Monday Gulf Fishing Report: Calm Seas, Hot Inshore Bite, Offshore Season Openers Podcast Por  arte de portada

Monday Gulf Fishing Report: Calm Seas, Hot Inshore Bite, Offshore Season Openers

Monday Gulf Fishing Report: Calm Seas, Hot Inshore Bite, Offshore Season Openers

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Good morning from the Gulf, anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Monday, May 19th fishing report for Florida’s stretch of the Gulf of Mexico. As the sun rises at 6:41 AM and sets at 8:16 PM, we’re looking at an outstanding day to be out on the water.

Weather today is classic late spring—expect partly cloudy skies and gentle southeast winds shifting southwest later, in the 5 to 10 knot range. Seas are calm at 1 to 2 feet, but keep an eye out for a stray afternoon shower or thunderstorm popping up further inland. Water temps are warm and baitfish schools are thick, sparking some excellent action up and down the coast.

Tidewise, we’ve got a nice high tide in the early morning hours, peaking around sunrise, with the next high coming mid to late afternoon. That’s prime time for many of our inshore species, so aim to hit the water for the transition or hold off for the afternoon push if you’re headed out later in the day.

Inshore, the bite has been excellent. Pompano and whiting continue to show up strong on the beaches, especially along the Forgotten Coast and barrier islands. Anglers surf casting 15 to 25 feet out around the sandbar breaks are reporting steady catches, with FishGum, Sand Flea Fishbites, Pink E-Z Shrimp, or fresh shrimp all putting fish in the cooler. As we move closer to summer, Spanish mackerel are starting to blitz close to shore—time to break out silver spoons and cast around active bait pods for high-speed fun.

Bay fishing is hot for spotted seatrout, redfish, and flounder. Oyster beds, drop-offs, and grassy flats are holding good numbers of fish around Apalachicola Bay, St. George Sound, and the bay systems around Tampa and Clearwater. Live shrimp are always a safe bet, but MirrOlures and Gulp baits are fooling plenty of fish. Mangrove snapper are showing up more often around docks, seawalls, and bridge pilings—they love live shrimp and small pilchards. Snook are on the move as well, prepping for their summer spawn along beaches and passes.

Offshore, bottom fishing is heating up with the opening of grouper season and steady catches of red snapper and amberjack on deeper structure. Kingfish and the first runs of mahi mahi are showing up around nearshore reefs and wrecks—rig up with wire leaders and try trolling spoons or duster rigs with live bait.

Hot spots to check out today include the beaches around St. George Island and the passes near Madeira Beach for pompano and mackerel action, as well as the oyster bars in Apalachicola Bay for trout and redfish. Those heading offshore should target the hard bottom and ledges off Clearwater or Destin for your best shot at snapper and grouper.

That’s the latest from the Gulf today—tight lines and safe travels. Let us know what you’re catching, and I’ll see you out there.
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