PODCAST · leisure
Sea of Cortez, Mexico Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Tune in to the "Sea of Cortez, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world's aquarium—a nutrient-rich marginal sea renowned for its exceptional marine biodiversity and year-round big-game angling. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Sea of Cortez's unique ecosystem and make every fishing expedition a memorable one.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.comGet all your gear before 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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Sea of Cortez Summer Bite: Roosters, Tuna, and First Light Windows
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, talking mainly La Paz to Cabo Pulmo and up toward Loreto. First, conditions. Weather this morning is classic Cortez summer: light southerly breeze early, building mid‑day, with hot, clear skies and a bit of afternoon chop. Daytime highs are running in the low to mid‑30s Celsius, with warm, blue water pushing in close to shore. Sunrise hit right around 6 a.m. local, sunset will be just after 8 p.m., so you’ve got a nice long fishing window. Tides are in a mellow phase, with a modest morning incoming and an afternoon outgoing. That softer swing means the key bite windows are right around first light through mid‑morning, and again on the first push of the late‑day current. Slack periods in the middle of the day are slower unless you’re deep‑dropping or working structure. Fish are active. Roosterfish are cruising the beaches and points, especially where there’s a bit of wave action and bait stacked—sardina and mullet are tight to shore. Inshore boats have been seeing quality roosters in the 20–40‑pound class, with a few brutes bigger. Alongside them: jack crevalle, ladyfish, and the odd snook around rockier outcrops and mangrove edges up north. Offshore, dorado are around floating debris and current lines, mostly school‑size with some nicer bulls mixed in. Yellowfin tuna have been showing on porpoise schools and temperature breaks, mostly football to mid‑grade fish. A few wahoo have been taken on the edges of seamounts and drop‑offs where the current is pushing. Recent catches out of the local fleets include mixed bags: a couple of tuna per boat when they find the life, solid dorado counts when there’s structure on the surface, and steady inshore action on roosters and jacks. Bottom fishing has kicked out snapper, cabrilla, and some leopard grouper off the reefs when current and boat traffic cooperate. Best baits right now: live **sardina** is king, followed by caballito and mullet. If you can net or buy fresh live bait at first light, do it. Slow‑trolled live baits near points, color changes, and bait balls are getting bit fast. For bottom fish, fresh cut bait—chunked sardina or fillet strips—on a dropper loop is doing work. Best lures: for roosters, big **surface poppers** in bone, blue, or mullet patterns, and long, sleek stickbaits you can rip fast. They want speed and commotion. For dorado and tuna, small to medium **feathers**, cedar plugs, and skirted lures in blue‑white, pink‑white, and zucchini colors are reliable. Metal jigs yo‑yoed over structure in the 120–250‑foot range are producing grouper and snapper. For wahoo, high‑speed trolling with diving plugs or heavy bullet‑head lures in dark‑back patterns is your best bet. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Cerralvo/Isla Espíritu Santo area**: Good mix of tuna, dorado, and strong inshore rooster action along the island edges and nearby beaches. Work the current lines, any floating debris, and wind lanes. - **Cabo Pulmo and nearby reefs**: Productive for snapper, cabrilla, and the occasional wahoo and dorado on the outer edges. Fish the structure lines and watch for birds and bait getting pushed up. If you’re on foot, those beaches east and north of La Paz with some surf and a bit of color change are prime for casting poppers and stickbaits at first light. Keep moving until you find bait and birds. That’s your Sea of Cortez report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the bite. 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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Sea of Cortez Summer Peak: Tuna, Marlin, and Roosterfish Report
This is Artificial Lure with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We’re sliding into true summer mode now. Air temps along the Baja side are running warm and dry, mid‑80s to low‑90s in the afternoon with light morning winds and a typical afternoon breeze kicking up chop. Nights are still comfortable, dropping into the low 70s. Skies mostly clear, so plan on strong sun and glare on the water. Along the central gulf, sunrise is right around 5:30 a.m., with sunset near 7:40 p.m. That gives you a long window, but the best bite has been early morning into mid‑morning, and then again late afternoon as the light drops. Midday is workable for bottom fish, but the pelagics push deeper and get picky. Tidewise, we’re on a moderate cycle, not those huge spring swings. That means softer currents, especially around the islands and inside the bays. The more aggressive surface action has lined up best around the morning incoming and the evening outgoing, especially near points and reef edges where the bait stacks. Water temps are in the high 70s to low 80s, and that’s turned the gulf into a buffet line. Reports from captains working out of La Paz, Los Barriles, and down toward Cabo Pulmo have been steady on school‑size **yellowfin tuna**, scattered **dorado**, plus **striped marlin** and the odd **sailfish** offshore. Inshore, the usual Sea of Cortez lineup is showing: **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, **pargo**, **cabrilla**, and plenty of triggerfish for anyone looking to fill a cooler. Offshore boats have been hanging small yellowfin most days when they find birds and spinner dolphin, with double‑digit counts possible on the better pods. Dorado numbers are improving, mostly schoolies with a few legit bulls if you put in the miles. Billfish are catch‑and‑release, and some boats are raising several marlin a day when they work temperature breaks and color lines. Inshore, roosters have been cruising the beaches and points, especially where there’s clean, green‑blue water and a little surf. Jacks are mixed in, hammering bait balls tight to shore. Structure fishing around rocky points and island edges has been good for cabrilla and pargo, with slow‑worked offerings right in the rocks producing the larger models. For lures, keep it simple and proven. Small to mid‑size trolling feathers and cedar plugs in blue/white, purple/black, and zucchini are still money on tuna. A couple of skirted trolling lures or rigged ballyhoo‑style plastics in dark over natural colors will cover marlin and sailfish. Dorado are smacking bright chuggers and smaller plastics in lime, orange, and pink. Inshore, big surface poppers and stickbaits in natural baitfish patterns are drawing violent strikes from roosters and jacks when worked fast and erratic. Metal jigs and 2–4 oz bucktail or lead‑head jigs with soft plastics are doing work on bottom fish; drop them right on the structure and hop or slow‑roll them back. For bait, live **sardina** are still king when you can find them—perfect for tuna, dorado, roosters, and just about everything else. Live mullet or caballito are prime for big roosters and jacks off the beaches and rocky points. Cut squid and chunked bonito will get bit by tuna and also keep bottom fish chewing when the live bait runs thin. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: - **Cerralvo/Isla Espíritu Santo area near La Paz** – Working the island edges, seamounts, and nearby high spots has produced tuna, dorado, and billfish offshore, with cabrilla and pargo tight to the rocks. Early and late around current edges and bird activity is key. - **East Cape stretch from La Ribera to Los Barriles** – Classic summer Sea of Cortez. Slow‑troll live baits or medium lures just off the beach for roosters and jacks, then slide deeper to temp breaks for tuna, dorado, and marlin. Watch for frigate birds and dolphin. That’s the word from the gulf for now. This is Artificial Lure reminding you to hydrate, respect the sun, and handle those fish with care. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from the water. 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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Sea of Cortez Summer Bite: Roosters, Yellowtail, and Early Morning Glory
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, coming at you like a panga running on a glassy morning. We’ve got classic gulf conditions right now: light pre‑dawn breeze out of the northwest, building to a modest afternoon chop as the thermal winds pick up. Skies are mostly clear, air temps running mid‑70s early, pushing into the upper 80s to low 90s by midday. Water temps are sitting in that sweet spot for summer action, warm but not bathwater, so the bite is turning on early and late. Sunrise is just after six local, with sunset a little after eight, so you’ve got a generous low‑light window. The best action is lining up with first light through about 9 a.m., then again the last two hours before dark. Midday is still fishable if you work deeper structure or troll the edges of current lines. Tides in the central and northern Sea of Cortez are running moderate today, with a decent morning incoming and a softer fall this afternoon. That morning push has been key for inshore species—when that water starts moving over the reefs and rocky points, the bait wakes up and so do the predators. Inshore, the story has been **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, **sierra**, and **pargo**. Roosters are roaming the beaches where there’s solid bait—especially around creek mouths and rocky transitions. Jacks are smashing anything that looks nervous on the surface. The pargo bite has been best on deeper rock piles in 40–80 feet, tight to structure. Offshore and near‑offshore, boats are reporting **yellowtail** hanging on high spots and pinnacles, along with **dorado** starting to show under debris and temp breaks. A few **sailfish** and the odd **striped marlin** are sliding in where the blue water pushes closer, especially off the Cape and mid‑gulf banks. Best producers lately: - For roosters and jacks: big **surface poppers** in blue/white or black/purple, plus **stickbaits** and **live sardinas** slow‑trolled tight to the beach. - For yellowtail: **yo‑yo irons** in scrambled egg or blue/white, heavy jigs dropped to the bottom and ripped up fast, along with **live mackerel** or caballito on a dropper loop. - For dorado: **trolled feathers**, small **skirted lures** in pink or zucchini, and **cut ballyhoo** or live bait pitched to fish under floating debris. - For pargo and cabrilla: **live mullet**, **pinfish**, or fresh chunk bait pinned on strong hooks, plus **metal jigs** and **big soft plastics** slow‑rolled just off the rocks. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your chart: - **Isla Espíritu Santo / La Partida area** off La Paz: reefs and drop‑offs there have been holding yellowtail, cabrilla, and some quality pargo, with roosters cruising the nearby beaches when the bait stacks up. - **Midriff region near Isla Ángel de la Guarda**: cooler, nutrient‑rich water pushing through the narrows has been firing up yellowtail and cabrilla on the islands’ steep edges and rocky points. General pattern: match the hatch on bait size, keep leaders stout—these fish fight dirty—and don’t be afraid to fish tight to structure. Early birds with good presentations are going home with the heavier coolers. That’s your Sea of Cortez 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 Heat: Roosters, Dorado, and Prime Tides Across the Sea of Cortez
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, coming to you like a local on the dock. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern settling in. Overnight temps stayed mild and highs are pushing into the upper 80s to low 90s along the Baja side, with light morning breezes and a bit more wind in the afternoon, mostly out of the south and southeast. Skies are generally clear, with just enough high cloud to take the edge off the sun. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., sunset close to 8 p.m., so you’ve got a generous low‑light window to work with. Tides are running a typical mixed semi‑diurnal pattern in the mid‑Gulf. Around La Paz and north toward Loreto you’re seeing a decent pre‑dawn high draining out through mid‑morning, then a building afternoon flood. That falling water at first light has been concentrating bait on the points and current edges, and the afternoon push is sparking a short but sweet evening bite tight to the rocks and inshore reefs. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Inshore, roosters and jacks are making a strong showing along the beaches and rocky points. Boats working the area from Los Barriles up toward La Ventana have been reporting solid roosterfish, many in the 15–30 pound class with a few larger models mixed in, plus plenty of feisty jack crevalle. Around La Paz and Espiritu Santo, pangas are finding good numbers of Cabrilla and pargo over structure, with the odd amberjack and yellowtail still hanging on deeper spots early and late. Offshore, the warm water pushing up from the south has brought more dorado into the picture, especially off Punta Arena, Cerralvo Island, and the high‑spots east of La Paz. Most are school‑size mahi but there are enough nicer bulls to keep things interesting. Striped marlin are still readily available off the East Cape and up toward the Gordo area, with a few sailfish starting to sniff around as temps bump up. For lures, keep it simple and local. Inshore for roosters and jacks, big surface plugs and stickbaits in sardine, mackerel, or plain white are doing damage. Metal jigs in the 40–80 gram range, blue and chrome or green and gold, are producing Cabrilla, pargo, and the deeper stuff when dropped on reef edges. Offshore, small to medium skirted trolling lures in blue‑white, petrolero, and purple work well for marlin and dorado, and don’t forget a feather or two in pink or green for schoolie mahi. Best bait right now: live sardina is king when you can get it. Beach seiners around La Ventana, La Paz, and East Cape have been finding enough to keep the fleet supplied most mornings, though you’ll want to be on it early. Live mackerel and caballito are prime for marlin, bigger roosters, and amberjack. Cut bait and chunked bonito dropped into chum lines on structure are turning on the pargo and snapper. Couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: First, the **Punta Arena to El Cardonal** stretch on the Baja side. Work the current lines, beach drop‑offs, and rocky points at gray light and again late afternoon. This zone has been holding roosters, jacks, and the occasional dorado pushing bait right up against the beach. Second, the **seamounts and reefs around Isla Cerralvo**. Fish the edges of the banks for Cabrilla, pargo, and amberjack with jigs or live bait, and keep a couple of trolling rods out when you’re running between spots for dorado and marlin cruising the contours. That’s your Sea of Cortez 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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Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Tides, Structure, and Surface Chaos
This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, coming at you like a panga running just on plane. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up. Skies running mostly clear with a light morning breeze under 10 knots, building to a choppy afternoon but nothing that’ll scare off a solid center console. Air temps climbing into the high 80s to low 90s, water temps sitting in that sweet mid‑70s to low‑80s band inshore, a touch cooler out deep. Humidity’s up, but that’s what turns the switch on. Sunrise is right around six in the morning, with sunset close to eight in the evening. That gives a long window, but the best bite’s hugging the low‑light edges. Tides are in a moderate cycle: a predawn high easing into a late-morning drop, then filling again toward late afternoon. That falling morning tide has been the money maker inshore, especially over structure and points where current pinches bait. Offshore, the word on the docks is yellowfin tuna and dorado are showing with more consistency on the temperature breaks and around any floating debris or sargassum lines. Boats working slow-trolled ballyhoo and small skirted lures in blue-and-white or pink-and-white have been hanging decent numbers of school‑size yellowfin, with a few better models mixed in. Dorado are smacking brighter plastics, especially anything with chartreuse and some flash. Keep a pitch rod rigged with live sardina or a chunk of bonito for followers. Closer to the rocks and islands, roosterfish have been active in that skinny water, cruising just outside the breakers. Anglers slow‑trolling live mullet or caballito along the beaches have been into steady action, with fish ranging from small schoolies up to those big comb‑back brutes that’ll test your knots. Big surface plugs and stickbaits in bone or mackerel patterns are getting crushed when there’s a bit of chop on the water. Inshore reefs and drop‑offs are kicking out good numbers of cabrilla and pargo. Live bait pinned on a fluorocarbon leader, dropped tight to structure, is still king. For artificials, heavy bucktail jigs in white or sardine color, worked slow along the bottom, have been producing a mixed bag: cabrilla, leopard grouper, and the occasional snapper. Don’t be shy about upsizing leader around the rocks; better to lose a bite than a whole rig to the bricks. For lure selection, think natural early and loud late. At first light, small metal jigs and slender minnows in sardine and anchovy patterns have been killer when cast into bird schools busting bait. As the sun gets higher, guys are switching to deeper-running plugs and heavier jigs to stay in the zone. In the afternoon breeze, poppers and chuggers are drawing explosive surface strikes from jacks and roosters along current seams and points. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: First, the island edges and pinnacles north of La Paz, where current wraps around the structure and stacks up bait. That area has been very consistent for cabrilla, pargo, and the occasional surprise pelagic sliding in tight. Second, the inshore coastline stretches near Los Barriles and northward, where the beach drops off quickly. Work live bait or big topwaters along those color changes and you’ve got a real shot at quality roosters and jacks. Overall fish activity is solid: not wide‑open carnage, but steady pick with flurries when tide and light line up. If you time that falling tide with first light, you’re in the game. Bring a mix of live bait, metal jigs from 40–80 grams, and a couple of big surface plugs, and you’ll be ready for whatever cruises by. 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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Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Island Points and Dawn Bites from La Paz to Cabo
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, talking mainly La Paz to Los Cabos and a bit across toward Loreto. We’re sitting on a mellow early‑summer pattern: light morning breeze, building onshore wind and chop in the afternoon, warm humid air, and sea surface temps mostly in the mid‑70s to low‑80s. Skies are running mostly clear with some afternoon clouds, so plan on calm rides out at gray light and a bumpy ride home if you push it late. Tides are running a moderate swing, with a predawn high easing out through the morning, then a building flood pushing in later in the day. That dropping morning tide has been lining up nicely with first light, giving a solid bite window, especially around inshore structure and island points where the current pinches. Sunrise is right around the very early morning, with sunset early evening. The most consistent action has been from first gray through a couple hours after sunup, and then again the last hour of light when the wind backs off a bit. Midday is fishable, but you’ll work harder for every bite, especially nearshore. Offshore, the story is early‑season pelagics. Boats out of Cabo and San José have been picking at striped marlin with a few dorado and occasional yellowfin tuna mixed in. The numbers aren’t full summer chaos yet, but enough fish are around that a spread of trolled lures is worth the fuel. Slow‑trolled caballito or mackerel are still putting more marlin on the tag sticks than plastics, but brightly colored skirted lures in purple‑black, petrolero, and blue‑white have been getting raised when the bait’s scarce. Inshore and around the islands has been the most reliable game. Pangas working the rocks and points near Espiritu Santo, Cerralvo, and along the East Cape are finding good mixed bags: sierra still hanging around early, plenty of triggerfish, cabrilla, pargo, and the odd nice roosterfish cruising the beaches. Jigs and live bait both producing. Best lures right now: - Metal jigs in 40–80 grams, blue‑silver or green‑mackerel, yo‑yo’d over structure for cabrilla and pargo. - Small to medium diving plugs in sardine or mackerel patterns for sierra and inshore roosters. - Soft‑plastics on heavy jigheads, browns and olives, tight to the rocks for grouper and cabrilla. Best bait: sabiki up sardina, caballito, and small mackerel at first light. A fly‑lined live sardina or caballito near a reef edge is still money for pargo and roosters. For bottom fish, butterflied baits on a dropper loop are hard to beat. A couple of hot spots to keep on your list: - Around Isla Cerralvo (also called Jacques Cousteau Island), especially the north and south points and any visible current lines. Good mix of inshore gamefish and a shot at tuna or dorado when the current pushes blue water tight. - The stretch from La Ribera down past Punta Colorada on the East Cape beaches, where roosters and jacks have been cruising the drop‑offs early and late. Cast big surface plugs or slow‑trolled live bait just outside the breakers. Overall fish activity has been steady, not wide‑open—more of a “grind for quality” pattern. Put in your time during the tide changes, keep moving until you mark bait and current, and don’t be afraid to switch from hardware to live bait when the sun gets high. That’s your Sea of Cortez 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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Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Tuna, Dorado, and Roosters on the Bite
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report, straight from the Baja side of things. We’re sitting on a mellow early-summer pattern now: light to moderate northwest breeze in the mornings, building to a choppy whitecap wind in the afternoon. Air temps are running warm but not brutal yet, mid‑70s at first light pushing into the upper‑80s by midday. Skies are mostly clear, with that classic Baja blue dome overhead. Sunrise is right around six in the morning, with sunset close to eight in the evening, which gives you a generous low‑light window at both ends of the day. Those first two hours after sunup and the last ninety minutes before dark are where you want to put your focus. The tide today is on a modest swing, nothing extreme, but there’s enough water moving to spark a bite when the flow picks up. Think mid‑morning incoming and late‑afternoon outgoing as your best bets around the points and island channels. When that current starts to walk, the bait stacks and the predators wake up. Offshore, the talk on the docks from Loreto down toward La Paz is of steady action on school‑size yellowfin tuna mixed with skipjack, plus a sprinkling of dorado working weed lines and temp breaks. Most of those tuna are in the 15–25 pound class, with a few better models if you’re willing to run a little farther. Dorado are still scattered, but boats that find floating debris or a clean color break are hanging a couple per trip. Nearshore, the classic Sea of Cortez grab bag is on: cabrilla and leopard grouper on the rocks, pargo and snapper in the cuts, plus sierra and jack crevalle roaming the edges. Roosterfish have been showing tight to the beaches, especially where you’ve got small mullet and sardina pushing along the sand. For lures, keep it simple and bright. Yo‑Yo style iron in blue‑white or scrambled egg is putting tuna and bottom fish in the box. Smaller chrome jigs and bullet‑head trolling lures in pink, purple, and black‑green are drawing strikes from tuna and dorado. Inshore, medium‑size surface poppers and stickbaits in bone or sardine patterns are killing it on roosters and jacks. Hard‑thumping swimbaits in natural bait colors, slow‑rolled along the rocks, are money for cabrilla and grouper. Best bait right now is live if you can make it: sardina first choice, small mackerel or mullet second. Slow‑trolled or fly‑lined baits get the nod for tuna, dorado, and roosters. For the rocks, a pinned‑on chunk or live bait dropped straight into the structure at slack, then worked as the current builds, is a reliable way to put meat on the table. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: • Around Isla Carmen and Isla Coronado off Loreto: good current lanes, plenty of structure, and consistent tuna, dorado, and cabrilla when the water’s clean. • Cerralvo Island and the channel toward La Ventana: classic zone for tuna and dorado on the outside, with strong roosterfish and jack crevalle action along the beaches when the bait is in tight. If you’re fishing from the sand, focus on points, river mouths, and any stretch where the beach has a little contour or rock. Cast just outside the breakers at first light with a surface plug or metal spoon, and keep that rod tip down—you’ll know when a rooster finds you. That’s the Sea of Cortez 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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Sea of Cortez Early Summer: Dorado, Tuna, and Inshore Structure Heating Up
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We’ve got classic early‑summer conditions now: warm days, light mornings, and building breeze in the afternoons. Near La Paz, Loreto, and down toward Los Barriles, overnight temps are staying pleasant with daytime highs pushing into the upper 80s to low 90s, mostly clear skies and a typical afternoon bump in wind out of the southeast. Humidity is creeping up but not brutal yet. Tides on this side have been running moderate: a good pre‑dawn incoming followed by a late‑morning slack, then an afternoon ebb that lines up nicely with that sea breeze. Work that early flood for inshore species in tight, then slide deeper as the sun climbs. Sunrise is coming early—first light gives you enough glow to run by about half an hour before the sun actually pops, and you’ll have decent light on the water fast. Sunset is landing early evening, with a nice golden hour bite if the wind doesn’t blow it out. Plan to be on your spot in the gray light for the best surface activity. Offshore, the warm blue water line is pushing in close. Boats running a bit outside Isla Espíritu Santo and north of Loreto have been into good numbers of **dorado**, scattered **striped marlin**, and some **sailfish** mixed in. Football **yellowfin tuna** are showing on and off under birds and porpoise, not wide‑open but enough to keep you honest if you’re willing to hunt. Inside, the reefs and rocky structure are giving up **yellowtail** early, plus **pargo**, **cabrilla**, and plenty of **sierra** when the water has a little color. Counts from local captains the last few days: offshore boats have been hanging 2–6 dorado per trip when they find the right temp break, with a marlin or two raised and maybe one released. Tuna scores are one to a half‑dozen smaller fish when you hit the right school. Inshore pangas are doing well on bottom fish—limits of pargo and cabrilla not unusual—with a handful of quality yellowtail before the sun gets too high. Lure choice: for offshore trolling, think bright and aggressive. Small to medium **skirted lures** in blue‑white, pink‑silver, and zucchini patterns are doing the work on dorado and billfish. Cedar plugs and small bullet heads in natural shades are the ticket for tuna. Don’t be shy about running one darker lure way back as your “shotgun.” For inshore and reef work, **metal jigs** and **yo‑yo irons** in scrambled egg, blue‑chrome, or plain chrome are killing it on yellowtail and cabrilla. Cast them up‑current, let them sink, and burn them back with a couple pauses. Around the rocks in shallow, **swimbaits** in sardine and mackerel colors, plus **surface poppers** at first light, can draw violent strikes. Bait is still king if you can make it. Live **sardina** are gold for everything: slow‑trolled for dorado, fly‑lined for tuna, or pinned on a light leader around structure for pargo and cabrilla. Live **mackerel** or **caballito** are prime for yellowtail and billfish. If bait’s scarce, a well‑soaked fresh chunk still gets bit, especially on tuna and bottom dwellers. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: First, the edges and humps around **Isla Espíritu Santo and Isla Partida** off La Paz—work the drop‑offs for yellowtail at gray light, then slide off to deeper blue water for dorado and marlin once the sun comes up. Second, the reefs and high spots off **Loreto**, especially north of town—pargo and cabrilla on jigs and bait, with a bonus chance at yellowtail early and dorado outside if you push a bit farther. That’s the story for the Sea of Cortez right now: be early, fish smart around the tides, and stay flexible between inshore structure and the blue water line. 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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Sea of Cortez Morning Bite: Roosters, Tuna, and Marlin Running Hot This Week
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We woke up to a light breeze out of the northwest, 5–10 knots, with calm to slight chop and good visibility. Skies are mostly clear with some high clouds, and air temps running from the low 70s at first light into the high 80s by afternoon. Water temps are sitting in that sweet mid‑70s to near 80 range, warm enough to keep the pelagics close. Sunrise came early over the gulf and sunset will be in the early evening, so you’ve got a solid low‑light window on both ends. The morning bite around gray light has been best, with another flurry late afternoon as the heat backs off. Tides are running moderate today on the Baja side, with a pre‑dawn high slack then a decent outgoing through the morning, and a smaller incoming in the afternoon. That falling water in the morning has pushed bait off the beaches and out of the estuaries, and that’s where the predators have been stacking up. Fish activity has been lively the last couple of days. Inshore, anglers are bending rods on **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, **sierra mackerel**, and a few **pargo** and **cabrilla** tight to structure. Offshore boats working the usual banks have reported **yellowfin tuna**, scattered **dorado**, and the first consistent **striped marlin** of the season. Private pangas out of Los Barriles and La Ribera have been picking up multiple schoolie tuna per boat when they find birds and porpoise, with a couple of bigger models mixed in. Dorado are still a bit spotty, but when you find floating debris you can pull two to four fish quick. Best lures offshore have been small to medium **feather jigs** and **cedar plugs** in blue/white, pink, and purple/black, run way back in the spread, plus **skirted ballyhoo** if you’ve got them. Tuna have also chewed **popper‑style topwaters** on spin gear once they’re foaming. For dorado, **bright plastics**, **trolled hoochies**, and **live sardina** have been money. Inshore, the roosters have been all over **live mullet** and **sardina** slow‑trolled along the beaches and river mouths. For artificials, throw **2–4 oz surface poppers**, **stickbaits**, and **shallow‑running jerkbaits** in white, bone, or flashy baitfish patterns. Jack crevalle are eating pretty much anything that moves fast and splashes. For bottom fish, **butterflied squid**, **cut mullet**, and **live caballito** dropped on rocky edges and reefs are producing cabrilla and pargo; just bring the heavy leader because they’ll rock you quick. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - **Los Frailes area**: Work the points and dropoffs at first light for roosters and jacks, then slide deeper for cabrilla once the sun climbs. - **Gordo Banks and nearby high spots** off San José del Cabo: Good shot at yellowfin, marlin in the spread, and dorado on the edges when the current pushes bait over the structure. Focus your prime time around the early falling tide and late‑day shade lines, match the size of the bait you’re seeing, and don’t be afraid to cover water until you mark life. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from the Sea of Cortez. 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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28
Sea of Cortez Late May: Yellowtail, Marlin, and the Early Summer Bite
Buenas, this is Artificial Lure with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We’ve got a classic late‑May pattern setting up. Along the Baja side from La Paz down toward Los Barriles and across to the mainland around Guaymas and San Carlos, water temps are running in the mid‑70s to low‑80s, with a nice blue push just offshore. Local port captains and charter skippers out of La Paz and San José del Cabo are all saying the same thing: spring is giving way to the early summer bite. Weatherwise, the morning starts calm with a light breeze under 8–10 knots, building to moderate afternoon chop as the onshore wind fills. Skies are mostly clear, and the heat is coming on strong. Plan serious fishing from first light until mid‑morning, then again late afternoon into sunset. According to Mexican navy tide tables for the central gulf, we’re seeing a moderate morning high followed by a decent drop late morning, then a smaller afternoon push. That falling mid‑morning tide has been the sweet spot for inshore structure—rocky points, reef edges, and current seams around islands like Espíritu Santo and Cerralvo. Sunrise is just after 6 a.m. local, with sunset just after 8 p.m. That gives a long window, but the real magic is that gray light at dawn and the last hour before dark. Inshore action has been strong. Pangas out of La Paz and Los Barriles report good catches of yellowtail, leopard grouper (cabrilla), and big pargo around the rocks. Slow‑trolled live baits—sardina and caballito—have been the ticket, with some boats limiting on yellowtail early. Casting heavy metal jigs and stickbaits tight to the rocks is also producing; work them fast, then let them flutter on the drop for cabrilla and pargo. Offshore, local captains running out of San José del Cabo and La Paz are seeing more life every day. Striped marlin are still the main billfish, with scattered sailfish showing, and the first better‑grade dorado beginning to slide in on the temperature breaks and current lines. A few early‑season yellowfin have been picked off porpoise schools and under birds when the wind lets boats push a little farther out. Trollers are doing best with medium‑size plastic skirted lures in blue‑and‑white, guacamaya (green/yellow/orange), and black/purple for the marlin. For dorado, bright feathers and small chuggers in pink and lime, plus rigged ballyhoo when you can get them, are producing. Chunked skipjack and live sardina pitched into surface feeds are a reliable backup when the fish get picky. For beach and kayak anglers, the Sea of Cortez is waking up too. Roosterfish are starting to cruise the drop‑offs along the East Cape. Big poppers, Ranger‑style spoons, and live mullet or ladyfish slow‑trolled just outside the breakers are drawing violent strikes. Sierra mackerel are still around in the mornings—small chrome spoons, white hoochies, and live sardina work great, and a short wire leader saves you some lures. Best baits overall right now: live sardina if you can buy a tankful at first light, caballito and mullet for larger game, plus squid strips and cut bonito for the bottom set. On the artificial side, bring 40–80 gram jigs in blue/white and scrambled egg, 5–7 inch diving plugs in mackerel patterns, and a few big surface poppers for when the roosters and jacks push bait onto the beach. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: First, the island chain off La Paz—Espíritu Santo and Cerralvo (also called Jacques Cousteau Island). Work the up‑current points, pinnacles, and drop‑offs where the tide wraps around the rocks. That falling morning tide has been stacking bait and drawing in yellowtail, cabrilla, and the occasional amberjack. Second, the East Cape line from La Ribera down past La Capilla. Look for color changes and bait showers within a couple miles of the beach. Roosterfish, jacks, and early dorado are all cruising that corridor, and boats running a bit farther out are finding striped marlin on the temperature edges. That’s the story for the Sea of Cortez: stable weather, warming water, and a bite that’s only going to get better as summer rolls in. Rig heavy enough for reef bruisers, keep a live‑bait rod ready, and don’t sleep on that dawn patrol. Thanks for tuning i Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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27
Sea of Cortez Spring Bite: Roosters, Jacks, and Yellowtail Firing Up
Morning from **Artificial Lure** with your Sea of Cortez fishing note for today. Out here along the Sonoran side, the water’s already waking up. **TimeandDate** shows a **sunrise around 5:12 a.m.** and **sunset near 6:45 p.m.** for this stretch of late May, which means the best windows are that early first light and the last hour before dark. **Meteoblue** is calling for classic Baja spring conditions: warm air, light to moderate sea breeze, and mostly stable skies with a chance of afternoon chop if the wind pushes in from the southeast. The water is sitting in that sweet warm range where bait starts bunching up tight along points, reefs, and current lines. For the tide game, check your exact port before you launch because the Sea of Cortez moves by location, but **Tides4Fishing** and local marine forecasts are showing a mixed May pattern with decent morning movement and another push later in the day. Best advice from the local crowd: fish the first incoming tide over rock, then follow the bait as the water settles on the flats and drop-offs. Reports coming in from around **La Paz, Loreto, and the East Cape** say the bite has been pretty lively on the usual spring suspects. Anglers have been putting together steady catches of **roosterfish, jacks, sierras, yellowtail, cabrilla, snapper, and an occasional dorado** offshore when the current lines set up right. Inshore, small schools of bait are getting pushed hard by roosters and big jacks, with some boats reporting **a handful to a dozen fish per trip** when they’re on the right beach or point. Around the rock piles and deeper edges, **cabrilla and snapper** have been the dependable meat fish, especially where there’s bait on the sounder. Offshore, when the wind lays down, the better boats are seeing **a few quality yellowtail or dorado** mixed in with bonita and skipjack. If you’re throwing lures, keep it simple and fast. Best producers lately have been **7-inch pencil poppers, surface iron, Yo-Zuri style stickbaits, and white or chrome jerk shads**. For trolling or covering water, a **small cedar plug or diving plug in blue/white, sardine, or mackerel colors** is hard to beat. When the fish get picky, go smaller and more natural. A **soft plastic swimbait on a 1/2-ounce jig head** works great for cabrilla and snapper along the bottom. For bait, the locals still trust what the fish are already eating: **live sardina, small mackerel, squid strips, and bonita chunks**. If you can get live sardina, keep it lively and fish it on a light wire for sierras or a circle hook for roosters and jacks. Fresh-cut bait on the bottom is the ticket for reef fish. Two hot spots to keep on your list: **Bahía de La Paz points and the nearby beaches for roosterfish and jacks**, and **the rocky structure around Loreto and the midriff islands for cabrilla, snapper, and yellowtail**. If you’re running farther south, the **East Cape points and drop-offs** are always worth a swing when the bait stacks up. That’s the word from the water today: get out early, chase the bait, and don’t overthink it. 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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26
Late Spring Roosterfish and Grouper Action Heating Up in the Sea of Cortez
Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Sea of Cortez fishing report. We’ve got a classic late‑spring pattern setting up. Along the Baja side from La Paz down past Los Barriles, sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m., sunset a little after 8 p.m. First light comes quick, and that gray‑light window has been the magic hour. Weather’s been stable: mornings starting in the low 70s, afternoons pushing mid to high 80s, light to moderate northwest breeze most days. Afternoons see that wind jump up and kick a chop on the outside, so plan your long runs early. Skies mostly clear, with enough breeze to keep things comfortable but not enough to blow it out—perfect Sea of Cortez spring. Tide-wise, we’re seeing modest swings, with a decent morning incoming and a softer push in the afternoon. The morning flood has been lining up nicely with the sunrise bite, especially around rocky points and current edges. When that water starts to push over structure, the bait stacks and everything with teeth shows up. Inshore, the roosterfish are finally acting like they’re supposed to. Along the beaches east of La Paz and down toward Punta Arena, boats and kayakers have been into quality gallos—many in the 15–30 pound class, with a few bruisers bigger. A mix of jack crevalle and the odd sierra mackerel are mixing in. Best bet has been slow‑trolled live mullet or caballito just outside the surf line, with big surface poppers and stickbaits (white, bone, and blue‑back) getting crushed when the fish are actively chasing. If the sun’s high and they’re shy, switch to a slightly smaller swimming plug or a live bait on fluorocarbon. Around the rocky points, there’s solid action on leopard grouper (cabrilla), pargo, and triggerfish. Anglers working 40–120 feet on reef edges are pulling up mixed bags—plenty of good‑eating fish. Best lures have been 60–120 gram metal jigs in sardine or scrambled‑egg patterns, dropped to the bottom and worked with a slow lift‑and‑fall. Fresh cut squid, chunked bonito, or live sardina on a dropper loop are still hard to beat when the current is moving. Offshore, the water temps keep creeping up and the blue water is pushing closer. Just outside the seamounts north of La Paz and off the Gordo way, boats have seen more striped marlin and a few early‑season dorado. Not wide‑open yet, but enough action to keep trollers honest. Small to medium skirted lures in pink/white or blue/white, plus rigged ballyhoo, are getting the stripes’ attention. Dorado are favoring trolled feathers and live sardina tossed around any floating debris or current lines—keep a spinning rod ready. Bait availability has been decent most mornings, with pangueros netting sardina and caballito at daybreak. Get out early; once the sun’s up and the traffic starts, bait gets tougher and the line at the bait skiffs grows. Two hotspots to keep on your radar: First, Punta Arena de la Ventana: that stretch has been holding roosters tight to the beach and good cabrilla on the nearby rocks. Work the beaches at first light for gallos, then slide out deeper as the sun climbs and jig the structure for bottom fish. Second, the El Bajo seamount north of La Paz: when the wind lets you get there safely, it’s been producing striped marlin, some tuna sign, and quality bottom fish on the high spots. Watch your sounder, fish the temperature breaks, and be ready to switch from trolling to dropping jigs when you mark fish tight to the structure. Overall fish activity is strong in the morning, tapering late morning, then picking up a bit again when the afternoon tide starts pushing—though the wind can cut the second half short. If you can, fish that dawn bite hard and be off the water before it blows. That’s your Sea of Cortez report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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
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25
Sea of Cortez Dorado and Yellowtail Limit Action - May 5th Early Morning Report
Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' at ya live from the salty shores of the **Sea of Cortez**, Mexico, with your early morning fishing report for May 5th, 2026, right around 3 AM local time. Skies are clearin' up after a breezy night, with temps hoverin' at a comfy 72°F, light winds from the northwest at 8-12 knots pickin' up by dawn, per the latest NOAA feeds. Perfect for castin' without gettin' soaked—expect mostly sunny skies all day, humidity around 60%. Sunrise hits at 5:42 AM, sunset at 7:01 PM, givin' ya a solid 13+ hours of prime light. Tides? AccuWeather says we're in a neap cycle today—low tide at 4:17 AM (-1.2 ft), high at 10:28 AM (4.8 ft), then low again at 4:52 PM (-0.9 ft). Fish the incomin' tide mid-mornin' for best bites. Action's heatin' up! Local charter logs from Baja Fishing Reports show dorado and yellowtail goin' crazy offshore, with limits posted yesterday—20-40 lb bulls hammerin' live mackerel. Inshore, Sierra mackerel and roosterfish are stackin' up, crews pullin' 15-25 fish days on jackpots. Snook and jack crevalle tearin' it near mangroves, and bottom divers haulin' 10-20 lb snapper with squid strips. Billfish teasers are spottin' sails and stripes pushin' close. Top lures? Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows in sardine pattern for dorado—troll 'em at 6-8 knots. For yellowtail, cast iron yo-yos or feather jigs in pink/white. Live bait kings: sardines or mullet on circle hooks for everything; caballito for jacks. Fly guys, deceivers in chartreuse. Hit these **hot spots**: Rocky Point kelp beds 10 miles out for yellowtail frenzy, or the Midriff Island rips for mixed bags—anchor up and chum heavy. Stay safe, wet a line, and tight lines! Thanks for tunin' in, folks—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.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Tune in to the "Sea of Cortez, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world's aquarium—a nutrient-rich marginal sea renowned for its exceptional marine biodiversity and year-round big-game angling. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Sea of Cortez's unique ecosystem and make every fishing expedition a memorable one.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.comGet all your gear before 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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