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San Francisco Bay Fishing Report: Winter Patterns, Rockfish Limits, and Halibut Prospects

San Francisco Bay Fishing Report: Winter Patterns, Rockfish Limits, and Halibut Prospects



Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report.

We’ve got a classic winter pattern settling over the Bay: cool, clear breaks between fronts, light morning breeze and afternoon northwest wind. According to the National Weather Service marine forecast, winds on the bay are running around 5 knots with 2‑foot or smaller chop, very fishable and friendly for the smaller boats. Skies are partly cloudy, temps pushing through the 50s, so bring layers and a good windbreaker.

Tides are doing a nice little dance for us today. Tide-Forecast’s San Francisco station shows a pre‑dawn high around 4:38–4:49 a.m. at about 5–5.8 feet, dropping to a late‑morning low around 9:50–10:00 a.m. near 2.8 feet. That gives you a productive outgoing swing right through the morning bite, then a slow turn and afternoon flood. Golden Gate Beach tide tables put sunrise right around 7:14 a.m. with sunset near 4:50 p.m., so your best windows are first light through mid‑ebb, and then again late afternoon on the push.

On the catching side, the party boats are still absolutely stuffing the boxes. Nor Cal Fish Reports shows yesterday’s crab‑rockfish combos out of Berkeley and Emeryville running full‑rack scores: California Dawn II logged 28 anglers with 280 Dungeness crab and 280 rockfish; the Emeryville fleet — C Gull II, New Huck Finn, Sea Wolf — all hanging 10‑crab limits plus full limits of mixed rockfish. That’s as good as it gets for winter combo fishing inside the Gate and just outside on the reefs.

Inshore, halibut and stripers are more of a scratch pick now, but the die‑hards still poking around the South Bay edges and shipping channels are finding a few keepers. Happy Hooker’s schedule still highlights live‑bait halibut/striper trips in season, and the same program works now if you can get decent bait: live anchovies or shiners on a three‑way rig, 10–12 oz of lead, and slow‑troll the edges of the flats and drop‑offs.

Best lures and baits around the Bay right now:

- For rockfish: shrimp flies tipped with squid strips, small swimbaits in anchovy or root‑beer, and metal jigs like P‑Line Laser Minnows or Krocodiles bounced near the bottom.
- For halibut: 4–6 inch paddletail swimbaits on 1–2 oz heads, white or chartreuse, or trap‑rigged frozen anchovies if live bait is scarce.
- For stripers inside: 4–5 inch soft jerkbaits, hair jigs, or small spoons on the current seams; bloodworms or pile worms still get bites off piers.

Couple hot spots to circle on your chart:

- **Berkeley Flats to the Ship Channel**: On the outgoing tide, drift from the flats toward deeper water with swimbaits or live bait. That’s your best shot at a bonus winter halibut or schoolie bass.
- **North Bar / Marin Coast just outside the Gate**: Party boats have been working this zone hard for rockfish and crab. If you’re private‑boating, watch the bar and weather, but the reefs here are loaded with quality rockfish right now.

From the piers and shore, the usual Bay suspects are still in play: a few stripers, some bat rays and sharks for those soaking squid or anchovies after dark, and the odd jacksmelt under a float. Fish slow, fish small, and let that tide do the work.

That’s the word from the water. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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 1 week, 3 days ago






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