『New Orleans Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

New Orleans Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report Today

New Orleans Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point Ai
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Welcome to the "Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans Fishing Report Today" podcast! Dive into expert insights, local fishing conditions, and the latest tips for anglers exploring the vibrant waters of the Gulf and New Orleans. Stay updated with daily reports on weather, tides, species activity, and the best fishing spots. Perfect for seasoned fishermen and newcomers alike, tune in to enhance your fishing adventures!

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  • Fishing the New Orleans Marsh: Redfish, Trout, and More in Ideal November Conditions
    2025/11/11
    Artificial Lure here, reporting live from the heart of Gulf fishing in and around New Orleans. With the sun rising at 6:22 AM and setting tonight at 5:02 PM, we’re starting the day with a gentle southeast breeze around 7 knots, scattered clouds, and temps climbing from the low 60s into the mid 70s. Water temps are steady near 70 degrees—ideal conditions for inshore action, though keep an eye on the forecast for an afternoon shift as humidity rises and clouds build.

    Tidal movement is solid today, peaking just after sunrise, falling through midday, and picking up again later in the afternoon. These swing tides have been driving bait along the marsh lines and around the jetties, setting up prime windows for quick bites from redfish and specks.

    Fish activity has been lively across Lake Borgne, the Rigolets, and out toward Shell Beach. Captain Experiences logs show great action these past few days, with near-limit catches for redfish and plenty of speckled trout—reports as recent as yesterday have anglers filling ice chests steadily all morning, especially when working birds and bait slicks near the passes. A few flounder have made their appearance in shallower flats, and the bayous are giving up some healthy black drum.

    Best lures right now? Locals are sticking with the classics. Under the birds and in moving water, soft plastics like Matrix Shad in lemon-head or avocado colors have been producing trout back-to-back. For reds, gold spoons and chartreuse spinnerbaits are the ticket along grassy points, with a few bonus fish on topwater plugs at dawn. Jigheads fished slow on the bottom, tipped with Gulp shrimp, are catching the flounder and drum.

    Live bait is strong too: shrimp on a Carolina rig or free-lined works when the artificial bite slows, especially near deeper cuts. Cut menhaden and crab are the choice if you’re soaking for bigger drum or bull reds off the canal edges.

    Hot spots this week:
    - The Rigolets has been loaded with trout, especially early in the outgoing tide.
    - Shell Beach, particularly near the MRGO rocks, is holding redfish and black drum.
    - Lake Borgne’s east shore, drifting the oyster reefs, for steady speckled trout action.

    Charter captains are calling this one of the best Novembers in recent years for action and variety. Multiple reports from Captain Experiences clients just over the last weekend mention “catching lots of different species,” “limits of reds and trout,” with guides moving to where the fish are biting and not afraid to switch spots or tactics. Veteran guide Jay put clients on “back-to-back trout all morning,” and others report “cleaning up with sand trout and filling chests for the fryer.” Folks are landing seven to fifteen keeper fish per trip on average, and the mornings have been best before the wind picks up.

    If you’re fishing solo this week, don’t skip the classic New Orleans marsh combo: a popping cork rigged with live shrimp or a paddle-tail plastic just above submerged grass. Cast and drift along tide lines for the most bites.

    Thanks for tuning in and good luck out there—don’t forget to subscribe for your daily local report. 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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    3 分
  • November 10th Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans Fishing Report - Hot Bites, Calm Seas, and Seasonal Transitions
    2025/11/10
    Artificial Lure here with your November 10th, 2025 Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans-area fishing report—let’s dive right into the bayou action.

    **Weather & Tides:**
    We kicked off the morning with a cool northerly breeze. National Weather Service out of New Orleans calls for north winds steady at 10 to 15 knots and waves hovering in the 2 to 3 foot range, so small craft were rocking a bit but not enough to stop the bite. High pressure moving in should keep things calm but brisk today and early this week. Sunrise hit us right at 6:23 AM, and we’re looking at sunset around 5:04 PM. Tides around Grand Isle are working a decent swing, with high tide peaking around mid-morning and low tide falling out just after lunch, prime for folks wanting to work the falling water along marsh drains and shell banks.

    **Fish Activity & Recent Catches:**
    November fishing is lighting up like the French Quarter at dusk. Reports from local guides and regulars say speckled trout and redfish have fired up in the marsh, particularly as water temps dip and schools transition from the lakes and bays toward winter holes. Just this weekend, multiple inshore boats limited out on slot reds and picked through schools of speckled trout under slicks and diving birds—Capt. Jay worked the edges of Lake Borgne and hammered the trout, with folks culling dinks for keepers all morning.

    Offshore, weather limited effort, but when boats got out past the Chandeleur Islands, bull reds ran strong and some nice black drum and sheepshead were caught around deeper rigs and cuts. A few tripletail were brought in by tossing live shrimp under buoys east of the river.

    Red snapper season is closed, but charter reports from last week noted hefty mangrove snapper and lane snapper caught on reefs and wrecks near the mouth of the Mississippi. Strong bites on cut bait and soft plastics near structure. A hot hand even put a couple nice flounder in the box near oyster beds!

    **Best Lures & Baits:**
    Marsh reds are eating up gold spoons, chartreuse paddle tail soft plastics on a 1/4 oz jighead, and old-school live market shrimp under popping corks. For specks, Matrix Shad in “shrimp creole” or “lemon head” have been hot, especially rigged on light jigheads bounced off the bottom of points and windblown shorelines. If you’re soaking bait, fresh dead shrimp and finger mullet will tempt everything from black drum to flounder.

    Offshore, those chasing snapper or mangroves are still swearing by squid strips and menhaden chunks, while big bull reds won’t turn down a live mullet or cracked crab.

    **Hot Spots:**
    For inshore anglers, Bayou Bienvenue and the MRGO wall are holding fat reds and trout, especially near the edges where marsh drains meet deeper channels. Another consistent producer: Hopedale Lagoon—work those oyster reefs on a moving tide for a mixed bag. Out on the coast, the east side of Grand Isle and Fourchon Beach have seen steady runs of slot drum and trout at first light.

    If you’re headed offshore—and the weather allows—the Chandeleur Sound holds solid schools of redfish and the occasional run of jack crevalle for those trolling spoons or sinking swim baits along the outer bars.

    That’ll do it for today’s fishing update around the Crescent City and nearby Gulf. Conditions are setting up for a heck of a week, so tie on your favorite lure, check that knot, and go make some memories out there.

    Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s daily fishing report—don’t forget to subscribe for your fresh updates from the water. 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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    3 分
  • Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Trout, Reds, and Offshore Drums in the Choppy Conditions
    2025/11/09
    This is Artificial Lure with your November 9th fishing report for the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans region.

    Today we're waking up to a classic coastal fall morning—temperatures hovering in the upper 50s to low 60s at first light, with a sunrise at 6:21 AM and sunset dialing in around 5:28 PM. We've got light northwest winds this morning switching due north this afternoon, expected to build from about 10 knots to upwards of 20–25 knots, and seas pushing 2 to 4 feet, building higher later as that cold front moves in according to the National Weather Service Marine Forecast. There's a Small Craft Advisory, so smaller boats should keep a close eye on afternoon conditions.

    The tide is running low today, with a tidal coefficient of 41 this morning and a midday drop to 37, according to Tides4Fishing's report for New Canal Station. Translation: that tidal swing is small, and current will be weak. You’ll want to focus your efforts during those key movement periods—the last couple hours around the low and high tides. That low amplitude favors inshore and backwater action, especially around the marshes, bayous, and drainage points.

    Recent catches have been strong as the cool front’s arrival has the **speckled trout** and **redfish** pushed into interior marshes and bayous. Local anglers are reporting limits of specks in places like Lake Pontchartrain’s south shore and the Chef Menteur passes. Redfish are thick in the Biloxi Marsh, with slot reds eager to eat along grass points and shell flats. Anglers using popping corks tipped with live shrimp or Matrix Shad plastics in purple haze and shrimp creole colors are seeing the best results. Topwater action early—and even into mid-morning on cloudy days—has produced some explosive strikes around flooded grass.

    Out in the deeper passes and nearshore rigs, the drum bite is still on. Folks drifting Carolina-rigged cut mullet or crab are wrestling in some solid black drum and the odd sheepshead. The flounder run is on the upswing—recent YouTube trip reports around the Louisiana barrier islands are full of “doormat”-sized fish taken on live finger mullet and white paddletail soft plastics bounced slow along the bottom.

    Hot spots today include:
    - **Bayou Bienvenue and the MRGO Wall:** Consistent trout and redfish reports, clear water, good bait movement.
    - **Biloxi Marsh, near Bayou La Loutre:** High concentrations of reds holding on points; the marsh drains are loaded on the outgoing tide.

    Weather-wise, the wind’s turning up midday—so hit those protected marshes, inside cuts, and leeward banks. Artificial lures to bring include:
    - **Matrix Shad in shrimp creole and purple haze**
    - **Z-Man DieZel MinnowZ in pearl or glow**
    - **Topwater baits like the Heddon Super Spook Junior** for those early morning pushes.
    - For bait, live shrimp or finger mullet are gold standards.

    If you’re feeling adventurous and the boats can safely make the run, try outside Breton Sound for bull reds staging up on windblown points and shell reefs.

    Remember, stronger winds this afternoon will churn up the water, so focus on areas with natural protection or find that clean water edge for a shot at the bigger fish.

    Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Gulf Coast fishing update. Be sure to subscribe and stay hooked for your daily bite intel. 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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    4 分
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