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New Orleans Fall Fishing Heats Up with Speckled Trout, Reds, and More
Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Good morning from the Crescent City, y’all—this is Artificial Lure with your October 17, 2025, fishing report for New Orleans and the surrounding Gulf of Mexico waters. The marsh is breathing deep with that first taste of fall, and the fish are fired up for it.
Here’s what you need to know if you’re plannin’ to wet a line today. Sunrise was at 7:02 a.m. and sunset’ll be at 6:27 p.m., so you’ve got a good window to get after ‘em. Over in Grand Isle, we’re workin’ with a strong tidal swing—high coefficient of 70, with low at 8:17 a.m. and another high push around 5:41 p.m., so expect solid current and lots of bait movement. With a post-front north wind and cooler air, conditions are prime, especially through dawn and dusk when everything gets a little livelier. That falling tide right around mid-morning should have the marsh drains lit up.
The bite is most definitely ON. October means speckled trout are stacking deep along oyster reefs and bridge pylons in Lake Pontchartrain and out toward the Calcasieu area. Topwater plugs like the Spook Jr. or She Dog work before the sun gets up, then swap to soft plastics under a popping cork as that light rises. For color, anything with root beer or chartreuse has been getting slammed.
Redfish—good numbers cruising marsh edges, drains, and points. Folks have been getting ‘em on gold spoons and with live shrimp beneath a cork. If you’re after big bull reds, the jetties near Grand Isle and Venice are the ticket—fish cut mullet or blue crab on the bottom for your best shot.
Flounder are starting their fall shuffle, hiding in current-swept pockets inside the bays. Slow-roll a Gulp! Swimming Mullet or paddle tail right on the bottom and wait for that thump. In deeper channels and river bends, blue catfish are hungry for cut bait, and the freshwater spillways are tossing out healthy largemouth bass if you want to play around with crankbaits or finesse worms.
According to recent trips reported by Captain Experiences and similar charters on the Gulf, everybody’s catching fish—limits of redfish, solid specks, and a pile of mixed bag offshore. One group pulled in 12 nice keepers on an offshore run, and another limited early on snapper out toward Gulf Shores just the other day. Local captains report exceptional trips with redfish, sheepshead, and mangrove snapper in the mix—even a 50-pound bull shark for the brave!
If you’re bank or land-based, Two Rivers Marina and the bridges at Lake Pontchartrain are both hot, while the marsh drains around Lafitte and the cuts near Hopedale are prime for sunrise and again just before dark. Harbors and marina entrances draw schools of bait, so working edges with live shrimp or Gulp under a cork can produce a real mixed bag.
Tips for today:
- Fish lighter leaders early with the clear water post-front.
- Work moving water, especially on the falling tide.
- Don’t overlook those marsh drains two hours before and after the slack tide—let your bait drift through natural for the most strikes.
Best spots to hit right now:
- Lake Pontchartrain bridges for trout and redfish.
- Passes and jetty points near Grand Isle for bull reds and specks.
- Hopedale and Delacroix marsh drains for mixed bags and flounder.
Don’t forget to check your local regs, and as always, bring that mosquito spray—it’s Louisiana, after all.
Thanks for tuning in to your daily New Orleans and Gulf fishing report. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a 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.
Here’s what you need to know if you’re plannin’ to wet a line today. Sunrise was at 7:02 a.m. and sunset’ll be at 6:27 p.m., so you’ve got a good window to get after ‘em. Over in Grand Isle, we’re workin’ with a strong tidal swing—high coefficient of 70, with low at 8:17 a.m. and another high push around 5:41 p.m., so expect solid current and lots of bait movement. With a post-front north wind and cooler air, conditions are prime, especially through dawn and dusk when everything gets a little livelier. That falling tide right around mid-morning should have the marsh drains lit up.
The bite is most definitely ON. October means speckled trout are stacking deep along oyster reefs and bridge pylons in Lake Pontchartrain and out toward the Calcasieu area. Topwater plugs like the Spook Jr. or She Dog work before the sun gets up, then swap to soft plastics under a popping cork as that light rises. For color, anything with root beer or chartreuse has been getting slammed.
Redfish—good numbers cruising marsh edges, drains, and points. Folks have been getting ‘em on gold spoons and with live shrimp beneath a cork. If you’re after big bull reds, the jetties near Grand Isle and Venice are the ticket—fish cut mullet or blue crab on the bottom for your best shot.
Flounder are starting their fall shuffle, hiding in current-swept pockets inside the bays. Slow-roll a Gulp! Swimming Mullet or paddle tail right on the bottom and wait for that thump. In deeper channels and river bends, blue catfish are hungry for cut bait, and the freshwater spillways are tossing out healthy largemouth bass if you want to play around with crankbaits or finesse worms.
According to recent trips reported by Captain Experiences and similar charters on the Gulf, everybody’s catching fish—limits of redfish, solid specks, and a pile of mixed bag offshore. One group pulled in 12 nice keepers on an offshore run, and another limited early on snapper out toward Gulf Shores just the other day. Local captains report exceptional trips with redfish, sheepshead, and mangrove snapper in the mix—even a 50-pound bull shark for the brave!
If you’re bank or land-based, Two Rivers Marina and the bridges at Lake Pontchartrain are both hot, while the marsh drains around Lafitte and the cuts near Hopedale are prime for sunrise and again just before dark. Harbors and marina entrances draw schools of bait, so working edges with live shrimp or Gulp under a cork can produce a real mixed bag.
Tips for today:
- Fish lighter leaders early with the clear water post-front.
- Work moving water, especially on the falling tide.
- Don’t overlook those marsh drains two hours before and after the slack tide—let your bait drift through natural for the most strikes.
Best spots to hit right now:
- Lake Pontchartrain bridges for trout and redfish.
- Passes and jetty points near Grand Isle for bull reds and specks.
- Hopedale and Delacroix marsh drains for mixed bags and flounder.
Don’t forget to check your local regs, and as always, bring that mosquito spray—it’s Louisiana, after all.
Thanks for tuning in to your daily New Orleans and Gulf fishing report. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a 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.