
Florida Gulf Fishing Report: Battling Weather, Chasing Snapper, Snook, and Tarpon
Failed to add items
Sorry, we are unable to add the item because your shopping cart is already at capacity.
Add to Cart failed.
Please try again later
Add to Wish List failed.
Please try again later
Remove from wishlist failed.
Please try again later
Adding to library failed
Please try again
Follow podcast failed
Please try again
Unfollow podcast failed
Please try again
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
Let’s start with the conditions—Mother Nature has kept us on our toes. According to the Florida Division of Emergency Management, it’s been an active weather pattern with widespread rain and afternoon thunderstorms across much of the state. Central and South Florida saw torrential downpours and some flooding concerns, while the Panhandle baked in triple-digit heat indices. Marine hazards include wave heights of one to three feet, with an elevated risk of rip currents along most coastlines. If you’re headed out, keep a weather eye, especially for afternoon storms.
Sunrise this morning came at 6:47 AM, and the sunset will be at 8:15 PM, so you still got plenty of daylight for those late bites. Tide tables for the western coast, such as Port St. Joe in St. Joseph Bay, showed a high tide around 9 AM at 1.6 feet, dropping to a shallow low around 7:40 PM—a classic summer pattern favoring early morning and dusk for peak activity.
Now, about the fishing: the recent rains have moved the fish around, but anglers are still finding action. Fishin’ Franks reports Mayan cichlids, mangrove snapper, and small tarpon up in the backcountry, and small snook and jacks roaming closer to the harbors. Mangrove snapper are thick around structure and docks, but keepers are harder to find—most are running small. There’s enough for a fish fry if you’re patient, with sand bream and Mayan cichlids ready to oblige. For bait, shrimp reign supreme—peeled shrimp under docks or bridges are fooling just about everything right now, from juvenile tarpon to snapper.
Offshore, deeper reefs (120-140 feet) off Tampa and Boca Grande have produced impressive red snapper catches—some pushing 20 pounds. African pompano and king mackerel are also showing, and hogfish are in the mix for those targeting bottom dwellers. Nearshore reefs are holding sheepshead, but they’re moving around after the storms. Keep a lookout for slot-sized grouper, though red grouper are catch-and-release only until January.
For lures, you can’t go wrong with soft plastics on a jighead for inshore snook and jacks—white, chartreuse, or root-beer have been solid. Silver spoons or topwater plugs like the classic Zara Spook are getting attention from jacks and the odd tarpon. If you’re after snapper or sheepshead, stick with shrimp or fiddler crabs. Offshore, heavy bucktail jigs tipped with squid or live pinfish are the ticket for snapper and grouper.
Hot spots worth checking:
- The passes and bridges around Boca Grande—early morning or dusk, drifting live shrimp along pilings for snook, snapper, and the occasional tarpon.
- The artificial reefs off Englewood and Venice—great for snapper, grouper, and kingfish right now, especially as the water clears up post-storm.
Remember, after a rain, water can get stained near creeks and river mouths; these spots attract bait, which brings the predators in. Be patient and move until you find the fish—don’t be afraid to switch up between live bait and artificials.
Thanks for tuning in to your Gulf of Mexico Florida fishing report! Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest updates, and as always, tight lines and bent rods. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
No reviews yet