『Late Fall Bite Active in the Gulf and New Orleans』のカバーアート

Late Fall Bite Active in the Gulf and New Orleans

Late Fall Bite Active in the Gulf and New Orleans

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Artificial Lure coming to you with Tuesday’s fishing report for the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans. Local anglers greeted the day with a sunrise at 6:28 AM and can expect sunset to drop at 5:02 PM. Tides were moving early, with a high around 5:01 AM and dropping to low at 5:40 PM, ideal for morning setups as water movement gets bait stirring and fish feeding—always good news for rod-benders. Water temperatures are holding steady around 63°F, just right for that late fall bite to stay active.

Weather is pleasant and partly cloudy, with air temps starting near 68°F and climbing into the low 70s through midday according to US Harbors. Winds are light for the most part, with occasional 8–10 knot gusts from the southeast—enough to ripple the surface and get those speckled trout and reds on the hunt.

The last few days have been robust for inshore catches around reefs, bridges, and jetties. According to Louisiana Sportsman, sheepshead action is solid; big groups are stacking up around hard structure and oyster beds, making this a tackle-testing time of year. Redfish and speckled trout were landed thick in the passes and at the mouths of the marsh, with some anglers reporting two to three person limits before lunch. And yes, the snapper and grouper bite offshore isn’t slacking either—Captain Experiences shared weekend trips where red grouper, gag grouper, mangrove snapper, and even snook were caught with cut bait and fresh squid.

Out near Shell Beach and Hopedale, folks are finding decent numbers of slot reds and solid stringers of trout, mixing live shrimp under popping corks and Matrix Shad plastics. Best baits for the current conditions include:
- Live shrimp (classic for trout and reds).
- Dead shrimp or fiddler crabs for sheepshead, especially tight to pilings.
- Gold spoons and soft-plastics in chartreuse or opening night colors for active trout.
- Gulp jerk shads and paddle tails are producing quality flounder around sandy cuts.
- Topwater plugs at dawn are drawing out the bigger redfish at Grand Isle’s Caminada Pass.

Recent enforcement around local oyster beds in St. Bernard and Terrebonne reminds everybody to respect regulations—agents seized 27 sacks for violation, so have your gear permits and harvest reports ready, especially with oystering hot right now after the cold snap.

For those looking for hotspots, two picks:
- Bayou Bienvenue: marsh edge and rock piles are firing for reds and drum.
- Grand Isle bridge and Barataria Pass: boats working the passes and jetties are consistently pulling big trout, slot reds, and stacks of sheepshead.

Don’t forget: Solunar charts are showing heavy activity today during those crepuscular periods, so match your outings to tide changes and be patient—sometimes it takes moving a few spots till it clicks, just ask the seasoned captains. With water cooling and bait flush happening, expect the bite to heat up ahead of the next cold front.

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