San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today podcast artwork

PODCAST · society

San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today

Dive into "San Francisco Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing adventures, tips, and local insights. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a curious beginner, join us each day to stay updated on the latest catches, hotspots, and fishing conditions in the vibrant waters of San Francisco Bay. Tune in and reel in the excitement!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis show includes AI-generated content.

  1. 332

    SF Bay Fishing Report: Halibut on the Flats, Stripers at the Gate

    This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool, gray start around the Bay this morning. Typical marine layer, light onshore breeze 5–10 knots, and daytime highs topping out in the low 60s. Forecast calls for that breeze to bump up to 10–15 in the afternoon with a steady west wind and a light chop on the Central Bay. Sunrise is right around a quarter past five, with sunset just after eight-thirty, so you’ve got a long window to work those tide swings. Early and late are still your best bets, especially if you can line them up with the start of an incoming or the top of the flood. We’re on a mid‑June tide cycle, so expect decent morning water movement, easing off mid‑day, then another push late afternoon into evening. Think slower currents in the South Bay, more ripping water through the Gate and around Alcatraz and Angel. Striped bass action has been steady, not wide‑open but consistent. Schoolie linesides with occasional legals are showing along the San Francisco shoreline, Crissy Field to Fort Point, and inside the Bay Bridge span. Boat guys tossing swimbaits and small paddletails in baitfish colors—white, pearl, and chartreuse—are doing well on the first of the incoming. Shore casters are getting fish on 3/4‑oz jigheads with 4–5 inch plastics, and the night bite has been decent around lighted structure. Halibut fishing remains the main draw. Drifters working live anchovies and herring in the South Bay channels, along the Berkeley Flats, and the Alameda side have been putting some nice keepers in the box. Bounce‑ball trollers pulling hoochies or small anchovy‑pattern plugs behind flashers are also scoring. The bite has been best on the slower parts of the tide—top of the flood and the beginning of the ebb—when you can keep baits near bottom without too much line angle. Leopard sharks and bat rays are chewing in the usual mudflat haunts. Any of the piers with access to deeper mud and a bit of current—Fort Point, Pier 32, or out toward Candlestick—are worth a soak. Squid strips, oily chunks of mackerel, or anchovy on a simple fish‑finder rig will keep you busy, especially on the outgoing. As for lures, keep it simple: - For halibut: 4–6 inch swimbaits in sardine, anchovy, or smelt patterns; slow roll them just off bottom. - For stripers: bucktail jigs, hair raisers, and small metal spoons for working rips and current seams, especially when the wind kicks up. - For bait: live anchovies if you can get them, otherwise frozen herring, sardines, and squid will handle halibut, sharks, and rays. A couple of hot spots to circle for today: First, the Berkeley Flats. That broad, relatively shallow shelf between Berkeley and Angel Island has been a classic early‑summer halibut drift. Set up on the edge of the flats on the last half of the incoming and drift across the contour lines, watching your sounder for bait schools. Second, the Alameda Rockwall and adjacent flats. It’s been a solid producer of both halibut and stripers when the tide lays down. Work parallel drifts along the rocks with live bait or swimbaits, and don’t ignore the deeper edges where the current softens—fish like to tuck in there on the heavier flows. If you’re stuck on shore, Crissy Field to Fort Point is still a go‑to. Work the edges of the bar and the rip lines during the slower parts of the tide. Stripers will push bait right up on the beach when the wind and current line up. Water temps are still on the cool side, so don’t be afraid to slow your presentation. Let that swimbait tick bottom, and give halibut an extra second before you swing. For bait fishing, shorter leaders and just enough weight to hold will out‑fish the guys dragging big pyramids around. That’s the San Francisco Bay 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

  2. 331

    Early Summer Halibut Heat: Morning Floods and Live Bait Dominate SF Bay

    This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern on the Bay. Weather’s starting cool with marine layer and light wind, then building to breezy northwest this afternoon. Expect mid‑50s in the morning, climbing into the 60s later, with that usual afternoon chop once the wind kicks up. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., sunset about 8:35 p.m., giving you a long window to work both tides. Tides are running decent swings the next couple of cycles. Think low tide pre‑dawn, flooding through mid‑morning, then a solid afternoon outgoing. That morning flood has been the money tide for halibut and stripers inside the Bay, especially where you can drift along edges from 15 to 35 feet. Halibut fishing has been the main show lately. Party boats and six‑packs coming out of Fisherman’s Wharf and Berkeley have been reporting anywhere from a fish per rod to near limits on the better days, with a mix of keeper halibut in the 22–30 inch class and a few doormats over 15 pounds. Stripers are mixed in, mostly schoolies with the occasional 10–15 pounder. Live bait is still king. If the bait receivers have them, **live anchovies** and **live shiners** are your best bet for halibut—drifted on a three‑way rig with just enough weight to tap bottom. If you’re running artificials, go with **5–6 inch swimbaits** in anchovy, smelt, or white, on 1–2 ounce jigheads. Slow, steady drifts with short hops off bottom are getting bit. For stripers, **topwater walkers** and **poppers** at first light along current seams, rock walls, and around the pier shadows can be electric. Once the sun’s up, switch to **white bucktail jigs**, **paddle‑tail swimbaits**, or **hair raisers** in chartreuse or white. Shore casters have been picking off fish on cut anchovy and sardine on a sliding sinker rig, especially on the outgoing. A couple hot spots to circle on your mental chart: • **Alameda Rockwall & South Bay flats** – The rockwall and nearby flats have been steady for halibut on the morning flood. Slow drifts parallel to the structure, 20–30 feet of water, have been putting fish in the box. • **Berkeley Flats & Treasure Island area** – Good mix of halibut and schoolie stripers. Work the edges of the flats on the incoming and the drop‑offs on the outgoing. When the wind’s down, drifting here with live bait or swimbaits has been very productive. Pier and shore anglers around **Fort Point, Pier 7, and Candlestick** have been seeing a mix of schoolie stripers, jacksmelt, and the odd halibut from shore. Best bets there are high‑low rigs with pile worms or pieces of anchovy, and Carolina rigs with whole anchovies for a shot at halibut tight to the bottom. Overall fish activity has been best early and late, bracketing the stronger parts of the tide. Midday, once the wind stacks up the waves, bites slow and presentations get tougher, so plan your trip around that morning flood or the later afternoon outgoing if the wind allows. That’s your Bay report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  3. 330

    Summer Stripers and Halibut Heat Up the Bay: Your Early June Fishing Guide

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a mild early‑summer pattern around the Bay. National Weather Service marine forecasts call for morning low clouds, clearing to hazy sun mid‑day, with highs in the low 60s along the water and a west wind building to 10–20 knots by afternoon. According to NWS tide tables for the Golden Gate, we’ve got a decent mid‑morning incoming and a strong afternoon outgoing, which should light up the bite on the edges of the channels and current seams. Sunrise is right around 5:45 a.m., sunset near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long window to work those tides. Striped bass have been the headliner. Local party boats and pier regulars have been reporting solid schoolie action with a mix of keeper‑size fish. Most of the recent counts have been in the “steady pick” category—nothing insane, but plenty of bass if you move around and fish the current. South Bay shorelines, the Oakland side, and the flats around Alameda have all kicked out fish. Berkeley Flats and Crissy Field have also given up some nicer models for the folks who stick it out through the wind. Best producers for stripers have been **soft‑plastic swimbaits** in natural baitfish colors—think 4–5 inch paddle tails in sardine, anchovy, or smelt patterns—slow‑rolled just off the bottom on the incoming. Topwater has had its moments at first light: pencil poppers and walking baits in bone or chrome when the birds are working and bait is up. At night and in stained water, try darker plugs and 5–7 inch glide baits around lit structure, bridge pilings, and marina mouths. Live anchovies, bullheads, or mudsuckers under a sliding sinker rig are still money if you’re soaking bait from shore or anchored up. Halibut have been quietly consistent more than wide‑open. Recent private‑boat and charter chatter has put most of the better fish on the **drifted live bait**—anchovies and herring—along the shipping channel edges, from the Berkeley Pier line down toward the South Bay, and around Treasure Island and Angel Island. Drifting dead bait—tray herring or cured anchovies—still works if you keep it moving just off the bottom. For artificials, 3–4 ounce jigheads with 5–6 inch paddletails or hoochies in white, glow, or root beer are doing damage when worked slow and steady in 20–40 feet. Leopard sharks and bat rays are keeping things interesting in the back bays and mud flats. Use squid strips or oily baits like mackerel on simple fish‑finder rigs. Great option if you’ve got kids or just want steady action on a lazy tide. For you lure junkies, pack: - 4–5 inch paddle tails in sardine, anchovy, and dark shad - 1/2 to 1 ounce jigheads - A couple of pencil poppers and walking baits in bone/chrome - 5–6 inch white or glow swimbaits for halibut on the drift For bait anglers, best bets: - Live anchovies or shiners from the local bait receivers when available - Squid and mackerel strips for sharks and rays - Anchovies, sardines, or herring cut baits on hi‑low or sliding rigs A couple of current hot spots to aim at: - **Berkeley Flats / Shipping Channel Edge**: Drifting for halibut along the drop‑off has been steady, with bonus schoolie stripers on the same drifts when the tide is moving. - **Crissy Field to Fort Point**: Early‑morning and evening striper action on swimbaits and topwater when the birds are up and the current’s pushing bait along the beach and rock line. Fish the slower water pockets and seams rather than the full rip. As always, watch the wind forecast, keep an eye on that afternoon blow, and respect the currents around the Gate and bridge zones. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Bay 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

  4. 329

    Early Summer Stripers and Halibut: Work the Tide Changes for Your Best Shot

    This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early summer pattern lining up. The National Weather Service is calling for morning marine layer along the coast, burning off late, with light west winds building to 10–15 knots this afternoon and a typical afternoon chop on the Central and North Bay. Inland temps are warmer, but on the water you’re looking at comfortable 60s, cooler near the Gate. Sunrise is just after 5:45 a.m. and sunset is a bit after 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those tide swings. Local tide tables show a decent pre-dawn incoming, topping out mid‑morning, then a dropping tide through the afternoon into the evening low. That morning flood and the first push of the afternoon ebb should be your money times, especially around structure and channel edges. Striped bass are still the headliner. Party boats and private skiffs working the South Bay, Oyster Point to the San Mateo Bridge, have been reporting solid schoolie action with a few bigger models mixed in. Trollers pulling broken‑back minnows and small chartreuse/white swimbaits along the edge of the main channel have been putting limits together. Shore anglers at Candlestick, Oyster Point, and along the San Leandro shoreline have been picking off bass on pile worms, anchovies, and 4–5 inch paddle‑tail plastics. Halibut fishing remains steady rather than wide‑open, but there are quality fish around. Boats drifting the Berkeley Flats, Crissy Field, and Alcatraz area have been bringing in a mix of keepers and shorts. Live anchovies and shiner perch are still king, but those drifting herring‑pattern swimbaits or white flukes on a light drop‑shot are getting bit, especially on that slower part of the tide. Inside the Gate, around Angel Island and the Rockpile, you’ll find a mix of stripers and halibut with an occasional lingcod if you slide a little deeper. High‑low rigs tipped with squid strips or sardines bounced along the bottom near structure have been producing a mixed bag. Best lures right now: - For stripers: 4–5 inch chartreuse/white or pearl swimbaits, silver spoons, and topwater walkers at first light in the shallows. - For halibut: 4–6 inch smelt or herring‑pattern swimbaits on 1–2 oz heads, white flukes on drop‑shot or Carolina rigs. - For multi‑species bait rigs: simple hi‑los with squid, anchovy, or sardine strips. If you’re fishing bait, bring anchovies, sardines, pile worms, and a little squid. Keep your leaders light and your hooks sharp; the water has decent clarity on the last of the flood, and a clean presentation matters. A couple of local hot spots to think about: - Berkeley Flats: drifting for halibut on the last of the flood and first of the ebb, with a shot at bass roaming the edges. - Oyster Point to San Mateo Bridge: trolling channels for schoolie stripers early, then bait‑soaking from shore or anchored up once the wind comes up. - Bonus call‑out: Crissy Field on a weaker wind morning can be a sleeper for halibut and the stray big striper cruising the beach. Work the tide changes, keep moving until you find clean marks and bait on the meter, and don’t be afraid to downsize your offerings if the bite turns picky. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Bay 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

  5. 328

    Early Summer Stripers and Halibut: Golden Gate Tides and Morning Bite

    This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early–summer pattern in the Bay: cool marine layer in the morning, modest afternoon wind, and very fishable tides. NOAA’s tide tables for the Golden Gate show a predawn low followed by a solid mid‑morning flood, then another ebb late afternoon. That morning flood is your money window: moving water, bait pushed up onto the flats, and gamefish right behind. Weather-wise, the National Weather Service is calling for upper 50s to low 60s on the water, overcast early, then partial clearing. Typical west to southwest winds building 10–15 knots in the afternoon with a stiff chop in open reaches like the Central Bay and off Alcatraz. Keep an eye out for that classic 2–3 foot wind wave when it pipes up; it’ll dictate where you can comfortably drift or troll. Sunrise is just after 5:45 a.m., sunset right around 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long workable day with prime bites at first light and again during that last couple hours before dark. Striped bass have been the headliner. Local reports from charter skippers working the Central Bay, especially around Alcatraz, Crissy, and the North Bar outside the Gate, are showing steady limits on schoolies with a few bigger fish to 15–20 pounds in the mix. Rockfish and lingcod are chewing well on the ocean side when the wind and swell allow runs out toward the Marin and San Mateo coastlines, with mixed bags of blacks, blues, and some solid lings. Inside the Bay, halibut fishing has remained good, especially on the mid‑morning flood. Drifters dragging live bait along the Berkeley Flats, Angel Island, and the South Bay channel edges are reporting several fish per rod on a decent day, with a mix of keepers and shorts. A few scattered leopard sharks and bat rays are also showing for folks soaking bait around Oyster Point, Candlestick, and the San Mateo Bridge. Best baits right now: live anchovies and live shiner perch are still king for halibut and bass. If you can’t get live, fresh dead anchovy or herring strips on a three‑way rig will still produce, especially when the tide is really rolling. For artificials, work 4–6 inch white or chartreuse swimbaits on 1–2 ounce jigheads along the bottom for halibut, and slightly smaller 3–4 inch paddle tails or jerk shads for bass around current breaks, pilings, and rock edges. On the troll, local captains are leaning on anchovy‑pattern minnow plugs and small hair jigs for stripers, and slow‑trolled herring or anchovies behind dodgers for halibut in the South Bay and around Treasure Island. Inshore rockfish and lings outside the Gate are falling for shrimp flies tipped with squid, and 6–8 inch swimbaits in brown, root beer, or motor oil bounced right on the structure. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: – The **Berkeley Flats**: productive on that incoming tide for halibut and schoolie stripers. Drift slow, follow the contour, and keep those baits just ticking bottom. – **Alcatraz and Crissy Field**: solid striper action when the current is moving, with a shot at halibut on the edges. Work the rips and color changes, and don’t be afraid to move until you mark bait. Work the tides, stay flexible with the wind, and you should find some life out there. 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

  6. 327

    **San Francisco Bay Hot Bite: Halibut and Stripers Stackin Up**

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  7. 326

    San Francisco Bay Fishing: Prime Striper Bite and Halibut Limits This Sunday

    Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' at ya with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Sunday, May 3rd, 2026. Dawn's breakin' over the Golden Gate, and it's lookin' prime out there. Weather's cooperatin' today—mostly sunny with highs around 68°F, light winds from the west at 5-10 knots, per the National Weather Service forecast. Perfect for a bay run. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset's at 8:15 PM, givin' ya a solid 14 hours of light. Tides are key in the Bay: NOAA charts show low tide at 4:12 AM (-0.8 ft), high at 10:28 AM (5.2 ft), then low again at 5:01 PM (0.1 ft). Fish the incomin' tide hard from now till noon— that's when the striper bite peaks. Fish activity's heatin' up post-spawn. Recent reports from Pier 39 and the Delta outposts say limits of **striped bass** (up to 15 lbs) on live shad and swimbaits, **halibut** floppin' in the flats (20-30 fishers/day boatin' 5-10 keepers), and **leopard sharks** stackin' up near the bridges. Lingcod and rockfish are solid offshore, with party boats from Bodega haulin' 20-fish limits. Dungeness crab's still open, pots fillin' fast. Best lures? Go **Rat-L-Traps** or **Yo-Zuri 3D Minnows** in anchovy patterns for stripers—work 'em slow over mudflats. **Bertram swimbaits** or **grubs on jigheads** nail halibut. Live **mud shrimp** or **ghost shrimp** under a sliding sinker for sharks and perch. Frozen anchovies on a Carolina rig if bait's scarce. Hot spots: Hit the **Potato Patch** shoals inside the Gate for stripers on the flood—troll or drift. Then slide to **Angel Island flats** for flatties; anchor and soak bait. Stay clear of restricted zones, check your licenses. Rig tight, watch the currents, and let's get bit! Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for daily updates! 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.

  8. 325

    Saturday Bay Fishing: Stripers and Sharks on the Bite

    # San Francisco Bay Fishing Report - Artificial Lure Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Saturday morning Bay fishing update. We're looking at a decent day out on the water. High tide's hitting around 10 AM, with a low following at 4 PM. That's prime time for striped bass and leopard sharks in the deeper channels. Water temp's sitting around 54 degrees—still chilly, but the fish are active. Weather-wise, expect mostly cloudy skies with light winds from the northwest, around 8-12 knots. Perfect conditions for getting out there without fighting the elements. Sunrise was just before 6:30 this morning, and you've got until about 8:45 PM tonight. The bite's been solid lately. Local reports show stripers hitting consistently in the 18-24 inch range, with some quality leopard sharks running 4-6 pounds. Perch have been coming through in decent numbers too. Recent catches include some nice sturgeon action deeper in the bay, though those require patience. For lures, I'm throwing live anchovies and shiners—can't beat 'em for stripers. If you're going artificial, try white swim baits or shad-pattern plugs. For leopard sharks, cut mackerel or squid gets the job done. Perch anglers should work small soft plastics or live ghost shrimp. Two spots I'm eyeing: the Dumbarton Bridge pilings—classic striper territory with good current flow during the tide change. Also hit up the Berkeley Pier if you want easier access and consistent perch action. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe for daily reports. 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.

  9. 324

    Spring Stripers Heating Up in San Francisco Bay

    Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' at ya with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for April 29, 2026, right here in the heart of the action. Tides today got a low at 3:15 AM, high around 9:45 AM, then droppin' to low at 4:20 PM and high at 10:30 PM—perfect for fishin' the incoming around mid-mornin' when bait gets pushed in. Weather's lookin' mild: partly cloudy, highs in the low 60s, light northwest winds 5-10 knots, water temps hoverin' at 58°F. Sunrise at 6:15 AM, sunset 8:00 PM—get out early for that dawn bite. Fish activity's heatin' up with spring striper runs pushin' north along the coast, mixin' into the Bay like we've seen in recent east coast reports from spots like Raritan Bay and Long Island, where 40-50 inch cows are showin'. Locals report steady striped bass up to 35 inches, halibut hittin' 20-30 pounds, plus leopard sharks and Dungeness crab in the shallows. Recent catches: limits of stripers on live shiner minnows near the Golden Gate, halibut on jigs off Alameda, and sturgeon pushin' 100+ pounds in the Delta channels. Best **lures**? Go with **Rat-L-Traps** or **Swimbaits** in chartreuse for stripers chasin' schools near drop-offs. **Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows** or **iron jigs** for halibut bouncin' bottom. Live **mudshrimp** or **ghost shrimp** under a float kills it for perch and sharks; pile worms or anchovies for sturgeon. Hot spots: Hit the **Marin County shoreline** near Point Reyes for stripers on the flood tide, or **the Oakland Bar** off the estuary for halibut—anchor up and soak bait. Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines! Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for more reports! 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.

  10. 323

    **Spring Stripers and Halibut Heat Up San Francisco Bay**

    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your Bay Area fishing guru, comin' at ya with the fresh scoop for April 8th, 2026, right here in San Francisco Bay. Dawn broke around 6:30 AM and she'll set about 7:40 PM—perfect for those long light lines. Tides today? Low slack at 3 AM gave way to a risin' incoming pushin' strong through midday, peakin' near 4 feet around noon per FishingReminder charts—prime for stripers chasin' bait in the channels. Weather's holdin' classic spring: clear skies, light NE breeze 5-10 knots easin' to calm, temps climbin' from 52° mornin' chill to 65° afternoon, accordin' to NWS marine forecasts. Fish are wakin' up! Recent reports from local guides like FishingBooker note solid action on **striped bass** up to 10 pounds hammerin' the flats, **halibut** floppin' in 20-30 feet near the Golden Gate, and **leopard sharks** schooled thick around the piers. Limits of **Dungeness crab** too if you're trappin'. Schoolies and keeper stripers dominated last week's tallies, with some fat 28-inchers boated near Alcatraz. Best plays? Hit 'em with **swimbaits** like 3-inch Keitech in pearl or anchovy patterns on 1/4-oz jigheads for stripers—those vibrations pop in the tide. Live **mudshrimp** or **anchovies** under a float for halibuts; pile **sardines** or chicken liver for sharks and rays. Topwater **poppers** at dawn if the glass is mirror. Hot spots? **Point Isabel** for easy shore access and stripers tearin' up the shallows, or drift the **Richmond flats** offshore for halibut ambushes—watch the incoming current. Stay safe out there, check regs, and wear your PFD. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.

  11. 322

    San Francisco Bay Heats Up with Halibut, Stripers, and More - 06/21/2025 Fishing Report

    Artificial Lure here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. Let’s get right into it—summer is rolling and the bay is fired up with action! Today’s sunrise was at 5:48 AM and you’ll get to fish all the way ‘til sunset at 8:34 PM, offering a generous window for both the morning and evening bites. Weather-wise, it’s classic June along the coast: highs around 66°F, with the usual morning fog clearing into bluebird sunshine by midday. Winds are mellow out of the southwest at about 10 to 15 mph—nothing that’ll keep you on the dock. The tides are playing along too, with a mid-morning incoming that peaks a little after noon, setting the table nicely for an active bite through late morning and into the afternoon. And let me tell you, the fish are here and hungry. According to NorCal Fish Reports and party boat scores from Sportfishing Report, boats working the central bay out of Berkeley and Emeryville are just stacking the deck—recent catches have been loaded with California halibut and striped bass. Just yesterday, the California Dawn II checked in with limits: 40 halibut (some pushing 29 pounds!), a leopard shark, a dozen rockfish, and 46 striped bass for 23 anglers. Other boats like the New Easy Rider, Amethyst, and New Huck Finn are all reporting similar hauls—double-digit halibut and stripers even for small parties, with quality bass consistently up to 10 pounds. Locals from the Lovely Martha report are echoing the same: “easy limits of big bass again,” with 28 quality striped bass and 16 halibut coming over the rails for just 10 anglers. That’s about as hot as the bite gets in June. For tackle, you can’t go wrong right now with white or chartreuse swimbaits, soft plastics on a leadhead, or live anchovies if you can get ‘em (the halibut in particular are all over ‘chovies and small smelt). Trolling herring or drifting live bait along the flats—from Treasure Island out to the Berkeley Pier—has been money for both species. Don’t forget the classic hair jigs or shallow-running crankbaits for stripers, especially around the rock piles and channel edges. A couple of today’s hot spots: Alcatraz Island’s west side is loaded with feeding stripes, and the flats off Berkeley and Emeryville are stacked with halibut and bass. If the mid-bay gets crowded, push out towards Paradise Cay or work the thoroughfares in Raccoon Strait—those outgoing tide swings can light up in a hurry. Just a reminder: Per current regs, no perch may be kept in the bay right now except shinerperch, so be sure to know your catch. And always check the latest advisories about eating your catch, as “forever chemicals” have been discovered in various bay fish. That wraps it for today’s report! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  12. 321

    San Francisco Bay Heats Up with Halibut, Stripers, and More - 06/21/2025 Fishing Report

    Artificial Lure here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. Let’s get right into it—summer is rolling and the bay is fired up with action! Today’s sunrise was at 5:48 AM and you’ll get to fish all the way ‘til sunset at 8:34 PM, offering a generous window for both the morning and evening bites. Weather-wise, it’s classic June along the coast: highs around 66°F, with the usual morning fog clearing into bluebird sunshine by midday. Winds are mellow out of the southwest at about 10 to 15 mph—nothing that’ll keep you on the dock. The tides are playing along too, with a mid-morning incoming that peaks a little after noon, setting the table nicely for an active bite through late morning and into the afternoon. And let me tell you, the fish are here and hungry. According to NorCal Fish Reports and party boat scores from Sportfishing Report, boats working the central bay out of Berkeley and Emeryville are just stacking the deck—recent catches have been loaded with California halibut and striped bass. Just yesterday, the California Dawn II checked in with limits: 40 halibut (some pushing 29 pounds!), a leopard shark, a dozen rockfish, and 46 striped bass for 23 anglers. Other boats like the New Easy Rider, Amethyst, and New Huck Finn are all reporting similar hauls—double-digit halibut and stripers even for small parties, with quality bass consistently up to 10 pounds. Locals from the Lovely Martha report are echoing the same: “easy limits of big bass again,” with 28 quality striped bass and 16 halibut coming over the rails for just 10 anglers. That’s about as hot as the bite gets in June. For tackle, you can’t go wrong right now with white or chartreuse swimbaits, soft plastics on a leadhead, or live anchovies if you can get ‘em (the halibut in particular are all over ‘chovies and small smelt). Trolling herring or drifting live bait along the flats—from Treasure Island out to the Berkeley Pier—has been money for both species. Don’t forget the classic hair jigs or shallow-running crankbaits for stripers, especially around the rock piles and channel edges. A couple of today’s hot spots: Alcatraz Island’s west side is loaded with feeding stripes, and the flats off Berkeley and Emeryville are stacked with halibut and bass. If the mid-bay gets crowded, push out towards Paradise Cay or work the thoroughfares in Raccoon Strait—those outgoing tide swings can light up in a hurry. Just a reminder: Per current regs, no perch may be kept in the bay right now except shinerperch, so be sure to know your catch. And always check the latest advisories about eating your catch, as “forever chemicals” have been discovered in various bay fish. That wraps it for today’s report! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  13. 320

    San Francisco Bay Heats Up with Halibut, Stripers, and More - 06/21/2025 Fishing Report

    Artificial Lure here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. Let’s get right into it—summer is rolling and the bay is fired up with action! Today’s sunrise was at 5:48 AM and you’ll get to fish all the way ‘til sunset at 8:34 PM, offering a generous window for both the morning and evening bites. Weather-wise, it’s classic June along the coast: highs around 66°F, with the usual morning fog clearing into bluebird sunshine by midday. Winds are mellow out of the southwest at about 10 to 15 mph—nothing that’ll keep you on the dock. The tides are playing along too, with a mid-morning incoming that peaks a little after noon, setting the table nicely for an active bite through late morning and into the afternoon. And let me tell you, the fish are here and hungry. According to NorCal Fish Reports and party boat scores from Sportfishing Report, boats working the central bay out of Berkeley and Emeryville are just stacking the deck—recent catches have been loaded with California halibut and striped bass. Just yesterday, the California Dawn II checked in with limits: 40 halibut (some pushing 29 pounds!), a leopard shark, a dozen rockfish, and 46 striped bass for 23 anglers. Other boats like the New Easy Rider, Amethyst, and New Huck Finn are all reporting similar hauls—double-digit halibut and stripers even for small parties, with quality bass consistently up to 10 pounds. Locals from the Lovely Martha report are echoing the same: “easy limits of big bass again,” with 28 quality striped bass and 16 halibut coming over the rails for just 10 anglers. That’s about as hot as the bite gets in June. For tackle, you can’t go wrong right now with white or chartreuse swimbaits, soft plastics on a leadhead, or live anchovies if you can get ‘em (the halibut in particular are all over ‘chovies and small smelt). Trolling herring or drifting live bait along the flats—from Treasure Island out to the Berkeley Pier—has been money for both species. Don’t forget the classic hair jigs or shallow-running crankbaits for stripers, especially around the rock piles and channel edges. A couple of today’s hot spots: Alcatraz Island’s west side is loaded with feeding stripes, and the flats off Berkeley and Emeryville are stacked with halibut and bass. If the mid-bay gets crowded, push out towards Paradise Cay or work the thoroughfares in Raccoon Strait—those outgoing tide swings can light up in a hurry. Just a reminder: Per current regs, no perch may be kept in the bay right now except shinerperch, so be sure to know your catch. And always check the latest advisories about eating your catch, as “forever chemicals” have been discovered in various bay fish. That wraps it for today’s report! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  14. 319

    San Francisco Bay Heats Up with Halibut, Stripers, and More - 06/21/2025 Fishing Report

    Artificial Lure here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. Let’s get right into it—summer is rolling and the bay is fired up with action! Today’s sunrise was at 5:48 AM and you’ll get to fish all the way ‘til sunset at 8:34 PM, offering a generous window for both the morning and evening bites. Weather-wise, it’s classic June along the coast: highs around 66°F, with the usual morning fog clearing into bluebird sunshine by midday. Winds are mellow out of the southwest at about 10 to 15 mph—nothing that’ll keep you on the dock. The tides are playing along too, with a mid-morning incoming that peaks a little after noon, setting the table nicely for an active bite through late morning and into the afternoon. And let me tell you, the fish are here and hungry. According to NorCal Fish Reports and party boat scores from Sportfishing Report, boats working the central bay out of Berkeley and Emeryville are just stacking the deck—recent catches have been loaded with California halibut and striped bass. Just yesterday, the California Dawn II checked in with limits: 40 halibut (some pushing 29 pounds!), a leopard shark, a dozen rockfish, and 46 striped bass for 23 anglers. Other boats like the New Easy Rider, Amethyst, and New Huck Finn are all reporting similar hauls—double-digit halibut and stripers even for small parties, with quality bass consistently up to 10 pounds. Locals from the Lovely Martha report are echoing the same: “easy limits of big bass again,” with 28 quality striped bass and 16 halibut coming over the rails for just 10 anglers. That’s about as hot as the bite gets in June. For tackle, you can’t go wrong right now with white or chartreuse swimbaits, soft plastics on a leadhead, or live anchovies if you can get ‘em (the halibut in particular are all over ‘chovies and small smelt). Trolling herring or drifting live bait along the flats—from Treasure Island out to the Berkeley Pier—has been money for both species. Don’t forget the classic hair jigs or shallow-running crankbaits for stripers, especially around the rock piles and channel edges. A couple of today’s hot spots: Alcatraz Island’s west side is loaded with feeding stripes, and the flats off Berkeley and Emeryville are stacked with halibut and bass. If the mid-bay gets crowded, push out towards Paradise Cay or work the thoroughfares in Raccoon Strait—those outgoing tide swings can light up in a hurry. Just a reminder: Per current regs, no perch may be kept in the bay right now except shinerperch, so be sure to know your catch. And always check the latest advisories about eating your catch, as “forever chemicals” have been discovered in various bay fish. That wraps it for today’s report! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  15. 318

    San Francisco Bay Heats Up with Halibut, Stripers, and More - 06/21/2025 Fishing Report

    Artificial Lure here with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. Let’s get right into it—summer is rolling and the bay is fired up with action! Today’s sunrise was at 5:48 AM and you’ll get to fish all the way ‘til sunset at 8:34 PM, offering a generous window for both the morning and evening bites. Weather-wise, it’s classic June along the coast: highs around 66°F, with the usual morning fog clearing into bluebird sunshine by midday. Winds are mellow out of the southwest at about 10 to 15 mph—nothing that’ll keep you on the dock. The tides are playing along too, with a mid-morning incoming that peaks a little after noon, setting the table nicely for an active bite through late morning and into the afternoon. And let me tell you, the fish are here and hungry. According to NorCal Fish Reports and party boat scores from Sportfishing Report, boats working the central bay out of Berkeley and Emeryville are just stacking the deck—recent catches have been loaded with California halibut and striped bass. Just yesterday, the California Dawn II checked in with limits: 40 halibut (some pushing 29 pounds!), a leopard shark, a dozen rockfish, and 46 striped bass for 23 anglers. Other boats like the New Easy Rider, Amethyst, and New Huck Finn are all reporting similar hauls—double-digit halibut and stripers even for small parties, with quality bass consistently up to 10 pounds. Locals from the Lovely Martha report are echoing the same: “easy limits of big bass again,” with 28 quality striped bass and 16 halibut coming over the rails for just 10 anglers. That’s about as hot as the bite gets in June. For tackle, you can’t go wrong right now with white or chartreuse swimbaits, soft plastics on a leadhead, or live anchovies if you can get ‘em (the halibut in particular are all over ‘chovies and small smelt). Trolling herring or drifting live bait along the flats—from Treasure Island out to the Berkeley Pier—has been money for both species. Don’t forget the classic hair jigs or shallow-running crankbaits for stripers, especially around the rock piles and channel edges. A couple of today’s hot spots: Alcatraz Island’s west side is loaded with feeding stripes, and the flats off Berkeley and Emeryville are stacked with halibut and bass. If the mid-bay gets crowded, push out towards Paradise Cay or work the thoroughfares in Raccoon Strait—those outgoing tide swings can light up in a hurry. Just a reminder: Per current regs, no perch may be kept in the bay right now except shinerperch, so be sure to know your catch. And always check the latest advisories about eating your catch, as “forever chemicals” have been discovered in various bay fish. That wraps it for today’s report! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  16. 317

    San Francisco Bay Fishing Report: Halibut, Stripers, and Offshore Action

    Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report for Saturday, May 24, 2025. Let’s start with today’s conditions. Expect partly cloudy skies with mild morning temps rising toward the low 60s by the afternoon. There is a light breeze out of the west but nothing like the gusty days last weekend that kept some boats docked. The tide will be incoming through most of the morning, peaking around midday and turning around early afternoon. Sunrise hit at 5:51 AM and sunset will be at 8:21 PM, giving you a generous window to chase the bite. The Bay has been producing some excellent action all week, with recent party boat counts looking strong. Yesterday out of San Francisco, the Lovely Martha pulled in 8 California halibut and 2 striped bass for just 4 anglers on a half-day trip. Over in Emeryville, the Pacific Pearl tallied 16 halibut and 6 striped bass with 16 anglers. Berkeley boats have been posting similar numbers, with halibut remaining steady and stripers showing up in nice batches. Offshore, Half Moon Bay boats continue to limit out on rockfish, but the main game for most Bay anglers right now is halibut and bass[2]. If you’re targeting halibut, drifting live anchovies or shiner perch has been the ticket. Trolling or drifting with herring, sardines, or a swimbait with a flashy tail will get you bit too, especially near the edges of deeper channels and drop-offs. For striped bass, try casting 4- to 6-inch white or chartreuse swimbaits, hair jigs, or the classic red and white bucktail lure. Topwater plugs and poppers can work around dawn if you find birds and active fish at the surface. Hot spots this past week include the flats off Berkeley and Paradise Cay, where both halibut and stripers have been stacked up on the incoming tide. The deeper holes around Alcatraz and the south side of Angel Island are also kicking out solid numbers, especially during the tide swing. If you’re looking for a change of pace, the rock piles off Treasure Island have been holding mixed bass and the occasional bonus lingcod. Word on the dock is the action should keep up as long as the tides move and the winds stay light. Bring plenty of bait and don’t be afraid to switch up your presentation if things slow down. Best of luck out there, and remember to send in your fish photos for bragging rights. That’s the bite for today. Tight lines and see you on the water[2][4][1]. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Dive into "San Francisco Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing adventures, tips, and local insights. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a curious beginner, join us each day to stay updated on the latest catches, hotspots, and fishing conditions in the vibrant waters of San Francisco Bay. Tune in and reel in the excitement!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis show includes AI-generated content.

HOSTED BY

Inception Point Ai

Produced by Quiet. Please

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today have?

San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today currently has 16 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today about?

Dive into "San Francisco Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing adventures, tips, and local insights. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a curious beginner, join us each day to stay updated on the latest catches, hotspots, and fishing conditions in the vibrant waters of San Francisco...

How often does San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today release new episodes?

San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today is no longer actively publishing new episodes, but the existing catalog remains available.

Where can I listen to San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today?

You can listen to San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening.

Who hosts San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today?

San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today is created and hosted by Inception Point Ai.
URL copied to clipboard!