Blistering Mahi Bite, Tarpon on the Bridges, and Snapper Slammin' - Your Florida Keys Fishing Update Podcast Por  arte de portada

Blistering Mahi Bite, Tarpon on the Bridges, and Snapper Slammin' - Your Florida Keys Fishing Update

Blistering Mahi Bite, Tarpon on the Bridges, and Snapper Slammin' - Your Florida Keys Fishing Update

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo

Acerca de esta escucha

Good morning, anglers! Artificial Lure here with your June 21st fishing report for the Florida Keys and Miami. Let’s get right into what’s happening on—and below—the water.

We’re off to a classic summer start with weather in the mid-to-high 80s, light southeast winds, and mostly sunny skies. Sunrise hit at 6:29 AM and sunset rolls in at 8:14 PM around Miami, just a few minutes later as you head down the Keys. Expect a high tide at 4:47 AM and again at 5:42 PM today in Miami Beach, with the outgoing tide peaking mid-late morning—prime time for that early bite. Key West sees its morning high at 6:26 AM with a low at 1:18 PM, so adjust your schedule if you’re chasing fish down island.

Offshore, the mahi mahi bite continues to heat up. Multiple charters, including Double Threat Charters, have reported big catches, with average fish in the 5–10 pound range and some exceptional bulls tipping the scales well over 50 pounds just this past week. Most dolphin are being found 8–15 miles offshore, often under birds or floating debris. Trolling small feathers and rigged ballyhoo is producing action, but don’t sleep on sight fishing from the tower and pitching live cigar minnows or pilchards—live bait is money when you find a big school.

The blackfin and skipjack tuna are still out there, mostly football-sized but always a thrill on lighter tackle. Every now and then, a wahoo or tripletail will surprise you under debris. And if you’re looking for something else to test your mettle, there have been late-season sailfish and some big blackfins showing up along the edge.

On the reef, snapper action is strong—especially yellowtails and mangroves. Reef fishing with chunks of pilchard, squid, or shrimp on a light leader is bringing steady action just outside the main channel edges and patch reefs. Nighttime inshore sessions are producing tarpon around bridges and deeper channels, with snook and trout also active. A free-lined live mullet or pilchard is your best bet after dark.

Down in the Middle Keys, Marathon guides report a mixed bag: yellowtail snapper, blackfin tuna, permit, and even a few sharks for those wanting a battle. Keep an eye on the current—slack tide makes for easy bottom fishing, especially for permit and mangrove snapper near the structure.

Hot spots for today:
- Fowey Light and the Hump east of Islamorada are loaded with pelagics.
- The patch reefs off Marathon and north channel bridges for big snappers and early morning tarpon.
- Government Cut and Haulover Inlet in Miami are still putting up action for both offshore and inshore targets.

Best lures right now are trolling feathers, bucktail jigs, and soft plastics for mahi and tuna offshore. For the reef and inshore, bring a mix of live bait—pilchards, shrimp, and mullet have been top producers. Always have a few Sabiki rigs to catch fresh bait when things get quiet.

That wraps it up for today’s Florida Keys and Miami fishing report. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for your daily bite updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Todavía no hay opiniones