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Fall Fishing Frenzy in the Greater New Orleans Gulf Region
Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure coming to you with the Wednesday morning fishing report for the greater New Orleans and Gulf of Mexico region, October 8, 2025.
The day kicks off with cool, crisp fall air hovering in the low 60s, and a light north wind keeping the humidity at bay—a classic autumn setup pushing clearer water into the marsh. According to the National Weather Service, we’re looking at mostly sunny skies with highs in the mid-70s, and winds coming steady out of the north around 10 mph. Sunrise hit at 6:58 AM, and you can expect sunset at 6:38 PM tonight.
Tides are on the move, with water rising through most of the morning before peaking out early this afternoon—prime conditions for a lively bite around both the passes and the marsh drains. According to Tides4Fishing, high tide for Lake Pontchartrain is rolling in just after lunch, but the best action is two hours before and after a falling tide, especially anywhere water is funneled out of the marsh or through a pass.
Fishing activity across southeast Louisiana has fired up with these October chills. FishingReminder reports that **speckled trout** are loaded up along the oyster reefs and bridge pylons in Lake Pontchartrain, feeding heavy at dawn and dusk. Early birds—work topwater plugs like the Heddon Super Spook Jr. or MirrOlure She Dog for explosive strikes. As the sun climbs, switch to Matrix Shad or Vudu Shrimp soft plastics under a popping cork, especially if you find a bait slick.
**Redfish** are cruising those marsh edges and spilling into the drains. The gold spoon is a local staple, but locals know a live shrimp under a cork, pitched right at the points or in the outgoing current, will rarely be refused. Some real bruiser bull reds—pushing 30 pounds or more—are showing at the jetties around Grand Isle and Venice; try cut mullet or blue crab to tempt these marsh giants.
**Flounder** are settling in around current-swept shorelines; slow-rolling a paddle-tail jig, like a Gulp! Swimming Mullet, across the bottom is the ticket. Black drum, sheepshead, and even a few jacks are mixing in, so stay ready for a surprise. And don’t forget about catfish—blue cats are active in the deeper channels, especially on cut bait.
Word from the shrimpers—thanks to new festival rules and SeaD Consulting’s inspection, every shrimp sold at this fall’s New Orleans events is 100% local, wild-caught Gulf product. That means the fresh shrimp you’re buying on the docks today is as authentic as it gets, and perfect both for your dinner table or as live bait.
If you’re planning a trip, two hot spots stand out:
- **Hopedale Lagoon and Marsh Drains**: This area’s a fall classic—schools of slot reds and specks on moving water, and you might spot guides poling for tailers early in the day.
- **Lake Pontchartrain Bridges (especially the Hwy 11 Bridge and Trestles)**: Always productive this month for specks and white trout, especially at daybreak.
Bring lighter fluorocarbon leaders for clear conditions, but don’t be shy to bump up the strength after a rain. On the bait front, you can’t go wrong with **live shrimp and mullet**, but gulp baits and gold spoons are landing their fair share too.
That’s the latest on the water. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe so you never miss a tide or bite. 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 day kicks off with cool, crisp fall air hovering in the low 60s, and a light north wind keeping the humidity at bay—a classic autumn setup pushing clearer water into the marsh. According to the National Weather Service, we’re looking at mostly sunny skies with highs in the mid-70s, and winds coming steady out of the north around 10 mph. Sunrise hit at 6:58 AM, and you can expect sunset at 6:38 PM tonight.
Tides are on the move, with water rising through most of the morning before peaking out early this afternoon—prime conditions for a lively bite around both the passes and the marsh drains. According to Tides4Fishing, high tide for Lake Pontchartrain is rolling in just after lunch, but the best action is two hours before and after a falling tide, especially anywhere water is funneled out of the marsh or through a pass.
Fishing activity across southeast Louisiana has fired up with these October chills. FishingReminder reports that **speckled trout** are loaded up along the oyster reefs and bridge pylons in Lake Pontchartrain, feeding heavy at dawn and dusk. Early birds—work topwater plugs like the Heddon Super Spook Jr. or MirrOlure She Dog for explosive strikes. As the sun climbs, switch to Matrix Shad or Vudu Shrimp soft plastics under a popping cork, especially if you find a bait slick.
**Redfish** are cruising those marsh edges and spilling into the drains. The gold spoon is a local staple, but locals know a live shrimp under a cork, pitched right at the points or in the outgoing current, will rarely be refused. Some real bruiser bull reds—pushing 30 pounds or more—are showing at the jetties around Grand Isle and Venice; try cut mullet or blue crab to tempt these marsh giants.
**Flounder** are settling in around current-swept shorelines; slow-rolling a paddle-tail jig, like a Gulp! Swimming Mullet, across the bottom is the ticket. Black drum, sheepshead, and even a few jacks are mixing in, so stay ready for a surprise. And don’t forget about catfish—blue cats are active in the deeper channels, especially on cut bait.
Word from the shrimpers—thanks to new festival rules and SeaD Consulting’s inspection, every shrimp sold at this fall’s New Orleans events is 100% local, wild-caught Gulf product. That means the fresh shrimp you’re buying on the docks today is as authentic as it gets, and perfect both for your dinner table or as live bait.
If you’re planning a trip, two hot spots stand out:
- **Hopedale Lagoon and Marsh Drains**: This area’s a fall classic—schools of slot reds and specks on moving water, and you might spot guides poling for tailers early in the day.
- **Lake Pontchartrain Bridges (especially the Hwy 11 Bridge and Trestles)**: Always productive this month for specks and white trout, especially at daybreak.
Bring lighter fluorocarbon leaders for clear conditions, but don’t be shy to bump up the strength after a rain. On the bait front, you can’t go wrong with **live shrimp and mullet**, but gulp baits and gold spoons are landing their fair share too.
That’s the latest on the water. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe so you never miss a tide or bite. 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.