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Autumn Abundance: Rockfish, Lingcod & Halibut Bite Hot on California's Pacific Coast
Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Good morning, this is Artificial Lure, your local angling expert, bringing you the October 8, 2025, fishing report for California’s Pacific coast.
We’re coming off an active bite with prime fall conditions in Southern and Central California. Sunrise hit at 7:08 AM, with sunset at 6:37 PM, so you’ve got a pretty classic autumn window to work the waters. Tidal charts from Tide-Forecast.com put the first high tide at 4:55 AM, low tide at 11:04 AM, followed by another high at 5:46 PM – almost textbook tides to fish moving in and out[2].
Weather-wise, it’s classic early October along the coast: mild temps in the high 60s to low 70s, morning fog burning off by mid-morning, and a slight onshore breeze. Not a lot of wind chop today, making it a fine time for both inshore and offshore runs.
The fall transition is lighting up both rockfish and pelagics. Down at the Los Angeles/Orange County and Channel Islands landings, the boats are returning packed. According to 22nd Street Landing in San Pedro, recent trips have loaded up on whitefish, calico and sand bass, rockfish (including reds), sheephead, yellowtail, and even halibut. And it’s not just numbers; size is up too – calico bass and rockfish are running chunky, and a few halibut over ten pounds came over the rails last week[1].
Up the coast in Oxnard and the Channel Islands, Channel Islands Sportfishing’s full boats are on fire for lingcod and rockfish, with halibut, sheephead, and the occasional yellowtail thrown in. One trip pulled in over 600 whitefish and 550 rockfish in a single day, while overnight charters consistently rack up double-digit lingcod and mixed bass[3]. Out of Emeryville in the Bay Area, reports from Nor Cal Fish Reports show party boats limiting out early on rockfish and lingcod, with halibut and striped bass also making a strong showing[6].
If you want hot spots, here’s where you ought to hit:
- **Palos Verdes kelp line and Rocky Point:** Sand bass, calico, and the chance for yellowtail or rogue halibut have been consistent this week.
- **Anacapa to Santa Cruz Islands:** The reefs north and east of Anacapa are producing limits on shallow rockfish and quality lingcod, plus those Channel Islands whitefish stacks. Dropper loop rigs with squid strips or live sardine are doing most of the work here.
Best lures and bait for today:
- Offshore: If you’re heading for bluefin or yellowtail, West Coast iron jigs in scrambled egg or mint, plus flat-fall style jigs for deeper bluefin. For bait, fin bait like sardines and anchovies always outfish plastics—if you can get them lively.
- Inshore and island: Swim baits in brown and green, plastics with a squid scent, and deep-drop jigs for ling—try chartreuse or white heads with a big strip of squid or mackerel. The classic dropper loop won’t fail for whitefish, sheephead, and bocaccio.
If you’re itching for some surf action—which is getting better every day now—anglers working Pacifica and Ocean Beach are sticking perch and the odd striper on Carolina rigs with sand crabs or Gulp! worms, especially near the evening high tide[9][24]. Early birds on the pier and jetties are whacking mackerel and the first run of fall bonito on heavy spoons and waxwings.
Quick reminder: check your regs for rockfish closures and depth restrictions, and always practice tight fish handling, especially with released calicos and undersized halibut.
That’s your boots-on-the-deck, up-to-the-minute report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your daily fix of California saltwater action. 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 episo
We’re coming off an active bite with prime fall conditions in Southern and Central California. Sunrise hit at 7:08 AM, with sunset at 6:37 PM, so you’ve got a pretty classic autumn window to work the waters. Tidal charts from Tide-Forecast.com put the first high tide at 4:55 AM, low tide at 11:04 AM, followed by another high at 5:46 PM – almost textbook tides to fish moving in and out[2].
Weather-wise, it’s classic early October along the coast: mild temps in the high 60s to low 70s, morning fog burning off by mid-morning, and a slight onshore breeze. Not a lot of wind chop today, making it a fine time for both inshore and offshore runs.
The fall transition is lighting up both rockfish and pelagics. Down at the Los Angeles/Orange County and Channel Islands landings, the boats are returning packed. According to 22nd Street Landing in San Pedro, recent trips have loaded up on whitefish, calico and sand bass, rockfish (including reds), sheephead, yellowtail, and even halibut. And it’s not just numbers; size is up too – calico bass and rockfish are running chunky, and a few halibut over ten pounds came over the rails last week[1].
Up the coast in Oxnard and the Channel Islands, Channel Islands Sportfishing’s full boats are on fire for lingcod and rockfish, with halibut, sheephead, and the occasional yellowtail thrown in. One trip pulled in over 600 whitefish and 550 rockfish in a single day, while overnight charters consistently rack up double-digit lingcod and mixed bass[3]. Out of Emeryville in the Bay Area, reports from Nor Cal Fish Reports show party boats limiting out early on rockfish and lingcod, with halibut and striped bass also making a strong showing[6].
If you want hot spots, here’s where you ought to hit:
- **Palos Verdes kelp line and Rocky Point:** Sand bass, calico, and the chance for yellowtail or rogue halibut have been consistent this week.
- **Anacapa to Santa Cruz Islands:** The reefs north and east of Anacapa are producing limits on shallow rockfish and quality lingcod, plus those Channel Islands whitefish stacks. Dropper loop rigs with squid strips or live sardine are doing most of the work here.
Best lures and bait for today:
- Offshore: If you’re heading for bluefin or yellowtail, West Coast iron jigs in scrambled egg or mint, plus flat-fall style jigs for deeper bluefin. For bait, fin bait like sardines and anchovies always outfish plastics—if you can get them lively.
- Inshore and island: Swim baits in brown and green, plastics with a squid scent, and deep-drop jigs for ling—try chartreuse or white heads with a big strip of squid or mackerel. The classic dropper loop won’t fail for whitefish, sheephead, and bocaccio.
If you’re itching for some surf action—which is getting better every day now—anglers working Pacifica and Ocean Beach are sticking perch and the odd striper on Carolina rigs with sand crabs or Gulp! worms, especially near the evening high tide[9][24]. Early birds on the pier and jetties are whacking mackerel and the first run of fall bonito on heavy spoons and waxwings.
Quick reminder: check your regs for rockfish closures and depth restrictions, and always practice tight fish handling, especially with released calicos and undersized halibut.
That’s your boots-on-the-deck, up-to-the-minute report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your daily fix of California saltwater action. 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 episo