PODCAST · society
New Orleans Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Welcome to the "Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans Fishing Report Today" podcast! Dive into expert insights, local fishing conditions, and the latest tips for anglers exploring the vibrant waters of the Gulf and New Orleans. Stay updated with daily reports on weather, tides, species activity, and the best fishing spots. Perfect for seasoned fishermen and newcomers alike, tune in to enhance your fishing adventures!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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Artificial Lure: Gulf Redfish and Trout—Light Winds, Prime Tides, and Storm Watch
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans and Gulf fishing report. We’re sitting on a light south breeze this morning, warming into the upper 80s to low 90s, with humidity doing its usual Gulf thing. Skies run partly cloudy with scattered pop-up storms this afternoon; keep one eye on the horizon and the other on your radar. Winds generally 5–12 knots out the south to southeast on the outside, calmer in the marsh. Nearshore Gulf chop stays light to a modest ripple. Tide-wise around Shell Beach, Hopedale, and Lake Borgne, you’re looking at a decent morning rise followed by a soft fall mid‑day, then another subtle push this evening. It’s not a huge swing, but just enough to move bait along points, drains, and the mouths of bayous. Fish that first good hour of incoming or the early part of the falling tide and you’ll feel the difference. Sunrise fires off just after 6 a.m. local, with sunset right around 8 p.m. That gives you a long creole of options: dawn trout bite, mid‑day redfish in the ponds, and maybe a sunset drum or flounder closer to home. Speckled trout have been steady more than spectacular, but good boxes are coming from Lake Borgne rigs, MRGO rocks, and the edges of Breton Sound when the water stays green. Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king, but plastic is closing the gap. Go with 3–4 inch paddle tails or shrimp imitations in glow/chartreuse, opening night, or purple/chart on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads. Walk‑the‑dog topwaters in bone or chrome/blue are drawing blowups at daybreak over shell and current seams. Redfish are the most reliable ticket right now. Work the marsh outside Delacroix, Hopedale, Reggio, and Shell Beach. Look for clean water, grass edges, and current pushing around points. Black and gold spoons, quarter‑ounce jigheads with shrimp‑ or crab‑scented plastics, and live or dead shrimp on the bottom are all putting slot reds in the box. If you find bait flickering on a wind‑blown bank, stop and fan‑cast; they’re often sitting right in that dirty/clean water line. Sheepshead and drum are hanging around hard structure: MRGO rocks, Lake Catherine bridges, and nearshore rigs. Dead shrimp or fiddler crabs on a Carolina rig or drop shot will get drilled. Flounder numbers are picking up around cuts and sandy points; slow‑roll a white or chartreuse grub tight to the bottom and be patient on the hookset. Recent catches have included mixed boxes of 20–40 trout for boats that hit the early tide with live shrimp, alongside a handful of slot reds and a couple of bull reds released at the rigs. In the marsh, limits of reds and a few flounder have been common for folks working plastics patiently along grass lines. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental map: - The MRGO rocks and nearby rigs in Lake Borgne for trout at first light, especially when that incoming tide starts pushing. - The marsh ponds and outer bays off Hopedale and Delacroix for reds all day, focusing on moving water and bait. If the storms stay scattered and the water holds some clarity, tonight’s last hour of daylight on a falling tide could line up for a slick topwater bite around shell and points. That’s your Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans 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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Summer Trout and Reds Firing in the Marsh: Early Tide Bite Around New Orleans
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans saltwater report from the edge of the Gulf. We’ve got a classic summer pattern setting up. The National Weather Service is calling for a warm, humid day around the city and coastal marshes, with highs pushing upper 80s to low 90s, light south to southeast breeze 8–15 knots, and only a scattered chance of a passing storm this afternoon. Skies start mostly clear, building into that hazy mix of clouds by mid‑day. Sunrise comes early over the marsh and the sun will duck out over Barataria and Breton Sound late this evening, giving you a nice, long window on both ends of the day. Tide charts out of Shell Beach and Grand Isle show a good moving tide: a decent incoming through the early morning, slacking late morning, then a falling tide through the afternoon into dark. That moving water on the edges of the flats and around the passes is what’s turning the bite on. Inshore, folks have been doing well on **speckled trout** and **redfish** the last few days in the outer marsh, especially where clean green water is pushing in. Reports coming out of Hopedale and Delacroix talk about solid boxes of schoolie trout on the early topwater bite over shell, then switching to subsurface plastics once the sun gets up. Redfish are stacked along grass lines and pond mouths where that tide funnels bait. For trout, best producers have been: - Topwaters: **bone or chrome walk‑the‑dog baits** at first light over oyster reefs. - Soft plastics: **matrix‑style shad tails** and **paddle tails** in shrimp, opening night, or chartreuse on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads under a popping cork. - Bait: **live shrimp** and **croaker** fished under corks around points and rips. Reds have been chewing: - **Gold spoons**, 1/4–1/2 oz, slow‑rolled along grass edges. - **Spinnerbaits with soft plastic trailers** in dirty water. - **Live or cut shrimp**, and **cut mullet** on the bottom near drains and trenasses on the falling tide. Nearshore out of Venice and Empire, the rigs and close platforms have been giving up **mangrove snapper, sheepshead, and the odd cobia**. Free‑lined live shrimp, small live baitfish, and cut squid around the pilings are getting it done. For the mangroves, tight to the structure with 20–30 lb leader and a small live bait has been key. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Breton Sound / Black Bay out of Hopedale** – good summer trout bite on reefs and wellheads with that early incoming tide; look for birds and slicks. - **Barataria Bay / Bayou Rigolets side of Grand Isle and Four Bayou Pass** – mixed trout and reds along current lines, especially where clear Gulf water meets the marsh. - **Interior ponds off Delacroix and Reggio** – sight‑fishing reds on the higher parts of the tide, then working drains on the fall. Midday is getting tough with the heat, so think dawn patrol and late‑evening missions. Work fast baits in low light, slow it down with plastics and live bait once the sun climbs. Keep an eye on those pop‑up storms and watch the sky more than your phone. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report from Artificial Lure. 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 Speck Bite: Topwater at Dawn and Reds in the Marsh Ponds
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf-side fishing report for the New Orleans area. We’re sitting under a classic early-summer pattern: warm, humid air, light southerly breeze off the Gulf, and scattered clouds with a good chance of pop-up afternoon thunderstorms. Temps are climbing through the 80s into the low 90s, with that south wind around 5 to 15 knots on the open water. Inshore, it feels lighter but still enough to put a little chop on the outside bays and the MRGO. Sunrise comes early, just after six, and sunset lands a little after eight in the evening, giving you a long window to play the tides. Around the Rigolets, Chef Pass, and Bayou Bienvenue, we’ve got a moderate tide cycle today, roughly a one-foot swing. The stronger movement is mid-morning and again later this afternoon, so plan your trips to be on your favorite drain or cut as that water starts pushing hard. Fish have been active with this steady heat. Speckled trout are chewing at first light on the bridges and nearshore rigs—folks have been boxing good numbers of keeper specks on live shrimp under popping corks and on 3–4 inch paddle-tail plastics in glow, opening night, and chartreuse. Topwater has been hot at dawn: walk-the-dog baits in bone or chrome-blue are getting smoked for the first hour of daylight, then the bite drops down in the water column. Redfish are stacked in the marsh ponds off Hopedale and Delacroix, working the grass edges and duck ponds. Anglers have been picking up solid slots, with a few bulls mixed in, using gold spoons, spinnerbaits with white or chartreuse plastics, and live or dead shrimp on the bottom. Cut mullet or pogies on a simple Carolina rig is still money for soaking near points with current. Sheepshead and drum are hanging around the rock jetties and pilings, taking market shrimp and fiddler crabs. A few flounder have been slipping into ice chests from the sandy points and cuts, hitting Gulp-style scented jigs and small live minnows bumped slowly along the bottom. Best baits right now: - Live shrimp under a popping cork for trout and slot reds - Finger mullet or cut bait for bigger reds and drum - Gulp shrimp or paddletails in natural and chartreuse for a soft-plastic option - Gold spoons and small spinnerbaits for sight-fishing reds in the ponds Couple of hot spots to circle on your map: - The MRGO rocks and the rock dam near Hopedale: trout on the early-moving tide, reds tight to the structure. - The Rigolets and Highway 11 bridge area: trout at daybreak on live shrimp and plastics, plus drum and sheepshead around the pilings. Remember to watch that afternoon sky—those Gulf storms build fast. Get your best work done at first light and again as the sun starts to sink and the air cools off. 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 Bite: Moving Water, Trout, and Reds in the Louisiana Marsh
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans coastal and Gulf fishing report. Light south breeze rolling off the Gulf this morning, muggy and warm, typical early summer pattern. Local marine forecasts are calling for highs in the upper 80s to low 90s, with scattered afternoon storms building inland and pushing out over the marsh by late day. Keep an eye on the sky and radar if you’re running outside. Tides around the Rigolets, Lake Borgne, and the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet are running a medium range today, with a good moving window from mid‑morning through early afternoon. Over toward Empire, Venice, and Grand Isle, those same mid‑day moving tides will line up nicely on points, drains, and the outside edges of the bays. Moving water is the whole game right now: if it’s slack, so is the bite. Sunrise is coming early and fast, with first light giving you that prime topwater window in the marsh. Sunset offers a short but solid evening bite if the storms don’t chase you off. Low light plus moving water has been the ticket all week. Speckled trout action has been best at first light on the outside edges of Breton Sound rigs, around Grand Isle bridges, and along windward shorelines in Lake Borgne and Black Bay. Boats working live shrimp under popping corks have been putting together 20–40 fish boxes when they stay on clean, green water. Soft plastics on 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce jigheads in opening night, avocado, and shrimp‑colored paddle tails are producing for folks who like to cover water. Redfish are thick in the ponds and along broken marsh shorelines from Hopedale to Delacroix and down toward Empire and Venice. Slot reds are chewing on live or dead shrimp under corks, cracked crab on the bottom, and gold spoons slow‑rolled along grass lines. A lot of fish have been coming off small drains dumping into ponds on that falling tide. If the water’s got a little stain and some bait flipping, you’re in the right spot. Sheepshead and drum are hanging near rock piles, bridges, and shell banks in Lake Pontchartrain and along the MRGO rocks. Market shrimp on a simple Carolina rig or split‑shot has been putting good numbers in the box. A few flounder are showing on sandy points and passes; work a soft plastic slowly along the bottom and be ready for that “thump.” Best artificial lures right now: - Topwater plugs at first light for trout on calm mornings. - 3–4 inch paddle tails and shrimp imitations under popping corks in the marsh. - Gold spoons and weedless swimbaits for reds in the grass. - Natural colors in clear water, chartreuse or darker profiles when it’s stained. Best natural baits: - Live shrimp is king for trout and reds. - Croaker and mullet chunks offshore or around deeper rigs. - Cracked crab and dead shrimp for drum and sheepshead. Couple of hot spots to circle on your map: - Breton Sound and Black Bay rigs and reefs for speckled trout when the wind lays. - Delacroix and Hopedale interior marsh ponds and drains for consistent redfish action. If you’re running farther, Venice roseau edges and outer bays are loaded with reds when the river’s not too high and the water cleans up a bit. That’s your Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans‑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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Early Summer Bite: Specks and Reds on the Morning Tide in Southeast Louisiana
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans Gulf fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up along the southeast Louisiana coast. Over in Breton Sound and outside Hopedale, a light south to southwest breeze is rolling 8–12 knots, with air temps climbing from the low 80s into the low 90s this afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, with a good shot at a pop‑up thunderstorm after lunch, so keep an eye on the horizon and the radar. Humidity’s thick, so bring extra water. On the river side and the marsh, we’re working a **falling tide at daybreak**, easing toward low late morning, then a modest **incoming** through the afternoon. Tides are running about a foot of movement on most passes and bayous off Black Bay and Lake Borgne. That moving water at the mouths of drains is key. Sunrise hit right around 6 a.m. on the east side, with sunset just after 8 p.m., which gives you a long day but the best bite has been the first three hours of light and the last hour before dark. Midday has been slower unless you’re out deeper on rigs or well pads. Inshore, speckled trout have been steady rather than crazy. Boats working live shrimp under popping corks in Bay Eloi, Lake Campo, and around the MRGO rocks have been boxing **limits or close** when they sit on clean, green water and moving tide. Most trout are running 13–18 inches, with a few bigger schoolies mixed in. Folks throwing artificial have done well on 3–4 inch paddle‑tails in glow/chartreuse, opening night, and purple with chartreuse tails on 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce jigheads. Topwater walkers in bone or chrome early have been drawing some blow‑ups around slicks and diving birds. Redfish are chewing in the ponds and along the grass lines from Shell Beach to Delacroix and out toward Pointe à la Hache. Sight‑fishing has been fair when the wind lays down enough to see, but most reds are coming from working points with current. They’re eating market shrimp on a Carolina rig, live or dead mullet on the bottom, and gold spoons or chatter‑style swim jigs in dirty water. Expect a mix of keeper slot fish with the occasional bull. Sheepshead and drum are still hanging on pilings and rock piles, taking bits of shrimp and crab. A few tripletail have started showing on high‑riding crab traps in the Gulf; look for that dark shape under the float and pitch a live shrimp or small jig. Offshore, when the weather allows, boats running out of Venice and Empire have been picking off school‑size yellowfin and blackfin around the floaters, plus plenty of chicken dolphin around weedlines. Chunking and live bait have worked best, but a spread of small skirted ballyhoo is still producing. Snapper trips over the rigs and hard bottom are putting solid red snapper and mangroves in the box on cut pogies and squid. For **hot spots**, I’d put my money on: - The outer edges of **Breton Sound islands and rigs** in 8–15 feet for specks: clean water, shrimp under corks or soft plastics under birds. - The drains and bayou mouths feeding into **Lake Borgne and the MRGO rocks** for mixed trout and reds on that falling morning tide. If you’re heading out today, think early start, find bait and moving water, and let the tide and birds tell you where to stop the boat. 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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Early Tide Magic: Specks, Reds, and Summer Heat on the Gulf
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans and southeast Louisiana fishing report for the Gulf and nearby marsh. We’re sitting on a light southeast breeze this morning, mid‑70s at daybreak, warming into the mid‑80s with that usual muggy air and a slight chop outside the protection of the marsh. Skies are partly cloudy with a slight chance of a pop‑up shower this afternoon, so a light rain jacket in the boat isn’t a bad idea. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m. local, sunset about 8 p.m., giving you plenty of daylight to work both ends of the tide. Down around the outer marshes and sounds, that early falling tide at first light has been the sweet spot. Moving water around cuts, trenasses, and the mouths of bayous is key. Speckled trout have been chewing at daylight over shell and current breaks. Think deeper edges of Breton Sound rigs, the MRGO rocks, and the outer edges of Hopedale and Delacroix. Boats that got out before sunup and worked topwaters over 3–6 feet of water picked up solid specks with a few pushing 3 pounds. Best producers have been classic walking baits in bone or chrome, then switching to 3–4 inch soft plastic paddle tails and shrimp imitations under popping corks once that sun gets higher. Chartreuse tails and natural shrimp colors have been out‑fishing everything else. Live shrimp is still king on the reefs and at the rigs; if you can’t get live, dead shrimp tipped on a jighead is still pulling bites from trout and drum. In the marsh, redfish have been cruising the shorelines on that lower water, especially in the ponds off Bayou Biloxi, Pointe aux Chenes, and down toward Shell Beach and Delacroix. Look for clean water with bait flipping—mullet and pogies in the pockets. Gold spoons, weedless paddletails in dark colors with chartreuse tips, and live or dead shrimp under a cork tight to the grass have been putting slot reds in the box. Folks soaking cracked crab on the bottom near deeper cuts are picking up some nice black drum and a few sheepshead. Closer to the passes and offshore edges, when the wind lays, boats working weedlines and rips have found schoolie mahi and a few blackfin tuna on trolled diving plugs and feather rigs, with chunked bait picking up fish when they slow down. Around the mouths of the river, big jigs and soft plastics are taking jack crevalle and bull reds in the dirty green water where it meets the clearer Gulf water. Two local hot spots to circle for the next trip: - The MRGO rock dam and nearby reefs: good mix of specks, reds, and drum on plastics and live shrimp. - Outer Hopedale and Black Bay reefs: trout early on topwater, then plastics and corks once the sun climbs. With the heat building through the day, the smartest play is early and late. Fish that first good moving tide at sunrise with topwaters and corks, then slide deeper or tuck into the shade of the marsh and slow down your presentation once the sun gets high. Keep an eye on storms building inland in the afternoon—they can march south faster than you think. That’s your Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans 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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Summer Trout and Reds: East River Money Time with Moving Water and First Light Bites
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf of Mexico New Orleans fishing report. Out on the east side of the river this morning we’ve got a light south wind, warm and sticky, with scattered clouds and a high pushing into the upper 80s by afternoon. A weak onshore breeze is keeping the Gulf laid down early, with a little chop building later once that sun gets up and the wind hits 10–15. Humidity’s thick, so plan on some haze at first light and a couple of pop‑up thunderstorms after lunch. Tide’s running a typical summer pattern: a gentle incoming through the early morning, slowing mid‑day, then easing back out late afternoon and into the evening. That moving water window right after low, as it starts pushing in, has been the money time for both trout and reds. If you can line that up with first light, you’re in business. Sunrise is right around early breakfast, with sunset in the neighborhood of dinnertime, giving you a long, bright day. The most consistent bite has been from first light through mid‑morning, then again the last two hours before dark once that sun drops and the water cools a touch. Inshore around the outer marshes and bayous, speckled trout have been chewing pretty steady on the edges of cleaner water and current lines. Boats working the passes and the outer points have been boxing good numbers of keeper trout with a decent mix of 14–18 inch fish, plus a few bigger schoolies mixed in. Redfish are roaming the grass edges and broken shorelines, especially where you’ve got bait flicking and a little dirty water pushed up on the bank. Best lures right now: - For trout, tight‑wobble suspending jerkbaits, 3–4 inch paddle‑tail plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, and small topwaters early when it’s calm. Whites, chartreuse, and anything with a little glow are working in that slightly off‑color water. - For reds, gold spoons, black/chartreuse or purple plastics, and weedless soft jerkbaits you can slide over grass and shell. When they get picky, a live or dead shrimp under a popping cork, or a mud minnow on a light jig, will finish the job. Out a bit farther, nearshore reefs and rigs have seen a mixed bag: keeper redfish where it’s legal, some drum, sheepshead hanging tight to structure, and a few snapper where the seasons allow. Anglers soaking cut pogie, squid, and shrimp around the legs are picking off a steady pile of bottom fish when the current’s not ripping. For natural bait, live shrimp is still king in the marsh. Croakers are starting to shine for bigger trout on the shells and rigs. Finger mullet and mud minnows are solid all‑around offerings for redfish, flounder, and the odd drum nosing around the banks. Couple of local hot spots to keep on your list: - The rigs and nearby reefs out of Venice and Empire, working the up‑current side where that tide rolls past the structure. - The outer marsh and bayous east of Hopedale and Shell Beach, targeting current‑swept points, mouths of drains, and shell patches off the main channels. Work the moving water, keep an eye out for birds and nervous bait on the surface, and don’t be afraid to change color or profile when the bite slows. Cover water until you bump into them, then slow down and pick it apart. 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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Early Summer Lake Pontchartrain: Trout and Reds on the Incoming Tide
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your New Orleans Gulf Coast fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up along Lake Pontchartrain, the MRGO, and down through Hopedale, Delacroix, and Shell Beach. Light south to southeast breeze, warm and muggy, with scattered afternoon storms popping up inland and drifting south. Air temps are running mid‑70s at first light, climbing into the upper 80s and low 90s by mid‑day. Humidity’s thick, so plan on sunscreen, a buff, and plenty of water. On the tide, we’re seeing a modest moving tide this morning with a low before daylight and a rising tide through the morning into early afternoon, then easing off later. That incoming water is the ticket around marsh drains, bayou mouths, and the bridges. Moving water is key right now; if the water’s not pushing, slide a few hundred yards until you see bait flicking and current pushing around pilings or points. Sunrise is right around early breakfast time, with sunset in the early evening, giving you a solid low‑light window both ends of the day. The first two hours after sunrise and the last two before dark are prime for topwater trout and redfish action. Recent action in the area has been solid. Local guides and marina chatter from places like Hopedale and Delacroix report good **speckled trout** numbers on the outside bays and over shell and broken oyster bottom, with two‑person boxes of 25–40 trout not uncommon on calmer mornings when the water’s clean. Mixed in are plenty of **keeper reds**, along with a few bull reds hanging closer to the passes and deeper bayous. **Sheepshead**, **black drum**, and the odd **flounder** are coming off dock pilings, rock jetties, and the bridges. Best baits right now: - For speckled trout: 3–4 inch soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads under a popping cork – anything shrimp or glow/chartreuse. Live shrimp under a cork is still king when you can get it. Topwaters like a bone or chrome walk‑the‑dog plug early over shell flats and along the Lake Pontchartrain bridges will draw bigger trout. - For reds: Gold spoons, shrimp‑pattern soft plastics, and paddle tails in natural colors along grass edges and pockets in the marsh. Cut mullet or live/cut shrimp on a jighead or Carolina rig along points and drains will keep the rod bent. - For sheepshead and drum: Small pieces of shrimp or crab tight to structure – bridge pilings, rocks, and dock legs. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: - **Lake Pontchartrain bridges** – especially the Causeway and the Twin Span areas. Work the up‑current side of the pilings with soft plastics or live shrimp under a cork, and switch to heavier jigheads if the current’s pushing hard. Trout, reds, and sheepshead are all in that mix. - **Hopedale and Shell Beach marsh** – look for clean, greenish water in the outer bays and along the edges of marsh drains dumping into larger ponds. Fish the mouths on the incoming tide with corks and plastics; on slack tide, push farther back and sight‑fish reds along the grass when the sun gets up. Water clarity is everything right now. If it looks like chocolate milk, keep moving. When you find clean, moving water with bait on the surface or on the sonar, slow down and work it over. That’s your Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans‑area report 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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New Orleans Gulf Fishing Report: Falling Tide Bite, Topwater Blowups, and Reds in the Marsh
This is Artificial Lure checking in with your New Orleans Gulf fishing report. We’ve got a light onshore flow this morning, southeast winds around 5–10 knots, building closer to 10–15 by afternoon with a typical humid, partly cloudy sky. Local marine forecasts are calling for a slight chop inside the marsh and a modest one- to two‑foot swell outside. Air temps are running from the mid‑70s at first light into the upper 80s by mid‑day, with a good chance of scattered pop‑up storms after lunch, so keep that rain jacket handy. Sunrise over the marsh comes a little after 6, with sunset a bit after 8. That gives you a long, juicy low‑light window early and late, prime time to work topwater and shallow structure. Tides around the New Orleans area – from Lake Borgne down toward Hopedale and Shell Beach, and out to Barataria Bay – are showing a decent one‑foot push today, with a falling tide through the morning then turning and coming in early afternoon. That falling water has been the ticket lately, pulling bait out of the grass and off the flats into drains and bayou mouths. Recent reports from local marinas and guides down in Shell Beach, Hopedale, and Delacroix say the speckled trout bite has been solid when you find clean moving water. Boats working the outer bays and rigs in Breton Sound have been boxing 25–50 trout on good days, with plenty of 14–18 inch fish and a few bigger mixed in. Redfish are stacked in the marsh ponds and along shoreline points, often in less than two feet of water, with folks regularly limiting out when they cover water and sight‑fish the pockets. Sheepshead and black drum are still hanging on deeper corners, rip‑rap, and around bridges and platforms, taking shrimp and crabs. A few slot reds and drum are also coming from the ICW and MRGO edges. Out a bit farther, when seas allow, anglers are running to nearshore rigs and reefs for snapper, mangrove snapper, and the occasional cobia. Best lures right now: – For specks, work **shrimp‑style soft plastics** under a popping cork in natural or glow colors, and paddle tails in opening night, chartreuse, or shrimp hues on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads. – At daybreak, **topwaters** like Spooks and Skitterwalks over oyster reefs and current lines have been drawing blowups. – For reds, **gold spoons**, spinnerbaits with a soft plastic trailer, and weedless jerk shads pitched tight to grass lines, points, and drains are money. – When the bite is finicky, live shrimp or croakers under a cork around current breaks and rig legs is hard to beat. Best baits: live shrimp, live croaker, and fresh dead shrimp. In the marsh, a simple live shrimp two to three feet under a cork drifting through a bayou mouth is putting fish in the box. Offshore or around structure, drop that same shrimp or a cut bait straight down. A couple of hot spots to consider: – **Hopedale and Shell Beach**: Fish the outer bay reefs, MRGO rocks, and cuts dumping into Lake Borgne for trout on the falling tide, then slide into the ponds for reds as the sun climbs. – **Barataria Bay and Bayou Perot/Lafitte area**: Work wind‑blown shorelines, cuts, and the backside of islands for redfish, then hop to shell pads and wellheads for trout when the tide starts rolling. Play the wind, chase that moving water, and adjust lure color to water clarity—cleaner water, go natural; dirtier, bump up the chartreuse and noise. 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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Gulf-Side Gold: Trout, Reds, and Perfect Conditions Around New Orleans Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf-side fishing report for the New Orleans area. We’ve got a classic south Louisiana setup this morning. National Weather Service marine data shows light south to southeast winds around 5–10 knots early, building closer to 10–15 by afternoon, with Gulf temps hovering in the low 80s and only a slight chop in the sounds and bays. Skies are partly cloudy with a pop-up shower chance later, so plan for sun and a quick squall or two. Sunrise hit just after 6:00 a.m., with sunset coming a little after 8:00 p.m., giving you a long, fishy daylight window. NOAA tide tables for Shell Beach and the Mississippi River delta show a modest but steady tidal swing today, more of a slow push than a big fall. That soft movement is perfect for working shorelines, drains, and current breaks rather than needing to sit on big passes. Peak movement is mid-morning and again late afternoon, so time your best spots around those windows. Inshore, the story’s been speckled trout and redfish. Local reports out of Hopedale and Shell Beach say boats have been boxing decent specks over reefs and wellheads in 6–10 feet of water, with some limits coming before the sun gets high. Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king, but plastic is holding its own: think 3–4 inch paddle tails in glow, opening night, or chartreuse on a 1/8–1/4 ounce jighead. Topwater walkers at first light—bone or chrome—have been producing some better-sized trout on calmer mornings. Redfish have been working the grass edges and broken marsh on the east side and down toward Delacroix. Anglers are seeing small pods cruising the shorelines on the higher water, with most reds in the 18–24 inch slot and a few bigger bulls mixed in. Gold spoons, black-and-gold spinnerbaits, and weedless paddle tails are getting crushed. If you’re soaking bait, fresh-cut mullet or cracked blue crab on a Carolina rig is hard to beat. Nearshore in the outer bays and close rigs, folks have been picking up sheepshead, drum, and some mangrove snapper around structure using live shrimp and small pieces of cut bait on dropper rigs. A few cobia and jack crevalle have also been reported cruising the rigs; big bucktail jigs and larger swimbaits are your best artificial bets there. For hotspots, put Bay Eloi and the outer edges of Lake Borgne on your list for trout, especially around old wells and shell pads when that tide is moving. Downriver, the waters around Breton Sound—especially rigs and platforms in 8–20 feet—have been steady producers when the wind lets you get out there. Inside, the marsh cuts and ponds off Oak River and Four Horse Lake have been holding both reds and some keeper trout on moving water. If you’re planning a trip, fish early, follow the bait, and match your lure colors to the water—more natural in clear, more chartreuse and glow when it’s dirty. Keep an eye on that wind; when it swings a bit stronger out the south, push tighter to protected banks and leeward shorelines. That’s your Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans-area report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next rundown. 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
Welcome to the "Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans Fishing Report Today" podcast! Dive into expert insights, local fishing conditions, and the latest tips for anglers exploring the vibrant waters of the Gulf and New Orleans. Stay updated with daily reports on weather, tides, species activity, and the best fishing spots. Perfect for seasoned fishermen and newcomers alike, tune in to enhance your fishing adventures!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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Inception Point AI
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