Podcast Episode Details

Back to Podcast Episodes
Bay Area Anglers Fuel Up for Stripers, Halibut & Rockfish Bonanza on the Tides

Bay Area Anglers Fuel Up for Stripers, Halibut & Rockfish Bonanza on the Tides



Good morning San Francisco Bay anglers, this is Artificial Lure bringing you the latest dock-to-bank report for Monday, October 20, 2025.

The Bay woke up under calm autumn skies with a light breeze; a typical October morning, with sunrise at 7:22 AM and sunset set for 6:24 PM. We're getting just over eleven hours of daylight, and the tidal coefficient today is a whopping 83, climbing up to 85 by noon—expect strong currents and large tidal swings out on the water, giving predator fish a real appetite, especially around structure and rips. Tides will be moving aggressively, so time those drifts and target slack tide windows for best bite risk.

On the weather front, it’s mild and clear, mid to upper 60s through the morning before warming slightly by the afternoon. Ideal conditions for both boat fishermen and shore casters, with just a touch of haze rolling in around the bridges later on. No advisories or closures for Bay launches and marinas this morning, so the whole waterfront’s open for business.

Fish activity is wide open right now. According to Nor Cal Fish Reports and Sportfishing Report, party boats absolutely crushed it over the weekend and into Sunday, reporting “LIMITS OF BASS AGAIN!!!” out of San Francisco—boat scores like 20 limits (that’s 40 striped bass for 20 anglers!) and bonus halibut each trip. Emeryville’s boats brought in monster mixed bags: Sea Wolf pulled 46 lingcod and 230 rockfish full day, while Pacific Pearl landed 13 halibut and 24 stripers. Lingcod up to 23 pounds, sanddab, mackerel, and outstanding numbers of rockfish. Berkeley’s California Dawn checked in with 30 lingcod and 150 rockfish for a packed rail.

Fresh catch counts show the bulk of successful fishing centered on striped bass, halibut, rockfish, and lingcod. The stripers are running thick in all the usual haunts, with bay halibut mixed in. Lingcod and rockfish limits are consistent for any deep reef or the Farallon Islands when weather allows boaters to make the run.

Let’s talk tactics. With the crazy tidal action today, fish will be tight to current breaks, bridge pilings, and drop-offs. On the artificial side, folks are scoring with chartreuse paddle tail swimbaits, white hair jigs, and 5–7 inch shad plastics for stripers and halibut. Lingcod and rockfish are hammering dark-colored leadhead jigs tipped with squid or mackerel, and diamond jigs get hit hard over deeper reefs. Bait anglers should stock up on live anchovies or pileworms, with drifting live bait around Alcatraz, Treasure Island, and the flats outside the South Harbor especially effective. Stripers are still taking cut sardine chunks on dropper rigs.

For the best action, your hot spots today:
- Alcatraz Island and the surrounding rock piles are prime for both striper and halibut action—boats reported nonstop bites over the weekend.
- Berkeley Flats continue to produce, with easy limits of rockfish and a shot at lingcod if you bounce jigs near structure.
- Down south, the Oakland Estuary and the piers off Emeryville are giving up good numbers of keeper stripers and some surprise mackerel—great for a quick morning outing on foot.

The local chatter says if you want a shot at quality fish, keep an eye on slack tide, fish the shaded edges during the midday sun, and always have a live bait rig ready for when the bite turns on. With this tidal spread, expect bite windows to open and close quickly, so remain mobile, switch up baits, and don’t forget that heavier metal works best with the strong swing today.

That’s the scoop from the docks and the jetties, folks. Thanks for tuning in! If you found this report useful, make sure to subscribe for daily updates and insider tips. 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 co


Published on 2 months ago






If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Donate