Gator Trout and Slot Reds: Fall Fishing Heats Up in the Texas Gulf
Update: 2025-11-03
Description
It’s Artificial Lure checking in with your November 3rd Gulf of Mexico, Texas, fishing report, tuned for all you saltwater anglers getting a jump on this cool fall bite.
Sunrise hit at 6:37 am and we’re looking at sunset at 5:31 pm along the Texas coast. Inshore, a light north breeze is ticking up, making for clean, slightly cooler water — perfect conditions for stalking reds and specks. Tides are working in our favor with a morning high around 5:45 am, then dropping out for a good stretch before the evening push. These moving tides are your best bet for sparking fish activity, especially at first light and the last hour before sunset, just as the bait starts stacking up along flats, cuts, and jetties. Water temps are holding in the mid- to upper-60s, ideal for an aggressive fall bite.
The fall run is here and it’s turning on fast around Corpus, Port A, Galveston, and all through the Upper Laguna. Shoreline waders and drifters are reporting solid numbers of redfish cruising shallow grass in the afternoons, with speckled trout popping off over potholes and grass beds early, especially over that “trout green” water. Flounder are staging up around channel edges and marsh drains, though keep in mind flounder season is closed for harvest until December 15th — but catch-and-release is hot, with some doormats being caught along Packery Channel and East Flats. Black drum and sheepshead are stacked up near the rocks and pilings, ready to jump a shrimp or crab.
Live shrimp under a popping cork remains king across the bays, followed close by finger mullet or mud minnows, especially if you’re looking for those chunky reds. Soft plastics like paddle tails (3 or 4 inch) in new penny, chartreuse, or white, bounced on a light jighead, are putting plenty of trout and slot reds in the box. Gold spoons are doing work for reds patrolling the shallow surf and along channel drop-offs. Early morning, don’t sleep on topwaters — a bone Spook or Skitter Walk accounts for several gator trout this past weekend. Switch to plastics once the water gets some glare.
Down in Galveston Bay, Texas Parks and Wildlife records show recent big catches for red and black drum, speckled trout, and southern flounder, with most of the best fish coming on live shrimp, mullet, or gulp soft baits. If it’s bull reds you’re after, the surf near North Jetty and Bolivar has been popping right after a tide change. Channel edges and shell reefs are still turning up quality trout.
Hot spots today:
- Bird Island Basin and the windward Laguna Madre shorelines — look for nervous bait and diving birds.
- Port Aransas jetties and Packery Channel for a mix of reds, trout, and drum, especially with high outgoing water.
- For waders, North Beach and the flats near the JFK Causeway spoil islands are producing well, especially on moving tides.
If you’re boating, check spoil islands and channel mouths, especially at the mouth of Oso Bay, Nueces Bay, and along reefs just outside the main turning basins.
Pair your lure color to clarity: go natural in clear water, reach for chartreuse or pink when it’s stirred up. Stay mobile and fish the edges — these fish are up shallow and hungry but skittish in skinny water.
Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Gulf of Mexico report! Don’t forget to subscribe for daily local insight and up-to-the-minute bite info. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please 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
Sunrise hit at 6:37 am and we’re looking at sunset at 5:31 pm along the Texas coast. Inshore, a light north breeze is ticking up, making for clean, slightly cooler water — perfect conditions for stalking reds and specks. Tides are working in our favor with a morning high around 5:45 am, then dropping out for a good stretch before the evening push. These moving tides are your best bet for sparking fish activity, especially at first light and the last hour before sunset, just as the bait starts stacking up along flats, cuts, and jetties. Water temps are holding in the mid- to upper-60s, ideal for an aggressive fall bite.
The fall run is here and it’s turning on fast around Corpus, Port A, Galveston, and all through the Upper Laguna. Shoreline waders and drifters are reporting solid numbers of redfish cruising shallow grass in the afternoons, with speckled trout popping off over potholes and grass beds early, especially over that “trout green” water. Flounder are staging up around channel edges and marsh drains, though keep in mind flounder season is closed for harvest until December 15th — but catch-and-release is hot, with some doormats being caught along Packery Channel and East Flats. Black drum and sheepshead are stacked up near the rocks and pilings, ready to jump a shrimp or crab.
Live shrimp under a popping cork remains king across the bays, followed close by finger mullet or mud minnows, especially if you’re looking for those chunky reds. Soft plastics like paddle tails (3 or 4 inch) in new penny, chartreuse, or white, bounced on a light jighead, are putting plenty of trout and slot reds in the box. Gold spoons are doing work for reds patrolling the shallow surf and along channel drop-offs. Early morning, don’t sleep on topwaters — a bone Spook or Skitter Walk accounts for several gator trout this past weekend. Switch to plastics once the water gets some glare.
Down in Galveston Bay, Texas Parks and Wildlife records show recent big catches for red and black drum, speckled trout, and southern flounder, with most of the best fish coming on live shrimp, mullet, or gulp soft baits. If it’s bull reds you’re after, the surf near North Jetty and Bolivar has been popping right after a tide change. Channel edges and shell reefs are still turning up quality trout.
Hot spots today:
- Bird Island Basin and the windward Laguna Madre shorelines — look for nervous bait and diving birds.
- Port Aransas jetties and Packery Channel for a mix of reds, trout, and drum, especially with high outgoing water.
- For waders, North Beach and the flats near the JFK Causeway spoil islands are producing well, especially on moving tides.
If you’re boating, check spoil islands and channel mouths, especially at the mouth of Oso Bay, Nueces Bay, and along reefs just outside the main turning basins.
Pair your lure color to clarity: go natural in clear water, reach for chartreuse or pink when it’s stirred up. Stay mobile and fish the edges — these fish are up shallow and hungry but skittish in skinny water.
Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Gulf of Mexico report! Don’t forget to subscribe for daily local insight and up-to-the-minute bite info. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please 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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