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LA Coastal Winter Fishing Report: Early Bites, Deepwater Bags, and Tactics for Halibut, Bass, and Rockfish

LA Coastal Winter Fishing Report: Early Bites, Deepwater Bags, and Tactics for Halibut, Bass, and Rockfish



Artificial Lure here with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report, coming in smoother than a dawn patrol paddle-out.

Let’s start with the tides. Tide-Forecast says we’ve got a solid pre-dawn **high tide around 4:54 a.m. at about 5 feet**, dropping to a **late-morning low around 11:40 a.m. just over a foot**, then building to an **evening high around 5:20 p.m. a bit over 3 feet**. Sunrise is about **6:50 a.m.** and sunset around **4:45 p.m.** According to Ventusky, winds stay light to moderate today with cool, stable weather and no major fronts—classic winter SoCal conditions.

Fish activity is matching that winter pattern: slower mid‑day, but really turning on at first light, the top of that morning high, and again on the late-afternoon push. FishingReminder pegs the major feed windows right around sunrise and again just after dark, so plan your sessions there.

Offshore and local party boats are still stacking bottom fish. 976-Tuna’s latest counts show boats out of San Pedro and Long Beach putting up **limits of rockfish**, plus **bonito and a sprinkle of lingcod and sheephead** on recent trips. Channel Islands Sportfishing to our northwest just reported trips with **full rockfish limits, double-digit halibut days, plus bonito and lingcod**, so that same mixed-bag vibe is sliding down into our local islands and deep stones.

Inshore along the LA and South Bay coast, it’s been a **grind but steady** on **legal calico bass, sand bass, and a few halibut** for the folks who work slow and tight to structure. Night and gray-light sessions are sneaking out **short barracuda and schoolie bonito** around bait balls when the birds start picking.

Let’s talk tackle.
For **halibut** in the harbors and along the beaches:
- Best bait: **live smelt, anchovy, or sardine** on a sliding sinker rig.
- Best lures: 3–4 inch **white or sardine-pattern swimbaits**, and **chrome or glow jerkbaits** slow-rolled right on the sand.

For **calico and sand bass** on the reefs and breakwalls:
- Best bait: **live or fresh-cut squid** pinned on a leadhead or dropper loop.
- Best lures: **brown/green/“red crab” pattern plastics** on 1/2 to 1 oz heads, plus **hardbaits in sardine or anchovy** around bait schools.

For the deep-water **rockfish and lingcod** offshore:
- Best bait: **squid strips and cut mackerel** on double dropper loops with 8–12 oz of lead.
- Best lures: **200–300 gram knife jigs** in blue/white, scrambled egg, or glow, yo‑yo’d right on the bottom.

A couple of hot spots to circle on your map:

- **Santa Monica Bay / Palos Verdes coast**: Work the hard bottom and kelp edges from Point Vicente down toward White Point for **calico, sheephead, and a shot at halibut**. Those morning and evening tide swings over the stones can be lights-out with squid-tipped leadheads.
- **Long Beach / San Pedro Harbor complex**: Inside the breakwalls and around the shipping channel edges you’ve got **halibut, sand bass, and winter perch**. Drag a swimbait or slow-troll a live bait right along the drops and you’re in the game.

Overall theme today: fish slow, fish tight to structure, and time your efforts to that early-morning and late-afternoon water movement. Winter fish here aren’t in a rush, but they’ll chew if you put it in their face.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide, a bite window, or a hot bite call.

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, 6 days ago






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