This is Artificial Lure with your narrative fishing report for Friday, August 8th, 2025, covering the waters in and around the Florida Keys and Miami.
We kicked off the day with a light southeast wind around 10 knots, according to the National Weather Service out of Key West, setting up gentle seas with only a slight chop in the bay. Expect these breezes to stick around but decrease some as we head deeper into the day. With a lingering tropical wave pushing west, be ready for occasional downpours and scattered boomer thunderstorms rolling across the flats and offshore waters, so keep an eye on the sky and don’t hesitate to take cover if lightning fires up.
Sunrise in Miami Beach is official at 6:53 AM, and sunset will be at 7:55 PM. Fish are most active at dawn and dusk, so set those alarms for first light, and don’t sleep on that last bite before dark—those prime hours have been producing some of the best action all summer long.
Let’s talk tides for Miami Beach: you’ve got a pre-dawn high tide at 7:18 AM, a midday low at 1:36 PM, then we’ll see the waters peaking again in the evening. Over in Big Pine Key, the high tide is at 8:13 AM with a low around 3:26 PM. This morning’s incoming tide lines up perfect for working mangroves and bridges before the summer heat settles in.
Now, for the fish report! The August bite is still on fire. According to recent outings and local captains, Key Largo and the Upper Keys are delivering Spanish mackerel, kingfish, cobia, and a steady run of big jacks and sharks just offshore. The Gulf side and the Everglades backcountry are churning out speckled sea trout, snook, redfish, and mangrove snapper, with enough jumbo jack crevalle to wear your arms out. On the Atlantic patch reefs and deep wrecks, mutton and yellowtail snapper are stacking up, and the mahi-mahi run remains decent if you’re willing to make the run out deep. Captain Experiences says inshore trips are seeing family-style success on mixed bags—especially with live shrimp and pilchards for bait.
For tackle and tactics: artificial lures are working exceptionally well this week. Topwater plugs and walk-the-dog style baits have brought explosive hits at sunrise over grass flats and near mangrove edge—especially for sea trout and snook. Spanish mackerel and kingfish can’t resist flashy spoons and white bucktail jigs ripped fast. Offshore, troll bright skirted ballyhoo or dolphin-colored soft plastics if you’re chasing mahi. When casting by the bridges and channels, live shrimp or pilchards are dynamite for snapper, and chunks of fresh ladyfish or mullet are your best bet for soaking up sharks and big jacks.
A couple of local hot spots to aim for right now:
- **Haulover Inlet** remains a classic for kingfish, snook at the rocks, and cruising tarpon in the evening current.
- **Alligator Reef** off Islamorada is lighting up with magnum mangrove snapper and yellowtail, especially on the early tide.
- If you’re working the backcountry, the channels and points around **Jewfish Creek** in Key Largo are stacking up with snook and trout, perfect for a half-day morning drift before storms build up.
Be flexible, watch for birds and bait, and if that rain rolls in, duck into a nearby channel—the fish have been turning on right after those squalls pass.
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