Islamorada Fishing Report: Mahi, Snapper, and Cobia Tearing It Up on the Patch Reefs Podcast Por  arte de portada

Islamorada Fishing Report: Mahi, Snapper, and Cobia Tearing It Up on the Patch Reefs

Islamorada Fishing Report: Mahi, Snapper, and Cobia Tearing It Up on the Patch Reefs

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# Islamorada, Florida Fishing Report - Saturday Morning

Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure with your Florida Keys fishing report for this morning. Let's talk about what's happening out on the water right now.

**Tides and Conditions**

We've got some beautiful tidal windows opening up today. Down here in Key West, we're looking at a high tide around 9:53 AM at 0.72 feet, then another solid push at 8:50 PM hitting 1.63 feet. Over in the Islamorada area and through the upper Keys, those tides are running similar patterns. The water's moving pretty well this morning, which means the fish are feeding. High pressure is sliding eastward, so we're expecting rapidly slackening breezes through the day—mostly northeast to east winds. Perfect conditions for getting out there.

**What's Biting**

According to the latest fishing reports coming out of the Keys, the action has been solid across the board. We've got mahi, snapper, and cobia tearing it up on the patch reefs. The flats are sizzling too—reds, snook, and spotted seatrout are responding well to the cooler water temperatures we've been having. This time of year, these inshore species are aggressive, and they're feeding heavy during these prime tidal periods.

**Best Setup for Today**

For the flats and backcountry, throw live bait—mullet and pilchards are working great. If you're working artificial lures, focus on gold and chartreuse patterns that mimic small baitfish. The mangrove edges and shallow creeks are holding quality fish right now. For offshore work on those patch reefs, live shiners and live grunts will get you into snapper and grouper.

**Hot Spots**

Head out to the shallow flats around Summerland Key and work the Niles Channel area—excellent for reds and snook. If you want deeper action, the patch reefs near Conch Key have been consistently productive for snapper and cobia.

**Light Schedule**

Sunrise was at 7:12 this morning, sunset's coming at 6:01 PM, so you've got a solid nine hours of daylight to work with.

Thanks so much for tuning in to the report. Make sure you subscribe for daily updates from the Keys. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out quietplease.ai.

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