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Late-Summer Slam: Pacific Coast Fishing Report for 9/17/2025
Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
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Artificial Lure here, bringing you today’s fishing report for California’s Pacific Coast, Wednesday, September 17, 2025—let’s get straight into the action. It’s a classic late-summer morning: sunrise popped at 6:49 AM, and folks, it’s shaping up for a solid bite till sunset at 7:10 PM. The tidal swing is subtle, with a low at 7:09 AM, peaking again around 12:46 PM, and falling off into the evening low by 7:07 PM according to Tide-Forecast. That mid-morning to early afternoon push should have predator fish more active along structure and kelp lines.
Weather’s fair all up and down the coast—mild temp, light westerly breeze, and that light marine haze burning off quick, making visibility great all the way from Oxnard and San Pedro to San Diego.
Let’s talk what’s biting: Offshore, the bluefin tuna game is still hot. According to Seaforth Sportfishing out of San Diego, boats like the Aztec have been stacking it up—108 bluefin on a 2.5-day earlier this week, with full-day trips still pulling steady numbers of bluefin and the occasional dorado. Closer to the islands, yellowtail are popping—San Diego and Sea Watch boats are reporting 16–19 yellowtail per trip, plus solid numbers of rockfish, sculpin, and whitefish.
Up the coast at 22nd Street Landing in San Pedro, boats like the Amigo and Pride have been bringing in mixed bags: recent trips scored heavy on rockfish (61), white seabass (48), barracuda, and sheephead. Freedom’s been making news too, recently reporting 33 bluefin up to 120 pounds, with yellowtail and bonito mixed in. Sheephead and calico are still very active on the islands and outer reefs.
Central Coast reports from Morro Bay and Avila Beach (via SoCalFishReports) show classic fall rockfishing—boats like Patriot and Endeavor are loading up with limits of copper, bocaccio, red rockfish, and a fair number of lingcod (up to 24 on some boats), with an occasional halibut still snapped off Avila. Up in Oxnard, Channel Islands boats are cashing in on calico bass and whitefish, plus the occasional big white seabass and halibut.
For surf and bay anglers, FishTheSurf.com notes a transition—corbina and other surf species have been gorging on sand crabs all summer, but September brings a shift: soft-shell sand crabs remain a top pick, but ghost shrimp and bloodworms start connecting better as those fish look for more protein and variety.
Bait and lure tips: Offshore tuna are still keyed in on small flylined sardines, but don’t sleep on lighter fluorocarbon and small Colt Sniper jigs—those bluefin are line-shy. Yellowtail and bonito have been inhaling surface irons like Tady 45s, mint and blue/chrome colors especially. Around the kelp and structure, swimbaits in sardine patterns, big ringed hooks with live squid, and dropper loops loaded with squid for the rockfish are all producing. Sheephead are aggressive—bring some fresh mussel or shrimp for a shot at a big male. In the surf, sand crab imitations or Carolina-rigged bloodworms will rack up spotfin croaker and even late-season beans.
As for today’s hotspots:
- 22nd Street Landing boats working the Catalina and San Clemente Island edges are hot for exotic mixes of yellowtail, seabass, and rockfish.
- The stretch from La Jolla kelp beds down to the Coronado Islands is loaded for both inshore bass and offshore tuna/yellowtail opportunities—fish early, fish hard, and cover ground.
That’s the skinny for this September day—conditions are premium, fish are biting, and the season’s far from done. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s daily Pacific fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest action, and remember: tight lines and sharp hooks!
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Weather’s fair all up and down the coast—mild temp, light westerly breeze, and that light marine haze burning off quick, making visibility great all the way from Oxnard and San Pedro to San Diego.
Let’s talk what’s biting: Offshore, the bluefin tuna game is still hot. According to Seaforth Sportfishing out of San Diego, boats like the Aztec have been stacking it up—108 bluefin on a 2.5-day earlier this week, with full-day trips still pulling steady numbers of bluefin and the occasional dorado. Closer to the islands, yellowtail are popping—San Diego and Sea Watch boats are reporting 16–19 yellowtail per trip, plus solid numbers of rockfish, sculpin, and whitefish.
Up the coast at 22nd Street Landing in San Pedro, boats like the Amigo and Pride have been bringing in mixed bags: recent trips scored heavy on rockfish (61), white seabass (48), barracuda, and sheephead. Freedom’s been making news too, recently reporting 33 bluefin up to 120 pounds, with yellowtail and bonito mixed in. Sheephead and calico are still very active on the islands and outer reefs.
Central Coast reports from Morro Bay and Avila Beach (via SoCalFishReports) show classic fall rockfishing—boats like Patriot and Endeavor are loading up with limits of copper, bocaccio, red rockfish, and a fair number of lingcod (up to 24 on some boats), with an occasional halibut still snapped off Avila. Up in Oxnard, Channel Islands boats are cashing in on calico bass and whitefish, plus the occasional big white seabass and halibut.
For surf and bay anglers, FishTheSurf.com notes a transition—corbina and other surf species have been gorging on sand crabs all summer, but September brings a shift: soft-shell sand crabs remain a top pick, but ghost shrimp and bloodworms start connecting better as those fish look for more protein and variety.
Bait and lure tips: Offshore tuna are still keyed in on small flylined sardines, but don’t sleep on lighter fluorocarbon and small Colt Sniper jigs—those bluefin are line-shy. Yellowtail and bonito have been inhaling surface irons like Tady 45s, mint and blue/chrome colors especially. Around the kelp and structure, swimbaits in sardine patterns, big ringed hooks with live squid, and dropper loops loaded with squid for the rockfish are all producing. Sheephead are aggressive—bring some fresh mussel or shrimp for a shot at a big male. In the surf, sand crab imitations or Carolina-rigged bloodworms will rack up spotfin croaker and even late-season beans.
As for today’s hotspots:
- 22nd Street Landing boats working the Catalina and San Clemente Island edges are hot for exotic mixes of yellowtail, seabass, and rockfish.
- The stretch from La Jolla kelp beds down to the Coronado Islands is loaded for both inshore bass and offshore tuna/yellowtail opportunities—fish early, fish hard, and cover ground.
That’s the skinny for this September day—conditions are premium, fish are biting, and the season’s far from done. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s daily Pacific fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest action, and remember: tight lines and sharp hooks!
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 cre