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LA Coastal Fishing Report: Mellow Winter, Prime Tides, and Structured Bites
Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report.
We’ve got a nice, mellow winter pattern on the bay and along the front side of Palos Verdes. Tide-Forecast shows a pre-dawn high around 1:57 a.m., dropping to a mid‑morning low near 8:13 a.m., then a midday push with another high about 1:30 p.m., and an evening low around 7:40 p.m. Sunrise is right around 6:58 a.m. with sunset just after 5 p.m. That morning outgoing and the early afternoon flood are your prime windows.
Weather along the LA coast is classic cool winter: light offshore breeze early, building onshore in the afternoon, cool mornings warming into the 60s, and relatively calm seas. Fishingreminder and the solunar charts line up best activity around dawn and that early afternoon tide swing.
According to Tide-Forecast and Tideschart for Los Angeles outer harbor, that midday high lines up perfectly for bay and harbor structure fishing. Inside the harbors, water’s still on the cool side, but 976-TUNA’s recent counts have been strong on bottom critters: Marina del Rey sport boats posting big numbers of sculpin, whitefish, mackerel, along with calico and sand bass. Pierpoint and 22nd Street landings have checked in with limits of sculpin, solid rockfish, sheephead, plus decent calico and sand bass, and even a few halibut and yellowtail for the guys running a little farther.
In real‑world terms, that means fish are there, but you’ve got to fish a little slower and closer to structure. Calico and sand bass are chewing best on smaller plastics and fly‑lined bait when the sun’s up and the water’s clear. Deckhands on multiple boats out of LA and Long Beach have been pushing small swimbaits, A‑rigs, and “small sliders” fished high in the column when the bass slide up in that 67‑degree surface water they reported earlier this week.
Best baits right now:
- For bass and bonito: anchovy or sardine fly‑lined on light line, or a 3–4" swimbait in baitfish colors.
- For sculpin, whitefish, and sheephead: dropper loops with squid strips or shrimp pieces; sheephead love a little fresh mussel or clam if you’ve got it.
- For halibut: slow‑rolled swimbaits or live smelt/anchovy near the bottom on the edges of the channel and along sandy pockets near structure.
Best lures:
- Daiwa‑style Salt Pro Minnow or similar jerkbaits in grunion or sardine patterns for shoreline and harbor wall work.
- 3–4" paddle‑tail swimbaits in mint, sardine, or anchovy on 1/2–1 oz lead heads.
- Small metal jigs for bonito and mackerel around bird schools and current edges.
Couple of local hot spots to hit:
- **King Harbor and outside Redondo canyon edge**: good for mackerel, bonito, and bass on the afternoon tide push.
- **Inner breakwall and kelp edges off San Pedro/Palos Verdes**: calico bass, sheephead, and rockfish around the high spots and hard structure, especially on that early afternoon incoming.
If you’re a pier or surf angler, focus on the morning outgoing at places like Santa Monica and Venice Pier with Carolina‑rigged squid strips or Gulp sandworms for mixed surfperch, croaker, and the odd halibut. Fish slow, keep your gear light, and move until you find a pocket of life.
That’s the word on the water from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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’ve got a nice, mellow winter pattern on the bay and along the front side of Palos Verdes. Tide-Forecast shows a pre-dawn high around 1:57 a.m., dropping to a mid‑morning low near 8:13 a.m., then a midday push with another high about 1:30 p.m., and an evening low around 7:40 p.m. Sunrise is right around 6:58 a.m. with sunset just after 5 p.m. That morning outgoing and the early afternoon flood are your prime windows.
Weather along the LA coast is classic cool winter: light offshore breeze early, building onshore in the afternoon, cool mornings warming into the 60s, and relatively calm seas. Fishingreminder and the solunar charts line up best activity around dawn and that early afternoon tide swing.
According to Tide-Forecast and Tideschart for Los Angeles outer harbor, that midday high lines up perfectly for bay and harbor structure fishing. Inside the harbors, water’s still on the cool side, but 976-TUNA’s recent counts have been strong on bottom critters: Marina del Rey sport boats posting big numbers of sculpin, whitefish, mackerel, along with calico and sand bass. Pierpoint and 22nd Street landings have checked in with limits of sculpin, solid rockfish, sheephead, plus decent calico and sand bass, and even a few halibut and yellowtail for the guys running a little farther.
In real‑world terms, that means fish are there, but you’ve got to fish a little slower and closer to structure. Calico and sand bass are chewing best on smaller plastics and fly‑lined bait when the sun’s up and the water’s clear. Deckhands on multiple boats out of LA and Long Beach have been pushing small swimbaits, A‑rigs, and “small sliders” fished high in the column when the bass slide up in that 67‑degree surface water they reported earlier this week.
Best baits right now:
- For bass and bonito: anchovy or sardine fly‑lined on light line, or a 3–4" swimbait in baitfish colors.
- For sculpin, whitefish, and sheephead: dropper loops with squid strips or shrimp pieces; sheephead love a little fresh mussel or clam if you’ve got it.
- For halibut: slow‑rolled swimbaits or live smelt/anchovy near the bottom on the edges of the channel and along sandy pockets near structure.
Best lures:
- Daiwa‑style Salt Pro Minnow or similar jerkbaits in grunion or sardine patterns for shoreline and harbor wall work.
- 3–4" paddle‑tail swimbaits in mint, sardine, or anchovy on 1/2–1 oz lead heads.
- Small metal jigs for bonito and mackerel around bird schools and current edges.
Couple of local hot spots to hit:
- **King Harbor and outside Redondo canyon edge**: good for mackerel, bonito, and bass on the afternoon tide push.
- **Inner breakwall and kelp edges off San Pedro/Palos Verdes**: calico bass, sheephead, and rockfish around the high spots and hard structure, especially on that early afternoon incoming.
If you’re a pier or surf angler, focus on the morning outgoing at places like Santa Monica and Venice Pier with Carolina‑rigged squid strips or Gulp sandworms for mixed surfperch, croaker, and the odd halibut. Fish slow, keep your gear light, and move until you find a pocket of life.
That’s the word on the water from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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