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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf-side fishing report for Florida.

We’re sliding deeper into winter patterns now, and the Gulf is settling into that clear, cool water that makes fish a little choosier but still plenty willing if you time it right.

Around Redfish Pass and the lower Pine Island Sound, Tides4Fishing shows a mild tide day, with sunrise right around 7:07 and sunset about 5:37. The bigger morning push has already eased off this week and today’s solunar activity is rated on the low side, so plan on grinding a bit harder and keying in on moving water windows rather than expecting a lights-out bite all day.

Farther west in the Panhandle, Tide-Forecast for Gulf Breeze has a low around mid-morning and a modest high late afternoon, sunrise about 6:30 and sunset just before 5. That afternoon flood lining up with sunset should be your prime shot at a better chew on the flats and along the bridges.

Weather-wise, we’re sitting in classic December Gulf conditions: cool mornings, highs topping out in the upper 60s to low 70s along much of the coast, light north to northeast breeze early, easing or swinging east by midday, and generally calm seas nearshore. A weak front earlier in the week helped clear the water, especially from Crystal River up toward the Big Bend, and that has the fish a little spooky but stacked where the warmth and current meet.

NOAA Fisheries just reopened the federal for-hire red snapper season in the Gulf on December 11, running through New Year’s, so every charter with a reef permit is back on the snapper grounds. Captains offshore from Destin to Clearwater have been putting decent numbers of keeper red snapper in the box over hard bottom and larger wrecks in 90–160 feet, mixed with a few gag grouper, lane snapper, and mingos when the current allows them to fish lighter leads.

Inshore, Crystal River and Homosassa guides are reporting strong winter trout and slot redfish action on the shallow rock flats and inside cuts when the sun gets up and warms that dark bottom. Clear water means long casts and quiet approaches. Folks have been picking at sheepshead on the rocks and markers already, and that bite will only get better as we cool off a bit more.

Best baits and lures right now:

- For reds and trout on the flats: 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads with a 3–4 inch paddle tail in new penny, pearl, or glow; suspending twitchbaits like MirrOdines over potholes on the afternoon rising tide.
- Around docks and mangroves: live shrimp under a cork or free-lined, and small white or chartreuse bucktails.
- Offshore: cut pogies, squid strips, cigar minnows, and live pinfish or threads for snapper and grouper. A simple knocker rig or chicken rig is getting it done.

A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar:

- **Pine Island Sound / Redfish Pass:** Work the oyster bars and grass edges on the afternoon incoming with paddle tails and live shrimp; then slide out toward the pass and look for birds and bait for winter trout and pompano.
- **Crystal River nearshore rocks:** In 6–15 feet, target limestone rock piles and scattered ledges with shrimp-tipped jigs for sheepshead and snapper, or soak pinfish for late-season grouper while that window is still open.

Fish are being caught; it’s just a more technical game now—light leaders, subtle colors, and moving when the tide and sun say move.

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.

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