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"Pacific Ocean Fishing Report: Tides, Temps & Trophies for Aug 8th"
Published 8 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Bright and early on this August 8th, this is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Pacific Ocean fishing report, California style. We’ve got a prime summer day ahead and the bite is shaping up to be just as hot as the weather.
Looking at today's tides along the central coast near Pacifica: low tide hit at five minutes after five this morning at just over half a foot, and we’ll see the first high tide rolling in at 11:51 AM, topping out at 6.5 feet. Second low is at 4:42 PM, and if you’re out late, the evening high tide pushes up just after 10:30 tonight reaching 8.3 feet, so plan your sessions accordingly. Down south in San Diego, tidal amplitude is average today and movement should be decent, with a little boost in water activity by the afternoon—ideal for both inshore and offshore action.
Weatherwise, expect classic coastal summer: clear to patchy fog in the morning, opening up to bright skies. Sunrise was right around 6:19 AM, sunset will be at 8:10 PM, with light winds out of the northwest around 5-10 knots and temps topping out in the upper 70s to low 80s, perfect for a long day on the water.
On the fishing front, the past 24 hours have been stellar for both rockfish and pelagics. Out of San Diego, Fisherman’s Landing is reporting bluefin tuna continuing to stack up—big models too, with the Tomahawk back this morning landing 22 bluefin, some up to 200 pounds. The Pacific Queen private charter checked in with 31 bluefin, a handful hitting that 120–180 pound class. These fish are responding to flat-fall style jigs in blue and glow, and for the live-bait crowd, a well-placed sardine is still money. Further up the coast, Morro Bay and Avila Beach boats continue to fill bags with rockfish—limits of reds, bolina, and copper rockfish, with some nice lingcod in the mix.
For our inshore anglers, Calico and sand bass remain steady across the region, especially on half and three-quarter day boats. Calicos are hammering weedless swimbaits in green and brown, knock on any kelp line or rocky outcrop. Tried and true hardbaits like jerkbaits and surface irons are also productive—work them slow around structure, give a twitch-pause-twitch retrieve as Randy from YouTube’s August bass tip reminds us: slow down those cranks, keep close to the cover, and let those bass come up and eat.
Yellowtail numbers are decent, too—San Diego’s "San Diego" boat just wrapped up a full day trip with 57 yellowtail and 48 calicos for 35 anglers, mostly biting fly-lined sardines and surface irons, especially during those brisk morning hours as the tide starts to swing. For bigger quarry, look offshore and bring heavy gear: your chance for that trophy bluefin is real this week.
A couple of hotspots worth the drive:
- La Jolla kelp beds for calico, sand bass, and a shot at yellowtail—hit it as the current swings in with the rising morning tide.
- San Diego offshore banks, especially around the 43 and the 182, have been loaded with bluefin and yellowtail lately.
- Up the coast, Avila’s reefs and drop-offs are stacked with both lingcod and rockfish—hop on a morning charter for your best shot.
Best baits right now: live sardines and anchovies offshore, plastics and jerkbaits inshore, and for bottom dwellers, a dropper loop rig with squid or a strip of mackerel is tough to beat. Fly anglers: streamers in olive and white tossed near the kelp can do serious work around twilight.
That’s the scoop for today, August 8th. Thanks for tuning in to your local line-up with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the hot bite, and as always, tight lines out there!
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial
Looking at today's tides along the central coast near Pacifica: low tide hit at five minutes after five this morning at just over half a foot, and we’ll see the first high tide rolling in at 11:51 AM, topping out at 6.5 feet. Second low is at 4:42 PM, and if you’re out late, the evening high tide pushes up just after 10:30 tonight reaching 8.3 feet, so plan your sessions accordingly. Down south in San Diego, tidal amplitude is average today and movement should be decent, with a little boost in water activity by the afternoon—ideal for both inshore and offshore action.
Weatherwise, expect classic coastal summer: clear to patchy fog in the morning, opening up to bright skies. Sunrise was right around 6:19 AM, sunset will be at 8:10 PM, with light winds out of the northwest around 5-10 knots and temps topping out in the upper 70s to low 80s, perfect for a long day on the water.
On the fishing front, the past 24 hours have been stellar for both rockfish and pelagics. Out of San Diego, Fisherman’s Landing is reporting bluefin tuna continuing to stack up—big models too, with the Tomahawk back this morning landing 22 bluefin, some up to 200 pounds. The Pacific Queen private charter checked in with 31 bluefin, a handful hitting that 120–180 pound class. These fish are responding to flat-fall style jigs in blue and glow, and for the live-bait crowd, a well-placed sardine is still money. Further up the coast, Morro Bay and Avila Beach boats continue to fill bags with rockfish—limits of reds, bolina, and copper rockfish, with some nice lingcod in the mix.
For our inshore anglers, Calico and sand bass remain steady across the region, especially on half and three-quarter day boats. Calicos are hammering weedless swimbaits in green and brown, knock on any kelp line or rocky outcrop. Tried and true hardbaits like jerkbaits and surface irons are also productive—work them slow around structure, give a twitch-pause-twitch retrieve as Randy from YouTube’s August bass tip reminds us: slow down those cranks, keep close to the cover, and let those bass come up and eat.
Yellowtail numbers are decent, too—San Diego’s "San Diego" boat just wrapped up a full day trip with 57 yellowtail and 48 calicos for 35 anglers, mostly biting fly-lined sardines and surface irons, especially during those brisk morning hours as the tide starts to swing. For bigger quarry, look offshore and bring heavy gear: your chance for that trophy bluefin is real this week.
A couple of hotspots worth the drive:
- La Jolla kelp beds for calico, sand bass, and a shot at yellowtail—hit it as the current swings in with the rising morning tide.
- San Diego offshore banks, especially around the 43 and the 182, have been loaded with bluefin and yellowtail lately.
- Up the coast, Avila’s reefs and drop-offs are stacked with both lingcod and rockfish—hop on a morning charter for your best shot.
Best baits right now: live sardines and anchovies offshore, plastics and jerkbaits inshore, and for bottom dwellers, a dropper loop rig with squid or a strip of mackerel is tough to beat. Fly anglers: streamers in olive and white tossed near the kelp can do serious work around twilight.
That’s the scoop for today, August 8th. Thanks for tuning in to your local line-up with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the hot bite, and as always, tight lines out there!
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial