New Orleans Fishing Forecast: Tides, Moons, and Hot Spots for Trout, Reds, and Flounder episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 30, 2025 · 2 MIN

New Orleans Fishing Forecast: Tides, Moons, and Hot Spots for Trout, Reds, and Flounder

from New Orleans Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI

# Artificial Lure's Gulf Coast Fishing Report – November 30th, 2025 Well hey there, folks. Artificial Lure here, coming to you with your Sunday morning fishing forecast for the New Orleans area and the surrounding Gulf waters. Let's talk tides first. We're looking at a low tide of 0.07 feet at 1:09 AM this morning, followed by a high of 0.36 feet around midday at 12:24 PM. Another low comes in at 12:43 PM, then we push up to 0.39 feet by 2:51 PM. The coefficient's sitting at 58 to 70, which means we've got decent tidal movement—not the strongest, but enough to get the baitfish moving and the gamefish feeding. Speaking of movement, we're in the First Quarter Moon phase right now, which typically triggers good feeding windows. The major bite times today fall between 6:42 AM and 8:42 AM, with a secondary window from 6:59 PM to 8:59 PM. That morning bite should be prime for cruising the bridges and trestles. For fish activity, the marshes have been producing solid numbers of speckled trout and redfish. Look for the schoolies along grass edges—they love a moving tide like what we've got this afternoon. Flounder are hanging tight to those channel edges too, so don't sleep on them. Rod-wise, throw 3/8-ounce jigheads with natural-colored soft plastics for trout around the Pontchartrain trestles. When conditions allow, a popping cork with live shrimp is deadly. For reds in the skinny water, gold spoons and weedless paddle tails work magic on windward points where bait's stacking up. Flounder? Slow-roll a jig-and-minnow combo and you'll find them. If you're looking for solid access, hit the Bienville Street Wharf or Toulouse Street Wharf downtown—both are close, well-lit for night fishing, and produce fresh fish regularly. Or venture out to the St. Bernard and Hopedale marshes for that redfish action. The visibility's sitting at 61%, so water clarity's decent. Get out there and find the life—bait flicks, slicks, and birds. Once you get two good hits, park it down and work methodically from shallow to deep. Thanks for tuning in, folks. Please subscribe for daily reports and more Gulf Coast intel. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

# Artificial Lure's Gulf Coast Fishing Report – November 30th, 2025 Well hey there, folks. Artificial Lure here, coming to you with your Sunday morning fishing forecast for the New Orleans area and the surrounding Gulf waters. Let's talk tides first. We're looking at a low tide of 0.07 feet at 1:09 AM this morning, followed by a high of 0.36 feet around midday at 12:24 PM. Another low comes in at 12:43 PM, then we push up to 0.39 feet by 2:51 PM. The coefficient's sitting at 58 to 70, which means we've got decent tidal movement—not the strongest, but enough to get the baitfish moving and the gamefish feeding. Speaking of movement, we're in the First Quarter Moon phase right now, which typically triggers good feeding windows. The major bite times today fall between 6:42 AM and 8:42 AM, with a secondary window from 6:59 PM to 8:59 PM. That morning bite should be prime for cruising the bridges and trestles. For fish activity, the marshes have been producing solid numbers of speckled trout and redfish. Look for the schoolies along grass edges—they love a moving tide like what we've got this afternoon. Flounder are hanging tight to those channel edges too, so don't sleep on them. Rod-wise, throw 3/8-ounce jigheads with natural-colored soft plastics for trout around the Pontchartrain trestles. When conditions allow, a popping cork with live shrimp is deadly. For reds in the skinny water, gold spoons and weedless paddle tails work magic on windward points where bait's stacking up. Flounder? Slow-roll a jig-and-minnow combo and you'll find them. If you're looking for solid access, hit the Bienville Street Wharf or Toulouse Street Wharf downtown—both are close, well-lit for night fishing, and produce fresh fish regularly. Or venture out to the St. Bernard and Hopedale marshes for that redfish action. The visibility's sitting at 61%, so water clarity's decent. Get out there and find the life—bait flicks, slicks, and birds. Once you get two good hits, park it down and work methodically from shallow to deep. Thanks for tuning in, folks. Please subscribe for daily reports and more Gulf Coast intel. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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New Orleans Fishing Forecast: Tides, Moons, and Hot Spots for Trout, Reds, and Flounder

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This episode is 2 minutes long.

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This episode was published on November 30, 2025.

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# Artificial Lure's Gulf Coast Fishing Report – November 30th, 2025 Well hey there, folks. Artificial Lure here, coming to you with your Sunday morning fishing forecast for the New Orleans area and the surrounding Gulf waters. Let's talk tides...

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