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Fall Fishing Frenzy Gulf Report: Trout, Reds, Flounder Biting Hot in New Orleans

Fall Fishing Frenzy Gulf Report: Trout, Reds, Flounder Biting Hot in New Orleans

Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans fishing report for Sunday, October 5th, 2025.

Cool, crisp October air has rolled in and the bite’s heating up as fast as the humidity’s dropping. Sunrise hit us at 6:39 AM with sunset set for 7:16 PM, giving anglers a nice, long day to work the marshes and bridges. Tides today are on the move: first high at 5:21 AM and a solid evening shift with the next high at 6:06 PM. We’re working with a high tidal coefficient of 77, which means strong flows and plenty of water movement—just what you want for hunting feeding fish, especially around those narrow bayou drains and oyster reefs.

Weather’s classic fall fishing: north winds behind a recent front so the water’s cleaning up and visibility’s high. You’ll want to fish the moving water at dawn and dusk, especially at the turns two hours before and after the falling tide.

Now, let’s talk about what’s hitting. Speckled trout are lining up thick along oyster reefs and bridge pylons in Lake Pontchartrain—topwaters in the low light are getting slammed, especially early, then soft plastics under a popping cork keep producing as the sun climbs. Anglers reporting in to CaptainExperiences.com had steady limits of specks this week with some fish over 3 pounds.

Redfish are firing along marsh edges and in current-swept drains; gold spoons are the top performer around points where bait’s stacking up, and live shrimp never fails for those wanting more action than casting. If you want something bigger, focus on the jetties at Grand Isle or Venice—bull reds showing up, some pushing 40 inches. Locals say cut mullet or blue crab is best if you want those trophy pulls.

Flounder are sneaking in around the mouths of the bayous and deeper pockets, especially where currents sweep bait by. Paddle tail soft plastics slow-rolled on the bottom are the ticket—think darker colors like purple/chartreuse or morning glory.

From recent trips, folks are still icing nice black drum and blue catfish in the mix off deeper channels, and the bowfishing crowd reported finding plenty of rays after dark in the shallows—resilient creatures, those rays, plenty for the adventurous at night.

Best baits right now: live shrimp is number one for a reason, but if you want artificials, stick to chartreuse paddle tails, gold spoons, and bone or chrome topwater plugs at first light. Upsize your leader if rains muddy the water, but stick with fluorocarbon on these clearer post-front days.

Want a couple trusted hot spots? You can’t go wrong working the Rigolets for speckled trout at daybreak, especially along the bridge pylons. For redfish and flounder, hit Shell Beach marsh drains, positioning yourself down-current and letting bait sweep naturally—the hits have been fierce all week.

If you’re heading out, remember: it’s all about timing those major solunar periods from 9:43 to 11:43 AM and again tonight from 9:56 to 11:56 PM, just as FishingReminder highlighted for today.

That’s your on-the-water update from New Orleans and the Gulf. Thanks for tuning in, y’all. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite.

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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