Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Tides, Weather, and Hotspots for Texas Anglers
Update: 2025-10-23
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Thursday, October 23rd Gulf of Mexico, Texas fishing report.
Startin’ off with the **tide and moonplay**, folks around Freeport and Galveston can expect notably strong tidal movement today—tidal coefficient’s sittin’ high at 76, which means you’ll get major current for moving bait and hungry fish. On the Freeport tide table, you’ll see a low tide mid-morning at 10:22 am around 0.3 ft, then a solid high tide come evening, hitting 2.2 ft close to 7:05 pm. **Sunrise showed up at 7:27 am, sunset rolls in at 6:43 pm**, giving us over 11 hours of light and a great solunar window this evening for that after-work bite, according to Tides4Fishing.
**Weather’s classic Texas Gulf fall—expect the morning slightly cool with a steadier warm-up, highs near the mid-80s, gentle southerlies, and semi-clear skies.** Water temps are sitting in the low-to-mid 80s as of Texas Parks and Wildlife, making for prime conditions for bay and surf action.
Let’s talk **fish and catchin’.** In Texas City, Capt. Shane Rilat at North Jetty Bait Camp reports daily limits of **speckled trout, slot redfish, and croaker**, plus sand trout and the odds of a late-season flounder, especially near levees and Mosquito Island. He mentions **live shrimp** and **finger mullet** as the baits of choice.
Over in Freeport, Capt. Jake Brown with Flattie Daddy Fishing Adventures says **specks, sand trout, and redfish are working birds in Bastrop, Christmas, and Chocolate Bays.** If you see mullet, drift by tossing soft-plastic shrimp under a Four Horseman popping cork, or just go with classic live shrimp or mullet strips. The harbor and the mouth of the Brazos have been steady for mixed bags—think redfish, trout, mangroves, drum, and the occasional flounder—all on natural baits.
Bayfront hotshot in East Matagorda, Capt. Charlie Paradoski, is still seeing action on redfish and trout for waders and drifters, but it’s a bit slower and fish size is down from last year. Folks walking the jetties are seeing flounder gigging success as well.
Headin’ farther south, Port Mansfield’s still “good”—topwaters like the **Glass Minnow or Sweet Heat by Mansfield Knockers** bring in solid trout and low slot reds. Wigalo’s soft plastics also score. Focus efforts wherever you spot rafts of mullet on the move. South Padre’s snook (yes, you heard me, snook!), redfish, and trout are biting on cut bait, live shrimp, and Fishbites, according to the Crystal Flats crew.
Hot spots for the day? **Texas City Dike** remains on fire, especially early and late, both on the rocks and along Mosquito Island. **Christmas Bay** continues as a local favorite: wade out at dawn or dusk where the bait is thick, and you’ll be set for trout or the odd big fall red.
For pier and surf anglers: the surf’s producing plenty of numbers, with black drum and reds cruising just past the first gut. Best bet there is live or fresh dead shrimp on a Carolina rig; topwater plugs like Spook Juniors are working first and last light for snappy trout.
Quick gear tips—if you like artificial, **paddle tail plastics in “chicken-on-a-chain” or “Texas roach,” Gulp! Shrimp, or DOA 3-inch shad tails**. Got live bait? Shrimp’s the MVP, followed close by finger mullet, especially on a popping cork around shallow structure.
Remember, a dropping tide in the late afternoon means fish are ambushing bait pulled out of the back lakes and marshes—set up near drains and you’ll find action.
Big thanks for tuning in to your Gulf Coast fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for fresh updates, and tight lines till next time!
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
Startin’ off with the **tide and moonplay**, folks around Freeport and Galveston can expect notably strong tidal movement today—tidal coefficient’s sittin’ high at 76, which means you’ll get major current for moving bait and hungry fish. On the Freeport tide table, you’ll see a low tide mid-morning at 10:22 am around 0.3 ft, then a solid high tide come evening, hitting 2.2 ft close to 7:05 pm. **Sunrise showed up at 7:27 am, sunset rolls in at 6:43 pm**, giving us over 11 hours of light and a great solunar window this evening for that after-work bite, according to Tides4Fishing.
**Weather’s classic Texas Gulf fall—expect the morning slightly cool with a steadier warm-up, highs near the mid-80s, gentle southerlies, and semi-clear skies.** Water temps are sitting in the low-to-mid 80s as of Texas Parks and Wildlife, making for prime conditions for bay and surf action.
Let’s talk **fish and catchin’.** In Texas City, Capt. Shane Rilat at North Jetty Bait Camp reports daily limits of **speckled trout, slot redfish, and croaker**, plus sand trout and the odds of a late-season flounder, especially near levees and Mosquito Island. He mentions **live shrimp** and **finger mullet** as the baits of choice.
Over in Freeport, Capt. Jake Brown with Flattie Daddy Fishing Adventures says **specks, sand trout, and redfish are working birds in Bastrop, Christmas, and Chocolate Bays.** If you see mullet, drift by tossing soft-plastic shrimp under a Four Horseman popping cork, or just go with classic live shrimp or mullet strips. The harbor and the mouth of the Brazos have been steady for mixed bags—think redfish, trout, mangroves, drum, and the occasional flounder—all on natural baits.
Bayfront hotshot in East Matagorda, Capt. Charlie Paradoski, is still seeing action on redfish and trout for waders and drifters, but it’s a bit slower and fish size is down from last year. Folks walking the jetties are seeing flounder gigging success as well.
Headin’ farther south, Port Mansfield’s still “good”—topwaters like the **Glass Minnow or Sweet Heat by Mansfield Knockers** bring in solid trout and low slot reds. Wigalo’s soft plastics also score. Focus efforts wherever you spot rafts of mullet on the move. South Padre’s snook (yes, you heard me, snook!), redfish, and trout are biting on cut bait, live shrimp, and Fishbites, according to the Crystal Flats crew.
Hot spots for the day? **Texas City Dike** remains on fire, especially early and late, both on the rocks and along Mosquito Island. **Christmas Bay** continues as a local favorite: wade out at dawn or dusk where the bait is thick, and you’ll be set for trout or the odd big fall red.
For pier and surf anglers: the surf’s producing plenty of numbers, with black drum and reds cruising just past the first gut. Best bet there is live or fresh dead shrimp on a Carolina rig; topwater plugs like Spook Juniors are working first and last light for snappy trout.
Quick gear tips—if you like artificial, **paddle tail plastics in “chicken-on-a-chain” or “Texas roach,” Gulp! Shrimp, or DOA 3-inch shad tails**. Got live bait? Shrimp’s the MVP, followed close by finger mullet, especially on a popping cork around shallow structure.
Remember, a dropping tide in the late afternoon means fish are ambushing bait pulled out of the back lakes and marshes—set up near drains and you’ll find action.
Big thanks for tuning in to your Gulf Coast fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for fresh updates, and tight lines till next time!
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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