Texas Gulf Coast October Fishing Forecast: Bull Reds, Trout, and More!
Update: 2025-10-08
Description
Hey y’all, Artificial Lure here with your Gulf Coast Texas fishing report for Wednesday, October 8, 2025.
First light came at 7:18 AM this morning and we’ve got sunset pegged for 6:54 PM, giving us nearly 11 and a half hours to chase those October linesiders. Tides are in our favor, with an early high at 4:31 AM, a lunchtime negative low around 1:39 PM, and the big flood coming in with another high at 10:39 PM, based on the latest from Tide-Forecast.com. That lunchtime low’s going to pull plenty of bait out of the grass and into the passes—prime time for ambush predators.
Weather’s classic for this season: we’re working through the backside of a front with cooler temps and a crisp north breeze. Texas Storm Chasers say to keep an eye on the surf—onshore winds mean some extra rip current risk, but also churn up the bait and push those schools close to shore. Water clarity’s mostly “green to the beach,” which is just how we like it.
Fish activity’s firing on all cylinders. According to FishingReminder and Bolivar Peninsula reports, it’s the front end of the fall run and the bite’s hot. On the upper coast, bull reds are thick around the beachfront and jetties. Cut mullet and menhaden on the bottom are pulling those drag-screamers within reach, especially at San Luis Pass and the Galveston North Jetty. Slot reds and Spanish mackerel are cruising the surf; gold or silver spoons, swimbaits, and Fishbites tails are all seeing action.
Inshore, early morning is trout time. Speckled trout are moving shallow at dawn, working shell and grass edges, especially around East Galveston Bay and Confederate Reef. Topwater plugs at first light are landing some real gators—think bone or chrome if it’s clear, chartreuse if the water muddies up. Later, switch to soft plastics in glow or chartreuse. Flounder are staging at all the drains and marsh edges on the last of the outgoing tide; slow-rolled paddle tails or live mud minnows are putting flatfish in the box.
Crab or shrimp is king for black drum in deeper channels, and don’t forget a live shrimp under a popping cork for mixed bags when the wind lays down.
Hot spots this week:
- The Galveston North Jetty—big reds, mackerel, and solid trout runs.
- San Luis Pass and the west side of the Surf—bull reds, slot reds, plenty of sharks, and the occasional big flounder.
For the bay folks, hit the mouths of marsh drains and shell reefs—look for birds diving and slicks popping.
Quick lure rundown:
- Topwaters (bone or chrome) at first light.
- Soft plastics in chartreuse or glow fleck.
- Shrimp imitations like Fishbites tails are cash money, as the local Bolivar report confirms.
- Cut mullet or menhaden for big reds; live shrimp under a cork is versatile and deadly.
Best bite windows today: early morning until mid-morning, and again around sunset as the second high tide fills in. Those major solunar times are 10:18 AM to 12:18 PM and 10:34 PM to 12:34 AM—don’t miss ‘em if you’re soaking baits.
Thanks for tuning in—give these patterns a shot and you’ll be grinning in those grip-n-grins. Don’t forget to subscribe and keep those rods bent!
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
First light came at 7:18 AM this morning and we’ve got sunset pegged for 6:54 PM, giving us nearly 11 and a half hours to chase those October linesiders. Tides are in our favor, with an early high at 4:31 AM, a lunchtime negative low around 1:39 PM, and the big flood coming in with another high at 10:39 PM, based on the latest from Tide-Forecast.com. That lunchtime low’s going to pull plenty of bait out of the grass and into the passes—prime time for ambush predators.
Weather’s classic for this season: we’re working through the backside of a front with cooler temps and a crisp north breeze. Texas Storm Chasers say to keep an eye on the surf—onshore winds mean some extra rip current risk, but also churn up the bait and push those schools close to shore. Water clarity’s mostly “green to the beach,” which is just how we like it.
Fish activity’s firing on all cylinders. According to FishingReminder and Bolivar Peninsula reports, it’s the front end of the fall run and the bite’s hot. On the upper coast, bull reds are thick around the beachfront and jetties. Cut mullet and menhaden on the bottom are pulling those drag-screamers within reach, especially at San Luis Pass and the Galveston North Jetty. Slot reds and Spanish mackerel are cruising the surf; gold or silver spoons, swimbaits, and Fishbites tails are all seeing action.
Inshore, early morning is trout time. Speckled trout are moving shallow at dawn, working shell and grass edges, especially around East Galveston Bay and Confederate Reef. Topwater plugs at first light are landing some real gators—think bone or chrome if it’s clear, chartreuse if the water muddies up. Later, switch to soft plastics in glow or chartreuse. Flounder are staging at all the drains and marsh edges on the last of the outgoing tide; slow-rolled paddle tails or live mud minnows are putting flatfish in the box.
Crab or shrimp is king for black drum in deeper channels, and don’t forget a live shrimp under a popping cork for mixed bags when the wind lays down.
Hot spots this week:
- The Galveston North Jetty—big reds, mackerel, and solid trout runs.
- San Luis Pass and the west side of the Surf—bull reds, slot reds, plenty of sharks, and the occasional big flounder.
For the bay folks, hit the mouths of marsh drains and shell reefs—look for birds diving and slicks popping.
Quick lure rundown:
- Topwaters (bone or chrome) at first light.
- Soft plastics in chartreuse or glow fleck.
- Shrimp imitations like Fishbites tails are cash money, as the local Bolivar report confirms.
- Cut mullet or menhaden for big reds; live shrimp under a cork is versatile and deadly.
Best bite windows today: early morning until mid-morning, and again around sunset as the second high tide fills in. Those major solunar times are 10:18 AM to 12:18 PM and 10:34 PM to 12:34 AM—don’t miss ‘em if you’re soaking baits.
Thanks for tuning in—give these patterns a shot and you’ll be grinning in those grip-n-grins. Don’t forget to subscribe and keep those rods bent!
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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