Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Autumn Abundance on the SoCal Coast: Rockfish, Tuna, and More!
Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure reporting for October 15, 2025, with your latest fishing pulse from the California Pacific coast—straight from San Diego up past the Channel Islands, out to where the ocean meets the horizon.
**Let’s jump right in with the weather and tidal swings.** Today’s sunrise is at 7:15 AM with sunset at 6:27 PM. Expect mostly clear skies early, pockets of marine layer burning off by mid-morning, and a light onshore breeze picking up through the afternoon—classic fall coastal conditions. The first low tide already hit at 5:54 AM with a high rolling in at 11:39 AM, then back down to another low at 5:52 PM. These tides are shaping up just right for that mid-morning push, with slack setting up shallow structure and kelp lines for early risers, and outgoing to bring biters onto deeper edges by late afternoon, according to Tide-Forecast.
**Fishing activity’s been hot across the board** for mid-October. Out of San Diego, Fisherman’s Landing reported full racks—The Dolphin’s morning run boxed eighty-six rockfish in deep water (that’s 400–600 feet), with steady counts of vermilion rockfish, whitefish, and lingcod showing up in the catch. Tuna action is still going offshore, with the Pacific Dawn returning with limits of bluefin, the biggest pushing up to 160 pounds, and a few yellowfin in the mix, as posted by Fisherman’s Landing. Up the coast, Santa Barbara Landing boats limited out on quality rockfish, including good-sized lings and chunky whitefish—excellent signs going into the season’s tail.
**Recent counts on the party boats and sport boats** give us:
- Bluefin tuna: 111 landed just yesterday (976-Tuna) with several up to triple digits on the scale.
- Yellowtail and Dorado also steady, especially for those running 1.5 days out to the offshore banks.
- Rockfish: Nearly 100 per trip is the norm; species include reds, coppers, bankies, and a surprising number of halibut turning up on the local grounds in Ventura and Channel Islands areas (So Cal Fish Reports).
**What’s been working?** Locals are cleaning up on deep-water stuff with heavy jigs—think 8-14 ounce knife jigs and flat falls for those bigger rockfish and lingcod. Out in shallower kelp and beach edges, swimbaits with a bit of chartreuse, dropper-looped squid or cut mackerel for halibut, and live sardines for surface biters have been the ticket.
For the offshore pelagics, stick to tried-and-true: the Yo-Zuri Pro Series 110 MID in Matte Ghost Pearl Shad has been a go-to for cast-and-crank work while 3DB Twitchbaits and large Megabass Magdraft swimbaits are a must in the arsenal for yellowtail and the late-season bluefin, as Yo-Zuri’s latest fall pattern notes suggest. When chunking or fly-lining, fresh sardines or anchovies always get the nod from the old-timers and the new-schoolers alike.
**Hot spots to check out:**
- The 9 Mile Bank out of San Diego is still producing tuna and yellowtail.
- Local hard bottom spots off Point Loma, especially in 400–600 feet, are giving up limits of reds and vermilion rockfish.
- Up in Santa Barbara channel, outer kelp beds and rocky reefs near Anacapa and Santa Cruz Islands are hitting with mixed bags—whitefish, lings, sheephead, and the odd fat halibut.
- Closer to shore, Malibu’s reef structure and the drop-offs near Palos Verdes are putting out steady bass and a shot at exotics on live bait.
That’s your morning rundown—conditions are primed, the fish are here, and the only thing missing is you on the water. Whether you’re bottom bouncing, slinging surface irons, or soaking bait, autumn on the Pacific is as good as it gets.
Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe to stay in the loop on all the latest SoCal fishing action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
**Let’s jump right in with the weather and tidal swings.** Today’s sunrise is at 7:15 AM with sunset at 6:27 PM. Expect mostly clear skies early, pockets of marine layer burning off by mid-morning, and a light onshore breeze picking up through the afternoon—classic fall coastal conditions. The first low tide already hit at 5:54 AM with a high rolling in at 11:39 AM, then back down to another low at 5:52 PM. These tides are shaping up just right for that mid-morning push, with slack setting up shallow structure and kelp lines for early risers, and outgoing to bring biters onto deeper edges by late afternoon, according to Tide-Forecast.
**Fishing activity’s been hot across the board** for mid-October. Out of San Diego, Fisherman’s Landing reported full racks—The Dolphin’s morning run boxed eighty-six rockfish in deep water (that’s 400–600 feet), with steady counts of vermilion rockfish, whitefish, and lingcod showing up in the catch. Tuna action is still going offshore, with the Pacific Dawn returning with limits of bluefin, the biggest pushing up to 160 pounds, and a few yellowfin in the mix, as posted by Fisherman’s Landing. Up the coast, Santa Barbara Landing boats limited out on quality rockfish, including good-sized lings and chunky whitefish—excellent signs going into the season’s tail.
**Recent counts on the party boats and sport boats** give us:
- Bluefin tuna: 111 landed just yesterday (976-Tuna) with several up to triple digits on the scale.
- Yellowtail and Dorado also steady, especially for those running 1.5 days out to the offshore banks.
- Rockfish: Nearly 100 per trip is the norm; species include reds, coppers, bankies, and a surprising number of halibut turning up on the local grounds in Ventura and Channel Islands areas (So Cal Fish Reports).
**What’s been working?** Locals are cleaning up on deep-water stuff with heavy jigs—think 8-14 ounce knife jigs and flat falls for those bigger rockfish and lingcod. Out in shallower kelp and beach edges, swimbaits with a bit of chartreuse, dropper-looped squid or cut mackerel for halibut, and live sardines for surface biters have been the ticket.
For the offshore pelagics, stick to tried-and-true: the Yo-Zuri Pro Series 110 MID in Matte Ghost Pearl Shad has been a go-to for cast-and-crank work while 3DB Twitchbaits and large Megabass Magdraft swimbaits are a must in the arsenal for yellowtail and the late-season bluefin, as Yo-Zuri’s latest fall pattern notes suggest. When chunking or fly-lining, fresh sardines or anchovies always get the nod from the old-timers and the new-schoolers alike.
**Hot spots to check out:**
- The 9 Mile Bank out of San Diego is still producing tuna and yellowtail.
- Local hard bottom spots off Point Loma, especially in 400–600 feet, are giving up limits of reds and vermilion rockfish.
- Up in Santa Barbara channel, outer kelp beds and rocky reefs near Anacapa and Santa Cruz Islands are hitting with mixed bags—whitefish, lings, sheephead, and the odd fat halibut.
- Closer to shore, Malibu’s reef structure and the drop-offs near Palos Verdes are putting out steady bass and a shot at exotics on live bait.
That’s your morning rundown—conditions are primed, the fish are here, and the only thing missing is you on the water. Whether you’re bottom bouncing, slinging surface irons, or soaking bait, autumn on the Pacific is as good as it gets.
Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe to stay in the loop on all the latest SoCal fishing action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
Listen Now
Love PodBriefly?
If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.
Support Us