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Sunday Fishing Report: Bend a Rod Around New Orleans & the Gulf

Sunday Fishing Report: Bend a Rod Around New Orleans & the Gulf

Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, bringing you your Sunday fishing report straight from the waters around New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico. Let’s get right down to it—today, September 21st, we’re looking at prime conditions for folks looking to bend a rod.

The sunrise this morning hit at 6:48 AM, and sunset will ease in at 6:58 PM. That gives us plenty of daylight, and with about 12 hours and 10 minutes of sun, you’ll want to get your baits wet early and stay on ‘em till close. The tides are moving today; we saw a low right near 5:08 AM, so some folks got a pre-dawn start, and we’ve got another high tide swinging in at 6:44 PM—perfect bookends for a day on the water. According to Tides4Fishing, the tidal coefficient is way up at 91, which means current’s up and the water’s moving—usually a great indicator for fish feeding around structures and inlets.

Weather’s steady—warm, humid, and a little breezy. Quick showers can roll through, especially this late in the summer, but mostly you’re looking at good, fishable conditions. Pack a rain jacket just in case.

Fish activity has been strong all week. Cajun Outcast Inshore Charters reports nonstop bites, with solid catches of redfish—plenty in the slot and a few bulls showing up around the marsh edges and main channels. Hopedale, Delacroix, and Shell Beach have all produced nice stringers, and you can expect to run into speckled trout in deeper cuts, especially close to bridges or where bayous pour into Lake Borgne and Pontchartrain. Black drum, sheepshead, and flounder are all in the mix, near structure, oyster reefs, and along the rock piles.

Redfish are taking to popping cork rigs with live shrimp or Gulp! shrimp in new penny or chartreuse. If you’re looking to target speckled trout, tie on a Matrix Shad or Vudu Shrimp, especially in lemon head or LSU color. Trout seem to want a moderate retrieve, and they’re stacking up where the current swings by deeper holes. Folks drifting with live shrimp under a cork have had solid luck, too. For black drum and sheepshead, fresh dead shrimp on a Carolina rig around bridge pilings and rocks is getting the job done. Flounder are picking off soft plastics bounced slow along the bottom near drains and marsh points.

If you’re wondering where to launch, here are two hot spots to consider:
- **Hopedale Lagoon:** Tons of action near the lagoon and adjacent ponds. Fish moving in and out with the tides, especially for redfish—easy to find with the current pushing bait in close.
- **Bayou Bienvenue and the Paris Road Bridge:** Producing solid specks and the occasional big red. With the current up, fish are hanging tight to drop-offs and ambushing bait moving with the tide.

Today’s high tidal swings and good solunar activity (with sunset overlapping the high tide) means that evening bite is likely to go off—don’t pack up early. As always, keep an eye out for changing weather, and fish the moving water for the best shot at steady action.

Thanks for tuning in to the report, and be sure to subscribe for more local fishing updates, tips, and tales from your friend Artificial Lure.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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