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St Augustine Fishing Report Today

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Stay updated with the latest fishing conditions, tips, and hotspots in St. Augustine, Florida, with the 'St Augustine Daily Fishing Report.' Whether you're a local angler or planning a trip, our daily podcast delivers real-time insights on tides, weather, fish activity, and the best bait to use. Get expert advice, interviews with seasoned fishermen, and everything you need to know for a successful day on the water in St. Augustine. Tune in for your daily fishing update and make your next catch your best!"

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Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for Wednesday, November 26th, 2025. Sunrise rolled in at 6:57 this morning, and you can expect sunset tonight at 5:25, so your window for prime action is nice and defined. We’re rolling into a crisp, late fall pattern—temperatures opening up cool in the low 60s and warming up just enough under clear skies to keep the bite lively. Winds are light out of the northwest, making conditions fishable inshore and from the surf.Looking at the tide, Saint Augustine Beach saw a low tide at 5:22 AM right around 1.0 feet, followed by a midday high tide peaking at 11:40 AM up to 4.87 feet, and it'll drop again to near 0.9 feet by this evening. That means your sweet spot for working the flats, creek mouths, and jetties is late morning through early afternoon, especially as that incoming water brings bait into the estuaries.Heading out, the mullet run is fading but there are still pods around, keeping the predators up shallow. Folks are reporting solid action on **redfish** and **trout**—reds are cruising the grasslines and oyster bars, especially around Salt Run and Guana River, while trout have been thick around the deeper bends of the ICW and bridge shadows. Live shrimp under a popping cork has been best for numbers, but if you’re an artificial junkie like me, a soft plastic paddle tail in new penny or electric chicken, rigged on an eighth-ounce jighead, is tough to beat. MirrOlure suspending twitchbaits and topwater plugs (think Spook Jr. or Skitter Walk) got some big trout in the low light this morning.The surf zone is holding **whiting**, **pompano**, and scattered **black drum**. Fishbites and live sand fleas on double-drop rigs are pulling steady action on St. Augustine Beach and down near Matanzas Inlet—cast just past the break on the incoming tide for your best shot at a pomp. Jetties at Vilano are a hotspot too, especially if you're chasing a slot red at dusk or dawn.In the creeks, anglers are still finding some hungry **flounder**, though most are shorts—mud minnows or finger mullet on a Carolina rig are your ticket there. Keep your retrieves slow, especially with the water cooling off.If you’re after a mixed bag, the City Marina docks and the channel edges at the mouth of the San Sebastian have put out some stout sheepshead this week. Fiddler crabs or small pieces of shrimp close to the pilings are the ticket.For gear, grab your medium-light spinning outfit with 10-15 pound braid and a 20-pound fluorocarbon leader. If the water’s clear, scale down for more bites.Two hot spots worth checking today:- **Salt Run**: Redfish and trout are both here, especially on a flooding tide. Fish the eastern edge grass lines and current breaks.- **Matanzas Inlet**: Surf anglers are seeing pompano and drum; inlet fishermen are pulling flounder from the rocks.Red tide is not present per the latest Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission update, so no worries about closures or irritation on the water today.That’s the round-up for your St. Augustine fishing this November 26th. Thanks for tuning in to the report—I’m Artificial Lure reminding you to subscribe for your daily dose of local fishing insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, bringing your local St. Augustine fishing report for Tuesday, November 25, 2025. The sunrise hit at 6:59 AM and sunset will be at 5:26 PM, giving us a solid window to chase the bite, especially around the prime tide swings.We’ve got a nice tide cycle for the day: low tide rolled in at 4:30 AM with a height of about 0.95 feet, and you'll see the high tide peak at 11:07 AM pushing just under 5 feet at 4.99 feet. We’ll drop back down to another low just after 5:30 PM at a similar 1-foot mark, with another high building late tonight at 11:29 PM, sitting at 3.94 feet according to TidesChart. These big swings are classic for fall and get the inshore action fired up.Weather’s cooperating this week. It started a touch chilly near dawn, but temps will settle in the mid-60s to low 70s, with a light west breeze keeping things comfortable through the afternoon—ideal for poling the flats or soaking bait from the surf.The fish certainly noticed. Reports from the last 48 hours around St. Augustine’s inshore and beach zones have been strong. Redfish continue to school up hard on the flats and creek mouths around the ICW near Salt Run and San Sebastian, with several solid upper slots landed early during outgoing. Speckled trout are showing up thick in the deeper bends and potholes, especially as the water’s got a touch cleaner after the weekend weather. Early risers picked off a limit on LO artificials and shrimp before the sun was warm. We’re hearing about consistent flounder, with multiple legal fish taken on live mullet, mostly around Matanzas River drop-offs and oyster bars.Off the sand just south at Butler Beach, anglers had a good run of whiting and a handful of pompano. Simple double dropper rigs with dead shrimp or sand fleas got plenty of action, particularly near the first trough on the rising tide.Best baits right now: - For redfish and trout, live shrimp or mud minnows under a popping cork is money, but don’t overlook soft plastics like Z-Man MinnowZ or Gulp! swimming mullet in white or chartreuse during those minor bite periods.- If you’re a lurehead, topwater walking baits like the Ima Little Stik in ‘Sexy Minnow’ work at first light, then switch over to suspending jerkbaits or paddle tails as the sun climbs. Add a bit of Pro-Cure for scent when things get slow.If you’re heading out and need a couple hot spots to sweeten your odds: Salt Run near Anastasia State Park is holding packs of slot reds and is great for waders and kayaks alike. For shore folks, Butler Beach is a strong bet on the incoming tide for both action and dinner fare. For the old salts, don’t sleep on the Vilano Bridge pilings—big black drum and sheepshead have been stacking up, and fiddler crabs or cut blue crab chunks are the ticket.On the offshore front, not many big boats out yesterday with the mild groundswell, but the nearshore reefs still saw some keeper flounder and the usual array of sea bass and snapper for those dropping jigs and cut bait.That’s the scoop from St. Augustine—a stellar stretch for light tackle and surf action, with plenty of fish up shallow and the bite window best during those tide changes, especially around mid-morning and dusk. Thanks for tuning in and be sure to subscribe for more local fishing updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, bringing you the latest fishing buzz from St. Augustine on this cool Monday, November 24, 2025. Folks woke before first light, with sunrise peeking over the Atlantic at 6:59 AM and sunset whispering away at 5:26 PM. Today’s temps settled in the upper 50s early, warming into the mid-60s by midday, under partly sunny skies and a touch of northwest breeze. That’s textbook late fall for us in the Ancient City—comfortable for anglers working the beach or marsh.Tide-wise, anglers saw a **low at 3:40 AM (0.9 ft)**, **high at 11:07 AM (5.0 ft)**, another dip by **5:35 PM (1.05 ft)**, and a late-evening rise close to **11:29 PM (3.94 ft)** according to tideschart.com. The morning incoming tide lined up well with the best bite window, especially for surf and inlet fishing. This cycle, paired with a waxing crescent moon, got predators running the troughs and channels.Word from the local docks is redfish and trout are both feeding strong, and a few bull reds cruised the deeper holes at the Matanzas and St. Augustine Inlets this weekend. A couple flounder rolled in too, though numbers aren’t as hot as last week. Pompano reports upticked near Vilano Beach and the pier, with whiting and black drum frequenting the sandy edges. Inshore, snook are slowing as cold fronts move in, but some slot fish were pulled from bridge pilings at first light.Lure recommendations from the St. Augustine Beach crew? Soft plastics in natural shrimp and paddletail styles are outfishing live bait with the clear water. Try a chartreuse or root beer paddle tail on a 1/4 oz jighead—Z-Man and DOA brands are local favorites. Topwater plugs and twitch baits got solid trout hits during minor bite periods around sunrise and sunset. For bottom huggers like flounder, slow-rolled mud minnows or gulp-style baits are the ticket. Those working the pier or the surf are getting good attention with sand fleas and fresh shrimp, especially on double drop rigs or Carolina rigs.Boat folks reported scattered action around Salt Run and the Vilano Ramp. Sheepshead are chewing fiddler crabs hard on the oyster bars at the Lighthouse and around the Bridge of Lions. The main channel at the inlet is moving with reds and drum—most successful anglers are fishing cut crab or fresh mullet strips.For hot spots today:- **Matanzas Inlet**: Bulls, drum, flounder near deeper cuts and the rocks.- **St. Augustine Pier**: Pompano, whiting, blues off the trough at first tide swing.- **Salt Run**: Speckled trout and reds around oyster bars and drop-offs.Remember, with colder mornings, fish are slow until the sun warms their backs. Fish the outgoing tide around structure or sandbars, and don’t be afraid to move spots if the bite drops off. Stick with smaller baits and lighter tackle for finesse, but switch to chunkier profiles for flounder and drum.Thanks for tuning in to your St. Augustine fishing report with Artificial Lure. If you dig these updates, be sure to subscribe and stay connected for more local angling insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for Friday, November 21st, 2025. The action this week’s been classic late fall—crisp mornings on the water, redfish tails in the shallows, and plenty of stories to swap at the fillet tables. Let's break it down for folks thinking of hitting the water.Sunrise came at 6:51 AM and sunset will wrap things up at 5:28 PM, giving us a nice full day on the water. According to Tide-Forecast.com, you’re looking at a low tide around 6:12 AM and a high coming back in just after noon. That incoming water after sunrise has been sparking solid fish activity around the grass lines and creek mouths.Weather’s cooperating: November fronts have cooled things off just enough to bring more bait into the shallows while the winds this morning are light out of the north-northeast. By afternoon, expect it to pick up a notch—keep that in mind if you’re planning to run the beach or head out the inlet, but the river and creeks should stay friendly.For the surf, small clean swell and chilly morning air but plenty fishable, reports from the beach cams and the local guides. The water’s got that late fall chill but mullet and finger mullet schools are still pushing through and bringing predators with ‘em.Now to what’s bending rods right now. This week, folks have been hammering the slot reds at the Vilano flats and the Matanzas River backcountry. Early risers driftin’ live shrimp or mud minnows under popping corks around oyster bars report limit catches, with plenty over-slot bruisers mixed in. Flounder have shown up big time—most hot around the rocky edges of the inlet and along the Bridge of Lions—just bounce a mud minnow or white Gulp! Swimming Mullet along the bottom and hang on.Trout are moving up on the ledges and creek mouths, especially at first light. Topwater plugs have produced some real gator trout before the sun gets too high; once it does, swap over to soft plastics or live shrimp for steady bites.Surf and pier anglers at St. Augustine Beach and around the southern rocks have been pulling in whiting, black drum, and a few pompano when the surf’s clean. Sand fleas, fresh shrimp, and Fishbites have all been solid choices here.If you’re throwing lures, nothing’s out-fishing a 3” paddle tail in new penny or electric chicken worked slow near structure right now. But if you want to target the sharpies, try a gold spoon or MirrOlure Mirrodine—these've accounted for multiple upper-slot reds this week.Hot spots? Start at the Salt Run flats at sunrise for trout and reds, then slide south to the Matanzas Inlet rocks on the last of incoming for larger flounder and drum. If the wind drops out, the north side of the Bridge of Lions is producing fish all tides right now.Remember to mind your limits, handle big flounder and overslot reds with care, and dress in layers—the wind’s got a bite even if the fish don’t!Thanks for tuning in to your St. Augustine fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for updates and more tackle tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Morning, folks. It’s Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for today, November 20, 2025. The tide’s running strong this morning—low tide hit at 1:20 am, and we’re now headed toward high tide at 7:49 am, with water levels peaking around 5.5 feet. The next low tide comes at 2:10 pm, dropping to just under 0.7 feet, so plan your spots around those swings. The weather’s mild, with light southwest winds and clear skies, making for some solid fishing conditions.Sunrise was just before 7:14 am, and sunset tonight will be around 7:44 pm, giving us a long day to work the water. The solunar forecast shows major bite windows from 3:01 to 5:01 am and 3:31 to 5:31 pm, with minor activity around 8:45 am and 11:22 pm. If you’re out during those times, you’ll have a better shot at hooking up.Redfish and speckled trout are biting strong right now, especially around the points and channels near Butler Beach and Trestle Bay Swamp. Anglers are reporting good numbers of reds and trout, with some flounder mixed in near the jetties and deeper cuts. The moving tides are pushing baitfish, and the predators are following.For lures, topwater poppers and swimbaits are working well in the early morning and late afternoon, especially around the surf and near the piers. If you’re fishing the bays or backwaters, try a drop-shot rig with a Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Hit Worm or a small fluke. Live bait like shrimp and finger mullet is also producing, especially for trout and flounder.If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, Butler Beach is always solid for surf fishing, and Trestle Bay Swamp offers some great backwater action. The harbor entrances are also worth checking, especially around the tide changes.Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine area fishing report for Wednesday, November 19, 2025. The stretch of salt marsh and beach from the Matanzas River to the pier is waking up to excellent late fall fishing, with sunny skies and crisp mornings drawing anglers to the water.Sunrise today was right around 6:54 AM, with sunset expected by 5:28 PM. We’ve got clear, mild conditions on deck, and it's been a string of dry, bright days—ideal for stalking the flats, throwing topwater early, or drifting the deeper holes by midday. According to WJXT News4JAX, patchy fog does hang low at dawn, but it’ll burn off quickly, and highs are pushing into the upper 70s inland, low 70s at the beaches. It’s textbook late-season weather for this part of the Florida coast.On the tide charts, St. Augustine Beach saw high tide just after sunrise, peaking at around 6:35 AM, dipping to a low right after noon. According to tides4fishing.com, this 6.35-foot high gives us moving water until a 12:43 PM low that’ll drain the creek banks and bring bait pouring off the grass. That’s prime time for redfish and trout to corral mullet into tight pockets. Solunar activity is rated high, so expect a solid bite through the morning and good windows late in the afternoon.Recent catches throughout the Intracoastal and inlet have been strong. According to Captain Tommy Derringer with Florida Insider Fishing Report, the marsh edges and oyster bars outside Salt Run and back in Moses Creek are holding solid slot redfish, plenty of schoolie trout, and a surprising number of flounder considering the time of year. Most folks are catching reds in the 20-26" range, with a few oversized brutes caught and released. Trout limits have been common, mostly 15-18", with some fat gator trout coming on live offerings at first light. Flounder from 14–18” are showing up on sandy drop-offs, and the odd black drum and bluefish round out coolers.The bite’s been best on live shrimp and finger mullet—just remember, finger mullet are still sliding south in decent numbers, and reds are keyed in on them wherever the current pushes bait tight to the shorelines—especially on the outgoing tide. For lures, paddle-tail soft plastics in silver mullet or new penny colors on a quarter-ounce jighead are deadly, especially bounced near grass points or oyster bars. Topwaters like Spook Juniors in bone or chartreuse fished at dawn draw big blow-ups, and gold spoons are always a steady choice for both reds and the occasional trout.If you like artificials, now’s the time for Twitchbaits like the Mirrodine and subsurface jerkbaits. These match the hatch when mullet are schooling and work wonders on trout and snook near bridge pilings and creek mouths. Don’t sleep on the popping cork and shrimp combo for numbers, especially for newer anglers.For hot spots, Pellicer Flats is a perennial producer this time of year, with solid redfish action over grass beds on the rising tide. The Vilano Bridge edges and deeper holes along the Matanzas River have been peppered with bait and hungry trout. If you’re beachside, try the rock piles by the St. Augustine Inlet or the cuts just south of the pier, where whiting, pompano, and the stray red are in the surf.That’s your St. Augustine local report for November 19. Thank you for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for more up-to-date reports and tactics from your trusted local source. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for November 18th, 2025, and I’ll tell ya—it’s shaping up to be a classic late-fall bite along the First Coast!First off, let’s get you dialed in on conditions. Sunrise hit at 7:14 this morning, with sunset coming at 7:44 tonight—the days are getting shorter, but there’s still plenty of light to wet a line. The moon’s at a 15% waxing crescent, and according to SolunarForecast, your best fishing windows—the “major times”—fell between 3:01 to 5:01 this morning and will fire off again this afternoon from 3:31 to 5:31. If you’re squeezing in a trip, consider hitting the water late afternoon for peak activity.The tide started high early, topping out near 5.05 feet just after 6 a.m. at the St. Augustine Inlet, and it’ll bottom out to its lowest around 12:21 p.m. at just about half a foot, then climb again for an evening high at 6:10 p.m. That falling tide mid-morning and the incoming in the evening should have reds and trout pushing into the creek mouths and on the drop-offs, right where you want ‘em.Weather’s sitting on the forgiving side—upper 60s at daybreak, warming up with a light westerly breeze, and not much rain in the forecast. Water clarity’s fair, so you’ll want to adjust your presentations accordingly. According to local surf and weather reports, surf is flat as a pancake today, so your backwater options are wide open.Now, let’s talk fish—recent catches have been solid. Folks reported good numbers of slot Redfish prowling the flats and oyster bars, especially north around Guana River WMA and south near Matanzas Inlet. Speckled Trout are chewing in the deeper holes along Salt Run, with a few doormats in the mix. There’ve been keeper Black Drum mixed in aroun’ the Vilano bridge, and some surprise Flounder caught around the Vilano and Conch Island docks. Offshore, it’s slowing down, but a few sheepshead are starting to move in on the rocks and pilings.For bait and lures, here’s the ticket:- **Live Shrimp** is your ace for drum and trout, either freelined or fished under a popping cork.- **Cut bait** (mullet or ladyfish strips) set on the bottom will tempt reds around the oyster edges, especially on that outgoing tide.- If you’re working artificials, **soft plastic jerkbaits** on 1/4 oz jigheads in natural or root beer hues have been hot for trout, while gold spoons and paddle tails are getting redfish to commit in the shallows.- Insiders also report that a 3/8-ounce jig with a beaver-style trailer—think Reaction Innovations Sweet Beaver or a gulp shrimp imitating a small mullet—can make a difference, especially skipped up under docks where those shy reds may be lurking.For gear, keep it light—10 to 15-pound braid with a 20-pound fluoro leader will handle nearly everything short of a stubborn drum.Now for a couple hot spots:- **Salt Run** inside Anastasia State Park—solid action for specks and the occasional oversized red, especially along the channel edges.- **Vilano Bridge**—good mixed bag on the outgoing tide, with black drum, reds, and flatties all in the mix.- Up north, poke around the grasslines at Guana Lake just after the tide turns; sneaky reds, and sometimes solid trout.Don’t forget to check the weather and tides before you run out—fishing’s always better when you’re tuned in to the local rhythm.Thanks for tuning in to the report. If you like these local updates and want to keep your tacklebox full of the latest tips, be sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for Monday, November 17, 2025.Sunrise was at 6:51 a.m., sunset’s coming up at 5:28 p.m.—perfect daylight for a solid outing, so get out early if you want to beat both the sun and the crowds. Tides are very favorable today: we had high tide at 5:55 a.m., and low tide comes in at 12:13 p.m., according to tide-forecast.com and Surfline's local tide data. Water’s been cooling off, and we’re right in the sweet spot of the fall bite.Weather this morning is classic North Florida November: a cool start, with a breeze swinging in from the north-northeast, but warming up by midday. National Weather Service notes we’ve got a standard sea breeze developing, so be ready for that wind to pick up by midmorning.The bite is on fire around here as reds, trout, and flounder headline the inshore action. The St. Augustine Daily Fishing Report and multiple local captains are reporting strong redfish and spotted sea trout catches around the inlet, ICW flats, and creeks. Flounder are still in decent numbers near structure, especially around Vilano Bridge and the Matanzas area.For lure selection, nothing’s beating a quarter-ounce jighead tipped with live shrimp or mud minnow right now. Soft plastic paddle tails in new penny or electric chicken are also producing. For the topwater enthusiast, a Super Spook Jr. around first light is a solid ticket for trout and the occasional upper-slot red. Folks dropping Gulp! baits or cut finger mullet are getting flounder, especially as the tide falls out and fish set up around edges and docks.Reports from the beach show that pompano and whiting are showing up in the surf thanks to those cooler water temps. Sand fleas, fresh-shucked clams, and Fishbites are the go-to. Try the area just north of the St. Augustine Pier or down Butler Beach; both are producing numbers.If you want local hot spots, you can’t go wrong with the following:- The flats behind Anastasia State Park, especially at first light or just ahead of the falling tide.- The Vilano Bridge pilings are holding reds, sheepshead, and flounder.- For surf casting, Butler Beach and the stretch south to Matanzas Inlet are firing for whiting and the occasional slot drum.Big tides mean moving water—target ambush points like creek mouths, channel bends, and docks with current running by. The bite has been strongest at the corners of the major and minor solunar periods, with late morning and late afternoon high activity according to Fishing Reminder’s tables.Remember, changing conditions mean adapting tactics. As the wind picks up, fish leeward banks, and if that water gets stirred, swing to darker baits and target spots just out of the main current.That’s your report for today. Tight lines and be courteous on the water, folks. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily locals-only fishing updates and on-the-water insight.This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for Sunday, November 16, 2025. Early risers had a sunrise at 7:29 AM, and you’ll catch sunset at 6:54 PM. Today started off brisk, steady east wind, clear skies, and temps in the high 50s warming fast by noon—classic November shine for the Ancient City.Tidewise, St. Augustine Beach hit high just before dawn at 4:22 AM around 5 ft, bottomed out mid-morning, and we’re seeing another high tide surge this evening near 4:43 PM, so the flats and creek mouths will have good moving water most of the day. With the tide swinging and clean flow, fish are active and feeding during transitions—especially two hours around the highs according to local tide charts.Inshore action is peaking. Redfish are stacked in the backcountry and around oyster beds from Salt Run to the Tolomato, with some quality slot fish landed on paddletail soft plastics and live mullet. Anglers drifting shrimp under a popping cork around Guana and Matanzas River edges are boating upper slot trout and the occasional flounder. The Docks at Vilano and points north by the water tower are holding drum, smaller sheepshead, and rat reds on fiddler crabs and cut shrimp.Recent charter reports say snook, mangrove snapper, and grouper have shown up with this week’s clean water[Captain Experiences]. The outgoing tide this morning saw several boats take mixed bags—eight nice reds, five keeper trout, a pair of flounder, and scattered snook caught over grass beds and rock piles with DOA shrimp, Gulp swimming mullet, and live finger mullet. For flounder, slow-hop a white or chartreuse bucktail around creek mouths and muddy banks.Nearshore, kingfish and the last batch of summer Spanish mackerel are biting off the surf zone and at the inlet on blue runners and silver spoons. Hard plastics like MirrOlure 52M and Rapala X-Rap are picking up bigger trout and snook in deeper cuts. Offshore, it’s grouper, snapper, and amberjack—good reports from boats running out past the 40’ ledge with frozen sardines and live pinfish.Best lures right now are:- Soft paddletail swimbaits in natural and new penny colors- Topwater plugs for early and late, like Super Spook or Rapala Skitter V- Bucktail jigs for flounder and drumIf you’re using bait, live shrimp and finger mullet are king for both inshore and jetties, while fiddler crabs and blue crab pieces land sheepshead and black drum.Top local hot spots today:- The south banks of Salt Run for reds and trout during outgoing tide- Matanzas Inlet rocks and channel edges for flounder and snook near high tide- Vilano Bridge pilings for sheepshead and drum, especially with the late day highIf you’re looking to fish from the sand, North Beach and the area near the surf station are giving up whiting and black drum—shrimp on the bottom rigs are producing.Fish have been moving and the fall bite’s strong. It's November prime time, and the next few days promise more good action—especially after the mid-day high tides and with clear water. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for the latest bite and local tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your November 15th fishing report for St. Augustine, and folks, it’s shaping up to be a prime weekend for wetting a line!First off, let’s talk about the tides. According to Tide-Forecast, you’ve got a pre-dawn **high tide at 4:28 AM**, rising to about 4.93 feet. That’ll fall to a **low tide around 10:34 AM** at just under one foot, before it starts filling back in later in the afternoon. If you’re planning to fish inlets or ICW creeks, the sweet spots will be around the bottom of the outgoing and the start of the incoming—think early and late morning action.Weather’s looking mellow this morning. We’ve got cool starts, mid-50s, warming into the low 70s by midday with just a gentle breeze from the WNW. Skies are clear, so bring a hat and sunscreen. NOAA shows sunrise hit at **6:48 AM**, and you’ll have daylight right up to **5:31 PM,** so there’s plenty of time to find your limit.Now, fish activity. With water starting to chill up a bit, the bite’s picking up inshore and surf. Coastal Angler Magazine points out that fall brings **redfish** thick in the creeks and flats—slot sizes are common, and over-slot bulls aren’t unheard of near the inlets. If you’re scouting the backcountry, look for pockets of **speckled trout** over oyster bars, especially as that sun gets up and warms the shallow water.Beach and jetty anglers are reporting steady runs of **pompano** and **whiting** right now, along with scattered drum. Folks are also pulling in some fat **flounder** around pilings and deeper holes, especially on the drop of the outgoing. The surf is small today according to 911 Surf Report, so you won’t be fighting much current; that makes for easier casts and better bait presentations.Best baits and lures: For reds and trout, locals are swearing by live shrimp under a popping cork, or mud minnows freelined along the banks. If you’re tossing artificials, a small paddle-tail soft plastic in new penny or glow color is killer right now—bounce it slowly near drop-offs or along oyster edges. In the surf, sand fleas and fresh-cut shrimp are the ticket for pompano and whiting. Jigs tipped with Fishbites will fill the cooler when the live stuff runs low. For flounder, a white bucktail jig with a Gulp! trailer dragged slow and steady near structure is tough to beat.Hot spots? You won’t go wrong launching at **Matanzas Inlet**, working the east flats at first light for redfish, then drifting the bridge shadow lines for trout at slack tide. The **Vilano Beach Pier** is producing a mixed bag, especially on the incoming. If you’ve got a kayak, try Salt Run—schools of reds are pushing up on the flood, and trout are staged in the deeper bends.With the **Nights of Lights kicking off downtown TONIGHT** after 6:30 PM, expect a little extra boat traffic upriver, so plan accordingly if you’re out late. Remember, with the days getting shorter and temps cooling fast after dark, it’s a good idea to pack an extra layer.Thanks for tuning in to your St. Augustine fishing forecast. Don’t forget to subscribe for more local reports and tips—tight lines out there! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
# St. Augustine Fishing Report - Friday, November 14thHey there, I'm Artificial Lure, and here's your Friday morning report for St. Augustine.**Tides & Timing**We've got high tide at 3:35 AM and low tide at 9:37 AM today. Sunrise was at 7:29 AM and we're looking at sunset around 5:39 PM, giving us a solid eight-plus hours of daylight. The solunar forecast shows major feeding times from 5:42 to 7:42 AM and again from 6:09 to 8:09 PM, with minor activity between 1:14 and 2:14 AM and 11:07 AM to noon. You're in that sweet spot right now if you're reading this early.**What's Biting**The stripers have been the story along the Florida coast this fall. We're seeing solid catches of 10 to 15-pounders, with reports coming in regularly from structure-oriented areas. Bloodworms have proven to be the most productive live bait lately. Striped bass love working the deeper channels and points, especially during those tidal transitions.**Best Approach Today**Given the mild conditions and recent reports, focus on creek channel bends and points with suspending jerkbaits early. As the day warms up, work the backs of creeks and coves with spinnerbaits and swimbaits. Have a buzzbait ready if you spot surface activity—the water's still in that transitional fall pattern where aggressive presentations can trigger strikes. Ned rigs and drop shots work wonders on offshore suspended fish if you locate them with forward-facing sonar.**Local Hot Spots**Hit the docks along the Matanzas Inlet area where stripers have been congregating. The deeper bluffs and points near the inlet structure consistently produce. Woodland Beach fishing pier is another solid option if you want to work from shore—constant activity reported there lately.**Gear Up**Bring your jerkbaits in pearl and shad patterns, swimbaits in natural profiles, and don't forget those buzzbaits. If you're targeting the bigger stripers, medium-heavy rods with quality drag systems are essential.The bite should be decent through mid-morning before that low tide hits at 9:37. Get out there!Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe for daily reports. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
You’re listening to the St. Augustine fishing report with Artificial Lure, your local fishing and angling insider, coming to you bright and early on Thursday, November 13th, 2025.Let’s start with the tides: This morning, expect your first high at 2:32 AM, peaking around 4.7 feet, and a low swinging in at 8:31 AM at just above 1.5 feet. Your afternoon high rolls back around 2:50 PM at just about 4.8 feet, with an evening low close to 9:20 PM, so plan those casts around the rising and falling water for the best action. According to the tide-forecast tables for Saint Augustine Beach, the next few days show steady patterns, so it’s a good time to pattern fish around those transitions.Sunrise hit us at 6:47 AM, with sunset set for 5:31 PM—plenty of good daylight, but that early-morning bite is prime right now. We’re working with a waning crescent moon, which tends to slow the fish a bit, but don’t let that fool you; November has built a reputation for hot inshore and surf action.Weather today is classic fall Florida—crisp and clear early, warming up with light westerly winds racing about 13 km/h. No rain, no fronts, and with the wind dropping through midday, it’s perfect for getting on the water, whether you’re wading, paddling, or taking the skiff out. According to The Weather Network, it should stay comfortable all day, so bring that SPF but you might want a hoodie early.As for what’s biting—put simply, just about everything you want this time of year. The Matanzas River and Salt Run have both been producing solid numbers of slot redfish, with plenty of upper-slot trout mixed in. Locals at Camachee Cove and along the Bridge of Lions report a run of flounder this past week, many in the 16-18 inch range with a few doormats, so if you’re looking to put dinner in the box, now’s go-time. Surf anglers down near Vilano and Butler Beach are hauling in nice pompano—shrimp-tipped Fishbites and sand fleas are doing the trick, especially on the outer bars at first light.For those itching to hook something bigger, the jetties at St. Augustine Inlet are loaded with bull reds on the outgoing tide; big cut mullet or blue crab chunks are leading to drag-peeling runs. The bait schools offshore are drawing in passing kingfish and the occasional Spanish mackerel, especially for folks trolling drones or slow-twitching live greenies.Best lures this week: For artificials, you want to throw paddle-tail soft plastics in pearl or chartreuse for the trout and reds—think Z-Man MinnowZ or Gulp! Swimming Mullet on a quarter-ounce jig head. Topwaters like a Super Spook Jr. or MirrOLure She Dog are turning bigger trout at dawn over grass flats. For live bait, mud minnows are money for flounder and reds in the creeks, while finger mullet and live shrimp under a popping cork will get you steady action on just about everything inshore.A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: Salt Run is still holding clear water and bait on the higher tides, fantastic for sight-fishing redfish. The Vilano Bridge area is another go-to, especially eddies on the incoming tide—work the pilings for sheepshead and throw artificials up current for the trout and reds.Fish activity should pick up again around the late afternoon high, especially as the sun starts to dip—if you can, plan to be on your spot by 2:30 PM and stick it out till after sunset.Whether you’re throwing artificials from the sand or working live bait in the marsh, the fish are here and hungry. Thanks for tuning in to the St. Augustine fishing report. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning from the Ancient City—this is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report for Tuesday, November 11, 2025.We kicked off today with a sunrise at 6:46 AM and we’ll see sunset at 5:31 PM, so anglers have just shy of eleven hours of daylight to work the water. The tides are moving nicely: a low at 6:25 AM (0.63 feet), high tide peaking at 12:42 PM (5.42 feet), and the next low coming in at 7:22 PM, all according to Tide-Forecast.com. Expect moderate tidal flow—a little lighter than some fall runs, but plenty to stir up the bite.Weather on the water this morning was mild and crisp, typical of early November. Winds were light out of the northwest, and by mid-morning we warmed up, making for a pleasant trip whether you’re inshore or running the inlet.Fishing activity has been lively these past few days. Local captains like Todd with Todd’s Rods Fishing Charters report steady action with solid catches of redfish, black drum, trout, sheepshead, and flounder. Most reds are running slot size, with a few big upper-slot bruisers coming out from the grass banks on the high tide. Some anglers hit keeper-size black drum around the bridges and docks on the last of the incoming tide, while trout are heating up along creek mouths and deeper grass edges.For numbers, it’s been common to see boats with limits or near-limits of legal redfish and a mixed bag of trout and flounder, especially as the mullet run tapers off. Sheepshead have picked up thanks to cooling waters, with several reports of anglers landing five or six per trip near structure.As for what’s working: artificial lures are putting fish in the boat. Soft plastics in natural or new penny colors, rigged on eighth-ounce jigheads, are deadly on the reds. MirrOlure MirrOdines and Rapala suspending twitchbaits are excellent in the cleaner water right now. For live bait, finger mullet and shrimp are the top producers; paddle tails in white or chartreuse fished slowly on the bottom have been hot for flounder and seatrout. If you’re after black drum or sheepshead, fiddler crabs or live shrimp on a dropshot or Carolina rig around pilings and oyster beds are the go-to.A couple of current hot spots: - The Vilano Bridge pilings and surrounding docks are loaded up on higher tides, especially for black drum and sheepies.- Salt Run and the marsh edges near Anastasia State Park are holding good numbers of redfish and trout, especially as the tide slows late morning.- If you’re surf fishing, try the area south of St. Augustine Pier around the first trough as the tide rises—pompano, whiting, and the occasional slot red have been caught on sand fleas and shrimp.Keep an eye out for bird activity and nervous mullet around the creeks; working those areas with “match-the-hatch” artificials or freelined baits often results in the best bite. With clear conditions, stealth matters, so downsize your leader and keep presentations natural.That’s the latest from the water here in St. Augustine. Thanks for tuning in to your local report—be sure to subscribe for daily updates and tips from Artificial Lure. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning from St. Augustine, this is Artificial Lure with your local November 10th fishing report—grab a cup of coffee and let’s get right into what’s biting and where.We’ve got classic fall conditions settling in: sunrise this morning hit at 6:45AM and sunset will be at 5:32PM, so daybreak and late afternoon are going to be prime feeding windows. Current weather at the coast is mild and mostly cloudy, with temps hovering in the low 70s and light west winds—ideal for both inshore and surf action, and a blessing compared to the fronts we saw last week, according to The Weather Network and Time.is.Tidewise, we’re looking at a nice incoming this morning. Low tide set up around 5:17 AM and high tide’s rolling in at 11:41 AM, per the NOAA and local tidal charts. Plan on strong movement at mid-morning and again during that sunset window—fish are going to be on the move and hungry.Inshore, redfish and trout are the stars right now. Local guides and regulars fishing the ICW, Salt Run, and the flats around Vilano have been reporting solid catches, especially at first light and during the evening push. Slot reds are crushing artificials—try soft-plastics like white paddle tails rigged on a quarter-ounce jighead, or Gulp shrimp in natural colors. Popping corks with live shrimp have produced well near oyster bars on the outgoing tide. Specks are schooling up, especially around drop-offs and creek mouths; MirrOdines and 17MRs are the local plug favorites for drawing those reaction bites.Flounder numbers are surprisingly strong for November, with a few near-doormats being reported by anglers bouncing mud minnows and finger mullet along the bottom, particularly near Matanzas Inlet and under the Bridge of Lions. Black drum and sheepshead are picking up near St. Augustine and Vilano piers—think fiddler crabs or cut blue crab, fished close to the pilings.The surf scene is lively as well. Local surf reports highlight a good early-morning bite for pompano, whiting, and the occasional slot black drum up around the pier and further down at Porpoise Point. Sand fleas and fresh cut shrimp on double-drop rigs are out-fishing everything else, but a chartreuse Fishbites strip will keep your baits working longer through pinfish pecks.For the offshore crowd, trolling nearshore reefs around 9-mile and 12-mile has brought in some legal kingfish, a few cobia, and scattered snapper, especially if you find some live pogies for the hook.Hot spots today? Try the flats of Salt Run just after daybreak for reds and trout—work the grass edge and give it a proper fan-cast. For surf action, head to St. Augustine Beach near the amphitheater boardwalk or Matanzas Inlet’s north rocks near high tide. If you’ve got a kayak, launch at Pellicer Creek and work deep bends with live shrimp under a popping cork—you might just stumble into a mixed bag of trout, reds, and flounder.Before you hit the water, remember: the weather’s looking stable, tides are prime, and the fish are feeding up for the winter push. Best lures today: Z-Man soft paddletails in Opening Night or Rootbeer, quarter-ounce jigheads, MirrOdine 17MR, and topwater plugs like the Spook Jr. for those first-light explosions. For bait, you can’t go wrong with live shrimp or finger mullet.Thanks for tuning in to your local St. Augustine fishing report with Artificial Lure—don’t forget to subscribe for more updates and daily tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, coming to you with your Sunday, November 9, 2025, fishing report for St. Augustine and the surrounding waters. Let’s get into the key details to help you make the most out of your day on the water.**Weather-wise**, we’re starting with mild fall temps and that classic humidity, hovering near 89% at sunrise. Winds are steady around 15 km/h from the south, bringing in a few gusts up to 23 but nothing too unruly, so small craft should take note but shouldn’t be deterred. Skies are starting overcast, but expect breaks of sunshine as we near midday according to The Weather Network.**Sunrise hit at 6:44 AM, with sunset at 5:33 PM,** so you’ve got a little less than eleven daylight hours to work with out there today. That cool November sun and slight cloud cover ought to keep the bite decent through morning and late afternoon, especially as the temperature evens out.**Tidal action** is prime for a productive outing. Over at St. Augustine Beach, our first low tide came through early at 4:12 AM, with a high tide now peaking at 10:44 AM. Look for another low at 5:13 PM and a final high at 11:17 PM, as reported by the NOAA tide calendar and Surfline’s Pier Tide Chart. That means a moving tide for most of the morning, and we all know moving water means feeding fish—plan to hit the flats and inlets as that tide swings upward late morning through lunch.**Recent catches and fish activity** have been classic November. The slot redfish bite is holding steady in the shallows and around oyster bars—folks have pulled in multiple legal reds this week, with some overslots on live mullet and cut ladyfish. Speckled trout are firing around first light and again at dusk, especially in the Intracoastal grass edges, with a fair mix of 16- to 20-inchers in the cooler. Surf anglers are reporting a nice showing of pompano and whiting at Butler Beach and Crescent Beach, with some solid black drum mixed in close to the pier pilings. Inshore, flounder are still picking off the stragglers of the mullet run—fish up to five pounds weren’t uncommon this past week.**Best lures and baits right now:** - For reds and trout, you can’t go wrong with gold spoons or a paddle tail soft plastic on a quarter-ounce jighead, especially in that new penny or dark green color. If you prefer topwater, walk-the-dog plugs have drawn some explosive strikes at dawn.- Live shrimp remains unbeatable for the trout and slot reds, and finger mullet is top pick for the bigger drum and flounder.- Surf casters are picking up plenty of whiting and pompano on sand fleas and fresh shrimp; a double dropper rig with a little orange bead is doing the trick.**Hot spots today:** - Try the City of St. Augustine Municipal Marina and the outflow along Salt Run for early morning trout and reds. The moving tide and abundant bait make this stretch reliable.- Head to Butler Beach for surf fishing—irregularities in the wave breaks mark holes that are holding pompano and whiting right now, especially near first light.- Oyster Creek Marina and the adjacent mangroves are holding flounder and reds on the outgoing tide. Look for small creek entrances and eddies created by the tide shift.As always, check local regs before you throw anything in the box, and keep an eye on that afternoon tide swing for your best shot at a trophy.That’ll do it for today’s report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for your daily bite, and stay fishy, St. Augustine! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Saturday morning fishing report straight out of St. Augustine, November 8th, 2025. Let’s spotlight the local bite, tides, weather, and what’s been happening on the water.Sun is up at 6:43 AM and sets tonight at 5:35 PM, so you’ve got just over ten hours to chase ‘em before the early darkness sets in, thanks to the time change and these shorter fall days. Weather’s sitting mild and pleasant—News4JAX forecasts a warm weekend with a little humidity hanging around before a cool front sweeps through Sunday night. Winds are just light enough not to put off the more finicky fish, and water clarity is decent with no red tide issues reported in our part of Florida according to the latest check by the FWC.If you’re planning your trip around the tides, here’s today’s rundown from USHarbors and Tideschart. We had a high tide at 7:11 AM, and a low rolls in at 1:30 PM. That means the flats and creek mouths will be flooding early and draining hard by midday—a classic fall transition for our marsh and river fish.Fishing activity in St. Augustine’s rivers and surf zones this week is fired up. Captain Experiences highlights redfish, speckled trout, flounder, and a smattering of sheepshead as the prime targets lately. Most charters and locals have been bringing in slot reds and keeper trout, with some nice flounder caught around the inlet and Matanzas River flats especially during moving water. Word is, a few folks even managed limit days on trout midweek near Salt Run.Best baits and lures right now? Tried and true is holding strong:- **Live shrimp** and **mud minnows** are still out-catching artificials on slower tidal swings.- **Paddle-tail soft plastics** in chartreuse or new penny, fished on a 1/8 oz jighead, are working magic around oyster bars and creek mouths.- For topwater action, a **Rapala Skitter Walk** or a classic Zara Spook is getting early morning hits, especially near the Vilano causeway as the marshes flood.- If you’re after flounder, a **Gulp! Swimming Mullet** or live finger mullet fished slowly on the bottom is a winning ticket.For the lure aficionados, heavier jigheads (as Major League Fishing recommends for sonar-focused anglers) are helpful when fishing windier conditions or deeper creek pockets.Favorite hotspots to try this weekend:- **Salt Run:** Consistent action for trout and reds during the outgoing tide near the edges of the grass. Look for bait movement and work your lures slow.- **Vilano Pier and Flats:** Great spot for mixing it up—reds, trout, and even some mangrove snapper have been showing up in the deeper holes.- **Matanzas Inlet backwaters:** Drift or wade the oyster bars at mid-tide for flounder and slot reds.Tidal coefficient today is low—currents won’t be raging, so target ambush points like channel swings, creek mouths, and the edges of drop-offs.Reminder: no respiratory irritation or fish kills due to algae in our region per FWC’s current status, so breathe easy and enjoy your time out.Thanks for tuning in to your local St. Augustine fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest news and tips—whether you’re wading, kayaking, or running the flats. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure reporting from St. Augustine, and Friday’s setting up to be a beauty for anglers hitting the local waters. With **sunrise at 6:43 AM and sunset at 5:33 PM** (based on this week’s NOAA and tide-forecast charts), you’ve got just about eleven hours of fishing light to play with. Tide-wise, it’s a classic fall pattern: **high tide just after 8 AM and again around 8:30 PM, with lows right before daylight and about mid-afternoon.** As of this morning, the inshore tide is rising, so plan to work the outgoing tide into early afternoon for your best movement.Weather’s looking comfortable—morning temps in the low 60s, climbing to the mid-70s by afternoon, with light breezes shifting north-northeast later in the day. No heavy weather, so it’s a strong bet for everything from the Matanzas to the Guana. Water clarity will be up, especially after a few settled days post-front.Recent catches in the St. Augustine area show November living up to its reputation. The last week’s chatter from bait shops and local guides is all about **slot and overslot redfish**, plenty of **speckled trout**, and a nice uptick in **flounder** action around the inlets and creek mouths. There’s consistent word of folks filling limits on **sheepshead** at Vilano Bridge and the city pier, and near-shore, if you can get out, you’ll find **black drum** and even scattered **pompano** working the first trough on the beaches.For **lures**, the bite’s been best on topwater plugs just after sunrise—think Rapala Skitter Walks in bone or mullet, or a spook if you’re hitting grass edges. Once the sun’s up, folks are switching to **soft plastics like Gulp! shrimp (white, new penny, or chartreuse)** rigged on 1/8 to 1/4 oz jigheads. Paddle tails like Z-Man DieZel Minnowz in Houdini or opening night have also been hot, especially on trout holding in deeper bends of Salt Run and the Guana River. For those reds cruising shallows with the mullet, gold spoons and spinnerbaits are still doing damage.**Live bait** fishers are having the best luck with **mullet, live shrimp, and mud minnows**, free-lined or under a popping cork. Mud minnows fished near drop-offs around the ICW and creek mouths are putting up solid flounder and trout numbers. Sheepshead are stacking up on fiddler crabs and small pieces of shrimp or clam on tight gear at the docks.A couple of **hotspots** to target today:- **Salt Run**: Fish the grass lines and dock pilings for reds and trout at the outgoing tide change.- **Matanzas Inlet (west side)**: The rocks and drop-offs have been steady for flounder and drum, especially with live mud minnows.- **Vilano Causeway and City Pier**: Classic choices for sheepshead and drum, and good for a family trip with nearby facilities.Boat anglers should try around the markers in the Tolomato and the south end of Guana for bigger trout and reds lurking in the deeper pockets as the day warms. Don’t ignore the surf either—the first troughs along Anastasia State Park Beach have been yielding whiting and pompano on shrimp-tipped jigs.That’s today’s rundown from your local tackle box, and as we roll closer to winter, the action’s heating up right along with the chowder pots. Appreciate y’all tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your St. Augustine fishing report for Thursday, November 6, 2025.Let’s start with the conditions: It’s a cool, breezy morning—temps kicking off in the low 60s with lingering high humidity. North winds are pushing steady at about 17 km/h with some gusts, so expect a mild chop on the inland and Intracoastal waters. According to The Weather Network, today’s sunrise was at 6:42 AM and sunset hits at 5:35 PM. That makes for just under 11 hours of light, perfect for an early start or late bite.Tide charts from Tide-Forecast.com show we had a low tide around 1:31 AM, spilling into a high tide at 7:43 AM. That prime window right around sunrise should produce strong action in the creeks, marshes and estuary mouths. Expect water to be on the move, pulling baitfish and shrimp—a recipe for solid activity from both reds and trout.St. Augustine fishing has fired up with the fall cooling. Recent catches across the bay and beaches include hefty **redfish**, slot-sized **speckled trout**, and flurries of big **flounder**. City docks and marinas are reporting the occasional black drum and sheepshead pulled from the pilings. Locals over at the Saint Augustine Municipal Marina say several anglers limited out on trout using 1/8 oz jig heads paired with Gulp shrimp in new penny and nuclear chicken colors—lure selection is key in these slightly murky tidal flows.If you’re looking to tangle with reds, head for the Vilano Bridge flats or the ICW banks near the Conch House Marina. That area has produced overslot reds on fresh cut mullet and live shrimp drifted along oyster beds. Artificial Lure always recommends working the drop-offs and points in Trestle Bay or plugging the Butler Beach troughs—early morning on the incoming tide there is money this week.The best bait right now is live shrimp for trout and flounder, while finger mullet is getting hammered by snook and slot reds along Matanzas River stretches. Artificial lures in the 3-5” range—think DOA Cal or Z-Man in rootbeer gold—are killer when paired with a light leader. If it’s topwater you want, hit the last light—MirrOlure Top Dogs walked slowly have brought fish blowing up at sunrise and sunset.Hot spots to put on your radar:- **Conch House Marina**: Active sheepshead and drum fishing with fiddler crabs around the pilings.- **Vilano Flats**: Dragging plastics or floating live shrimp at dawn catching reds and trout.- **Butler Beach troughs**: Flounder and drum on fish bites or cut crab, especially as tide rises.Boat, kayak, or wade—the bite is on. Most folks are reporting 5 to 15 fish in half a morning if you’re covering water and working bait methodically. Don’t overlook pitching soft plastics under docks and mangroves—just make sure to mind the tide movement for the best results.Before wrapping up, a friendly reminder—check regs and watch those slot limits. The fall run has the fish hungry and active, so respect the resource and enjoy the action.Thanks for tuning into the St. Augustine report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s updates 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/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure reporting live from St. Augustine, and it’s a picture-perfect November morning on the water. The sun broke the horizon right at 6:40 am, and we can expect sunset at 5:37 pm today. That gives anglers almost 11 hours of daylight to chase fish across the Matanzas River, Salt Run, and those infamous St. Augustine tidal flats. If you’re out on the early bite, know we’re just coming off a high tide at dawn. According to Tide-Forecast.com, our next low tide will hit near midday—so adjust your strategy, especially when working creek mouths or oyster bars. The tidal swing is moderate, meaning currents won’t be ripping, which is ideal for pitching artificial lures tight against structure or drifting live baits over deeper holes.Weather-wise, News4Jax and The Weather Network report we’re looking at a cool start in the high 60s, warming up to right around 80 this afternoon. Winds are light out of the west, gusting up to 11 km/h, so boaters and kayakers can count on a glassy morning. Surf Station’s latest surf check notes a clean waist-high swell—favorable if you’re tossing jigs right in the trough or working spoons through a moving tide.Fish activity has been strong. Locals and guides are reporting solid catches of **redfish**, **speckled trout**, and **flounder**—the usual suspects this time of year. Reds are being pulled from the flats near Vilano and Guana, often stacked up on drop-offs and grass edges. Trout action remains steady in Salt Run and along the Intracoastal; morning topwater plugs are drawing some real nice speckled trout with this still air. Flounder numbers from the city docks have improved, especially for folks dragging mud minnows or white gulp shrimp.Artificial lures are getting the job done: - **Soft plastics** (paddle tails in new penny or pearl) rigged on a 1/8 oz jig head are working wonders over grass beds and oyster bars.- **Topwater plugs** like the Heddon Super Spook Jr. shine during the sunrise strike—especially for trout and slot reds.- For flounder, switch to **slow-rolled bucktails** or scented gulp swimming mullets.Live bait is also producing quality fish. **Shrimp** and **mud minnows** under popping corks are fooling both reds and trout, while finger mullet remain the go-to for bigger flatties. For those venturing offshore or around the Jetties, cut bait and heavy spoons are bringing in black drum and sheepshead.Recent reports from Captain Experiences and Coastal Angler Magazine show limits being hit on reds, with individual fish running from 23 to 30 inches—perfect for catch-and-release or a fish fry. Speckled trout are averaging 18 to 22 inches, and flounder up to 18 inches, though the bite does slow a touch with each incoming cold front.Hot spots today: - The Matanzas River flats near the 312 Bridge for early redfish and trout.- Salt Run by the Anastasia State Park for topwater action and good flounder numbers.- Vilano Beach Pier for anglers preferring a land-based setup—reports of sheepshead and drum have been steady, especially during the change of tide.Remember, keep an eye on the late afternoon as the tide pushes in—predators get hungry and those backwater creeks fire up all over again. The mullet run may be tapering, but there’s still plenty bait in the system drawing strikes.Thanks for tuning in to your St. Augustine fishing update. If you want more detailed tactics or daily conditions, be sure to subscribe and stay hooked. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning, St. Augustine anglers. It’s Tuesday, November 4th, and the water’s alive out here. Sunrise was at 6:40 AM, and sunset will be at 5:38 PM, so you’ve got a solid day ahead. The tide’s running with a low at 2:21 AM and a high at 8:37 AM, and the next low will be around 2:07 PM. The morning’s been a bit choppy with northeast winds at 15 to 20 knots and seas 3 to 5 feet, but it’ll calm down by tonight. The intracoastal’s a little choppy, but nothing the local boats can’t handle.Fish activity’s been steady. Redfish and speckled trout are biting well in the backwaters and around the inlet, especially near the rising tide. Flounder are scattered, but a few were caught near the Matanzas River and the old bridge pilings. Striped bass are starting to show up in the deeper channels, and a few weakfish were landed near the jetties. Bluefish are running in small schools, and the creel limit’s 3 per person for private boats. Mullet are thick, and the daily limit’s 100 per person, with a 400 per vessel cap.The best lures right now are soft plastics in white and chartreuse for trout and redfish, and a 1/4 oz gold spoon for bluefish and weakfish. For flounder, try a live finger mullet or a Gulp! Shrimp on a jig head. If you’re after striped bass, a bucktail jig or a live eel works well. The bite’s strongest around the tide changes, so plan your trip accordingly.Hot spots today are the Matanzas River near the inlet, the old bridge pilings, and the jetties at St. Augustine Beach. The backwaters around Crescent Beach are also producing some nice trout and redfish.Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget 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/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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