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Southern California Fishing Report: Bluefin Bonanza, Rockfish Riches, and King Tide Caution
Published 5 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, reporting from the breezy docks and breakwaters along the Pacific Coast this Tuesday, November 4th, 2025.
Let’s kick off with the **weather**: Marine layers hugged the early shoreline with patches of fog clearing mid-morning. Winds are light west at 6-10 knots, keeping seas manageable and air temperatures hovering from the high 50s at dawn, climbing to the mid-60s by afternoon. With sunrise at 6:44 AM and sunset at 4:55 PM, anglers have optimal daylight to get that line wet.
The **tides** this morning in Southern California have a low around 3:37 AM and a rising high at 9:25 AM, before easing into a gentle afternoon ebb. That means the bite window from pre-dawn to mid-morning saw stronger current flow—a prime time for those predator species to feed, especially near rocky structure and kelp beds. Tidal info sourced from Tide-Forecast.com.
The bite is heating up across the SoCal region. According to daily counts from 22nd Street Landing in San Pedro, boats on 1.5-day runs have been posting **limits of bluefin tuna by 10 AM** for both anglers and crew. That’s been the headline for multiple trips this past week, so bluefin are running thick offshore. Party boats are checking in with robust hauls—Freedom returned recently with 64 bluefin, 40 whitefish, 20 calico bass and a handful of bonito. These are standout numbers for early November.
Northern boats, like those fishing from Channel Islands Sportfishing, are hauling up **rockfish, lingcod, and ocean whitefish in big numbers**—last count was 507 rockfish, 136 whitefish, and 21 lingcod just two days ago. Further north, reports from Fish Emeryville and NorCal Fish Reports corroborate a “wide open rockfish and crab” bite, with combo trips maxing out their scores.
**Hot spots to put on your map:**
- The outer banks off San Pedro and Long Beach have been bluefin central.
- Channel Islands reefs near Anacapa and Santa Cruz for rockfish and lingcod.
- Half Moon Bay for crab combos and big coastal rockfish.
Anglers targeting bluefin and yellowtail offshore should rig up with **heavy jigs, knife jigs, and deep-diving plugs** like the Moonshine Glow Deep Little Ripper. Those fish hit best on fluorocarbon leader with live sardines or big frozen squid, especially mid-column. For rockfish, squid-tipped dropper loops, shrimp flies and heavy weights around 8oz are producing limits, particularly when fished right on the bottom structure.
Closer to shore, sand bass and calico bass continue to respond to plastics in natural bait colors. Try swimbaits or lead-heads paired with frozen squid or cut anchovies around harbor entrances and kelp edges.
The elephant in the room is the **King Tides**—the largest tides of the year hitting the Pacific this week. Forecasts from regional weather and tide agencies expect powerful surges, especially through Saturday. This means bigger water movement, enhanced feeding activity, but also challenging shore access. Exercise caution along jetties, low-lying beaches, and check tide stations before heading out.
Best bets for the rest of today? Get out early, fish the rising tide, and keep your gear heavy and your bait fresh. Offshore, bluefin and yellowtail are chewing strong, while nearshore rockfish limits are a sure thing aboard the party boats.
Thanks for tuning in to your local Pacific fishing report. Make sure to subscribe for more updates and remember, “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.
Let’s kick off with the **weather**: Marine layers hugged the early shoreline with patches of fog clearing mid-morning. Winds are light west at 6-10 knots, keeping seas manageable and air temperatures hovering from the high 50s at dawn, climbing to the mid-60s by afternoon. With sunrise at 6:44 AM and sunset at 4:55 PM, anglers have optimal daylight to get that line wet.
The **tides** this morning in Southern California have a low around 3:37 AM and a rising high at 9:25 AM, before easing into a gentle afternoon ebb. That means the bite window from pre-dawn to mid-morning saw stronger current flow—a prime time for those predator species to feed, especially near rocky structure and kelp beds. Tidal info sourced from Tide-Forecast.com.
The bite is heating up across the SoCal region. According to daily counts from 22nd Street Landing in San Pedro, boats on 1.5-day runs have been posting **limits of bluefin tuna by 10 AM** for both anglers and crew. That’s been the headline for multiple trips this past week, so bluefin are running thick offshore. Party boats are checking in with robust hauls—Freedom returned recently with 64 bluefin, 40 whitefish, 20 calico bass and a handful of bonito. These are standout numbers for early November.
Northern boats, like those fishing from Channel Islands Sportfishing, are hauling up **rockfish, lingcod, and ocean whitefish in big numbers**—last count was 507 rockfish, 136 whitefish, and 21 lingcod just two days ago. Further north, reports from Fish Emeryville and NorCal Fish Reports corroborate a “wide open rockfish and crab” bite, with combo trips maxing out their scores.
**Hot spots to put on your map:**
- The outer banks off San Pedro and Long Beach have been bluefin central.
- Channel Islands reefs near Anacapa and Santa Cruz for rockfish and lingcod.
- Half Moon Bay for crab combos and big coastal rockfish.
Anglers targeting bluefin and yellowtail offshore should rig up with **heavy jigs, knife jigs, and deep-diving plugs** like the Moonshine Glow Deep Little Ripper. Those fish hit best on fluorocarbon leader with live sardines or big frozen squid, especially mid-column. For rockfish, squid-tipped dropper loops, shrimp flies and heavy weights around 8oz are producing limits, particularly when fished right on the bottom structure.
Closer to shore, sand bass and calico bass continue to respond to plastics in natural bait colors. Try swimbaits or lead-heads paired with frozen squid or cut anchovies around harbor entrances and kelp edges.
The elephant in the room is the **King Tides**—the largest tides of the year hitting the Pacific this week. Forecasts from regional weather and tide agencies expect powerful surges, especially through Saturday. This means bigger water movement, enhanced feeding activity, but also challenging shore access. Exercise caution along jetties, low-lying beaches, and check tide stations before heading out.
Best bets for the rest of today? Get out early, fish the rising tide, and keep your gear heavy and your bait fresh. Offshore, bluefin and yellowtail are chewing strong, while nearshore rockfish limits are a sure thing aboard the party boats.
Thanks for tuning in to your local Pacific fishing report. Make sure to subscribe for more updates and remember, “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.