Episode Details
Back to Episodes
California Coastal Bounty: Rockfish, Halibut, and the Salmon Comeback
Published 10 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Ocean, California fishing report for Saturday, June 21st, 2025.
It’s the summer solstice weekend and the action along the Cali coast is matching the long days! We’re seeing consistent early morning fog burning off to clear, sunny skies by noon, temps hovering in the comfortable mid-60s to low-70s—classic coastal weather. Winds are light in the AM, but pick up onshore in the afternoon, so plan your trips accordingly.
Today’s tides set up well for morning and late-afternoon bites: low tide hit at 6:43 AM, high at 12:20 PM, and the evening low at 6:42 PM. Sunrise came at 5:41 AM and you can fish all the way to sunset at 8:34 PM—a lot of daylight to work with according to Tide-Forecast.
Let’s talk fish activity and recent catches. The rockfish bite has been hot from Morro Bay up through Avila Beach, with party boats like Endeavor and Starfire reporting limits: hundreds of rockfish, plus quality catches of bolina, copper, and red rockfish, along with steady lingcod ranging up to 13 pounds. Ventura boats also reported excellent numbers of rockfish, plus a few standout halibut, yellowtail, and some good white seabass counts. Over in Bodega Bay and Berkeley, it’s been a halibut and striped bass bonanza—Berkeley’s California Dawn boats posted close to 40 halibut and almost as many stripers per trip, with fish up to 29 pounds.
And today’s headline—salmon season is finally back after three years off, with the opener running this weekend statewide. The summer Chinook harvest guideline is 7,000 fish; if it doesn’t get reached, look for more open dates next month. Most anglers are sticking to trolling anchovy or herring strips, but if you’re fishing near the bar at the Golden Gate or Monterey, try running a FBR (Fish Flash) or hoochie behind a dodger for that elusive Chinook.
Bait and lure recommendations for today:
- For rockfish and lingcod, go with shrimp flies, swimbaits, or heavy metal jigs like P-Line Laser Minnows in blue/white or glow.
- Halibut are biting best on live anchovies, herring, or drifted sardines—tip your rigs with a little bling, like a spinner blade, to up your odds.
- Striped bass are responding to topwater plugs in the early AM; later, switch to swimbaits or even chunks of frozen anchovy fished near structure.
- Salmon anglers should troll with FBRs, hoochies, or cut plug herring, especially during that strong morning ebb.
Hot spots today:
- Morro Bay reefs for rockfish and lings,
- The inside edges of San Francisco Bay from Berkeley Flats to the Alameda Rockwall for halibut and striped bass,
- Ventura’s coastal kelp lines for a shot at white seabass and yellowtail,
- And if you’re salmon hunting, the area just outside the Golden Gate and above Monterey’s submarine canyon are your best bets.
Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for up-to-date local tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
It’s the summer solstice weekend and the action along the Cali coast is matching the long days! We’re seeing consistent early morning fog burning off to clear, sunny skies by noon, temps hovering in the comfortable mid-60s to low-70s—classic coastal weather. Winds are light in the AM, but pick up onshore in the afternoon, so plan your trips accordingly.
Today’s tides set up well for morning and late-afternoon bites: low tide hit at 6:43 AM, high at 12:20 PM, and the evening low at 6:42 PM. Sunrise came at 5:41 AM and you can fish all the way to sunset at 8:34 PM—a lot of daylight to work with according to Tide-Forecast.
Let’s talk fish activity and recent catches. The rockfish bite has been hot from Morro Bay up through Avila Beach, with party boats like Endeavor and Starfire reporting limits: hundreds of rockfish, plus quality catches of bolina, copper, and red rockfish, along with steady lingcod ranging up to 13 pounds. Ventura boats also reported excellent numbers of rockfish, plus a few standout halibut, yellowtail, and some good white seabass counts. Over in Bodega Bay and Berkeley, it’s been a halibut and striped bass bonanza—Berkeley’s California Dawn boats posted close to 40 halibut and almost as many stripers per trip, with fish up to 29 pounds.
And today’s headline—salmon season is finally back after three years off, with the opener running this weekend statewide. The summer Chinook harvest guideline is 7,000 fish; if it doesn’t get reached, look for more open dates next month. Most anglers are sticking to trolling anchovy or herring strips, but if you’re fishing near the bar at the Golden Gate or Monterey, try running a FBR (Fish Flash) or hoochie behind a dodger for that elusive Chinook.
Bait and lure recommendations for today:
- For rockfish and lingcod, go with shrimp flies, swimbaits, or heavy metal jigs like P-Line Laser Minnows in blue/white or glow.
- Halibut are biting best on live anchovies, herring, or drifted sardines—tip your rigs with a little bling, like a spinner blade, to up your odds.
- Striped bass are responding to topwater plugs in the early AM; later, switch to swimbaits or even chunks of frozen anchovy fished near structure.
- Salmon anglers should troll with FBRs, hoochies, or cut plug herring, especially during that strong morning ebb.
Hot spots today:
- Morro Bay reefs for rockfish and lings,
- The inside edges of San Francisco Bay from Berkeley Flats to the Alameda Rockwall for halibut and striped bass,
- Ventura’s coastal kelp lines for a shot at white seabass and yellowtail,
- And if you’re salmon hunting, the area just outside the Golden Gate and above Monterey’s submarine canyon are your best bets.
Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for up-to-date local tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.