Hot Summertime Bite Heats Up the Louisiana Gulf Podcast Por  arte de portada

Hot Summertime Bite Heats Up the Louisiana Gulf

Hot Summertime Bite Heats Up the Louisiana Gulf

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Artificial Lure here with your June 21, 2025, fishing report for Louisiana’s Gulf of Mexico waters, where summer’s in full swing and the action is heating up across the marshes, bays, and nearshore rigs.

Today’s sunrise came at 6:01 AM, with sunset rolling in at 8:08 PM, giving anglers a big window for prime fishing. Weather’s looking good—expect highs in the upper 80s, mostly sunny skies, light south winds, and a humid feel—classic June fishing weather for south Louisiana.

Tides are moderate, with a high tide peaking late morning and falling out after lunchtime. That means your best shot for inshore species like speckled trout and redfish is right at dawn and during the first part of the outgoing tide.

The bite’s been hot and steady, with speckled trout coming off the reefs and shell pads at Shell Beach and Hopedale, especially on the falling tide. According to the Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana Daily Fishing Report, speckled trout, redfish, and flounder have been the main catches lately, with the trout bite described as “goin’ strong”—Shell Beach and Hopedale are top picks right now.

Redfish are stacked up along the grass beds and points near Biloxi Marsh and the mouth of Bayou Bienvenue. Reports on Louisiana Sportsman show big slot reds, and even some bulls, coming from cut banks on live and cut bait, but they’re also smashing spinnerbaits and soft plastics.

Offshore, snapper season’s in swing. Local charters have been doing well on red and mangrove snapper out at the live bottoms, especially using big live baits. There’s even been a surprise showing of tripletail around floating debris, and a few late cobia caught near the rigs, as noted by the Shore Thing Fishing Report.

Best baits and lures: Can’t beat a live shrimp under a popping cork for trout and slot reds right now, but when the bite gets tough or you’re after numbers, switch to artificial—topwater walk-the-dog lures like the Heddon Super Spook and popping baits are excellent for early morning trout. When the sun’s up, soft plastics in chartreuse or opening night colors rigged on 1/4-ounce jigheads have been pulling trout and flounder from channel edges. For redfish, gold spinnerbaits and weedless spoons are deadly in those grassy marsh drains, especially with off-color water.

A couple of hot spots to try: Shell Beach reefs in the early morning for trout, and the edges of Biloxi Marsh for both reds and trout, especially on the falling tide. Don’t overlook the rigs out of Breton Sound for a mix of snapper and the occasional cobia.

Shrimp and croakers are plentiful at the bait stands, but the artificial bite is truly strong—especially with the trout chasing baitfish spawns in open water. Just remember: with crowds getting thick, sometimes it pays to look for quieter water a bit away from where everyone’s anchored up.

Thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe to get the latest reports and tips—this has been Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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