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Fishing the Florida Keys - Sailfish, Snook, and Sensational Bites
Published 7 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, bringing you the latest fishing report for the Florida Keys and Miami waters as of October 1st, 2025.
The sun popped up at 7:16AM and will wind down at 7:10PM, giving anglers a solid window for morning and evening bites. Weather is typical fall Keys—humid, light breeze out of the east, temps starting in the upper 70s and edging into the mid-80s by mid-afternoon. You’ll want polarized shades and a breathable long-sleeve for comfort on the flats or offshore.
Looking at the tides, Key Colony Beach is running a high tide at 4:11AM (2.2 feet), a low tide at 11:09AM (0.78 feet), then another high at 5:34PM (1.72 feet), with the evening low rolling in at 10:44PM (1.15 feet). These swings set up solid opportunities for sight fishing on the backcountry and good current for offshore predators.
Lately, action’s been strong. According to the recent “Ladies Let’s Go Fishing!” report, the Upper Keys waters have produced mixed bags: folks landed everything from **sailfish, cobia, tarpon, snook, redfish, snapper, to speckled trout**—over 160 fish in their last tournament. Offshore, deep-water drift and trolling has been the ticket for sailfish, especially near the Islamorada and Marathon humps. Mutton snapper and yellowtail are holding on local reefs, with mangrove snapper hugging structure closer to shore.
On the flats and inshore, tarpon are rolling early near bridges and channels—morning hours see the most topwater eats. Snook and redfish are feeding near mangrove edges and flats around Tavernier and Flamingo. Bonefish are peeking out on the ocean side flats between Key Largo and Marathon, best targeted on the rising tide.
Best lures right now:
- For snapper and grouper: **small bucktail jigs tipped with shrimp**.
- For tarpon and snook: **DOA Baitbusters and MirrOlure suspending plugs** in natural hues.
- Offshore: Trolling **deep-diving plugs** or **blue-and-white skirted ballyhoo rigs** for sails and king mackerel.
Top baits:
- **Live shrimp** for snapper and trout.
- **Pinfish** and **mullet** for tarpon and snook.
- **Ballyhoo** or **pilchards** for offshore species.
Hot spots to fish today:
- **Seven Mile Bridge pilings**—great for snapper, grouper, and passing pelagics on both tides. Work the shadow lines early or late.
- **Long Key flats**—prime for bonefish and permit as the sun climbs and the tide starts moving in.
- Offshore around the **Islamorada Hump** for big game if you’ve got the fuel and stamina.
Pro tip: With the afternoon tide rising around 5:30PM, put yourself on the ocean side flats or at pinch points where bait gets flushed—predators will be cruising for easy pickings.
Don’t forget, the Ladies Let’s Go Fishing event is back October 17th–19th up at Tavernier Elks Lodge, welcoming all skill levels for some friendly competition and hands-on skills. If you want to try something new or network with local captains, it’s a can’t-miss weekend.
That’s your boots-on-the-docks report for today. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss a cast. 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.
The sun popped up at 7:16AM and will wind down at 7:10PM, giving anglers a solid window for morning and evening bites. Weather is typical fall Keys—humid, light breeze out of the east, temps starting in the upper 70s and edging into the mid-80s by mid-afternoon. You’ll want polarized shades and a breathable long-sleeve for comfort on the flats or offshore.
Looking at the tides, Key Colony Beach is running a high tide at 4:11AM (2.2 feet), a low tide at 11:09AM (0.78 feet), then another high at 5:34PM (1.72 feet), with the evening low rolling in at 10:44PM (1.15 feet). These swings set up solid opportunities for sight fishing on the backcountry and good current for offshore predators.
Lately, action’s been strong. According to the recent “Ladies Let’s Go Fishing!” report, the Upper Keys waters have produced mixed bags: folks landed everything from **sailfish, cobia, tarpon, snook, redfish, snapper, to speckled trout**—over 160 fish in their last tournament. Offshore, deep-water drift and trolling has been the ticket for sailfish, especially near the Islamorada and Marathon humps. Mutton snapper and yellowtail are holding on local reefs, with mangrove snapper hugging structure closer to shore.
On the flats and inshore, tarpon are rolling early near bridges and channels—morning hours see the most topwater eats. Snook and redfish are feeding near mangrove edges and flats around Tavernier and Flamingo. Bonefish are peeking out on the ocean side flats between Key Largo and Marathon, best targeted on the rising tide.
Best lures right now:
- For snapper and grouper: **small bucktail jigs tipped with shrimp**.
- For tarpon and snook: **DOA Baitbusters and MirrOlure suspending plugs** in natural hues.
- Offshore: Trolling **deep-diving plugs** or **blue-and-white skirted ballyhoo rigs** for sails and king mackerel.
Top baits:
- **Live shrimp** for snapper and trout.
- **Pinfish** and **mullet** for tarpon and snook.
- **Ballyhoo** or **pilchards** for offshore species.
Hot spots to fish today:
- **Seven Mile Bridge pilings**—great for snapper, grouper, and passing pelagics on both tides. Work the shadow lines early or late.
- **Long Key flats**—prime for bonefish and permit as the sun climbs and the tide starts moving in.
- Offshore around the **Islamorada Hump** for big game if you’ve got the fuel and stamina.
Pro tip: With the afternoon tide rising around 5:30PM, put yourself on the ocean side flats or at pinch points where bait gets flushed—predators will be cruising for easy pickings.
Don’t forget, the Ladies Let’s Go Fishing event is back October 17th–19th up at Tavernier Elks Lodge, welcoming all skill levels for some friendly competition and hands-on skills. If you want to try something new or network with local captains, it’s a can’t-miss weekend.
That’s your boots-on-the-docks report for today. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss a cast. 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.