Fishing fans, this is Artificial Lure reporting from down in south Louisiana, where the Gulf of Mexico is greeting us to October with a sultry dawn, muggy air, and that rolling promise of fall fishing picking up steam. Sunrise hit just before 7 AM, and we’ll get nearly 12 hours of daylight—perfect for those willing to put in the time early and late, with sunset rolling in around 7:20 PM, per the Cocodrie tide and solunar charts from Tides4Fishing.
Today’s tidal swing is subtle, with a tidal coefficient around 47, so you’re not going to see those big flushes of water ripping through the marshes or the rigs. That means your creeks, passes, and bayou mouths might be a tick slower than you’d want, but that steady, lower movement can make for more accurate casting and tighter schools—especially when the weather’s still leaning hot and humid, like it is now, and a few showers are sliding through from time to time. Don’t expect a hard north wind yet—the breeze is light, and so are the currents.
Speckled trout have been popping up strong, especially along the shores from Bayou Bonfouca to Goose Point. Reports from Louisiana Sportsman have anglers filling coolers in these zones, most hitting limits on live shrimp and glow-chartreuse soft plastics bounced around points and shell bottoms. Early risers dragging topwater plugs—think bone-colored Spooks or chrome She Dogs—have been getting explosive strikes just after sunrise, especially over grass beds that still hold a little shade. When the sun gets brighter and the trout slide deeper, switch to a 1/4 oz jighead tipped with a Matrix Shad, or try slow-rolling a Vudu Shrimp under a popping cork for the late-morning bite.
Redfish have stayed thick back in the ponds, cruising near grass edges and cuts. The bite is best on an incoming tide, but even with slower movement today, chunk mullet, cut crab, and gold spoon lures are lighting them up in the shallow marshes. If you want some drag-pulling action, don’t overlook tossing a weedless Gulp! or a spinnerbait in chartreuse-gold. Live shrimp remains the crowd-pleaser—brings in reds, drum, and the occasional big flounder, though be aware that the flounder season will close October 15, so get yours now if you can, as Louisiana Sportsman reminds us.
Bass fishing is chasing that early fall pattern: heat hangs on, so focus on grass lines at first light with frogs or buzzbaits, then flip jigs or Texas rigs into shaded cover as the sun climbs. BassForecast’s October outlook tags this week as high potential, especially if you jump on any pre-storm dips in pressure; their top lure picks for Louisiana right now are topwater early, then glide baits or slow-moving plastics as things warm up.
If you’re looking for hotspots, you can’t go wrong with:
- **Doiron’s Landing** near Morgan City—a local favorite and currently reporting solid catches of bass with a few big crappie in the mix, according to Louisiana Sportsman.
- **Empire and Buras marshes**—trophy trout are just a boat ride away, and plenty of reds are there in the early hours.
- For a kayak adventure, the shoreline at **Bayou Lacombe** is offering consistency on trout, and you can sneak up shallow for tailing reds if you keep quiet.
Don’t forget: the moon rises just after lunch and sets a little before midnight, so the afternoon bite should stay solid, especially if those clouds stack up and cool things off. Always keep an eye on pop-up storms—there’s a little energy in the Gulf, but nothing is expected to shut us down today.
That’s the daily rundown. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s fishing report—make sure you subscribe for more, and stay on the bite, y’all! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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