St. Augustine Summer Bite: Beat the Heat and Catch Early Morning Trout, Reds, and Offshore Action episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 18, 2026 · 3 MIN

St. Augustine Summer Bite: Beat the Heat and Catch Early Morning Trout, Reds, and Offshore Action

from St Augustine Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI

This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic Northeast Florida summer pattern setting up. Offshore, nearshore, and the river are all waking up early, then slowing once the sun gets high, so plan on beating the heat and the boat traffic. Around St. Augustine Inlet and the beaches, the morning incoming tide has been the sweet spot. Surf’s running light, with a gentle chop and scattered bait pods along the sandbars. Local beach anglers report steady whiting and a few pompano in the early hours, with sharks and the occasional redfish cruising the outer bar once the light comes up. Fresh dead shrimp on small circle hooks, Fishbites in sandflea or clam, and small sand fleas dug right in the wash are doing the work. Inshore, the ICW, Salt Run, and the flats around Vilano and Matanzas are alive at first light. The lower light and moving water are pushing finger mullet and glass minnows up on the edges, and that’s where the trout and redfish have been posted up. Folks fishing topwater early are getting blow‑ups from speckled trout and slot reds on walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or mullet patterns. Once the sun’s high, switching to soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads in new penny or natural brown has been putting keeper reds and a few flounder on the deck. The backwater creeks off the ICW are holding decent numbers of smaller reds and some sneaky nice drum around deeper bends and shell. Live shrimp or small blue crab chunks on a Carolina rig, pitched tight to the oysters, are getting bit. Just remember: light leader, quiet boat, and let that bait soak on the edges of the current. Offshore and nearshore, the reefs and wrecks out front have been giving up mixed bags. Boats running out to the local numbers in 60–90 feet are finding vermilion snapper, lane snapper, and the usual sea bass, with a few grouper mixed in when you drop bigger baits. Sardines, cigar minnows, and cut squid on double‑drop bottom rigs are standard. Closer in, nearshore structure has seen kingfish cruising through when the bait stacks up; slow‑trolled live pogies and ribbonfish are your best bet for a smoker. For boat anglers looking to bend a rod quickly, two hot spots to consider: the shell bars and drop‑offs just north of the Vilano Bridge on the ICW for morning trout and reds, and the Matanzas Inlet area, working the points and creek mouths on a moving tide with live shrimp under popping corks. Both have been producing consistent inshore action when the water’s moving and boat pressure isn’t too heavy. Best artificial choices right now: – Topwater plugs at daybreak for trout and reds. – 3–4 inch paddletails and shrimp imitations in natural colors on light jig heads for working the creeks and docks. – Silver spoons and small diving plugs along the beach if you see bait getting nervous near the surface. Natural bait still rules in this heat: live shrimp, mullet, and mud minnows inshore; pogies, sardines, and squid offshore. Keep your leaders fluorocarbon and your presentations simple. That’s your local St. Augustine fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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 is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic Northeast Florida summer pattern setting up. Offshore, nearshore, and the river are all waking up early, then slowing once the sun gets high, so plan on beating the heat and the boat traffic. Around St. Augustine Inlet and the beaches, the morning incoming tide has been the sweet spot. Surf’s running light, with a gentle chop and scattered bait pods along the sandbars. Local beach anglers report steady whiting and a few pompano in the early hours, with sharks and the occasional redfish cruising the outer bar once the light comes up. Fresh dead shrimp on small circle hooks, Fishbites in sandflea or clam, and small sand fleas dug right in the wash are doing the work. Inshore, the ICW, Salt Run, and the flats around Vilano and Matanzas are alive at first light. The lower light and moving water are pushing finger mullet and glass minnows up on the edges, and that’s where the trout and redfish have been posted up. Folks fishing topwater early are getting blow‑ups from speckled trout and slot reds on walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or mullet patterns. Once the sun’s high, switching to soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads in new penny or natural brown has been putting keeper reds and a few flounder on the deck. The backwater creeks off the ICW are holding decent numbers of smaller reds and some sneaky nice drum around deeper bends and shell. Live shrimp or small blue crab chunks on a Carolina rig, pitched tight to the oysters, are getting bit. Just remember: light leader, quiet boat, and let that bait soak on the edges of the current. Offshore and nearshore, the reefs and wrecks out front have been giving up mixed bags. Boats running out to the local numbers in 60–90 feet are finding vermilion snapper, lane snapper, and the usual sea bass, with a few grouper mixed in when you drop bigger baits. Sardines, cigar minnows, and cut squid on double‑drop bottom rigs are standard. Closer in, nearshore structure has seen kingfish cruising through when the bait stacks up; slow‑trolled live pogies and ribbonfish are your best bet for a smoker. For boat anglers looking to bend a rod quickly, two hot spots to consider: the shell bars and drop‑offs just north of the Vilano Bridge on the ICW for morning trout and reds, and the Matanzas Inlet area, working the points and creek mouths on a moving tide with live shrimp under popping corks. Both have been producing consistent inshore action when the water’s moving and boat pressure isn’t too heavy. Best artificial choices right now: – Topwater plugs at daybreak for trout and reds. – 3–4 inch paddletails and shrimp imitations in natural colors on light jig heads for working the creeks and docks. – Silver spoons and small diving plugs along the beach if you see bait getting nervous near the surface. Natural bait still rules in this heat: live shrimp, mullet, and mud minnows inshore; pogies, sardines, and squid offshore. Keep your leaders fluorocarbon and your presentations simple. That’s your local St. Augustine fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

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St. Augustine Summer Bite: Beat the Heat and Catch Early Morning Trout, Reds, and Offshore Action

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How long is this episode of St Augustine Fishing Report Today?

This episode is 3 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 18, 2026.

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This is Artificial Lure with your St. Augustine fishing report. We’ve got a classic Northeast Florida summer pattern setting up. Offshore, nearshore, and the river are all waking up early, then slowing once the sun gets high, so plan on beating the...

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