Artificial Lure here with your October 4th, 2025, Los Angeles area fishing report.
Let’s start with the tides: We’ve got a negative low tide right at 7:00 a.m. this morning, bottoming out at -0.16 feet, followed by a big high at 1:37 p.m. soaring to 7.45 feet. Those swinging tides mean lots of water movement—great news if you’re fishing structure or current lines. Sunrise today is at 6:50 a.m., with sunset wrapping things up at 6:32 p.m., so there’s plenty of daylight to chase down that bite.
Weatherwise, conditions are classic early fall: cool and clear in the morning, warming up under mostly sunny skies by midday. Expect a light marine layer hanging around the coast before burning off, with afternoon highs pushing the mid to upper 70s—perfect for a full day on the water.
Saltwater action is staying strong out of San Pedro and the LA Harbor area. According to the 22nd Street Landing daily counts, whitefish and rockfish are pouring over the rail—just yesterday, half-day trips nailed 136 rockfish, 87 whitefish, and over 70 sand bass. There’s still a steady showing of calico bass, too, with 57 reported on an overnight. Yellowtail are spotty but present; five were checked in on the Amigo this week, and don’t sleep on a halibut drifting through the mix, either.
And for those running deeper, bluefin are still pushing through offshore—recent 1.5 day returns marked limits on fish from 15 to even 120 pounds, especially when weather windows allowed the boats to run out to the outer banks, according to the Freedom boat crew at 22nd Street Landing.
Best bets for saltwater lures right now are chartreuse and sardine-patterned swimbaits for bass, sliding sinker rigs or dropper loops tipped with squid or strips of mackerel for the whitefish and rockfish. For those bluefin, guys are still doing best on live sardines free-lined or pinned to glow jigs after dark, with some bigger models falling to flat-fall and knife jigs in blue/silver or pink glow. Don’t forget heavy fluorocarbon with that clean water offshore.
On the freshwater scene, Castaic and Pyramid are holding at good levels and the fall bass bite is on. SoCal Fish Reports says the Texas rig, Ned rig, and small swimbaits in natural baitfish tones are catching decent largemouth, especially early along rocky points and shallow brush before the sun gets high. River Walk Lakes and Lake Ming are seeing steady action on smaller bass and the odd stocker trout—try a nightcrawler under a float or a small gold Kastmaster.
A quick shout for hot spots: For saltwater, Point Fermin kelp beds and the Horseshoe Kelp are both delivering quality mixed-bag fishing. Inside the breakwall near Angel’s Gate, you’ll find sand bass and sculpin stacking up on the ledges during moving water. On the freshwater side, Castaic Lower Lake in the morning and Pyramid’s shoreline brush piles are both prime for bass on plastics or spinnerbaits at dawn.
Remember to check regulations for limits and closures, especially for rockfish and halibut as seasons shift.
Thanks for tuning in and tight lines to everyone heading out this weekend. Don’t forget to subscribe for your local bite updates and inside info.
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Published on 2 months, 3 weeks ago
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