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This is Artificial Lure with your Florida Keys fishing report.

Down here this morning we’ve got classic winter Keys conditions: mild, clear, and breezy out of the northeast, with a cool edge to the water that’s got the reef and backcountry both waking up. According to the National Weather Service marine outlook, winds are running in that 10–15 knot range with seas 2–3 feet on the reef, calmer inside the bayside.

Tides are modest but fishable. Key West tide-forecast shows a pre‑dawn high around 5:20 a.m. and a late‑morning low around 10 a.m., with another small bump this afternoon. Sand Key Light and Summerland Key charts mirror that gentle rise through mid‑day, so plan your best shots on the first of the incoming both oceanside and in the backcountry. Key Largo tide tables are calling for an early low, then a mid‑morning high around 7:30–8 a.m., setting up nicely for patch reefs and bridge edges.

Sunrise across the Middle Keys is right about 7:10 a.m., sunset just after 5:45 p.m., per Tides4Fishing’s Channel Two and Big Pine Key solunar charts. That gives you a tight dawn topwater window and a solid last‑light snapper chew.

Recent reports out of Big Pine Key on FishingBooker say the reef and patch reefs have been steady: plenty of mangrove snapper, yellowtail, some muttons, porgies, and the odd grouper when you park on good structure. Bud N’ Mary’s Islamorada trips are echoing that—family boats putting nice boxes together with mangroves, yellowtail, mutton, and the occasional small shark to keep things spicy.

Offshore wreck and deep reef videos out of Hawks Cay and Marathon this week show solid action on mutton snapper, amberjack, and mixed bottom fish on the humps and wrecks when current and wind line up. You’ll work for the bigger fish if the water’s super clear, but the bites are there.

Bait and lures:
- On the reef and bridges, shrimp and small pilchards are king. Cut ballyhoo and squid will handle yellowtail and muttons.
- For artificials, a 3–4 inch paddle‑tail on a 1/4‑ounce jig in pearl, glow, or new penny is money on mangroves and trout in the backcountry.
- Around mangroves and island edges, a weedless soft jerkbait in white or silver, or a bone‑colored walk‑the‑dog plug, will pull snook and small tarpon on the warmer tides.
- If you’re dropping on wrecks, heavy bucktails tipped with ballyhoo strips are still the go‑to for mutton and AJ.

Fish activity’s best around that first incoming tide and again at dusk. According to Tides4Fishing’s solunar charts for Big Pine and Flamingo, mid‑day is softer, so that’s your time to anchor up, chum, and grind on snapper rather than run‑and‑gun.

A couple of hot spots to circle on the chart:

- **Seven Mile Bridge / Hawk Channel side** – Work the bridge pilings and surrounding patch reefs with live shrimp on a light knocker rig for mangroves, lanes, and the chance at a keeper grouper. Tide swing is key: fish the start of the incoming for clean water and moving bait.
- **Channel Two and Channel Five bridges, Lower Matecumbe** – Great mix of current and structure. Fish live shrimp or small pinfish on the bottom for mutton and mangroves, and toss jigs upcurrent for mackerel when the water’s green and glass minnows are thick.

If you’re stuck inshore around Key Largo or Big Pine Spanish Harbor, slide into the leeward mangrove edges on the rising tide. Quiet drifts with a popping cork and shrimp will get you trout, mangrove snapper, ladyfish, and the occasional red.

That’s your Keys rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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