Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today
Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today

Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today

Inception Point AI

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Dive into the "Pacific Ocean, California Fishing Report Today" your go-to podcast for the latest updates on fishing conditions in the Pacific Ocean off California's coastline. Stay informed about daily weather forecasts, ocean conditions, and expert tips from seasoned anglers. Perfect for fishing enthusiasts and professionals looking to plan successful outings, this podcast offers valuable insights on fish species, hotspots, and strategies to enhance your fishing experience. Tune in each day to stay ahead and make the most of your time on the water. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock Also check out https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/time-in-city-news-info/id6692631879 and https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/what-to-do-in-city-guides/id6615091666 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Recent Episodes

Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Morning Tides and Solid Bites from Crescent City to San Diego
JUN 22, 2026
Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Morning Tides and Solid Bites from Crescent City to San Diego
Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Coast California fishing report. Let’s start with the ocean. From about Crescent City down through Santa Barbara, we’ve got a gentle mixed swell, generally 2–4 feet with light morning winds and a typical afternoon northwest bump as the sea breeze fills in. Marine layer is hanging along much of the coast in the morning, clearing to sun by late morning in most spots. Air temps are running cool at dawn in the 50s, warming into the 60s and low 70s on the open coast. Water temps are running cooler north, mid–50s, and creeping up into the low 60s as you slide south toward SoCal. Tides today run an early morning low pushing into a mid‑day high, then dropping again toward evening. That means the **morning incoming tide** is your money window, especially on the rocky points and harbor mouths. Sunrise is roughly just after 5:40 a.m. up north and closer to 5:45–5:50 a.m. farther south, with sunset around 8:30 p.m. north and a touch earlier as you head toward San Diego. Plan to be set up and making your first cast right at gray light. Fish activity has been solid. Up north, rockfish and lingcod have been chewing hard on the reefs and pinnacles in 60–150 feet. Party boats out of ports like Eureka, Fort Bragg, and Bodega have been reporting easy limits of mixed rockfish with a good pick of lings. Best offerings are 4–6 inch swimbaits in sardine or anchovy patterns on 2–6 ounce leadheads, metal jigs like diamond jigs and knife jigs, and for bait anglers, strips of squid or cut anchovy. Keep your presentation near bottom and expect the bite to spike on that incoming tide. Around the Central Coast—Monterey, Santa Cruz, Morro Bay—the halibut bite in the bays and nearshore sand flats has been building. Drifting live anchovies or smelt is tough to beat, but artificial folks are doing well with white or chartreuse swimbaits, 3–5 inch paddle tails on 1–2 ounce heads, and fluke‑style soft plastics on drop‑shot rigs. Early morning and the first couple hours of the flood have been prime. Rockfish remain steady on the deeper structure with similar gear to the north. Farther south, along Malibu, Palos Verdes, and down toward San Diego, inshore fishing has been good. Surf anglers are finding barred surfperch, corbina, and some spotfin croaker on the beaches. Best baits are sand crabs dug on site, fresh mussel, ghost shrimp if you can get it, and small Gulp sandworms in camo or natural colors on light Carolina rigs. Work the edges of troughs and cuts as the tide pushes up the beach. In the bays—San Diego Bay, Mission Bay, Newport, Long Beach—the spotted bay bass, sand bass, and halibut are active around structure and channel edges. Small swimbaits, underspins with 3–4 inch plastics, and shrimp‑impregnated soft baits are producing. Night and low‑light periods are best around the stronger parts of the tide swing. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: First, the outer reef lines and pinnacles off Bodega Bay and Point Arena, where rockfish and lings have been stuffed with anchovies—drop jigs or swimbaits and be ready. Second, San Diego Bay’s main channel edges and bridge pilings, which have been kicking out quality spotted bay bass and keeper halibut on the incoming tide, especially for folks slow‑rolling swimbaits tight to the bottom. Gear‑wise, keep it simple: For bottom fish and lings, medium‑heavy to heavy rods, 30–50 lb braid, and 20–30 lb leaders. For halibut and bay bass, medium setups with 15–30 lb braid and 12–20 lb leaders do the job. In the surf, light spinning gear with 6–12 lb line keeps it fun and lets small baits move naturally. As always, check local regulations and rockfish depth restrictions before you head out, and keep an eye on the wind forecasts if you’re planning to run offshore. The morning window is your best bet for calmer seas and more cooperative fish. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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
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4 MIN
Early Summer Perch and Halibut: Pacific Coast Bite Report from Point Reyes to Orange County
JUN 21, 2026
Early Summer Perch and Halibut: Pacific Coast Bite Report from Point Reyes to Orange County
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Pacific Coast fishing report for coastal California, from about Point Reyes down through Orange County. We’ve got a mellow early‑summer pattern along the beaches today. Marine layer is hanging in most spots at daybreak with light winds, building to a typical onshore breeze this afternoon. Air temps are running mid‑50s in the morning into the upper 60s and low 70s by mid‑day. Ocean temps are hovering in the high 50s to low 60s up north, low to mid‑60s further south. Sunrise is right around 5:45 to 5:50 a.m. along most of the coast, with sunset close to 8:30 p.m. That gives you long low‑light windows; the punch times are first light to about 9 a.m., and then again the last two hours before dark. Tides are running a moderate swing on the Pacific today, with a higher morning high easing into a dropping tide late morning and a stronger afternoon low pushing water hard out of the bays and inlets. That falling water has been the best bet for halibut and surf species; the first push of the incoming in the late afternoon has been turning on the bite again in many areas. Surf fishing has been solid. Up and down the central and southern coast, anglers have been posting good numbers of barred and calico surfperch, plus a nice mix of yellowfin croaker, spotfin croaker, and some chunky corbina where the sand crabs are thick. Reports from local tackle shops say most folks are getting into “a dozen or more” perch per tide window when they find the right cut, with a few palm‑to‑forearm models in the mix. Sand crabs are the top natural bait, followed by ghost shrimp and lugworms. On artificials, 2–3 inch camo or motor‑oil grubs on 1/4 oz jigheads and small Gulp sandworms in natural colors are doing damage. Halibut action in the bays and nearshore sand flats has been fair to good. Charter skippers from San Francisco Bay down through Santa Monica Bay are reporting a mix of shorts with a steady pick of legals, often one to three keepers per angler on the better trips. Live anchovies and sardines are the number one bait; smelt and small mackerel get bit too. For artificials, slow‑rolled swimbaits in sardine, smelt, or brown bait patterns, and 1/2 to 1 oz bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of squid or soft‑plastic trailer, are putting fish on the deck. Focus on edges of channels, bay mouths, and any sandy pocket with a bit of current. Rockfish and lingcod are still a solid option on the deeper reefs and hard bottom. Party boats working 120–240 feet are reporting limits or near‑limits of assorted rockfish with a sprinkling of lings. Squid strips, anchovy pieces on double‑dropper loops, and 4–6 oz metal jigs in blue/white or glow have been the go‑to offerings. If you’re fishing from a private boat, keep an eye on depth restrictions and closed areas, but otherwise the bite’s been steady. Striped bass in the SF and Marin oceanfront remain a decent side show. School‑size fish with the occasional bigger model are cruising the bars and rips. Swimmers, white hair‑raisers, and 4–5 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits in baitfish colors are the ticket, especially on the last half of the outgoing tide around river mouths and open‑coast structure. A couple of hot spots to consider: 1. Ocean Beach and down through Pacifica: Good recent reports of surfperch and schoolie stripers working the bars early and late, especially on that dropping tide. Look for nervous water and birds working tight to the beach. 2. Bolsa Chica to Huntington Beach: Nice mix of perch, yellowfin croaker, and some early‑season corbina where the crabs are loaded in the troughs. Light line, size 4–6 hooks, and natural baits or small grubs are key. The inside edges of holes on the outgoing tide have been best. Best overall lures right now: small paddle‑tail swimbaits in natural baitfish colors, 2–3 inch grubs, and medium metal jigs for deeper structure. Best baits: sand crabs, ghost shrimp, lugworms, squid strips, and live anchovies where you can get them. That’s your coastal California Pacific report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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4 MIN
Morning Bite Magic: Early Tides, Light Wind, and Golden Hour Fishing Along the California Coast
JUN 20, 2026
Morning Bite Magic: Early Tides, Light Wind, and Golden Hour Fishing Along the California Coast
This is Artificial Lure with your Pacific Coast California fishing report. Along most of the open coast this morning we’ve got a gentle mixed swell and light winds giving way to a typical onshore breeze in the afternoon. Nearshore temps are hanging in the high 50s to low 60s, with that cooler upwelling water concentrating bait close to points, kelp, and reef edges. Morning marine layer clears late morning in many areas, then it’s sunny and breezy, so plan to fish early or late. Tides along the central and southern coast are running a moderate morning high dropping to a mid‑day low, then flooding again toward evening. That dropping morning tide has been kicking off the best bite for rockfish and lingcod on structure in 40–120 feet, while the afternoon flood is lining up nicely for surf species sliding up onto the bars and troughs. Sunrise was early and mellow behind the marine layer, with sunset coming late and clear enough to give you a solid golden hour window. Low light has been key—once that wind gets over 12–15 knots, the bite and the boat position both get tougher. Fish activity’s been solid. Party and six‑pack boats out of San Diego, Oceanside, and the LA/Long Beach landings have been reporting steady mixed‑bag rockfish, reds, whitefish, sculpin, and a few lingcod on the deeper stones. Private boaters working paddies offshore of San Diego and Orange County have started to see more life—scattered kelp paddies holding yellowtail with occasional school‑size bluefin showing deep for those willing to drop jigs. Up north, out of Morro Bay and Monterey, the rockfish game is strong: limits of vermilion, canary, and assorted mixed rockfish are common when the wind allows, with a decent shot at lingcod on the edges and high spots. Closer to the beach, surf casters have been into barred surfperch, spotfin and yellowfin croaker, plus the odd corbina in the pockets where the water cleans up. Best baits right now: - Boat: strips of squid, anchovy, or sardine on double‑dropper loops for rockfish and lings; live sardine or mackerel slow‑trolled or fly‑lined near kelp for yellowtail. - Surf: sand crabs you dig yourself are king for corbina and perch; lugworms, bloodworms, or ghost shrimp work great for croaker; soft‑shell sand crabs on light line and small hooks get bit even on pressured beaches. Best lures: - For rockfish/lingcod: 4–6 oz metal jigs in blue/white, scrambled egg, or glow; 4–6" swimbaits on 2–4 oz lead heads in sardine or anchovy colors. - For yellowtail and school tuna: surface irons in mint or mint/white, Colt Sniper‑style heavy jigs in natural bait patterns, and small knife jigs worked mid‑column over meter marks. - For surf: 1/2–1 oz Kastmasters, Carolina‑rigged 2–3" grub tails in motor oil, root beer, or smelt patterns. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **La Jolla kelp and the 9‑Mile Bank (San Diego area):** The kelp line has been holding calico bass, bonito, and the occasional yellowtail on fly‑lined sardines and surface irons. Farther offshore, the 9‑Mile’s been a good starting point to find temperature breaks, bird life, and kelp paddies with yellowtail for those willing to hop spot to spot. - **Point Dume to Rocky Point (Northern LA County):** The reefs and stones off this stretch have been giving up quality reds, chuckleheads, and lings on squid strips and jigs. In tight, the beaches around Zuma and south toward Malibu Lagoon have been producing perch and croaker on sand crabs and light tackle during the morning and evening windows. Work the structure on that outgoing morning tide with bait and jigs, then slide in shallow or onto the sand as the afternoon breeze picks up. Keep your leader light in the surf and a bit heavier around the rocks and kelp, and you’ll stay connected. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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
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4 MIN
Pacific Coast Early Bite: Tides, Lures, and First Light Windows for California Anglers
JUN 19, 2026
Pacific Coast Early Bite: Tides, Lures, and First Light Windows for California Anglers
Good morning, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Pacific Ocean, California fishing report for today. Around the coast, the bite is lining up best with the early tide swing and the first light window, so if you’re chasing fish, get there before the sun gets high. For the **tides**, the most productive windows today are typically the incoming tide and the first part of the outgoing tide along jetties, harbor mouths, and rock structure. Without a live tide table in hand, I’d still key on moving water over slack water, because that’s when bait gets pushed and predators get active. For the **weather**, late June along coastal California usually means a marine layer, cool mornings, light to moderate onshore wind, and improving visibility by midday. If the wind stays down, expect better surface action near shore and around protected points. **Sunrise and sunset** matter today: first light is your best shot, and the evening low-light bite should be strong too. Plan your topwater and fast-moving presentations around those windows, then slow it down if the sun gets bright. For **recent fish activity**, the coast has been producing the usual mix this time of year: **calico bass**, **sand bass**, **rockfish**, **croaker**, **halibut**, and an occasional **yellowtail** where warmer water and bait are present. In many stretches, the most consistent action has been smaller school fish and rock structure species, with quality fish showing where bait stacks up and current runs hard. Best **lures** right now are hard to beat: - **Swimbaits** in white, sardine, or anchovy patterns - **Surface irons** for covering water on boils and current breaks - **Small jerkbaits** and **paddletails** for halibut and bass - **Jigs** fished near bottom for rockfish and deeper structure Best **bait** is simple and effective: - **Live sardines** if you can get them - **Anchovies** for drifting and bait soaking - **Squid** for rockfish and bottom fish - **Sand crabs** for surf perch and corbina on the beach If I were working the coast today, I’d start at a **harbor entrance or jetty mouth** at gray light, then slide to a **kelp edge or rocky point** as the sun climbs. Two hot spots to keep on the radar are **Monterey Bay rock structure** for mixed inshore action and **the Point Loma/La Jolla stretch** for bass, yellowtail chances, and bait-rich water. Local take: stay mobile, match the hatch, and don’t waste the slack tide. If you see birds working, bait flicking, or boils on the surface, cast immediately and stay ready for a fast bite. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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2 MIN
Early Summer Mixed Bags: Tuna, Yellowtail, and Calico Bass Along the California Coast
JUN 18, 2026
Early Summer Mixed Bags: Tuna, Yellowtail, and Calico Bass Along the California Coast
This is Artificial Lure with your California Pacific fishing report. Along the coast from San Diego up through the central stretch, we’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up. Light marine layer in the morning, west to northwest winds building in the afternoon, and a modest mixed swell keeping things bumpy later in the day. Inland valleys are heating up, so expect that onshore breeze to kick hard after lunch. Tides are running on the softer side today, with a pre-dawn high, a mid-morning drop, then an afternoon push that should line up nicely with that wind bump. Think low water late morning, filling back in early to midafternoon. The best window is that incoming tide 2–3 hours before the evening high. Sunrise is right around early morning, with sunset landing in the later evening. That gives you a long gray-light period both ends of the day. Use that to your advantage: flyline baits or slow-rolled artificials at dawn, then switch to heavier gear once the breeze and chop come up. Offshore and islands first. Sport boats out of San Diego, Oceanside, and Dana Point have been putting together decent mixed bags. Recent counts have included bluefin and yellowfin tuna, a few dorado starting to trickle in on the temp breaks, plus solid numbers of yellowtail on the paddies and high spots. Most of those tuna are coming on flylined sardines, sinker rigs at night, and knife jigs dropped deep when the marks show. For artificials, heavy 200–300 gram knife jigs in blue-silver or glow, plus Colt Snipers and other small irons when fish push up. Yellowtail around the islands and local high spots are eating surface iron and slow-trolled sardines. Mint, scrambled egg, and blue-white irons are doing work. Bring 30–40 lb for the kelp, bump to 50–60 if you’re around bigger grade. Inshore along the kelp lines from La Jolla up to Point Loma and north through Orange County and LA, calico bass have been active around the evening high tide and that last light. Kicker-size sand bass and an occasional white seabass are mixed in. Swim baits in sardine or anchovy patterns, 3–5 inch on a leadhead, have been solid. If you’re fishing bait, a flylined anchovy or sardine right on the edge of the stringers is still tough to beat. Surf fishing from Imperial Beach, Mission Beach, Huntington, and on up toward Ventura has been fair to good for barred surfperch, spotfin, and corbina nosing in tight. Fish the last couple hours of the incoming tide with sand crabs, ghost shrimp, or mussel. Light line, small hooks, and keep it stealthy in the shallows. Grubs and Gulp sandworms in camo or motor oil are the go-to artificials. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: – La Jolla kelp beds: solid calico bass, chance at yellowtail and white seabass in the gray light. Fish hard plastics and swimbaits along the edges before the wind comes up. – Tanner and Cortez Bank, when you can get there: bluefin and yellowtail on the deeper structure, especially around the afternoon tide swing. Nighttime knife-jig bite can go off when the fleet is on them. General tackle notes: 20–30 lb setups for inshore and surf, 30–50 lb for local islands, and at least one heavy 60–80 lb rig if you’re chasing the bigger tuna. Fluorocarbon leaders are making a difference on the pickier fish. Keep a mix of small hooks for anchovy and stronger sizes for sardine and mackerel. That’s the scoop from the California Pacific. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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
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3 MIN