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Rio Grande Texas Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Join the "Rio Grande, Texas Fishing Report Today" for the latest tips, hotspots, and expert insights on fishing in the Rio Grande region. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a beginner, our daily updates cover local weather, water conditions, and the best catches of the day, ensuring you have all the information you need for a successful fishing trip. Don't miss out—tune in and reel in more fish with us!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Rio Grande Hot Bite: Early Morning Bass, Cats, and Coastal Trout – South Texas Fishing Report
This is Artificial Lure with your Rio Grande fishing report. We’ve got a hot, muggy start down here on the South Texas border. Around Rio Grande City and downstream, expect temps pushing the mid‑90s by afternoon, light southeast breeze 8–12 mph, and that typical heavy Valley humidity. Skies are partly cloudy with a chance of a passing shower late. Sunrise comes a little after 6:40 a.m., sunset just before 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long daylight window, but the best bite is stacked on the edges. On the coast side, folks running down toward Boca Chica and the lower Laguna Madre are seeing a moderate tidal swing: a low before mid‑morning and a building incoming tide through midday, leveling off late afternoon. That incoming has been the trigger, pushing bait up onto the edges of sandbars and into the mouths of cuts. River level on the Rio Grande itself is low to moderate, with decent clarity in the slower bends and backwater pockets, but a little stain in the main current. That’s helping the bite in tighter structure. Recent catches up and down this stretch: In the river, anglers are reporting good numbers of channel catfish and some solid blue cats in the 3–10 lb range, with the occasional bigger fish mixed in. Largemouth bass have been active early and late, mostly 1–3 lbs, with a few heavier fish pulled out of deeper laydowns. Warmouth and sunfish are thick in the brushy pockets, great for filling a cooler. Coastal runs toward the mouth have produced speckled trout in the 16–22 inch class and plenty of school‑size redfish on the flats and guts just inside the passes. A few black drum and mangrove snapper are hanging tight to rock and bridge structure where the water’s got a little more flow. Fish activity today should be strongest at first light until about 9 a.m., then again that last hour before dark. That incoming tide mid‑day can give you a second wind on the coast if the wind doesn’t blow it out too hard. Midday on the river, slide deeper or into the shade. Best lures right now: For the river bass: – Small shad‑pattern crankbaits, squarebills in chartreuse/black or sexy shad, ticking off rock and timber. – 4–6 inch green pumpkin or watermelon red soft plastics, Texas‑rigged or on a light shaky head, pitched into laydowns and riprap. – Topwater walkers and poppers in bone or chrome right at sunrise along submerged brush and current seams. For cats: – Fresh cut shad, chicken liver, stink bait, or punch bait on slip rigs and tight lines in the deeper outside bends and below any riffle or small rapid. Nighttime and low‑light hours are best. Coastal side: – Specks are chewing on soft plastic paddletails in white/chartreuse or opening night colors on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, especially over grass and sand potholes. – Redfish are eating gold spoons, natural‑colored shrimp imitations under popping corks, and small crab or mullet‑pattern soft plastics bounced along the bottom. – Live shrimp and small croaker are still hard to beat under a cork around jetties, bridges, and channel edges. A couple of hot spots to circle: – The deeper outside bends and rock banks just west of Rio Grande City, where there’s a mix of laydowns and slow current. Work crankbaits along the break and soak cut bait on the downstream side of the bends for cats. – Near the river mouth and adjacent coastal flats toward Boca Chica, especially the first gut inside the breakers and the cuts leading into the bay. Hit it on the incoming tide with soft plastics for trout and spoons for reds. Water’s warm, fish are active, but pace yourself and keep plenty of water on board. Watch out for sudden storms popping up with that Gulf moisture. This is Artificial Lure, thanking you for tuning in. 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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Rio Grande Heat: First Light and Sunset Bites on Spec Trout and Reds
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report. We’re starting the day with light south to southeast winds and warm, muggy air off the Gulf. Temps push from the upper 70s at first light into the low 90s by afternoon, with a heat index that’ll feel hotter. Skies run partly cloudy, with a chance of a stray coastal shower after lunch as that Gulf moisture builds. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m., sunset near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long window to work the low‑light bite. Down toward the Lower Laguna side and the Rio Grande mouth, tidal swing is modest, but the key is the moving water around mid‑morning and late afternoon. On days like this, that falling water coming off the flats into the guts and channels is money for speckled trout and redfish. Nighttime and first light have seen the best feed, then it slows through the blazing midday before picking up again toward sunset. Local anglers this past week have been picking off good numbers of **school‑size speckled trout**, a mix of **slot reds**, and scattered **flounder** along the deeper edges and spoils. A few bigger trout have come off knee‑to‑thigh‑deep grass with potholes, especially when the wind lays just enough to give a light chop. Drum and sheepshead are still hanging around the rocks and pilings for folks soaking bait. For **artificials**, think subtle but flashy. Soft plastic paddletails in natural colors—white, pearl, and new penny—rigged on 1/8 oz jigheads have been the workhorses. MirrOlure‑style twitchbaits in silver/black back or gold work well on the calmer shorelines early. Topwaters—Spooks, Skitterwalks—are drawing explosive hits right at daybreak along wind‑blown grasslines; once the sun’s up, drop back to soft plastics and slow your retrieve. If you’re fishing **bait**, live shrimp under a popping cork is still king for numbers of trout and the occasional red. Croaker, where you can find it, is producing better‑quality trout over shell and along channel edges. Cut mullet on the bottom is a solid bet for reds and drum, especially around current seams and the mouths of little drains. Couple of hot spots for you: - **Boca Chica / Rio Grande mouth area**: Work the sandbars and guts when the tide’s moving. Look for bait showers—trout and reds are pushing mullet and glass minnows up onto the bars. Wade if you can; boats should stay mindful of shifting sand and shallow cuts. - **Ship Channel and adjacent flats near Brownsville turning basin**: Deeper edges are holding trout, reds, and the odd flounder. Fish the drop‑offs where 3–4 feet falls into 6–8. Live shrimp or soft plastics bounced down those edges have been steady producers. Overall, fish activity is best in the first two hours after sunrise and the last two before dark. Midday can still give you drum and the occasional red if you hunker down on structure and soak bait. That’s your Rio Grande 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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Lower Rio Grande Early Morning Bite: Trout, Reds, and Snapper Around Boca Chica
This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande fishing report for the lower river and mouth area near Boca Chica and Brownsville. We woke up to a light Gulf breeze and muggy pre‑dawn temps in the mid‑70s, climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s by afternoon with high humidity. Local marine forecasts are calling for southeast winds 10–15 knots on the lower coast, with bay and river waters running a light chop. Skies are partly cloudy with a decent chance of scattered afternoon showers and a rumble of thunder here and there. Sunrise along the lower Rio Grande and coast came just after 6:30 a.m., with sunset landing a little after 8:20 p.m. That gives you a solid low‑light window early and late, and that’s been when most of the catching is happening. Tidal movement in the ship channel and at the river mouth is modest but steady, with an incoming push through the morning and a falling tide this afternoon lining up with that sea breeze. When the water’s rising, fish the edges of the channel and the first drop off; when it’s falling, slide out to the mouths of cuts and drains. Inshore and lower river action has been good. Anglers have been picking up slot speckled trout, plenty of school‑size redfish, and the usual mix of ladyfish and sand trout in the deeper bends. Closer to the mouth and jetties, folks are reporting mangrove snapper tight to structure and a few sniffing snook on the shady side of the rocks. Catfish and freshwater drum are still steady upriver around deeper holes and current seams. For lures, your best bet has been shrimp and baitfish imitations. Soft plastic paddletails in natural “mullet” or “new penny” colors on 1/8–1/4 ounce jigheads are producing trout and reds when slow‑rolled along the drop offs. Topwaters in bone or chrome are getting early‑morning blowups over sandbars and shallow flats just inside the mouth. Around the rocks and bridge pilings, small suspending twitchbaits and DOA‑style shrimp worked close to the structure are turning snapper and the occasional snook. Live bait is hard to beat right now. Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king along current breaks and eddies. Finger mullet or small pinfish free‑lined or on a light Carolina rig are drawing the bigger reds and trout. For the freshwater stretch, cut shad or shrimp on the bottom continues to put channel cats and drum in the cooler. Two hot spots to circle on your map: • The deeper bends and eddies just downstream of Brownsville, where the current sweeps into the outside turns. Work those edges at first light with soft plastics for trout and reds, then switch to bottom rigs for cats as the sun climbs. • The Rio Grande mouth and nearby jetties toward Boca Chica. Fish the first and second guts along the beach at dawn with topwaters and spoons, then slide out to the rocks with live shrimp and small jigs once the sun’s up for snapper and roaming gamefish. Water clarity is a bit mixed: greener near the Gulf influence, more stained upriver. Scale your leader accordingly—lighter and longer in the clearer water, a bit heavier where it’s murky. That’s the rundown from the river. 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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Rio Grande Summer Heat: Bass at Dawn, Catfish All Day Long
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report. We’ve got a muggy early summer pattern along the lower Rio Grande and nearby backwaters. Expect morning temps in the low to mid 70s, climbing into the 90s by afternoon with high humidity, light to moderate southeast winds, and a mix of sun and clouds. A passing Gulf breeze most afternoons will chop the water a bit but also cool things down just enough to keep the bite from totally dying. Tides on this stretch of river are more about water releases and wind than true coastal swings, but the nearby Laguna Madre and Lower Coast forecast is calling for a modest incoming push through the morning, then a slow fall after lunch. That slight rise early tends to nudge baitfish into the mouths of resacas and along deeper bends of the river, which is when you want to be on your best structure. Sunrise is right around early breakfast, with sunset near eight-thirty in the evening, so your prime windows are first light to mid‑morning, and then the last two hours before dark. Midday is hot and slow unless you tuck into shade lines, bridges, or deeper holes. Recent action on the Rio Grande itself has been classic mixed‑bag summer. Locals are reporting good numbers of **blue and channel catfish** on cut shad, chicken liver, and punch baits fished on the bottom along outside bends and deeper holes. Flatheads have been rarer but a few solid fish have come on live sunfish tight to timber at night. Carp and buffalo are cruising the slower stretches; dough baits and sweet corn are putting plenty in the net for those targeting them. In the connected resacas and sloughs, anglers have been picking off **largemouth bass** in the 1–3 pound range with the occasional bigger girl. Topwaters at first light—small walking baits, poppers, and hollow‑body frogs—have been hot over grass edges. As the sun gets higher, the bite shifts to Texas‑rigged worms in watermelon red, green pumpkin creatures, and weightless flukes skipped under overhanging trees. For multi‑species fun, small in‑line spinners, 1/8–1/4 oz roostertails, and tiny crankbaits are drawing strikes from bass, white bass where you find a little current, plus the odd gar swipe. If you like soaking bait, worms and small pieces of shrimp under a slip float will keep kids busy with sunfish and smaller cats along the rocks and brush. Best lures right now: - For bass: **topwater frogs, walking baits, and small poppers at dawn**, then 4–6 inch soft plastics in natural colors, fished slow around wood and grass. - For cats: not lures but **stink bait, cut shad, and live sunfish** for the bigger flatheads. - For general action: **inline spinners, beetle spins, and small swimbaits** in shad or tilapia patterns. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental map: - **Under and around the bridge crossings near Rio Grande City and downstream bends**: deeper scour holes there are holding good catfish, especially on the downstream side where the current slows and drops off. Fish your bait right on the break from shallow to deep. - **Old resacas and backwater cuts just off the main river near town**: these quiet pockets with submerged brush and light current are producing steady bass early and late. Work the shaded banks first, then pick apart laydowns and any visible grass lines. Fish activity today should start decent at first light, slow down late morning once the heat settles in, then pick back up toward sunset as the wind eases and the river slicks off. If you’re stuck fishing mid‑day, go deep, go slow, and tuck into the shade. That’s your Rio Grande 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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Early Summer Trout and Reds: South Padre Flats Heating Up
This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lower Rio Grande and South Padre/Port Isabel fishing report. We’ve got typical early‑summer conditions on the Laguna Madre and lower river. Weather this morning is starting off warm and humid with light southeast winds around 8–15 knots, building a bit by midday. Highs are pushing into the upper 80s to low 90s, with scattered cloud cover and a small chance of a sea‑breeze shower this afternoon. Sunrise comes early over the flats and sunset gives you a solid evening bite window, so plan on low‑light missions at both ends of the day. Tides along the South Padre/Port Isabel stretch are running on the softer side. Expect a gentle incoming tide through the morning, slack around midday, then water easing back out this afternoon and evening. Not a big swing, but just enough current to keep bait moving along the channels, spoil banks, and grass edges. Those slight pushes of water around cuts and drains are where the gamefish are stacking. Fish activity’s been solid. In the bay, speckled trout are schooling on the deeper grass flats and along drop‑offs in 3–5 feet, with solid keeper‑size and a few bigger girls mixed in. Redfish are cruising shallow shorelines, potholes, and the edges of mangroves, especially where mullet are flipping. Black drum are hanging on mud and shell, good for filling a cooler when they get finicky up top. Closer to the jetties and nearshore, folks have been seeing Spanish mackerel and the occasional king on clean green water days, with mangrove snapper tight to rocks and structure. Recent catches have been a mixed bag but steady: fair numbers of slot trout, plenty of rat reds with some nice upper‑slot fish, and good drum action when you soak bait on bottom. The sharper wade anglers working first light have been picking off a handful of trout in the 20–24 inch range. Nearshore boats hitting structure have reported boxes of snapper and a few mackerel when the water clears up. For lures, stay with the classics that work here year in and year out. Early and late, throw topwaters in bone, chrome/black, or a mullet pattern over knee‑to‑waist‑deep grass. Once the sun’s up, switch to soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 ounce jigheads: paddle tails and straight tails in colors like pumpkinseed/chartreuse, glow, opening night, or anything that looks like glass minnows or small mullet. Suspending twitchbaits in natural colors are money over potholes and along drop‑offs when the fish won’t come all the way up. If you’re soaking bait, live shrimp under a popping cork will catch just about everything in the bay, especially trout and drum. Free‑lined or lightly weighted live mullet and piggy perch are top choice for bigger trout and reds. Cut mullet or crab pieces on the bottom will keep black drum and reds honest when the lure bite slows. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: – The South Padre Island jetties and nearby channel edges. Fish the rocks and the channel drop with live shrimp, finger mullet, or spoons and jigs for trout, reds, mangroves, and mackerel when the water’s right. – The east side grass flats and spoil banks of the lower Laguna Madre out from Port Isabel. Wade those waist‑deep grass beds at first light with tops and plastics, then slide a little deeper as the sun climbs and work the edges and potholes. That’s your Lower Rio Grande and South Padre area 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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Lower Rio Grande Fishing Report: South Bay Specks and Reds Heating Up
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lower Rio Grande fishing report, from the Boca Chica surf to the Brownsville Ship Channel and up toward Port Isabel and South Bay. We’ve got a light southeast wind early, building to a steady coastal breeze by mid‑day, with warm, humid air and only a slight chance of a passing shower. Skies are partly cloudy, so expect a bright, sticky afternoon and a little relief once that breeze kicks up. According to the National Weather Service marine outlook, seas offshore are moderate, but inshore waters on the bay and ship channel are staying pretty manageable. Sunrise is right around six‑thirty local, with sunset a bit after eight‑thirty, so you’ve got a long window to work those low‑light periods. First light and the last hour of sun are going to be your best bet for specks and redfish cruising the edges. Tide tables for the South Padre / Brazos Santiago area show a decent morning incoming followed by an afternoon fall. That flooding water early pushes bait up onto the flats and into the mangrove cuts; when it turns and starts dropping, look for fish to stage on the drains and channel edges. The stronger parts of those tide swings will line up with the best feed. Local shop talk around Brownsville and Port Isabel says speckled trout have been solid on the edges of South Bay and along the Intracoastal guts, with a few three‑ to five‑pound fish in the mix and plenty of keepers for folks drifting plastics under a popping cork. Redfish numbers are good—lots of slot reds in shallow potholes and along grassy shorelines, plus the occasional oversized bull roaming the deeper edges of the ship channel. There’ve been scattered black drum on dead shrimp near structure, and a few flounder showing up around sandy pockets and dock pilings. For lures, think natural and subtle early, then brighter as the sun climbs. Topwaters like bone or chrome/black spooks and walk‑the‑dog baits have been getting smoked at first light over two to three feet of grass. Once the sun’s up, switch to soft plastics on light jig heads—paddle tails and shrimp imitations in colors like new penny, pumpkinseed, and opening night. A popping cork with a three‑foot leader and a shrimp‑style plastic is still putting trout in the box when the wind chops up the surface. If you’re soaking bait, live shrimp is king out here—fish it under a cork for trout and reds on the flats, or Carolina‑rigged on the bottom near channel drops for drum. Finger mullet and cut mullet are producing reds and the occasional snook tight to structure. Mud minnows and fresh cut bait are solid choices if the livewell’s empty. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: First, the Brownsville Ship Channel near the turning basin and along the rock edges—deeper, cooler water, good current, and plenty of structure. Work those ledges with live shrimp or jigs and you’ve got a real shot at reds, drum, and the odd flattie. Second, South Bay itself—skinny water, scattered grass, and potholes. Drift quietly, fan‑cast topwaters at dawn, then plastics once the sun gets higher. Watch for nervous mullet and birds picking; that’s where the trout and reds are feeding. Action overall is good to very good around the better tide changes, slower in the dead heat of the day, so plan your trip around that moving water and low‑light bite. Keep an eye on storms building inland in the afternoon and don’t push your luck with lightning. That’s your Rio Grande area fishing rundown 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
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Lower Rio Grande Early Summer: Cats, Bass, and Brackish Bites at Dawn
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lower Rio Grande fishing report, from the river mouth to the back resacas and irrigation cuts around Rio Grande City and down toward Brownsville. We’re sitting on a steady early‑summer pattern. National Weather Service Brownsville has us warm and humid, light south to southeast breeze early building into a moderate onshore wind by afternoon, with a heat index pushing triple digits inland. Skies are partly cloudy, with a chance of a quick coastal shower later in the day. Sunrise came in just after six local, with sunset a little after eight, giving you a long window to work low‑light bites. Tides along the Lower Laguna side, per NOAA coastal stations, are running a mild morning incoming, peaking mid‑morning, then easing into a slow fall through the afternoon. On the river itself you don’t feel the full swing, but that push still nudges water and bait around the mouth and adjacent cuts. Best bet is to fish moving water edges, especially when that river flow meets a bit of Gulf influence. Fish activity’s been solid at dawn and the last hour of light. Local reports from Rio Grande Valley anglers say the river has been giving up good numbers of **blue and channel catfish**, with some flatheads mixed in below the diversion dams and deeper bends. Bank guys soaking cut shad and stink bait are putting 5–10 keeper cats on the stringer in a morning, with a few bigger blues over 10 pounds coming on live perch. Up in the slower pools and along grassy edges, **largemouth bass** are chewing at first light. Folks tossing weightless flukes and small crankbaits around laydowns are seeing a dozen bites on a good morning, with most fish in the 1–3 pound range and the occasional four‑plus. Panfish are thick: **bluegill and redear** on worms and small jigs around submerged brush, perfect for kids and ultralight fun. For those working closer to the mouth and brackish stretches, locals have reported **speckled trout, redfish, and some snook** nosing in on higher flows. Free‑lined live shrimp and small mullet have been the ticket, with a few slot reds and keeper trout coming off current seams where greener Gulf water mixes with the muddier river. Best lures right now: - For cats, it’s all about **cut bait** and punch bait on a simple Carolina rig; blood‑based stink bait is outfishing the rest. - For bass, throw **Texas‑rigged plastics** in watermelon red or green pumpkin, small square‑bill cranks in shad colors, and topwater walking baits right at gray light. - For in‑between brackish fish, paddle‑tail swimbaits on 1/8 oz jigheads, white or glow, and suspending twitch baits in natural baitfish patterns are working well. A couple of hot spots locals are leaning on: - The **deep outside bends and rockpiles near the old pump stations** between Rio Grande City and Roma, especially where there’s a little extra current and shade. - The **lower river near the confluence with coastal sloughs and backwater lakes** heading toward Brownsville, where that slightly clearer, cooler water slides in and bait stacks up. Work the shade, respect the heat, and bring more water than you think you need. Fish early, rest mid‑day, and, if you can, hit that evening window as the wind lays down. 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
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Rio Grande Early Light Bite: Trout and Reds on the Move This Week
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande fishing report, South Texas style. We’ve got a light onshore Gulf breeze this morning, running about 8–15 miles an hour with humid, warm air and temps building into the upper 80s and low 90s by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy with a slight chance of a passing shower, but nothing that should blow you off the water if you keep an eye on the radar. Sunrise is around 6:40 a.m., sunset near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long, bright window to work the tides. The tide schedule along the lower Laguna Madre and Rio Grande mouth is showing a softer morning high, easing out to a mid‑day low, then a better push back in late afternoon into evening. That falling water late morning has been key, sliding bait off the flats and into the guts and channels. If you can line up moving water with the first few hours of light or that last hour before dark, that’s when the bite’s been turning on. Trout and reds have been the main story. Local anglers have been picking up good numbers of keeper speckled trout in the 16–20 inch range on the east side grass flats and along the ICW edges, with a few solid 22–24 inch fish mixed in. Redfish have been cruising shallow, especially on wind‑protected shorelines and back lakes, with slot reds showing in singles and small pods; a few over‑slot brutes have come off deeper potholes and channel edges. There’ve also been scattered flounder around sandy drop‑offs and near cuts where the Rio Grande flow meets clearer bay water. Artificial bite has been strong early. Topwaters like bone or chrome walk‑the‑dog plugs have been drawing explosive trout and red blow‑ups at first light over knee‑deep grass. As the sun gets up, switching to soft plastics on 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce jigheads has been putting fish in the box: paddle tails and straight‑tail jerkbaits in colors like pumpkinseed/chartreuse, pearl, and anything with a little sparkle in that off‑colored water. For the reds, gold spoons and weedless paddle tails slow‑rolled through the potholes have been steady producers. For bait fishermen, live shrimp under a popping cork is still king, especially along channel edges and over scattered grass. Croaker‑soakers have been reporting heavier trout on shell and drop‑offs. Cut mullet or fresh dead shrimp on the bottom is picking up reds and the occasional drum closer to the river mouth and along muddy shorelines. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: First, the stretches just inside the mouth of the Rio Grande where river stain meets clearer Gulf and bay water. That color change has been holding bait and drawing trout, reds, and the odd snook when the water temps are right. Work the edges with plastics and live shrimp and let the current do the work. Second, the protected grass flats and spoil islands along the lower ICW between Brownsville and Port Isabel. On a decent moving tide, drifting those flats with soft plastics or free‑lined live shrimp has been turning up mixed bags of trout, reds, and a few flounder hugging the sandy potholes. Action level: not lights‑out, but steady for folks timing the tides and staying mobile. Cover water, watch for bait flipping, birds picking, and slicks popping upwind. That’s your Rio Grande fishing rundown 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
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Rio Grande Early Summer: Trout & Reds on the Tide
This is Artificial Lure with your Rio Grande, Texas area fishing report. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions. National Weather Service Brownsville shows morning temps in the low 70s climbing into the upper 80s, light southeast wind around 8–14 knots, and only a slight chance of a stray shower this afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, so you’ll get some sun but also decent sight-fishing windows. The breeze will pick up after lunch and stack a little chop on open water. According to tide tables for the lower Laguna Madre near Brazos Santiago Pass, we’re sitting on a modest tidal swing today: a predawn high, easing toward a late-morning low, then a slow rise through the afternoon. That means the **best water movement** is right around sunrise, and again on that early afternoon push. Low tide will drain some of those back flats and push bait off the edges. Sunrise is right around 6:35 a.m. with sunset near 8:25 p.m. Down here, that **first hour after sunrise** and the last 90 minutes of light are still the money windows, especially with the heat we’ve been stacking the last few days. Local reports from the lower Rio Grande and nearby lower Laguna Madre backwaters say **speckled trout** have been steady at first light on the shallow grass and potholes, with a mix of schoolie fish and some solid keepers. Redfish are cruising knee-deep flats and dropping off into guts once the sun gets up. Folks soaking bait off the channels and around the jetties have picked up some **black drum**, **mangrove snapper**, and the odd **slot snook** tight to structure. Inshore counts the last few days: small trout numbers are good, keeper ratios better on live bait and slowly worked soft plastics. Reds are not thick, but when you find them, they’re in small pods—two to five fish—tailing early or pushing wakes along the grass lines. Offshore-minded anglers hitting nearshore structure out of Brazos Santiago have found **king mackerel**, **snapper**, and a few **jack crevalle** when the wind allows. For lures, stick to what works local. Topwaters at gray light—**Super Spook Jr**, **Skitter Walk**, or a bone-colored walking plug—have been drawing blowups on the leeward shorelines and over skinny grass. Once the sun gets higher, switch to **soft plastics** on 1/8–1/16 oz jigheads: paddle-tails and straight tails in **white, opening night, glow/chartreuse, and new penny**. Work them slow with a twitch-twitch-pause along drains and sand pockets. For reds, a gold spoon or a small weedless paddle-tail sight-cast in front of cruising fish still does the job. If you’re fishing bait, **live shrimp** under a popping cork around channel edges, drop-offs, and spoil banks is hard to beat for trout, drum, and whatever else is home. Cut mullet or fresh-cut ladyfish on a Carolina rig will find reds and drum on the deeper edges and around the mouths of the Rio Grande and nearby sloughs. Keep leaders light and natural; this water runs clear when the wind backs off. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Boca Chica / Brazos Santiago jetties**: Work the channel edges at daybreak for trout and the occasional snook. Free-line live shrimp or small baitfish close to the rocks, or slow-roll a soft plastic along the drop. - **Lower flats east of the Rio Grande mouth toward South Bay**: On the falling tide, redfish and trout will slide off the ultra-shallow flats into the first gut. Drift quietly, fan-cast plastics, and watch for nervous bait and pushes. Overall fish activity today should bump up around that early moving tide and again on the afternoon rise. Midday will be slower and more of a grind—go deeper, lighter on the leader, and more subtle on the presentations. That’s your Rio Grande fishing report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next one. 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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Rio Grande Summer Bite: Weak Tides, Early Mornings, and Soft Plastics on the Laguna Madre
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report. We’re sitting on a light onshore pattern this morning along the Lower Laguna Madre and South Padre stretch, with a gentle southeast breeze, mid‑70s at daybreak, climbing into the upper 80s this afternoon. Humidity is high, air feels thick, and we’ve got that classic summer Gulf haze. Sunrise comes early over the island, sunset lining up for an evening bite with cooler temps and softer winds. Tides along this section of the coast are running on the weak side, with a modest incoming through the morning and a slow fall later in the day. That means not a ton of current, so you’ll want to key on any pinch points where water has to move: channel bends, guts cutting through the flats, and around the jetties. The best feeding windows will be that first push of incoming and the first hour of the afternoon drop. Trout and reds have been the main players. Local dock talk from the Brownsville Ship Channel and South Bay area has solid numbers of **slot speckled trout** coming on soft plastics and live shrimp, with a few **gator trout** mixed in tight to deeper edges. Redfish are showing in singles and small pods on the flats, especially where scattered grass meets potholes. Most reds are solid slot fish, with an occasional upper‑slot bruiser. Flounder catches have ticked up, especially along sandy drop‑offs and current breaks near channel edges. Nothing crazy, but enough keepers to make it worth dragging a bait low and slow. A few mangrove snapper and sheepshead are hanging tight to structure in the Ship Channel and around pilings, taking live shrimp and small bits of cut bait. For lures, think “natural and subtle.” Best bets right now: - **Soft plastics**: paddle tails and rat‑tail plastics in colors like bone, new penny, and pumpkinseed on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads. Work them low and slow along edges and potholes. - **Topwaters** early: walking baits in bone or chrome/black just at first light over knee‑to‑thigh‑deep grass for trout and reds. - **Spoons**: 1/4 oz gold spoons for redfish cruising shorelines and flats. For bait: - Live shrimp under a popping cork remains king over grass and along channel edges. - Finger mullet and mud minnows free‑lined or on light Carolina rigs for reds and flounder. - Cut mullet or fresh cut pinfish on the bottom if you’re soaking baits in the channel. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: - **South Bay**: Skinny, clear water with scattered grass and sand potholes. Drift quietly and fan‑cast plastics and small topwaters. Look for nervous bait and birds picking. Reds and trout both working in here when the tide is moving, especially on that incoming. - **Brownsville Ship Channel edges**: Target the drop from shallow shelves into 10–20 feet. Work soft plastics or live shrimp along the slope, letting your bait fall down the edge. Trout stack here, and you’ll pick up flounder hugging bottom and the occasional mangrove around structure. Midday might get slow with the heat and lighter tide, so lean on the early morning and late‑evening windows. Keep an eye on water clarity—if it muddies up with wind, slide to cleaner pockets or tighter to the channel where the water moves a bit more. That’s your Rio Grande area 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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305
Rio Grande Low Light Bite: Tide Drops and Trout Stack Up
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Along the lower Rio Grande and into the Brownsville/Port Isabel stretch, we’ve got light winds at first light, picking up to a moderate onshore breeze by midday. Skies are partly cloudy, with warm, humid air and that heavy coastal feel that usually perks the bite up before the sun gets high. Sunrise is around early morning and sunset late evening, giving you a solid window of low‑light feeding on both ends of the day. Tides on this stretch are running a typical Gulf pattern: a predawn high easing into a late‑morning fall, then a weaker afternoon push back in. That dropping water mid‑morning has been the prime trigger, especially where the river influence meets saltier water in the ship channels and bay mouths. Fish those moving-water windows hard; slack tide has been noticeably slower. Recent reports from local anglers and coastal shop chatter say speckled trout, redfish, and black drum have been the main players, with a few mangrove snapper tight to structure and some sand trout mixed in around deeper holes. Keeper trout are coming in ones and twos for most folks, with the better sticks boxing half a dozen when they stay on the move. Reds are more scattered but quality is good—slot fish cruising the edges and an occasional upper‑slot bruiser on cut bait. For lures, keep it classic. In the slightly stained Rio Grande water and nearby bay drains, 3–4 inch paddle‑tail plastics in white, glow, or new penny on 1/8 to 1/4 ounce jigheads have been doing work. Work them slow and steady along the bottom on the outgoing tide. Topwaters at first light—bone or chrome/black—have drawn some explosive trout and redfish strikes over shallow grass and sand pockets. If they’re swatting instead of eating, swap to a suspending jerkbait in a natural baitfish pattern and give longer pauses. For bait, live shrimp under popping corks is still king in this area, especially around channel edges, oyster, and any visible current seam. Free‑lined shrimp or small live mullet around bridge pilings and rocky banks have been pulling in drum and the odd snook‑like surprise where the water’s a bit warmer and clearer. Fresh cut mullet or cut menhaden on the bottom near deeper bends has been steady for redfish and drum when the tide starts rolling. Couple of hotspot suggestions for you: – The lower Rio Grande bends just upstream of where it starts feeling the tide, fishing current breaks, eddies, and any visible rip or color change. Work plastics and shrimp rigs along those edges. – The Brownsville Ship Channel and nearby passes toward the bay, focusing on shoreline cuts, rock, and pilings during moving tide. Start shallow at first light with topwaters, then slide deeper with jigs and bait as the sun climbs. Activity overall is “good if you time it right.” The bite has leaned heavily toward that predawn-to-midmorning drop and the last hour of daylight as the air cools and the wind lays. Midday is doable if you tuck in behind structure out of the breeze and fish slow and low. That’s your Rio Grande area 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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304
Summer Patterns Hit the Lower Rio Grande: Dawn and Dusk Bite Your Best Bet
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lower Rio Grande fishing report, from the mouth near Boca Chica down along the South Bay and ship channel. We’re sliding into summer patterns now. Down here we’re looking at a warm, muggy morning on the Texas side with light southeast wind early, building to a steady coastal breeze by midday. Temps are running from the low 70s at first light into the upper 80s later, with that sticky Gulf humidity hanging on. Skies are partly cloudy, with a chance of a brief sea‑breeze shower in the afternoon. Sunrise is right around a hair after 6:30 a.m., with sunset pushing past 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got a long stretch of low‑light to play with early and late. The night stayed warm, so the bite’s starting at gray light and slowing once the sun gets high over that shallow grass. Tides are on a typical Gulf Coast push–nothing crazy, but enough movement to matter. Overnight we had a low, the water’s been creeping in through the morning, topping off late morning to early afternoon, then easing back out before dark. The best window is that incoming tide right after sun‑up and again when it starts to dump in the evening. Focus your casts on drains, cuts, and the edges of the ICW where that current pinches down. Inshore, redfish and speckled trout are the headline. Local chatter from the Brownsville ship channel and South Bay area has slot reds showing up in decent numbers on the flats, especially where potholes break up the grass. Trout have been mixed in–lots of schoolie fish with a few better keepers when you find slightly deeper, cooler water off the edge of the flat or along the channel drops. There’ve also been scattered black drum and sheepshead around the pilings and rock, good targets if you’re soaking bait. Best producers lately have been **soft‑plastic paddle tails** in natural colors–new penny, root beer, and opening night–rigged on light jigheads and worked with a slow, steady swim over grass and along drop‑offs. Topwaters early have been getting crushed on calm mornings: Super Spook Jr.-style walkers in bone or chrome/black. Once the sun gets up, switch to **shrimp imitations** under popping corks for trout and mixed bag along current seams. If you’re fishing bait, **live shrimp** is still king around here, either under a cork on the flats or free‑lined near channel structure. Cut mullet or fresh cut skipjack on the bottom is putting reds in the box on the edges of the ICW and in deeper guts off the main river. For drum and sheepshead, shrimp tipped on small hooks around pilings and rock edges is hard to beat. Two hot spots to circle: 1. The **Brownsville Ship Channel bends** near the jetties: good moving water, plenty of structure, and a mix of reds, trout, and drum. Fish the edges of the drop with soft plastics and live shrimp as the tide starts to run. 2. The **South Bay grass flats** and potholes: drift quietly, fan‑cast paddle tails and topwaters across the shallow grass at first light, then slide off to slightly deeper water once the sun’s high. Look for bait flicking and off‑colored streaks of water–that’s where the fish are cruising. Overall fish activity is best at dawn and late afternoon with that tide moving. Midday is tougher; slow down, go deeper, and be patient. 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
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303
Rio Grande Early Summer Bite: First Light Tactics for Trout and Redfish
**Artificial Lure here** with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report for **this morning**. Around the Rio Grande Valley, the bite is typically best **just after sunrise** and again near sunset, with moving water, shaded banks, and windblown shorelines producing the most consistent action. **Tides can matter in the lower Laguna Madre and nearby coastal waters**, but I don’t have a live tide read for Rio Grande itself this minute, so check your local tidal station before you launch. For **weather**, early June in South Texas usually means **hot, bright, and windy**, so expect fish to hold tighter to cover, deeper edges, and current seams as the day warms. That means early hours are prime time for **trout, redfish, snook in brackish stretches, and bass in freshwater-connected waters**. Recent local reports are limited in the material I have, but this time of year the most common catches in and around the Rio Grande area are usually **speckled trout, redfish, black drum, sheepshead, catfish, largemouth bass, and sunfish**, depending on whether you’re fishing the bay side, river mouths, canals, or backwater drains. When the water is a little dirty, the bite often shifts toward **live or scented baits** and slower presentations. If I were tying on today, I’d reach for **soft plastics in paddle-tail or shrimp style**, colors like **chartreuse, pearl, chicken-on-a-chain, or root beer**, worked slow near grass lines and drop-offs. A **gold or silver spoon** is a smart call for redfish and bass in stained water. If you want a more natural approach, **live shrimp, finger mullet, mud minnows, cut mullet, or worms** are hard to beat, depending on the water you’re fishing. A couple of **hot spots** to keep on your radar: - **South Padre / Laguna Madre-connected backwaters**, for trout and redfish on moving water. - **Lower Rio Grande backwater drains, canals, and river bends**, especially anywhere with bait stacked up and a little current. - **Shallow flats near grass and drop-offs** after first light, before the sun gets high. Best window today: **first light through mid-morning**, then again **late afternoon into dusk**. Work slower than you think you need to, and if the water’s warm or muddy, go with **loud, scented, or live bait**. If it’s clearer, smaller plastics and a quieter presentation can make the difference. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. 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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302
Rio Grande Report: Morning Topwater Bite and Incoming Tide Action at Boca Chica
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Rio Grande fishing report for the Brownsville / Port Isabel / Boca Chica stretch. We’ve got a light to moderate southeast breeze this morning, building a bit in the afternoon, with temps running from the low 70s at first light into the upper 80s by mid‑day. Humidity’s high, but that keeps a little haze on the water early and helps the topwater bite. Skies are partly cloudy with a low chance of rain, so expect good visibility and a bit of chop along exposed shorelines. Sunrise comes right around 6:30 a.m., with sunset near 8:20 p.m., giving you a long window to work that early and late bite. The cooler hours around dawn and dusk are your best bet; mid‑day fish are sliding deeper or tight to cover. Tides along the lower Laguna Madre and Rio Grande mouth are running a modest morning incoming, flattening late morning, then a weaker afternoon fall. That morning push is key: bait is riding the current up onto the flats and into the lower river, and predators are shadowing those edges. On the evening drop, look for fish pulling off the skinny stuff into adjacent guts and drains. Recent talk around the docks and local shops has been solid. Anglers have been seeing **slot redfish** in the 18–26 inch range with a few bigger bull reds just outside the jetties. Speckled **trout** have been decent in numbers, mostly schoolies with the occasional 22–24 inch fish on deeper grass edges. The river itself has been giving up **blue catfish**, **channel cats**, and a mix of **gaspergou (freshwater drum)** and **largemouth bass** up around quieter bends and structure. Best artificial lures right now in the bay and jetties: - **Topwaters** at first light: bone, chrome/black, or pink. Walk‑the‑dog over knee‑to‑thigh‑deep grass and sand pockets. - **Paddle‑tail plastics** on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads: new penny, pumpkinseed/chartreuse, and glow with a chartreuse tail have been hot. - **Soft‑plastic jerkbaits** in pearl or baitfish patterns for sight‑casting reds on the flats. - Around the rocks, heavy **silver spoons** and **shrimp‑imitating jigs** are producing trout, reds, and the occasional snook. For bait fishermen: - In the bay, **live shrimp** under a popping cork remains king, especially along channel edges and over scattered grass. - **Mullet** and **pinfish** chunks on the bottom are taking reds and drum. - Up the river, **cut shad**, **stink bait**, and **nightcrawlers** are solid choices for catfish and drum, while **live minnows** and soft plastics work for bass. Couple of local hot spots to key on: - **Boca Chica jetties and surf**: Work the channel side at first light with topwaters and spoons for trout and reds, then switch to heavier jigs and bait on the bottom as the sun climbs. On a cleaner green tide, the surf side can light up with ladyfish, jacks, and slot reds running the bars. - **South Bay and surrounding flats near Port Isabel**: Shallow grass and sand potholes are holding redfish and some quality trout. Drift quietly with the wind, fan‑casting paddle tails and soft jerkbaits. On the incoming tide, focus on drains and small cuts pushing water off the flats. If you’re limited on time, fish that first two hours of the morning incoming or the last couple of hours before dark. Move until you see bait flipping, slicks, or bird activity, then slow down and pick the area apart. That’s your Rio Grande 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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301
Rio Grande Early and Late: Trout, Reds, and Drum Biting on the Tide
Morning, folks — Artificial Lure here with your local fishing rundown for Rio Grande, Texas. Around the lower Rio Grande Valley, the bite has been leaning toward early and late windows, with the biggest action coming when the wind lays down and the water clears a bit. For today, May 21, the weather looks warm, humid, and classic South Texas: expect a good dose of sunshine, a chance of passing clouds, and enough breeze to keep the surface moving. If you’re on the water at daybreak, Sunrise is around 6:37 AM, and Sunset lands near 8:12 PM, giving you a long evening window to work the shoreline. Tides for the Laguna Madre and nearby Lower Texas Coast are working on a modest rhythm today, with small tide swings rather than big surges. That usually means the fish are staged tight to structure, drains, potholes, grassy edges, and any moving water. When the tide starts easing out, that’s when the bait gets flushed and the predators turn on. If you can find clean water with a little current, you’re in business. Recent action has been steady on speckled trout, slot redfish, and a few black drum mixed in. Folks have also been tangling with sheepshead around rock and dock structure, and some smaller flounder have been showing up along sandy cuts and transition zones. Most of the better reports have trout and reds coming on live shrimp, small croaker, and paddle tails worked slow. In the back lakes and marsh drains, the redfish have been cruising in singles and small pods, especially first light and near sunset. Trout have been most active when worked over grass flats and potholes with a soft, subtle presentation. Best lure picks for today: a 3-inch paddle tail in pearl, silver, bone, or chartreuse; a weedless gold spoon for covering water and finding active reds; and a suspending twitch bait if you’ve got cleaner water and want to tempt trout. If you’re fishing around structure, a jighead tipped with shrimp imitation or a soft plastic shrimp can save the day. Work everything slower than you think — this time of year, a lot of bites come on the fall. Best bait? Live shrimp is still the money bait, plain and simple, especially under a popping cork around grass and drains. Cut mullet, fresh shrimp, and live croaker are all producing when the trout are feeding heavier. For reds, cracked crab, shrimp, and cut bait can all get it done. If you’re targeting drum, shrimp on the bottom is hard to beat. A couple hot spots to check: the back lakes and marsh drains off the lower Laguna Madre, where outgoing water concentrates bait; and the channels, spoil islands, and grass edges near the lower valley bay systems where current meets structure. If you find muddy water, slide to a cleaner edge and fish the seam — that’s where the better fish tend to sit. Bottom line, the bite is there if you stay mobile, fish early, and match the tide movement. Keep it simple, keep it natural, and don’t ignore the drains. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. 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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300
Rio Grande and Lower Laguna Madre: Wind Picks Up, Bite Best at First Light
This is Artificial Lure with your Rio Grande and Lower Laguna Madre fishing report. We’ve got light to moderate southeast wind early, building by late morning into the 15–20 mph range, with gusts a little higher on open water. Air temps running mid‑70s at first light, climbing to the upper‑80s by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, humid, and it’s that sticky south Texas heat you know well. Sunrise hit right around 6:40 a.m., sunset will be just after 8:10 p.m., so you’ve got a nice, long day to work the water. The bite window’s lining up best around low light and tide turns. Tides along the lower coast near Boca Chica and the mouth of the Rio Grande are on the softer side today, with a modest morning incoming pushing a little higher water into the mangroves and then easing back early to mid‑afternoon. Not big swings, but just enough current to get bait moving along the edges of drains and guts. Water inshore is a stained green‑brown mix, especially closer to the river mouth where that Rio Grande flow muddies things up. Farther up into the Lower Laguna Madre proper, you’ll find clearer grass flats, especially on the east side when the wind allows. According to regional coastal fishing reports and recent local chatter from Brownsville and Port Isabel tackle shops, trout catches have picked up on the deeper edges of the flats and in the ICW, with slot fish mixed in with a lot of 15–17 inch schoolies. Redfish are roaming shallow, tight to the grass and shorelines when the wind lays, and some nice slot drum are hanging deeper near the old channels and around structure. Fish activity has been strongest at daybreak and then again late evening when the wind backs off and the water smooths out. Midday, you’ll still pull fish but you’ll need to go deeper and slower—think channels, drop‑offs, and the windward shorelines where bait gets pushed. On artificials, keep it simple. For speckled trout and schoolie reds, a 1/8 to 1/4 oz jighead with a paddle tail in bone, chicken‑on‑a‑chain, or opening night is money in that off‑color water. Topwaters like a Super Spook Jr. or Skitter Walk in bone or chrome/black are getting crushed right at first light over the grass and along potholes—walk them slow with long pauses. When the sun gets higher, switch to soft plastics or a slow‑rolled swimbait. For bait soakers, live or fresh‑dead shrimp under a popping cork is still king, especially around the edges of the ICW and along drop‑offs. Cut mullet or cut menhaden on the bottom will pick up reds, black drum, and the occasional oversize loner. If you’re fishing the actual river mouth or jetties, don’t be shy about tossing heavier spoons or swimbaits and soaking cut bait—there’ve been reports of jack crevalle, some sharks, and a few bull reds cruising those areas when the water cleans up. A couple of hotspots to put on your list: 1. Mouth of the Rio Grande and adjacent surf: When the wind isn’t blowing it out too hard, work the current seams where that brown river water meets the greener Gulf water. Cast spoons, swimbaits, or big paddle tails into the color change. Watch for birds and nervous bait—if you see showers, get a lure in there quick. 2. Lower Laguna Madre grass flats between South Bay and the ICW: Wade or drift these flats early, throwing topwaters and paddletails in 2–4 feet over grass with scattered potholes. Focus on any slight depth change or sand pocket. As the sun climbs, slide a little deeper and work soft plastics slower near the bottom. Boat anglers: mind the wind and watch that skinny water—lots of prop‑eaters out there. Shore and wade anglers: shuffle your feet and keep an eye out for rays in the shallows. 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
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299
Early Summer Rio Grande: Trout, Reds, and Cats on the Bite
This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Rio Grande, Texas fishing report. We’ve got early-summer patterns settling in along the lower Rio Grande and nearby Laguna Madre. Weather’s warm and sticky: overnight lows in the low 70s, afternoon highs pushing upper 80s to near 90, light to moderate southeast breeze building by late morning. Humidity is high, skies partly cloudy with a decent Gulf breeze kicking up a light chop on open water. Along the coast near Boca Chica and South Bay, NOAA’s Brownsville/Port Isabel data shows a pre‑dawn low tide, a strong incoming push through mid‑morning, then a higher afternoon tide easing off toward night. That incoming morning water has been the sweet spot, stacking bait and feeding reds and trout along drains and channel edges. Sunrise is right around 6:40 a.m., sunset near 8:10 p.m. The bite has been best in two windows: the gray‑light first hour of sun and then that late‑afternoon period when the wind lays a bit and tide is still moving. In the river itself, water is a little stained with decent current. Catfish and drum are active on the deeper bends, especially where there’s brush and rock. Folks soaking cut shad, chicken liver, and stink bait have been reporting steady channel cats in the 2–5 pound range with an occasional blue cat mixed in. A few nice freshwater drum and the odd gar are showing up on cut bait near structure. Closer to the coast, anglers running out of the Brownsville Ship Channel toward South Bay and the jetties have been into solid speckled trout and slot reds. Local bait shops in Brownsville and Port Isabel are reporting recent catches of specks from 15–22 inches, some limits taken early when that incoming tide lines up with sunrise. Reds have been running mid‑slot, 22–26 inches, with a couple of heavier bruisers hanging on the edge of the channel. Best artificial lures have been: - 1/8 to 1/4 oz jigheads with paddle‑tail plastics in white, opening night, and new penny - Topwaters at first light: bone or chrome/black “walk‑the‑dog” plugs for trout over shallow grass and sand pockets - Gold spoons slow‑rolled along edges for reds and schoolie jacks Live bait is still king for numbers. Live shrimp under popping corks along channel drops and bay grasslines have been hot, especially on that rising tide. Finger mullet and mud minnows freelined or on light Carolina rigs are producing reds and the occasional snook tight to mangroves and docks. For pure numbers on the river side, stink bait or punch bait on small circle hooks with just enough weight to hold bottom will keep you busy with channel cats all morning, particularly just downstream of logjams and outside river bends. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: 1. Ship Channel to South Bay edges Work the channel breaks and adjacent flats on an incoming tide. Drift with plastics or anchor and throw live shrimp under corks. Watch for slicks and nervous mullet. 2. Lower Rio Grande deep bends near town access points Look for sharper outside bends with visible current seams. Drop cut shad or prepared baits right on the seam for cats and drum. Early and late are best, especially when the wind isn’t howling. Water temps are warm enough now that mid‑day bites get sluggish, so plan around tide and low light. Downsizing leaders and going a little more natural on colors helps in the clear bay water, while in the river’s murkier flow you can get away with heavier gear and louder baits. That’s the rundown from Artificial Lure—hope it puts more bend in your rod next trip. 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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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Join the "Rio Grande, Texas Fishing Report Today" for the latest tips, hotspots, and expert insights on fishing in the Rio Grande region. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a beginner, our daily updates cover local weather, water conditions, and the best catches of the day, ensuring you have all the information you need for a successful fishing trip. Don't miss out—tune in and reel in more fish with us!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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