『Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Reds, Trout, and Shrimp Galore on the Louisiana Marshes』のカバーアート

Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Reds, Trout, and Shrimp Galore on the Louisiana Marshes

Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Reds, Trout, and Shrimp Galore on the Louisiana Marshes

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Artificial Lure here, bringing you the latest fishing report straight from the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans waters for October 20, 2025.

The sun’s on the rise at 7:06 AM and will dip at 6:23 PM tonight, giving us prime daylight on the marshes and bays. This morning’s weather is breezy—expect southeast winds at 10 to 15 knots through the day with small chances of pop-up showers and a two- to three-foot chop, according to the National Weather Service. That wind might keep boaters on their toes but it’s moving bait and waking up the fish.

Tides today in The Rigolets see a low around 9:38 AM and a high just after 4:15 PM, meaning late morning into early afternoon is your golden window. The later rising tide is perfect for inshore action with water pushing into the marsh, flushing shrimp and baitfish and firing up predators—classic October.

Redfish are absolutely stacked, both slot-sizes and some bigger bulls. Folks are seeing bites on nearly every cast out in the marshes and lakes. Louisiana Sportsman reports redfish everywhere, with keeper speckled trout moving into the marshes. October high water always means hot fishing—white shrimp are running out of the marsh, and everything from Lake Borgne to Barataria Bay is loaded. Anglers on recent trips have limited out on reds and picked up plenty of trout. One review from Captain Experiences this weekend said they “ended the morning with a nice catch of reds and specs, exactly what we were targeting,” and another report had boats tallying up 15-20 fish per angler, plus piles of gafftop catfish.

If you’re after numbers, soft plastics in white or chartreuse rigged on a quarter-ounce jighead are hot right now. Marsh Man Masson swears by them, and with water clarity up in areas like Hopedale and Shell Beach, they’ve been irresistible for reds and trout. Live shrimp under a popping cork still gets the nod if you want no-fuss bites and mixed species. For topwater, the first hour after sunrise is magical—toss a bone or mullet-colored Super Spook Jr. in the lagoons or along grass edges, especially when bait’s everywhere.

Artificial lures are working great: Matrix Shad and Vudu Shrimp are killing it, and if you’re chasing bigger trout, try a MirrOLure suspending twitchbait in the cuts and passes. If the wind lets you out front, gold spoons and weedless paddle tails are dynamite over oyster reefs for both trout and redfish.

If crabbing or shrimping’s on your agenda, Lake Pontchartrain is still seeing some good jumbo shrimp pushing out—cast netters are doing fine on the evenings.

Two hot spots to circle for today:
- The Biloxi Marsh, with boundless pockets for sight-casting reds, and
- Lake Catherine, where speck action is picking up strong as they transition into the interior waters. For an easy spot, try the Highway 11 bridge or the mouth of Irish Bayou.

Whether you’re wading, drifting, or working from the shore, this is peak fall fishing, so local guides say don’t overthink it—get a good supply of plastics, grab some fresh live shrimp, and get after it.

That’s your wrap from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your daily bites. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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