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Islamorada Winter Fishing Rundown: Sails, Tuna, Yellowtail & Trout Bite
Published 4 months ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure comin’ to you from Islamorada, the sportfishin’ capital of the world, with your local fishing rundown.
We’re sittin’ on a classic winter Keys pattern: cool, clear mornings, light northeast breeze around 6–10 knots and temps in the low 70s by afternoon, according to PredictWind and the Alligator Reef marine forecast. Sunrise is right around 7:10 AM and sunset close to 5:45 PM, so you’ve got a nice long day to work both ends of the tide.
NOAA’s Upper Matecumbe Key tide station shows modest highs and lows today, nothing extreme, but enough water movement to matter. Plan your best shots around the last two hours of the incoming and the first of the fall, especially on the edges of flats and around the bridges.
Offshore, local charter sites like Reef Runner Sportfishing are reporting steady winter action on sailfish, blackfin tuna, kingfish, and a few wahoo when that NE wind stacks up the color change in 120–200 feet. Dolphin are smaller but still popping up around birds and debris. Bottom guys are putting good numbers of yellowtail and mutton snapper in the box, with some keeper grouper mixed in when you anchor on the reef line in 60–90 feet.
Best offshore offerings:
- For sails and tuna, slow-trolled **live ballyhoo** or pilchards on fluorocarbon leaders.
- For kings and wahoo, **spoons** and **sea witches** over wire, pulled a bit faster.
- On the reef, **cut ballyhoo**, squid, and fresh chunks for yellowtail; **live pinfish** or larger baits for muttons and grouper.
In the backcountry, recent reports out of the Islamorada and Flamingo area point to a solid mixed bag: snook, redfish, speckled trout, juvenile tarpon, jacks, and mangrove snapper. Cooler water has pushed fish tight to the mangroves and into deeper potholes and creek mouths. Action has been “pick-y but steady” — not on fire everywhere, but boats working multiple spots are ending up with dozens of fish per trip, plenty of keepers.
Top inshore baits and lures:
- **Live shrimp** is king right now under a popping cork or freelined around shorelines and bridge pilings.
- **Pilchards** and finger mullet, when you can net ’em, are money for snook and tarpon.
- Artificial-wise, work **1/8–1/4 oz jigheads** with paddle tails or shrimp imitations, plus small **gold spoons** over grass for trout, reds, and snook.
Couple of local hot spots to circle on your chart:
- **Channel 2 and Channel 5 bridges**: great winter bites on muttons, mangroves, jacks, and the occasional tarpon; fish the up-current side with live shrimp or small pinfish.
- **Alligator Reef and the outer reef edge off Islamorada**: anchor, chum heavy, and you’ll raise yellowtail, muttons, and sometimes sails cruising the edge.
Back in the bay, push toward the Cape Sable and Flamingo side if you’ve got the range; work creek mouths and points on the falling tide for snook, reds, and trout.
Tackle it all with 20–30 lb braid, 20–40 lb fluoro leaders offshore, 15–20 lb fluoro inshore, and you’re dialed in Keys-style.
Thanks for tuning in, y’all—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite report.
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
We’re sittin’ on a classic winter Keys pattern: cool, clear mornings, light northeast breeze around 6–10 knots and temps in the low 70s by afternoon, according to PredictWind and the Alligator Reef marine forecast. Sunrise is right around 7:10 AM and sunset close to 5:45 PM, so you’ve got a nice long day to work both ends of the tide.
NOAA’s Upper Matecumbe Key tide station shows modest highs and lows today, nothing extreme, but enough water movement to matter. Plan your best shots around the last two hours of the incoming and the first of the fall, especially on the edges of flats and around the bridges.
Offshore, local charter sites like Reef Runner Sportfishing are reporting steady winter action on sailfish, blackfin tuna, kingfish, and a few wahoo when that NE wind stacks up the color change in 120–200 feet. Dolphin are smaller but still popping up around birds and debris. Bottom guys are putting good numbers of yellowtail and mutton snapper in the box, with some keeper grouper mixed in when you anchor on the reef line in 60–90 feet.
Best offshore offerings:
- For sails and tuna, slow-trolled **live ballyhoo** or pilchards on fluorocarbon leaders.
- For kings and wahoo, **spoons** and **sea witches** over wire, pulled a bit faster.
- On the reef, **cut ballyhoo**, squid, and fresh chunks for yellowtail; **live pinfish** or larger baits for muttons and grouper.
In the backcountry, recent reports out of the Islamorada and Flamingo area point to a solid mixed bag: snook, redfish, speckled trout, juvenile tarpon, jacks, and mangrove snapper. Cooler water has pushed fish tight to the mangroves and into deeper potholes and creek mouths. Action has been “pick-y but steady” — not on fire everywhere, but boats working multiple spots are ending up with dozens of fish per trip, plenty of keepers.
Top inshore baits and lures:
- **Live shrimp** is king right now under a popping cork or freelined around shorelines and bridge pilings.
- **Pilchards** and finger mullet, when you can net ’em, are money for snook and tarpon.
- Artificial-wise, work **1/8–1/4 oz jigheads** with paddle tails or shrimp imitations, plus small **gold spoons** over grass for trout, reds, and snook.
Couple of local hot spots to circle on your chart:
- **Channel 2 and Channel 5 bridges**: great winter bites on muttons, mangroves, jacks, and the occasional tarpon; fish the up-current side with live shrimp or small pinfish.
- **Alligator Reef and the outer reef edge off Islamorada**: anchor, chum heavy, and you’ll raise yellowtail, muttons, and sometimes sails cruising the edge.
Back in the bay, push toward the Cape Sable and Flamingo side if you’ve got the range; work creek mouths and points on the falling tide for snook, reds, and trout.
Tackle it all with 20–30 lb braid, 20–40 lb fluoro leaders offshore, 15–20 lb fluoro inshore, and you’re dialed in Keys-style.
Thanks for tuning in, y’all—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite report.
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