
Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report: Summer Bites, Tides, and Offshore Riches
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About this listen
We’re in the heart of summer, and the Gulf’s showing out with those classic June conditions: plenty of warm, clear water and long stretches of daylight. According to Amelia Fish Bites, June is a prime month for the Gulf Coast, and you can feel it in the bite from sunrise to sunset.
For today, tide times are favoring a strong afternoon push. Over at Gulf Shores, we’ll see a low tide around 1:55 AM, then the high tide peaking at 2:52 PM. Sunrise is at 5:48 AM and we won’t see that sun slip away till close to 8 PM. That gives you a wide window to work those moving tides—just the ticket for inshore and nearshore action.
Weather’s cooperating, too—it’s warm, fairly light winds, and water temps are in that sweet spot for both inshore and offshore targets. Great Days Outdoors reports that in northwest Florida, anglers are scoring big on red snapper, king mackerel, and gag grouper offshore, while inshore you’ll find speckled trout and big redfish working the flats and oyster bars. Hubbard’s Marina says redfish action has been hot all week, especially around mangroves and oyster bars.
What’s biting? This past week, boats out of Panama City and Destin have been loading up on red snapper and grouper when the seas let them run deep, while shore anglers are finding mackerel, ladyfish, and some keeper trout on the beaches and piers. Mangrove snapper are thick at the jetties, and there’s steady sheepshead and drum near structure.
Best baits and lures: If you’re heading offshore, drop live pinfish or cut squid for snapper, or try a big bucktail jig for grouper. Nearshore and inshore, soft plastics in pearl or chartreuse are getting hammered by trout and redfish—especially swimbaits and paddle tails. Don’t sleep on live shrimp or cut mullet, either. For king macks, flashy spoons and gotcha plugs are the ticket, especially at first light and when the tide’s running.
A couple of hot spots to check out this week: John’s Pass around Madeira Beach is producing steady redfish and the occasional snook, especially working the afternoon incoming tide. Further up the Panhandle, Destin’s East Pass is seeing strong snapper bites and a rush of Spanish mackerel.
That’s your Gulf report for today! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for more daily insight and on-the-water updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
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