Florida Keys Fishing Report Today

Early June Keys: First Light Tarpon, Snook, and the Tide Change Bite

3 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Early June Keys: First Light Tarpon, Snook, and the Tide Change Bite

Descripción

Good morning from the Florida Keys, where the first light is already working the flats and the backcountry edges. I’m Artificial Lure with your local-style fishing report for today: expect **warm, breezy conditions**, **good early bite windows**, and the kind of June action that shifts fast with the tide. For the **tides**, check the channel-facing side and the Gulf-side shallows around first light; the best feeding often lines up with **moving water**—either the last push of the outgoing or the first turn of the incoming. In the Keys, that current change can wake up everything from **tarpon** and **snook** to **snapper**, **jack crevalle**, and **mangrove snapper**. Since I don’t have live tide tables in the results provided, use your nearest Key West, Marathon, or Islamorada station before you launch. For the **weather**, June in the Keys usually means hot mornings, bright sun, and the chance of scattered afternoon showers or a squall line offshore. A light southeast breeze often helps push bait onto shorelines, reefs, and cuts, which is exactly where the fish want to be. If the wind lays down early, stealth matters; if it freshens up, work protected edges and lee-side channels. **Sunrise** is early and the first hour is prime time. **Sunset** is your second best window, especially on reef edges, bridge shadow lines, and drop-offs where bait stacks up. If you’re planning a full day, fish dawn hard, rest through the midday glare, then be ready for the evening bite. Recently, the Keys have been producing a mixed bag typical of early summer: **tarpon rolling in the channels, snook sliding the mangroves, permit tailing on the flats, and reef fish like yellowtail and mangrove snapper picking at live bait and cut bait**. Anglers have also been seeing **jacks, Spanish mackerel, and barracuda** around bait schools and current seams. The key pattern is simple: where the bait goes, the predators follow. For **lures**, I’d keep it practical: - **Soft plastic paddle tails** in white, pilchard, or silver for flats and channel edges - **Bucktail jigs** for deeper cuts, bridges, and reefy drop-offs - **Topwater plugs** at dawn for snook, jacks, and working tarpon - **Shrimp or pilchard imitations** when fish are keyed in on small bait For **bait**, the standouts are usually **live pilchards, live shrimp, and small crabs** for permit and tarpon. On the reef and around bridge pilings, **cut ballyhoo, pinfish, and shrimp** can all get eaten fast if you get the drift right. If you can net fresh pilchards, that’s hard to beat in the Keys. A couple **hot spots** to check: - **Florida Bay side mangrove edges and creek mouths** for snook, redfish, and juvenile tarpon - **Bridge channels and current rips near Islamorada or Marathon** for tarpon, snapper, and jacks If I were heading out, I’d fish the first light on a moving tide, throw a topwater or paddle tail, then switch to live bait once the sun gets high. Keep one eye on birds, nervous bait, and clean color changes in the water—that’s usually where the day’s fish are stacking. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe for more reports. 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 Florida Keys Summer Bite: Tarpon, Permit, and Offshore Action artwork

Florida Keys Summer Bite: Tarpon, Permit, and Offshore Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Florida Keys fishing report. We’ve got a light summer pattern setting up over the island chain. Around Key Largo down through Big Pine and Key West, expect warm, muggy conditions, light to moderate southeast breeze, and typical afternoon thunderheads popping up. Morning temps start in the upper 70s, climbing into the high 80s to low 90s. Water temps are sitting in the low 80s on the oceanside flats and a touch warmer in the backcountry. Sunrise is right around a quarter past six, with sunset close to eight thirty this evening, so you’ve got nice long low-light windows to work with. The morning incoming tide has been the money maker on the oceanside flats, with a decent fall-out mid‑day and another push this evening. Around the bridges, the best moving water has been the last part of the outgoing into the first of the incoming; that’s when the tarpon and snook have really turned on. Inshore, the backcountry has been alive. Anglers have been finding good numbers of speckled trout and mangrove snapper on the edges of grass flats in 3–5 feet, with the occasional keeper redfish mixed in. On the flats, there’s been solid sight‑fishing for bonefish and a few permit on calm mornings. Tarpon are still around the channels and bridge shadows early and late, rolling and free‑jumping when the tide and wind line up. Offshore, dolphin (mahi) fishing has been steady with schoolies and a few gaffers around weed lines and scattered debris beyond the 300‑ to 600‑foot line. Blackfin tuna are hanging near the humps, especially when there’s a bit of cloud cover and current. A few sails and wahoo are still in the mix for folks putting in the time. Best producers inshore have been live shrimp, pilchards, and pinfish under corks or free‑lined in the current. Artificial-wise, tie on a 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce jighead with a white or new penny paddletail, or a gold spoon for cruising reds and trout. For bonefish and permit, small shrimp and crab patterns on light fluorocarbon leaders have been the ticket. Tarpon are eating live mullet, crabs, and big swimbaits or suspending plugs fished along the bridge shadow lines. Offshore, mahi are chewing on small ballyhoo, squid strips, and bright feather jigs trolled around weed lines. Chunking with sardines or pilchards around the humps is working well for blackfin. Keep a pitch rod rigged with a live bait or bucktail jig for fish that show right on the surface. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: first, the channels and flats around Islamorada and Lower Matecumbe have been a strong bet for tarpon, bonefish, and mixed snapper. Second, the Key West Harbor and adjacent shipping channels are holding tarpon, jacks, and plenty of mangrove snapper for those fishing live bait on the bottom. That’s your Keys 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

10 de jun de 20263 min
episode Early June Keys Bite: Chase the Tide Through Channels and Bridges artwork

Early June Keys Bite: Chase the Tide Through Channels and Bridges

Good morning from the Keys, this is **Artificial Lure** with your fishing report. Early June has the water warming fast, the bait is thick, and the bite is best around moving water, especially the first push of the incoming tide and the last of the outgoing around channels, bridges, and reef edges. The **tides** are the big player today, and without a live tide table in hand, the rule down here is simple: fish the current, not the clock. Around the Keys, the most consistent action is usually on tide movement through cuts, channels, and flats edges where pilchards, shrimp, and glass minnows get swept out. If you can line up with a clean moving tide, you’re in business. For the **weather**, early June in the Florida Keys is typically hot, humid, and often breezy with a chance of afternoon thunderstorms. That means early and late are your best windows, and slick calm water at daybreak can turn into a chop by midday. Dress light, carry rain gear, and keep an eye on the horizon. **Sunrise and sunset** this time of year give you a long day, with sunrise coming early and sunset late, so the prime bite windows are usually the low-light periods around dawn and dusk. Those edges are especially good for tarpon, snook, jacks, and snapper. Recently, the water around the Keys has been producing a mixed bag when conditions line up: **tarpon** rolling on bridges and channels, **mangrove snapper** stacking on structure, **yellowtail snapper** picking over reef edges, and **snook** and **jacks** feeding along mangroves and flats. Offshore and near the reef, you can also run into **mahi, kingfish, and assorted grouper** when the bait is present and the current is right. On a good day, a local crew might box a few snapper, hook a tarpon or two, and jump several jacks before lunch. For **lures**, keep it simple and local: - A small **soft plastic jerkbait** on a light jighead for mangrove edges and channel mouths. - A **topwater plug** at dawn for snook, jacks, and tarpon on calmer flats. - A **suspending twitch bait** or **paddletail swimbait** for working bait schools and current seams. - For bridges and night fishing, a **live bait hook** or a simple weighted presentation beats fancy every time. For **bait**, the best all-around choices are **live pilchards**, **shrimp**, and **threadfin herring** when you can get them. For snapper, small pieces of shrimp, cut bait, or a lively pilchard are tough to beat. For tarpon, nothing speaks louder than a healthy live bait drifting naturally with the current. A couple of **hot spots** worth your attention are the **bridges and channels in the Middle and Lower Keys**, and the **reef edge/patch reef lines offshore of Key Largo through Marathon**. Also watch the **flats and mangrove edges on the bayside** when bait gets pushed tight to the shoreline. If I were fishing today, I’d start at first light on a moving tide with live pilchards or a topwater, then slide to bridge shadows and channel edges as the sun gets up. Keep your eyes open for birds, nervous water, and bait flipping—that’s where the fish are telling you to go. Thanks for tuning in, and remember 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

Ayer3 min
episode Florida Keys Summer Bite: Reef Snapper, Backcountry Snook, and Offshore Dolphin Action artwork

Florida Keys Summer Bite: Reef Snapper, Backcountry Snook, and Offshore Dolphin Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Florida Keys fishing report. We’ve got a light summer pattern setting up. Overnight showers offshore, then mostly sun with a light east–southeast breeze around 8–12 knots. Air temps climbing to the mid‑80s, humidity up there, but seas inside the reef are pretty friendly, 1–2 feet, a little bumpy on the outside edge. Tide-wise, around Key Largo and Islamorada you’re looking at an early morning incoming, topping out mid‑morning, then falling through early afternoon. Down toward Marathon and Big Pine it all lags about 30–45 minutes. Low water and slack around mid‑day, with the second push coming late afternoon into evening. That incoming around the flats and channels has been the money window. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m., sunset just after 8:10 p.m., so you’ve got long low-light periods. First light to about 9 a.m. and then the last two hours before dark have been the best bite. Offshore, the charter docks have been hanging good flags. Boats running out 10–20 miles off Islamorada and Marathon have been bringing in mixed dolphin: schoolies with a few gaffers in the 15–20 pound range, plus scattered blackfin tuna and the odd wahoo on the deeper edges. Trolled rigged ballyhoo, small chuggers, and peanut-sized skirted lures in blue/white and pink have been hot. Keep a spinning rod rigged with a bucktail or small swimming plug for dolphin that swim up on the weedlines. On the reef, the snapper bite has been steady. Yellowtail in the 12–16 inch class with some bigger mangroves mixed in over the patch reefs and the 60–90 foot edge. Lightweight chum, 12–15 pound fluoro, and small hooks are helping when the water’s clear. Best baits have been cut ballyhoo, squid strips, and live pilchards. A few muttons coming off the deeper rubble for folks patient with a live pinfish on the bottom. Inshore, the backcountry is classic summer Keys. Around Islamorada and the Everglades side, anglers are getting snook, redfish, and a few tarpon in the creeks and channel mouths on the mid‑to‑late incoming. Soft-plastic paddletails in new penny or root beer, gold spoons, and live shrimp under a popping cork are all producing. Early morning, rolling tarpon around the bridges and channels have been eating live mullet and crabs; once the sun gets high they’re a lot pickier. On the flats from Key Largo down through Big Pine, bonefish have been active on the late rising and early falling tides when you’ve got a little breeze to break the surface. Small shrimp patterns on fly, tan or olive skimmer jigs, and live shrimp on a light leader are working. Permit reports are decent around the oceanside wrecks and deeper flats using live crab or crab‑profile jigs. Best artificial choices right now: - For reef and wrecks: 1–2 oz bucktail jigs tipped with bait, medium diving plugs in natural baitfish colors. - For backcountry: 3–4 inch paddletails on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, gold spoons, and walk‑the‑dog topwaters at dawn. - Live bait: pilchards, pinfish, mullet, shrimp, and small crabs are all top tier. Couple local hot spots to circle on your chart: - The Islamorada reef line from Alligator Reef down to Tennessee Reef for yellowtail, mangroves, and the occasional mutton, plus dolphin just outside the edge. - Bahia Honda Bridge area for tarpon on that early morning incoming and again right before dark, especially around the shadow lines. Work those tide changes, keep your leaders light and your baits natural, and you’ll bend a rod. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

8 de jun de 20263 min
episode Florida Keys Fishing Report: East Wind, Long Days, and Stacked Bait artwork

Florida Keys Fishing Report: East Wind, Long Days, and Stacked Bait

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Florida Keys fishing report. We’re sitting on a light to moderate east‑southeast breeze this morning, 10 to 15 knots, easing a bit by late afternoon. Air temps riding the mid‑70s at first light, pushing into the mid‑80s with that classic muggy Keys feel. Seas inside the reef are a gentle 1 to 2 feet; just outside the reef line 2 to 3, a little chop on the incoming tide. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m. with sunset close to 8:15 p.m., so you’ve got a nice, long window. First light to mid‑morning and then that last two‑hour evening push should be your prime bite. Tides around Marathon and Islamorada are running a pre‑dawn low, rolling into a solid late‑morning high and another falling tide toward evening. That incoming mid‑morning water is going to stack bait on points, bridges, and channel edges; outgoing around sunset will flush the mangroves and backcountry creeks. Inshore and backcountry, snook and redfish have been chewing around the mangrove shorelines, island edges, and potholes. Local captains out of Islamorada report good numbers of schoolie snook with a few upper‑slot fish mixed in, plus reds tailing early on the flats. Live shrimp, pilchards, and pinfish under a popping cork are money. For artificials, think small paddle‑tails in pearl or new penny, gold spoons, and light‑colored jerkbaits twitched along the edges. Trout and mangrove snapper are stacked on channel edges and grass flats in 3 to 6 feet. Small jigs tipped with shrimp, or a simple knocker rig with cut bait or live shrimp, will fill a cooler fast. Don’t overlook those afternoon slick‑calm periods for mangroves near structure. On the reef, charter docks from Key Largo to Key West are hanging plenty of yellowtail, mutton snapper, and a few black grouper. The clearer the water, the lighter the leader: 12‑ to 20‑pound fluorocarbon, small hooks, and fresh cut ballyhoo or squid drifting back in the chum slick. A few kings and bonitas are roaming the deeper edges; slow‑trolled live baits or diving plugs will find them. Offshore, when the weedlines stay together, boats have been picking at schoolie mahi with some gaffers mixed in. Captains out of Marathon and Big Pine report most fish on small trolled lures, feathers in blue‑white or pink‑white, and chunks of ballyhoo once the school finds you. Keep a spinning rod rigged with a small bucktail or flashy jig to pitch at followers. For hot spots, check the bridges: Seven Mile Bridge and Channel 2/5 are classic. Work the shadow lines on moving water with live pilchards or pinfish for tarpon, snapper, and the odd snook. In the backcountry, the lakes and basins north of Islamorada and out of Flamingo are holding redfish, snook, and trout—just mind the storms and carry a good chart or GPS. Best overall artificials right now: – White or bone topwater plugs at first light for snook, reds, and baby tarpon. – 3‑ to 4‑inch paddle‑tails in natural baitfish hues on 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce jigheads. – Small bucktail jigs in chartreuse or white for everything from trout to schoolie mahi. Natural bait: live shrimp, pilchards, pinfish, and fresh ballyhoo are your go‑tos. Keep it simple, fish the moving water, and be ready at low light. 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

7 de jun de 20263 min
episode Keys Summer Bite: Tarpon at Dawn, Snapper on the Afternoon Outgoing artwork

Keys Summer Bite: Tarpon at Dawn, Snapper on the Afternoon Outgoing

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Keys fishing report. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions down here. Light southeast breeze 8–12 knots most of the day, bumping to 15 in the afternoon, with scattered clouds and that hazy, humid feel. High around the upper 80s, heat index pushing mid‑90s. Barometer steady and that usually keeps the bite consistent. Sunrise came just after 6:30 this morning, sunset will be a little after 8:10 tonight, giving you a long window to work the low‑light periods. Tides through the island chain are running a gentle morning incoming and a stronger afternoon outgoing on the Atlantic side, with about a 2‑foot swing. Around the bridges, that falling water later in the day has been the magic, stacking bait and predators right in the shadow lines. Offshore, the bluewater edge has been alive. In 400–700 feet, boats have been putting together nice mixed bags of schoolie and gaffer **mahi**, with a few slammers in the mix. Anglers are also reporting scattered **blackfin tuna** on the humps and some **sailfish** still around when the current pushes in tight. Best bet has been small skirted ballyhoo, bonito strips, and white or chartreuse feather jigs trolled at 6–7 knots. Keep a spinning rod rigged with a chunk of cut bait or a pilchard for when the mahi show right behind the boat. On the reefs in 25–80 feet, the **snapper bite** has been strong. Yellowtail and mangrove snapper, along with lanes and the odd mutton, have been chewing on the late afternoon outgoing. A steady chum slick, 12–20‑pound fluoro leaders, and small J‑hooks with cut ballyhoo, squid, or shrimp are the ticket. Free‑lined baits drifting back naturally are outfishing weighted rigs when the current’s not ripping. Inshore, backcountry flats and mangrove edges are waking up early. **Tarpon** are still rolling at the bridges at first light and again on the evening tide change. Live crabs and big mullet are prime, but soft‑plastic paddletails in pearl or gold on a light jig head will get crushed in the right current seam. Around the oceanside flats, anglers are seeing **bonefish** tailing on the higher morning water, with shrimp‑pattern jigs and small natural‑colored flies doing damage. **Snook** and **redfish** deeper in the mangroves are hitting live pilchards, pinfish, and gold spoons. Artificial-wise, if you’re staying inside: – Topwater walk‑the‑dog plugs at dawn for tarpon and snook. – 3–4 inch paddle‑tails in new penny, white, or chartreuse on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads along channel edges. – Shrimp‑profile jigs for bonefish and picky snapper on the shallow patch reefs. Couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: – **Seven Mile Bridge**: Work the bridge pilings on the afternoon outgoing for tarpon, big mangroves, and the occasional grouper. Fish the shadow lines with live bait or big soft plastics. – **Long Key Reef and nearby patches**: Great mixed snapper action, with mackerel and the odd cobia cruising through. Get there an hour before the tide peaks, fire up the chum, and free‑line baits back. Water’s warm, fish are active, and if you line up that moving water at dawn or dusk, you’re in for a solid day. 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

6 de jun de 20263 min