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SoCal Anglers Reel in the Bite on Free Fishing Day

SoCal Anglers Reel in the Bite on Free Fishing Day



Los Angeles anglers woke up to that clean, early light—sunrise at 6:25 a.m., promising calm conditions and a serious shot at quality fishing across our local waters. It’s Free Fishing Day statewide, thanks to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife—no license needed, so you’ll see everyone from first-timers at Echo Park Lake to seasoned veterans on the piers and party boats getting after it.

Tides are lining up for a classic late-summer bite: the morning starts with a high at 4:03 a.m. (2.76 ft), followed by a low at 5:27 a.m. (2.75 ft), then a solid midday high tide at 1:59 p.m. reaching 4.61 ft, and another low at 11:05 p.m. at 1.46 ft. Transition periods around high tide have been the sweet spot for both pier and inshore action, so work those lures or baits as the water starts moving.

The weather is classic SoCal August: bright, clear skies and highs that’ll push into the mid-80s on the sand. Remember your hat and sunscreen, but bring some layers for the early morning breeze if you’re surfside or on a half-day boat out of 22nd Street Landing.

The local boats have seen solid action this week. According to the recent 22nd Street Sportfishing reports, the Freedom and Amigo have been checking in with steady counts of bluefin tuna on their 1.5-day runs—expect fish running from that “better grade” 40- to 80-pound range, with a few casualties on the bigger models. The half-day and three-quarter day boats—the Monte Carlo and Native Sun, for example—are seeing a mixed bag: bonito and barracuda on the chew, with yellowtail showing up on some of the Catalina runs. Water temperatures locally broke the 70-degree mark just days ago, and that’s kept the surface bite rolling for both calico bass and sand bass, especially near structure and kelp beds.

Artificial lures have been shining—especially surface irons like the Tady 45 and Salas 7X in blue/white or mint—and those slow-pitch jigs have gotten bit both offshore and deeper near the breakwalls. If you prefer bait, live sardines and anchovies are always a go, but the old-fashioned squid strip is still getting the bigger bass to commit off the rocks and local reefs. Pier anglers are scoring on mackerel with Sabiki rigs and seeing legal halibut with swimbaits on an evening incoming tide.

Hot spots are holding—but you’ve gotta time your tides. Santa Monica Pier is a family favorite and fully stocked with bait and tackle, making it prime for both mackerel and the odd legal halibut. Inshore, head to the breakwall near Cabrillo Beach—big bass and the odd yellowtail lurk around the rocks, and a properly presented lure will get you bent. Offshore, the party boats out of San Pedro and Long Beach are still finding bluefin tuna within range, particularly if you’re booking an overnight or 1.5-day trip.

Don’t forget, today’s Free Fishing Day is ideal to introduce a new angler to the game; hit the local lakes like Castaic or Echo Park if saltwater isn’t on the menu—the panfish and bass have been active on artificials and nightcrawlers both.

Thanks for tuning in to your local Los Angeles fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 1 day, 15 hours ago






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