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Fishing the Gulf: Trout, Reds, and Drum Await in Louisiana's Marshes
Published 8 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your August 29th report, straight from in and around the Gulf of Mexico and the New Orleans region.
We rolled into morning on a slack high tide around 6:06 am at Shell Beach, with the low rolling in by 2:50 pm. The sun peeked out at 6:33 and will dip below the horizon by 7:24 tonight—almost thirteen hours to chase fish. Today’s tidal coefficient is running average at 61, which means decent water movement but not much crazy current, so baits can stay in the strike zone longer. Grand Isle’s tides are riding a little higher this week with strong swings, which always perks up fish activity.
Weatherwise, we've got light west winds 5 to 10 knots this morning, picking up a touch as the afternoon rolls on. Seas will rock gently around two feet, so it’s a good day for small crafts and bay boats. Forecasters from the National Weather Service say showers and thunderstorms might sneak in by evening—bring a slicker just in case and keep a weather eye open, especially near the afternoon tide change.
Water clarity’s fair to good in most marshes and nearshore spots, with surface temps riding steady in the upper 70s—a touch cooler in deeper passes. That’s prime comfort for late summer trout, reds, and drum.
Reports from guides running out of Venice to Grand Isle mention a solid bite on the incoming tide, especially around drains and shell pockets. The marsh is heating up with keeper specks, slot reds, black drum, and the start of flounder trickling in. Trout are stacked early along points at Lake Borgne, while reds are tight to grass edges in Delacroix. Over the past week, groups working the outside flats around Breton Sound boxed double-digit counts of specks, reds, and the occasional sheepshead.
Lure action has been steady—local sticks say orange and chartreuse soft plastics are money right now, especially under a popping cork. Paddletail jigs, like DownSouth or Matrix in white ice or pearl, are getting crushed in low-light or stained water. On calmer days, topwaters like the Super Spook Jr. are earning big blowups at first light. If the water turns off-color after a shower, bump up to chartreuse tails and work drains where bait balls are flipping.
Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king for mixed bags, but for targeting bigger trout and snappier reds, try a 1/8 oz jighead with a Shrimplet or Gulp swimming mullet in new penny or nuclear chicken—let it sink and twitch on the pause. For drum and flounder, fresh cut bait or market shrimp fished on bottom rigs along oyster reefs is the ticket.
Hot spots today:
- **Shell Beach drains and Lake Borgne’s east shoreline**: Trout and slot reds at daybreak, working shell and grass mix.
- **Delacroix marsh cuts**: Redfish in the grass, especially near Alligator Pass and around Oak River.
- **Bayou Biloxi and outer bars of Breton Island**: Larger specks and the chance at flounder with moving water on the incoming tide.
Stay current, watch that tide, and follow the bait—if you see mullet flipping or shrimp popping, the fish are close and ready to play.
That wraps it for today, folks. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and tips. 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 Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
We rolled into morning on a slack high tide around 6:06 am at Shell Beach, with the low rolling in by 2:50 pm. The sun peeked out at 6:33 and will dip below the horizon by 7:24 tonight—almost thirteen hours to chase fish. Today’s tidal coefficient is running average at 61, which means decent water movement but not much crazy current, so baits can stay in the strike zone longer. Grand Isle’s tides are riding a little higher this week with strong swings, which always perks up fish activity.
Weatherwise, we've got light west winds 5 to 10 knots this morning, picking up a touch as the afternoon rolls on. Seas will rock gently around two feet, so it’s a good day for small crafts and bay boats. Forecasters from the National Weather Service say showers and thunderstorms might sneak in by evening—bring a slicker just in case and keep a weather eye open, especially near the afternoon tide change.
Water clarity’s fair to good in most marshes and nearshore spots, with surface temps riding steady in the upper 70s—a touch cooler in deeper passes. That’s prime comfort for late summer trout, reds, and drum.
Reports from guides running out of Venice to Grand Isle mention a solid bite on the incoming tide, especially around drains and shell pockets. The marsh is heating up with keeper specks, slot reds, black drum, and the start of flounder trickling in. Trout are stacked early along points at Lake Borgne, while reds are tight to grass edges in Delacroix. Over the past week, groups working the outside flats around Breton Sound boxed double-digit counts of specks, reds, and the occasional sheepshead.
Lure action has been steady—local sticks say orange and chartreuse soft plastics are money right now, especially under a popping cork. Paddletail jigs, like DownSouth or Matrix in white ice or pearl, are getting crushed in low-light or stained water. On calmer days, topwaters like the Super Spook Jr. are earning big blowups at first light. If the water turns off-color after a shower, bump up to chartreuse tails and work drains where bait balls are flipping.
Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king for mixed bags, but for targeting bigger trout and snappier reds, try a 1/8 oz jighead with a Shrimplet or Gulp swimming mullet in new penny or nuclear chicken—let it sink and twitch on the pause. For drum and flounder, fresh cut bait or market shrimp fished on bottom rigs along oyster reefs is the ticket.
Hot spots today:
- **Shell Beach drains and Lake Borgne’s east shoreline**: Trout and slot reds at daybreak, working shell and grass mix.
- **Delacroix marsh cuts**: Redfish in the grass, especially near Alligator Pass and around Oak River.
- **Bayou Biloxi and outer bars of Breton Island**: Larger specks and the chance at flounder with moving water on the incoming tide.
Stay current, watch that tide, and follow the bait—if you see mullet flipping or shrimp popping, the fish are close and ready to play.
That wraps it for today, folks. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and tips. 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 Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.