Gulf of Mexico Friday Fishing Report - Fall Patterns, Tides, and Top Lures
Update: 2025-10-24
Description
Artificial Lure here, coming to you with your Gulf of Mexico, Texas fishing report for today, Friday, October 24, 2025.
We're kicking off the morning with comfortable fall temps around 78 to 85 degrees and light winds out of the northeast. Expect clear skies most of the day, so pack your sunglasses and sun protection. According to the National Weather Service, water clarity is excellent, and no major fronts are expected to mess up your weekend plans.
Sunrise hit at 7:27 a.m. and sunset’ll close out your day at 6:39 p.m.—plenty of daylight to get lines wet from dawn till dusk. Tidal movement’s moderate today: first low tide was at 12:55 a.m., high tide rolled in at 3:14 a.m., second low at 12:46 p.m., and a strong high at 9:37 p.m. as reported by Tide-Forecast.com. The tidal coefficient is hanging low this morning at 49, meaning not a ton of current, but it does bump up a bit closer to dark. It’s not the most dramatic tide swing, so those pinch points and drains will be your best friends for fish traffic.
Let’s talk bite. Captain Jeff Brandon of Get the Net Guide Service says the fall pattern is still rolling strong in East Galveston Bay. Surface temps steady at 78, water’s gin-clear, and bird activity is red hot across the flats. Redfish are hanging around those offshore oyster reefs, grassy shorelines, and back marshes. Trout and sizeable flounder are crushing bait on shallow flats with scattered shell. If you spot nervous bait or see birds working, park yourself and get to casting.
Flounder season’s still open till the end of the month, so this is your shot—remember, regulations tighten up starting November.
Best lures this week: imitation shrimp under a popping cork with a 12-inch leader is dynamite for trout and reds. Also putting up numbers are 1/8-ounce jigheads rigged with Wac Attack and Deadly Dudley soft plastics in light colors—don’t sleep on Fishbites tails if you’re specifically after flounder. For live bait enthusiasts, shrimp or mullet on the edge of deeper cuts or around structure will put you on trout, snapper, redfish, and the occasional sheepshead. Folks wading early along the beachfront are catching solid trout and redfish on topwaters and soft plastics, especially tossing live croaker or shrimp as the light comes up.
Hot spots to check out:
- **Bastrop Bay and Christmas Bay**: Birds are thick, and the trout and reds are right under them, especially in the mornings.
- **West end of Galveston Bay**: Drift the flats with live shrimp under those popping corks.
- **Freeport Harbor and beachfronts**: Early morning wading with live croaker, shrimp, or throwing surface plugs gives you a shot at both trout and redfish.
- **Pinch points with current in East Bay**: Look for active bait—if it’s dead, keep moving.
Recent catches include healthy speckled trout, lots of slot reds, flounder thick along marsh drains and edges, and still plenty of big black drum around the jetties if you want to yank and crank. Mangrove snapper are showing in the Freeport harbor, especially on mullet and shrimp.
Best bet this weekend: get an early start, watch for working birds, move with the tides, and use light leader and realistic presentations. October fishing doesn’t get a whole lot better, so gather your crew and hit the water.
Thanks for tuning in and be sure to subscribe for more local reports. 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
We're kicking off the morning with comfortable fall temps around 78 to 85 degrees and light winds out of the northeast. Expect clear skies most of the day, so pack your sunglasses and sun protection. According to the National Weather Service, water clarity is excellent, and no major fronts are expected to mess up your weekend plans.
Sunrise hit at 7:27 a.m. and sunset’ll close out your day at 6:39 p.m.—plenty of daylight to get lines wet from dawn till dusk. Tidal movement’s moderate today: first low tide was at 12:55 a.m., high tide rolled in at 3:14 a.m., second low at 12:46 p.m., and a strong high at 9:37 p.m. as reported by Tide-Forecast.com. The tidal coefficient is hanging low this morning at 49, meaning not a ton of current, but it does bump up a bit closer to dark. It’s not the most dramatic tide swing, so those pinch points and drains will be your best friends for fish traffic.
Let’s talk bite. Captain Jeff Brandon of Get the Net Guide Service says the fall pattern is still rolling strong in East Galveston Bay. Surface temps steady at 78, water’s gin-clear, and bird activity is red hot across the flats. Redfish are hanging around those offshore oyster reefs, grassy shorelines, and back marshes. Trout and sizeable flounder are crushing bait on shallow flats with scattered shell. If you spot nervous bait or see birds working, park yourself and get to casting.
Flounder season’s still open till the end of the month, so this is your shot—remember, regulations tighten up starting November.
Best lures this week: imitation shrimp under a popping cork with a 12-inch leader is dynamite for trout and reds. Also putting up numbers are 1/8-ounce jigheads rigged with Wac Attack and Deadly Dudley soft plastics in light colors—don’t sleep on Fishbites tails if you’re specifically after flounder. For live bait enthusiasts, shrimp or mullet on the edge of deeper cuts or around structure will put you on trout, snapper, redfish, and the occasional sheepshead. Folks wading early along the beachfront are catching solid trout and redfish on topwaters and soft plastics, especially tossing live croaker or shrimp as the light comes up.
Hot spots to check out:
- **Bastrop Bay and Christmas Bay**: Birds are thick, and the trout and reds are right under them, especially in the mornings.
- **West end of Galveston Bay**: Drift the flats with live shrimp under those popping corks.
- **Freeport Harbor and beachfronts**: Early morning wading with live croaker, shrimp, or throwing surface plugs gives you a shot at both trout and redfish.
- **Pinch points with current in East Bay**: Look for active bait—if it’s dead, keep moving.
Recent catches include healthy speckled trout, lots of slot reds, flounder thick along marsh drains and edges, and still plenty of big black drum around the jetties if you want to yank and crank. Mangrove snapper are showing in the Freeport harbor, especially on mullet and shrimp.
Best bet this weekend: get an early start, watch for working birds, move with the tides, and use light leader and realistic presentations. October fishing doesn’t get a whole lot better, so gather your crew and hit the water.
Thanks for tuning in and be sure to subscribe for more local reports. 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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