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Pacific Ocean Fishing Report - April 2, 2025
Published 1 year ago
Description
Good morning, anglers! Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Ocean fishing report for April 2, 2025, focusing on the California coastline. Get ready for some great action as spring is heating up the local waters, and the bites are following suit!
Today’s **sunrise** was at 6:38 AM, and **sunset** will be at 7:16 PM, giving you plenty of daylight for a full fishing session. The **tides** are cooperating too, with a morning **high tide** of 4.5 feet around 8:45 AM and an afternoon **low tide** of 0.5 feet at 3:52 PM—ideal for targeting certain species during those shifting currents.
**Weather-wise**, it's shaping up to be a prime fishing day with partly cloudy skies, a high temperature around 67°F, and light winds from the west at 6-9 mph. Ocean conditions are calm with 2-3 foot swells, which is perfect for both inshore and boat fishing.
The **fish activity** has been lively. Halibut activity is heating up as they move into shallower waters for springtime spawning. Recent catches have ranged from 12 to 25 pounds, particularly strong off Huntington Beach and Monterey Bay. Lingcod and rockfish are also providing steady action for bottom-fishing enthusiasts, with many boats reporting limits on quality catches. For the surface angler, yellowtail have been popping around the Catalina and San Clemente Islands. Surf casters, too, are getting in on the action with barred surfperch and corbina active along Southern California beaches.
As for **lures and bait**, for halibut, slow-trolling white bucktail jigs tipped with squid strips or working swimbaits in sardine or anchovy patterns near the bottom is the ticket. Lingcod and rockfish are biting well on cut squid or shrimp and jigs like the 6-ounce diamond jig. Yellowtail are responding to surface iron jigs like the Tady 45 in blue and white or yo-yo jigs, and live sardines are also very effective for these strong fighters. Surf anglers should consider Carolina-rigged grubs in motor oil or root beer colors.
Looking for **hot spots**? Try Monterey Bay’s canyon edges for halibut or the reefs off San Diego for lingcod and rockfish. For those targeting yellowtail, the Horseshoe Kelp area is producing outstanding results. Surf fishing at Torrey Pines State Beach has been hot as well, particularly for perch and corbina.
Reminder, rockfish season is now open, and regulations remain in place for other species, so ensure you’re compliant with local rules.
That’s it for this morning’s report, anglers. Tight lines, stay safe, and enjoy the bounty the Pacific Ocean has to offer! See you on the water.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Today’s **sunrise** was at 6:38 AM, and **sunset** will be at 7:16 PM, giving you plenty of daylight for a full fishing session. The **tides** are cooperating too, with a morning **high tide** of 4.5 feet around 8:45 AM and an afternoon **low tide** of 0.5 feet at 3:52 PM—ideal for targeting certain species during those shifting currents.
**Weather-wise**, it's shaping up to be a prime fishing day with partly cloudy skies, a high temperature around 67°F, and light winds from the west at 6-9 mph. Ocean conditions are calm with 2-3 foot swells, which is perfect for both inshore and boat fishing.
The **fish activity** has been lively. Halibut activity is heating up as they move into shallower waters for springtime spawning. Recent catches have ranged from 12 to 25 pounds, particularly strong off Huntington Beach and Monterey Bay. Lingcod and rockfish are also providing steady action for bottom-fishing enthusiasts, with many boats reporting limits on quality catches. For the surface angler, yellowtail have been popping around the Catalina and San Clemente Islands. Surf casters, too, are getting in on the action with barred surfperch and corbina active along Southern California beaches.
As for **lures and bait**, for halibut, slow-trolling white bucktail jigs tipped with squid strips or working swimbaits in sardine or anchovy patterns near the bottom is the ticket. Lingcod and rockfish are biting well on cut squid or shrimp and jigs like the 6-ounce diamond jig. Yellowtail are responding to surface iron jigs like the Tady 45 in blue and white or yo-yo jigs, and live sardines are also very effective for these strong fighters. Surf anglers should consider Carolina-rigged grubs in motor oil or root beer colors.
Looking for **hot spots**? Try Monterey Bay’s canyon edges for halibut or the reefs off San Diego for lingcod and rockfish. For those targeting yellowtail, the Horseshoe Kelp area is producing outstanding results. Surf fishing at Torrey Pines State Beach has been hot as well, particularly for perch and corbina.
Reminder, rockfish season is now open, and regulations remain in place for other species, so ensure you’re compliant with local rules.
That’s it for this morning’s report, anglers. Tight lines, stay safe, and enjoy the bounty the Pacific Ocean has to offer! See you on the water.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI