Coastal Texas Fishing Report: Reds, Trout, and Flounder on the Move
Update: 2025-10-05
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Gulf Coast Texas fishing report for Sunday, October 5th, 2025—based right on the water where it counts.
Sun rose bright at 7:15 this morning and will slip beneath the horizon at 6:59 tonight. We're running a classic October set of tides: high at 4:20 AM, a nice outgoing push just after sunrise with low at 10:00 AM, another high at 3:58 PM, then the evening drop at 10:21 PM. That waxing gibbous moon will pop up at 6:08 PM, giving a little extra pull and a chance for prime evening bites according to Tide-Forecast.com.
Weather is just about perfect: highs nudging 80, a gentle north breeze laying the humidity down, and clear skies coastwide. Water clarity ranges green to sandy, with the wind just stiff enough to shuffle bait south. Cooler nights have plenty of us shaking off the summer, and if you’ve prayed for those crisp autumn fronts, today’s about as good as it gets.
Fish are on the move: bull reds are tearing up the surf and bay drains from Surfside to Bolivar, chasing mullet hard. Early risers—especially kayakers and waders—have been landing bulls in impressive numbers; MDLR Fishing reports multiple double-digit days, with fresh shad or cut mullet on a slip-sinker rig doing most of the work in the surf and along jetty edges. If you see nervous mullet flipping at sunrise, get a bait in there quickly.
Speckled trout are back in force, with Galveston Bay, West Bay, and Christmas Bay all producing fat keepers lately. Topwater plugs in bone or silver are lights-out at first light—especially over broken shell and grass beds. As that sun climbs, soft plastics like chartreuse and white paddle tails are beating out the old favorites; Fishingreminder.com adds that scent-charged pintails and paddle tails are a smart move when water gets a bit muddy.
Don’t sleep on flounder—the marsh drains, bayou mouths, and ship channel edges are loaded right now. Outgoing tides around mid-morning have seen plenty caught. Live mud minnows are always reliable, but Gulp swimming mullets and downsized paddle tails fished slow and low are getting hit hard. In fact, the Christmas Bay and San Luis Pass areas saw solid limits just yesterday, with most flounder coming on slow-twitched plastics along the bottom.
Hot spots around the Gulf today:
- Galveston beachfront and both jetties: consistent bulls and trout, with flounder stacking at the mouth and edges.
- San Luis Pass: the current can get sketchy but the fishing’s hot. Fish the edges or incoming tide for a mixed bag and watch for birds diving.
- Christmas Bay and West Bay marshes: upper-slot reds and keeper trout, mostly on live shrimp or sunrise topwaters.
Best artificial lures right now: bone and silver topwater walkers for trout, chartreuse/white soft plastics, MirrOlure or Rapala twitch baits, and scented paddle tails for flounder. If things slow down, tip your plastics with a bit of crab or shrimp scent.
Live bait kings: fresh shad, mullet, live shrimp, and mud minnows. If anchoring up, a slip-sinker rig with cut bait is nearly foolproof for bull reds, as Captain Experiences guide crews have seen consistently.
To sum up the last few days, folks are catching redfish in the surf and drains, trout over morning grass beds, and flounder stacked at every marsh outlet. Kayakers and boaters are finding limits before noon on a solid mix of lures and natural baits. Heavy reports from Galveston down to Sargent Beach echo that the fall run is on.
If you want action, get out early or hit sunset. Watch for visible bait, slicks, and bird activity—then fish those guts or channel drops with moving water.
Thanks for tuning in to your coastal Texas fishing report. Make sure to subscribe for your daily shot of Gulf bite. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out quietplease dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Sun rose bright at 7:15 this morning and will slip beneath the horizon at 6:59 tonight. We're running a classic October set of tides: high at 4:20 AM, a nice outgoing push just after sunrise with low at 10:00 AM, another high at 3:58 PM, then the evening drop at 10:21 PM. That waxing gibbous moon will pop up at 6:08 PM, giving a little extra pull and a chance for prime evening bites according to Tide-Forecast.com.
Weather is just about perfect: highs nudging 80, a gentle north breeze laying the humidity down, and clear skies coastwide. Water clarity ranges green to sandy, with the wind just stiff enough to shuffle bait south. Cooler nights have plenty of us shaking off the summer, and if you’ve prayed for those crisp autumn fronts, today’s about as good as it gets.
Fish are on the move: bull reds are tearing up the surf and bay drains from Surfside to Bolivar, chasing mullet hard. Early risers—especially kayakers and waders—have been landing bulls in impressive numbers; MDLR Fishing reports multiple double-digit days, with fresh shad or cut mullet on a slip-sinker rig doing most of the work in the surf and along jetty edges. If you see nervous mullet flipping at sunrise, get a bait in there quickly.
Speckled trout are back in force, with Galveston Bay, West Bay, and Christmas Bay all producing fat keepers lately. Topwater plugs in bone or silver are lights-out at first light—especially over broken shell and grass beds. As that sun climbs, soft plastics like chartreuse and white paddle tails are beating out the old favorites; Fishingreminder.com adds that scent-charged pintails and paddle tails are a smart move when water gets a bit muddy.
Don’t sleep on flounder—the marsh drains, bayou mouths, and ship channel edges are loaded right now. Outgoing tides around mid-morning have seen plenty caught. Live mud minnows are always reliable, but Gulp swimming mullets and downsized paddle tails fished slow and low are getting hit hard. In fact, the Christmas Bay and San Luis Pass areas saw solid limits just yesterday, with most flounder coming on slow-twitched plastics along the bottom.
Hot spots around the Gulf today:
- Galveston beachfront and both jetties: consistent bulls and trout, with flounder stacking at the mouth and edges.
- San Luis Pass: the current can get sketchy but the fishing’s hot. Fish the edges or incoming tide for a mixed bag and watch for birds diving.
- Christmas Bay and West Bay marshes: upper-slot reds and keeper trout, mostly on live shrimp or sunrise topwaters.
Best artificial lures right now: bone and silver topwater walkers for trout, chartreuse/white soft plastics, MirrOlure or Rapala twitch baits, and scented paddle tails for flounder. If things slow down, tip your plastics with a bit of crab or shrimp scent.
Live bait kings: fresh shad, mullet, live shrimp, and mud minnows. If anchoring up, a slip-sinker rig with cut bait is nearly foolproof for bull reds, as Captain Experiences guide crews have seen consistently.
To sum up the last few days, folks are catching redfish in the surf and drains, trout over morning grass beds, and flounder stacked at every marsh outlet. Kayakers and boaters are finding limits before noon on a solid mix of lures and natural baits. Heavy reports from Galveston down to Sargent Beach echo that the fall run is on.
If you want action, get out early or hit sunset. Watch for visible bait, slicks, and bird activity—then fish those guts or channel drops with moving water.
Thanks for tuning in to your coastal Texas fishing report. Make sure to subscribe for your daily shot of Gulf bite. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out quietplease dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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