『New Orleans-Gulf Fishing Report: Early Winter Patterns and Hot Spots』のカバーアート

New Orleans-Gulf Fishing Report: Early Winter Patterns and Hot Spots

New Orleans-Gulf Fishing Report: Early Winter Patterns and Hot Spots

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans–Gulf fishing report.

We’re in that classic early-winter pattern: cool mornings, light north to northeast breeze, and mostly fair skies. According to the National Weather Service marine forecast out of New Orleans, inshore winds are running around 5–10 knots with small chop, with the bigger Gulf seas in the 3–5 foot range offshore. That makes the inside marsh and nearshore bays the play today.

NOAA’s tide prediction for the New Canal Station on Lake Pontchartrain shows a modest morning high followed by a falling tide through the afternoon, so you’ll want to time your trips around moving water in the bayous and passes. That falling water is going to pull bait out of the ponds and stack fish at the mouths of drains and cuts. Sunrise is right around seven, sunset a little after five-thirty, giving you a tight dawn and dusk chew.

Fish activity lines up well with the solunar tables from FishingReminder, which flag a strong major feeding window mid‑morning and again around sunset. That matches what local captains have been seeing all week: slow first light, then a real pick‑up once the sun’s up a bit and the tide starts rolling.

According to Louisiana Sportsman’s recent December coverage, the coastal marsh from Lafitte over toward the Barataria and Empire area has been hot with speckled trout and slot reds, with some bruiser bull reds out toward the larger bays and near Gulf passes. Trout have been running solid keeper size with some two‑ to three‑pound fish mixed in on oyster reefs and along current‑swept shorelines. Reds are thick in the shallow ponds and along broken marsh edges, especially where clean water meets slightly off‑color water.

Best baits right now:
- **Speckled trout:** 3–4 inch soft plastics in opening night, glow, or chartreuse on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads under a popping cork. That new shrimp‑style plastics like the Vudu‑type shrimp Louisiana Sportsman highlighted are catching well over shell and in deeper bayous.
- **Redfish:** Gold spoons, spinnerbaits, and paddle‑tail plastics in dark colors. If you’re soaking bait, dead shrimp or cut mullet on the bottom in a little current is hard to beat.
- **Live bait:** Live shrimp and cocahoe minnows are still king if you can get them; free‑line or under a cork around points and drains.

Recent catches in the Grand Isle–Barataria–Empire corridor have shown mixed bags: limits of specks for boats that stick to moving water and work through schools, plus 4–10 reds a trip, with drum and sheepshead as bonus fish. Up toward Pontchartrain, anglers working the bridges and nearby reefs are picking up decent numbers of trout when the water cleans up after fronts.

Couple of local hot spots to zero in on:
- **Bayou Bienvenue and the MRGO rocks** on the east side of town: great for trout and reds when that tide starts pulling. Work plastics and shrimp under corks along the rocks and drains.
- **Barataria Bay and the marsh south of Lafitte:** hit the mouths of small bayous dumping into larger canals. Position downcurrent and let your cork or bait sweep naturally.

Fish the lee side of shorelines with that north wind, look for clean green water, and don’t be afraid to move until you find them. Once you stick a few, power‑pole down or stick an anchor and work that area hard.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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