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Bay Area Bites: Stripers, Halibut & Perch Heating Up as Tides Surge

Bay Area Bites: Stripers, Halibut & Perch Heating Up as Tides Surge



Good morning anglers, it’s Artificial Lure coming to you with the latest on fishing in and around San Francisco Bay, October 5th, 2025.

Today began with a classic cool Bay morning and a rising tide, with high water hitting around 11 AM. The tidal coefficient is at a very high 98, meaning we’ve got real strong movement—ideal for getting fish fired up and pulling bait toward structure. Sunrise was 7:09 AM, sunset due at 6:45 PM, so you’ve got over 11 hours of daylight to work with. Expect patchy fog early, clearing to brisk northwest winds into the afternoon with water temps steady in the mid-50s. Best bite windows remain dawn and dusk, especially those first and last two hours of moving tide.

The star performers this week continue to be **striped bass**. Schoolies are actively chasing bait along Crissy Field, Fort Point, and the Embarcadero piers. Locals are hooking up with 3-5 inch paddle-tail swimbaits and bucktail jigs in white or chartreuse. Top producers are also dragging live or cut anchovy—never fails near the current seams and shadow lines.

If you’re looking for halibut, bite’s spotty but not dead yet. Most action’s on slow-trolled herring-pattern plugs, drifted anchovy, or sardine when the wind stays down. Try the central and south Bay edges or work the drop-offs near Oyster Point. Evenings have produced a few small keepers, most coming from slow trolled plugs or carolina-rigged live bait. A classic Big Hammer swimbait or Lucky Craft Flash Minnow in MS Anchovy or Metallic Sardine are worth a shot.

Down below, perch are always biting but know your limits: five per person, except shiner perch which are twenty. Rubberlip, black, white, and striped perch are found tight to the pilings. Best rig is a simple hi/lo with size 6 or 4 hooks tipped with pile worms, bloodworms, or grass shrimp. Market shrimp or mussel bits are backup options. Small grubs and Berkeley Gulp Sand Worms—especially in “camo” or “root beer”—get it done jigged just off bottom.

On the night shift, leopard sharks and bat rays are prowling channel banks and pier pilings. Squid and oily baits bring the bigger ones up after sundown. Surfperch bite good near Ocean Beach and Baker Beach troughs—try gulp-style grubs and sandworms for steady action when the wind’s down and surf’s manageable.

Reports from Fish Emeryville’s charters and NorCal Fish Reports call it “rockfish galore”: limits of mixed rockfish, plus several halibut landed, with plenty of striped bass and lingcod for the bag. On 976-Tuna’s trip, 24 anglers brought in a total haul of 279 fish—dominated by calico bass, bonito, and yellowtail, though that numbers comes from the region; locally, expect more perch and bass than yellowtail at the piers.

Best artificial lures today are paddle tails in “anchovy” and “shad” colors, 3-5 inch swimbaits, bucktail jigs, and spoons like Kastmasters in chrome/blue. For bait, live or cut anchovy ranks top, followed by mussels, pile worms, and grass shrimp. If you’re working the surf, stick with sandworms and gulp grubs on size 8 hooks.

For hot spots, don’t miss:
- **Crissy Field:** Best for dawn bass around tidal change.
- **Embarcadero piers:** Reliable multispecies bite, especially perch and bass.
- **Oyster Point:** Good halibut chance, especially with moving water.

Keep an eye on bird activity—diving birds and surface boils signal schooling anchovy and feeding fish nearby.

Thanks for tuning in! Be sure to subscribe for all your Bay Area fish reports. 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


Published on 2 months, 2 weeks ago






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