LA Coastal Fishing Report: Clear Water, Moderate Swells, Prime Tide Windows Today episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 21, 2026 · 4 MIN

LA Coastal Fishing Report: Clear Water, Moderate Swells, Prime Tide Windows Today

from Los Angeles Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. Marine layer’s hanging in this morning along the LA coast with light onshore breeze, cool low 60s early, pushing into the low 70s on the sand this afternoon. According to the National Weather Service discussion, winds stay mostly under 10–15 knots nearshore with a small west swell, generally 2–3 feet, maybe a touch more on open beaches by midday. That means very workable conditions for both surf casters and boat anglers. Tides today are running a moderate swing, with a pre‑dawn high dropping to a late‑morning low, then building again into a solid afternoon high. Pulled from NOAA’s LA area tables, that gives you classic structure windows: outgoing tide at first light and a nice push later for the evening bite. Work those tide changes; that’s when things have been turning on. Sunrise is just after 5:40 a.m. with sunset a little after 8 p.m., so you’ve got a long light window. Low light around dawn has been key for finicky inshore species, especially in the clear water we’ve had most of this week. Recent coastal catches up and down the Santa Monica Bay and South Bay have been steady rather than spectacular. Local landings and pier chatter report mixed bags of **barred surfperch**, **yellowfin croaker**, **spotfin croaker**, **walleye surfperch**, and the odd **corbina** sliding into the shallows. South toward Palos Verdes and Long Beach breakwalls, boats and kayakers are picking away at **calico bass**, **sand bass**, **sheepshead**, and some **short halibut** with a few legals in the mix. Offshore a bit, the sportboats running out of San Pedro and Marina del Rey have been seeing good counts of **rockfish**, **whitefish**, and **sculpin**, with a slow pick on **barracuda** when the schools push in. On bait, the consistent producers in the surf have been **sand crabs**, lugworms, and fresh mussel. If you can find small, soft shell sand crabs, thread two or three on a size 4–6 hook and fish them on a light Carolina rig right in the first and second trough. For croaker and perch, a 6–10 lb fluorocarbon leader really helps; the water’s clear and they’re line shy. Artificial‑wise, this week has leaned toward natural presentations. In the surf, **1/2–3/4 oz Kastmasters** in chrome or chrome/blue, **3-inch swimbaits** in smelt or anchovy colors on 1/4 oz heads, and small **Gulp sandworms** in camo or blood red have all been getting bent. Around structure and the kelp edges, anglers are doing well on **5-inch weedless swimbaits**, brown/back or sardine patterns, and **leadhead plus squid strip** combos for bass and rockfish. If you’re chasing halibut along the harbor mouths and sandy points, slow‑rolling a **3–4 inch paddle tail** in baitfish patterns tight to the bottom has been the ticket. Fish activity has been best in two windows: that gray‑light dawn period through about 8 a.m., and then again on the afternoon high, especially if the wind doesn’t blow the surface to froth. Midday has been scratchy unless you’re dropping deeper for rockfish. A couple of local hot spots to circle: • **Dockweiler to El Segundo stretch**: That long, gently sloping beach has been putting out quality barred surfperch and some chunky yellowfin croaker on sand crabs and Gulp sandworms fished in the inside trough. Look for bird activity and slightly darker seams of water; that’s your deeper cut. • **Palos Verdes Peninsula area**: Both from kayak and private boat, working the kelp edges and rocky pockets with swimbaits and whole squid has produced solid calico bass and a few halibut. Keep a heavier setup handy; there have been sheepshead hanging tight to the hard structure. If you’re limited to the piers, Santa Monica and Manhattan Beach piers have seen a mix of mackerel, jacksmelt, perch, and the occasional legal halibut on live bait rigged on sliding setups. Travel light, fish smart around those tide swings, and scale down your gear if the bite seems off — lighter line and smaller hooks have been making all the difference in this clear, calm stretch. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for mor Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. Marine layer’s hanging in this morning along the LA coast with light onshore breeze, cool low 60s early, pushing into the low 70s on the sand this afternoon. According to the National Weather Service discussion, winds stay mostly under 10–15 knots nearshore with a small west swell, generally 2–3 feet, maybe a touch more on open beaches by midday. That means very workable conditions for both surf casters and boat anglers. Tides today are running a moderate swing, with a pre‑dawn high dropping to a late‑morning low, then building again into a solid afternoon high. Pulled from NOAA’s LA area tables, that gives you classic structure windows: outgoing tide at first light and a nice push later for the evening bite. Work those tide changes; that’s when things have been turning on. Sunrise is just after 5:40 a.m. with sunset a little after 8 p.m., so you’ve got a long light window. Low light around dawn has been key for finicky inshore species, especially in the clear water we’ve had most of this week. Recent coastal catches up and down the Santa Monica Bay and South Bay have been steady rather than spectacular. Local landings and pier chatter report mixed bags of **barred surfperch**, **yellowfin croaker**, **spotfin croaker**, **walleye surfperch**, and the odd **corbina** sliding into the shallows. South toward Palos Verdes and Long Beach breakwalls, boats and kayakers are picking away at **calico bass**, **sand bass**, **sheepshead**, and some **short halibut** with a few legals in the mix. Offshore a bit, the sportboats running out of San Pedro and Marina del Rey have been seeing good counts of **rockfish**, **whitefish**, and **sculpin**, with a slow pick on **barracuda** when the schools push in. On bait, the consistent producers in the surf have been **sand crabs**, lugworms, and fresh mussel. If you can find small, soft shell sand crabs, thread two or three on a size 4–6 hook and fish them on a light Carolina rig right in the first and second trough. For croaker and perch, a 6–10 lb fluorocarbon leader really helps; the water’s clear and they’re line shy. Artificial‑wise, this week has leaned toward natural presentations. In the surf, **1/2–3/4 oz Kastmasters** in chrome or chrome/blue, **3-inch swimbaits** in smelt or anchovy colors on 1/4 oz heads, and small **Gulp sandworms** in camo or blood red have all been getting bent. Around structure and the kelp edges, anglers are doing well on **5-inch weedless swimbaits**, brown/back or sardine patterns, and **leadhead plus squid strip** combos for bass and rockfish. If you’re chasing halibut along the harbor mouths and sandy points, slow‑rolling a **3–4 inch paddle tail** in baitfish patterns tight to the bottom has been the ticket. Fish activity has been best in two windows: that gray‑light dawn period through about 8 a.m., and then again on the afternoon high, especially if the wind doesn’t blow the surface to froth. Midday has been scratchy unless you’re dropping deeper for rockfish. A couple of local hot spots to circle: • **Dockweiler to El Segundo stretch**: That long, gently sloping beach has been putting out quality barred surfperch and some chunky yellowfin croaker on sand crabs and Gulp sandworms fished in the inside trough. Look for bird activity and slightly darker seams of water; that’s your deeper cut. • **Palos Verdes Peninsula area**: Both from kayak and private boat, working the kelp edges and rocky pockets with swimbaits and whole squid has produced solid calico bass and a few halibut. Keep a heavier setup handy; there have been sheepshead hanging tight to the hard structure. If you’re limited to the piers, Santa Monica and Manhattan Beach piers have seen a mix of mackerel, jacksmelt, perch, and the occasional legal halibut on live bait rigged on sliding setups. Travel light, fish smart around those tide swings, and scale down your gear if the bite seems off — lighter line and smaller hooks have been making all the difference in this clear, calm stretch. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for mor Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

NOW PLAYING

LA Coastal Fishing Report: Clear Water, Moderate Swells, Prime Tide Windows Today

0:00 4:21

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Chewing the Fat with WorkForge WorkForge Bite-Sized Conversations for Building a Stronger Workforce Welcome to Chewing the Fat, a podcast delving deep into the world of food manufacturing. Dive into real conversations around critical topics like staffing, retention, onboarding, and career development in this essential industry. Subscribe now to gain insights from your peers, subject matter experts and more on the biggest issues facing food manufacturers today: -Hiring and retaining employees -Addressing the challenges of the Silver Tsunami -Improving time to productivity of new employees -Engaging employees from hire to retire And more... Tune in to Chewing the Fat, a WorkForge podcast, and join the conversation on how to build and sustain a resilient, high-performing workforce in food manufacturing. She’s a Hazard to Herself She’s a Hazard Hi there, I’m Mallory, and I’d like to invite you into our world with “She’s a Hazard to Herself!” Join us as we navigate life with Multiple Sclerosis from the seat of my power wheelchair. Discover stories of resilience, family, and the community we’ve built around chronic illness. Whether you’re impacted by MS or want to learn from our journey, there’s something here for you. So why wait? Subscribe to “She’s a Hazard to Herself” on your favorite podcast app and be part of our journey today. Let’s lift each other up, one episode at a time! Dragnet Entertainment Radio The Dragnet radio show was a groundbreaking and influential police procedural drama that ran on NBC from 1949 to 1957. Here are some key things to know about it:Main Features:Focus: The show followed the cases of Sergeant Joe Friday and his partners, primarily in the Los Angeles Police Department. It depicted the real-life work of detectives, including the tedious investigation process, interviews, stakeouts, and occasional danger.Realism: Jack Webb, the show's creator and star, aimed for authenticity. Episodes were often based on real cases, with details changed to protect the innocent. The dialogue was direct and unvarnished, mimicking the way police officers actually spoke.Famous Intro: The show's opening sequence is iconic: the announcer's voice declaring "This is the city... Los Angeles... California..." followed by the signature "dun-dun-DUN" theme music.Impact:Pioneering Police Procedural: Dragnet is considered a pioneer of MySwimPro Swimming Technique & Training Podcast MySwimPro MySwimPro is the number one fitness application for the fastest growing sport in the world. Since 2014, we have been on a mission to help swimmers of all levels live happier and healthier lives through swimming. Today, swimmers in more than 150 countries use MySwimPro’s award-winning mobile and wearable apps to access personalized swim workout plans, training plans, educational drills and videos, advanced analytics, and to log and track their progress. MySwimPro is accessible on iOS and Android smartphones and wearables, and is free to get started.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Los Angeles Fishing Report Today?

This episode is 4 minutes long.

When was this Los Angeles Fishing Report Today episode published?

This episode was published on June 21, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report. Marine layer’s hanging in this morning along the LA coast with light onshore breeze, cool low 60s early, pushing into the low 70s on the sand this afternoon....

Can I download this Los Angeles Fishing Report Today episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!