–40 mile line and the seamounts have been picking away at yellowfin tuna in the 15–40 pound class, with the odd bigger model mixed in. Dorado are around in better numbers now, mostly school‑size fish, but enough 20‑plus pound bulls to keep things interesting. Sailfish and the occasional striped marlin are sliding through the warmer blue water edges; the billfish bite isn’t wide‑open, but it’s steady for crews willing to put in the time. Inshore, the story has been variety. Roosterfish patrol the beaches and rocky points, with most fish running 10–25 pounds and a few brutes over 40 showing on the cleaner stretches of shoreline. Cabrilla and pargo are stacked on structure in 40–100 feet, and there are respectable flags of yellowtail still hanging deeper on some of the cooler, high‑relief spots, especially where current is strongest. Best producers lately: for offshore pelagics, trolled skirted ballyhoo, small to medium marlin lures in dark/bright combos, and cedar plugs or small bullet heads for the tuna. When the fish come up, live sardines fly‑lined on light fluorocarbon have been deadly. Inshore, big roosters and jacks are crushing live mullet, caballito, and sardinas slow‑trolled tight to the beach. For artificials, work stickbaits, medium diving plugs, and 1–2 ounce surface poppers in natural bait colors early, then switch to darker or more contrasty patterns as the sun climbs. Around the rocks and reefs, yo‑yo iron and 2–4 ounce jigs in blue/white, scrambled egg, or chrome, plus simple chunks of cut bait, have been putting cabrilla and pargo in the box. A couple local hot spots to keep on your radar: - The reefs and seamounts off La Paz and Cerralvo/Isla Espíritu Santo: good mix of tuna, dorado, and the occasional billfish offshore, with solid pargo and cabrilla on the structure edges. - The points and beaches around Loreto and down toward Puerto Escondido: prime roosterfish and jack crevalle water, plus nearby high‑spot structure that’s still holding yellowtail and grouper where the current hits hardest. Plan to fish hard from gray light until mid‑morning on the falling tide, then take a break through the worst of the heat. Slide back out for the late‑afternoon incoming tide and work that last light for your best shot at quality fish. 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

20. juni 2026 - 4 min
episode Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Dorado, Tuna, and the Dawn Bite from Baja cover

Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Dorado, Tuna, and the Dawn Bite from Baja

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, straight from Baja-style boots-on-the-sand. Up the Cortez side from Los Cabos through La Paz and north toward Loreto, we’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern: warm, clear water pushing mid to high 70s near shore and low 80s offshore, light morning wind, building breeze mid‑day, then easing toward evening. Local marina boards in San José del Cabo and La Paz are showing steady flags of dorado, yellowfin, and billfish the past few days, with inshore boats stacking up cabrilla and snapper. Tides along the Baja Sur Cortez coast are running a modest morning high, dropping through late morning into early afternoon, then a building flood toward sunset. That first light high tide has been the money window inshore, especially around rocky points and reef edges. Sunrise is right around very early morning; you want lines in the water in the gray light. Sunset is early evening, and that last hour of incoming tide has been turning on the surface bite for dorado and schoolie tuna. Offshore, the action line has been roughly 10–25 miles out where the blue water meets greener currents and scattered weed lines. Recent charter counts out of Cabo and La Paz report decent numbers of **dorado**, school‑size **yellowfin tuna**, a mix of **striped marlin**, plus the odd **sailfish**. Boats running cedar plugs and small to medium skirted lures in blue‑white, purple‑black, and zucchini patterns are doing best. Drop a live or chunked sardina or caballito back into the chum line once you get a strike; that’s been key for converting singles into doubles and triples. Inshore and around the islands, it’s classic **grouper, cabrilla, pargo, sierra, and jack crevalle** fishing. Pangas working tight to the rocks with 2–4 oz lead and live sardinas or cut mullet are coming back with solid mixed bags. For artificials, think yo‑yo jigs and metal spoons in 40–80 grams, plus 4–6 inch soft plastics in baitfish colors on heavy jig heads. Early and late, a walk‑the‑dog topwater or popper along the shoreline rocks can draw savage strikes from cabrilla and jacks. Couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: - **Cerralvo / Isla Espíritu Santo area out of La Paz** – Current edges and high spots holding tuna, dorado, and the odd wahoo, with strong bottom fishing around the structure. Slow‑trolled live bait and mid‑size diving plugs in blue‑silver are producing. - **Gordo Banks and Iman Bank off San José del Cabo** – Good marks of tuna and billfish with dorado around floating debris. Start with small‑profile skirted lures, then switch to live sardina or caballito once you find life. Bring fluorocarbon; the clearer water has the fish a little line‑shy. Best bait overall right now: **live sardinas** when you can get them, followed by caballito, squid strips, and fresh cut bonito. Best lures: small‑to‑medium trolling skirts, diving plugs like Rapala‑style minnows, yo‑yo jigs, and surface poppers at dawn and dusk. That’s your Sea of Cortez report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the 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

19. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bite: Marlin, Tuna, and Roosters Light Up the Sea of Cortez cover

Early Summer Bite: Marlin, Tuna, and Roosters Light Up the Sea of Cortez

This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, from Loreto down to Cabo and across toward La Paz. We’re sitting in a classic early-summer pattern. Light offshore breeze at dawn, picking up to a moderate onshore wind mid‑day with chop on the windward sides. Mornings are starting in the low 70s, afternoons pushing into the upper 80s and low 90s, with strong sun and generally clear skies. Humidity is up but we’re still before the heart of storm season. Sunrise is just after 6 a.m. local on the Baja side, sunset a bit after 8 p.m., giving a long fishing window. First light topwater has been money, and that last 45 minutes before dark is turning on the inshore fish. Tides are running a modest swing – not huge spring tides, but enough movement to matter. The stronger bite has been around the morning incoming and the first half of the afternoon outgoing. If you can line up that tide change with dawn or dusk, you’re in business. Water temps are solidly into the summer band now, mid‑70s to low 80s depending on how far offshore you run. That’s brought in more pelagics: striped marlin, some blue marlin starting to show, yellowfin tuna scattered but present, and the usual run of dorado getting more consistent by the day. Roosterfish patrol the beaches, and inshore structure is holding snapper, cabrilla, and a few amberjack. Recent catch reports up and down the corridor have been strong: - Offshore, boats are tagging 2–4 striped marlin on a decent day, with some crews finding small pods of yellowfin and putting 4–10 school‑size tuna in the box when they hit the porpoise right. Dorado counts are creeping up, 1–6 fish per boat, mostly schoolies with the odd bull. - Inshore, pangas working the rocks and points are seeing limits or near‑limits of leopard grouper and various snappers when the current is moving, plus a handful of trophy roosters for the guys putting in time on the beaches. Best producers right now: Offshore lures: - Medium‑sized skirted trolling lures in blue‑white, black‑purple, and petrolero patterns for marlin and tuna. - Small jet heads and feathers in pink, zucchini, and blue‑white for yellowfin and school‑size dorado. - Cedar plugs or small bullet heads run way back when the tuna get picky. Bait offshore: - Live caballito, mackerel, or sardina slow‑trolled on circle hooks have been deadly on marlin and dorado. - Chunked or fly‑lined sardina when you find tuna on top. Inshore lures: - 4–6 inch swimbaits in sardine and mackerel colors bounced around rocky structure for cabrilla and snapper. - Surface poppers and stickbaits in white or bone for roosters along the beaches. - Metal jigs worked vertically on high spots for mixed bottom fish and the occasional amberjack. Inshore bait: - Live sardina is king – free‑line them along current seams, points, and color changes. - Cut bait or squid on heavier leader near the rocks for bigger snapper and grouper. Couple of local hot spots to put on your list: - Isla Carmen and Isla Coronado area off Loreto: work the edges and high spots around Carmen for cabrilla, snapper, and the occasional yellowtail, and look for dorado and billfish just outside the island line when the water edges clean up. - Gordo Banks off San José del Cabo: classic high spot for yellowfin, billfish, and some serious bottom dwellers. When the current is right, it can light up, especially with live bait. - As a bonus, the beaches near La Ribera and down toward Los Frailes have been giving up some quality roosterfish to guys willing to walk and cast poppers at dawn. Overall, fish activity is solid, with the best action at gray light and late afternoon around the tide changes. Midday can get slower with the sun high, so that’s a good time to run, scout, or grab a taco and wait for the light to soften. That’s your Sea of Cortez 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. juni 2026 - 3 min
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