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Foggy Morning Fishing in the SF Bay - Stripers, Halibut, and Sharks Await

Foggy Morning Fishing in the SF Bay - Stripers, Halibut, and Sharks Await



Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure bringing you the San Francisco Bay fishing report for Wednesday, October 15, 2025.

First off, expect a classic foggy Bay morning with temperatures hanging in the mid-50s and a light northwest breeze. Winds will start off variable beneath 10 knots, shifting northwest and picking up to 10-15 knots into the afternoon, with seas right around three to five feet. Fishing off the beach or Bay piers will be most comfortable before noon, ahead of the wind switching on, so set the alarm and hit it early according to the National Weather Service.

Sunrise was at 7:18 a.m., with sunset due at 6:30 p.m. That gives just over eleven hours for those looking to maximize their time on the water. The tides today are fairly modest—a low at 1:29 a.m. (0.0 ft), a solid high tide at 8:50 a.m. (5.1 ft), a minor ebb at 2:01 p.m. (2.7 ft), and a high again at 7:37 p.m. (5.2 ft). These moderate tidal coefficients mean currents will be manageable, but your best bite windows are in the first and last couple hours of these tide changes, especially around dawn and dusk. Watch for bird action and surface dimples—anchovy schools are getting pushed to the edges and the stripers are right behind them.

Fish activity picks up with the moving water, and schoolie striped bass have shown strong nearshore appearances at Crissy Field, Fort Point, and the Embarcadero piers. Locals are scoring with 3–5 inch paddle-tail swimbaits and classic white or chartreuse bucktail jigs, working the seams and structure. For bait, cut anchovy or live if you can get it has been deadly, pinned to a sliding sinker or Carolina rig.

Halibut are slowing down in the south and central Bay, but persistent trollers pulling herring-pattern plugs or gently drifting bait have still put a few quality flatfish on the deck when the wind backs off—try just outside South Beach Harbor and off Mission Bay for best odds.

After sunset, pier hunters are leaning into night sessions for leopard sharks and bat rays. Squid and other oily baits fished near channel edges or pier pilings are bringing fish in, with some rays running to hefty sizes.

On the oceanfront, Baker Beach and Ocean Beach have been producing barred surfperch on the calmer surf days. Gulp-style grubs in camo and motor oil, or a sandworm on a two-hook rig thrown into troughs and pockets, are solid options.

Recent fish counts offshore have leaned more into rockfish and—occasionally—bluefin tuna for deep-water boats, but inside the Bay, expect mostly stripers, a few residual halibut, leopard shark, bat rays, and surfperch. Numbers in the Bay are healthy but not outrageous; several anglers reported quick limits of schoolie bass yesterday off Pier 17 with a mix of swimbaits and anchovy.

Hot spots to try today: Crissy Field in the early hours for stripers, Baker Beach for surfperch at mid-tide, and the Embarcadero piers (Pier 7 and Pier 17) for consistent bass and evening sharks. South Beach Harbor and Fort Point also remain reliable for multispecies action.

Key tips for the SF Bay in October—match your lure weight to the current so it just ticks the bottom, and switch out leaders if you get bitten off by rays or leopards in low light. Always check local fishing regs, especially near marinas and historical wharves, as some areas are protected or have gear restrictions.

Thanks for tuning in and remember to subscribe for your on-the-water advantage. 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 ago






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