Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Sunday, August 10th fishing report for the Florida Keys and Miami region.
We kicked off today with a sunrise at 6:29 AM over Miami’s Government Cut, and sunset’s coming at 8:07 PM. That’s a long day on the water, with tides running strong—high tide hit around 11:02 AM, and you can expect slack low tide mid-afternoon. Tidal coefficients are high: lots of water moving, especially around the cuts and passes, meaning fish are feeding heavy through the peak periods. Over at Elliott Key, sunrise was 6:34 AM, sunset just after 8:00 PM. The tide chart there shows a good high low swing, favoring a steady bite all morning and late afternoon.
Weather’s classic August: muggy, highs pushing 90, gentle southeast breeze, and a steady 40% chance of a passing shower, but nothing to scare off a serious trip. Water temps are right in that summer sweet spot, perfect for reef and offshore action. Visibility is good, current’s strong, and barring any pop-up thunderstorms, you’re set for a solid day out.
Fishing action has been absolutely popping. Yesterday, crews out of Marathon and Islamorada slammed into Blackfin Tuna, Dolphin (Mahi), and those always fun Yellowtail Snapper. Dylan Snyder and crew reported dolphin pushing near the weed lines and Blackfin blitzing on pilchard schools—if you’re headed offshore, rig up with live baits or a trolling spread featuring bright-colored feathers or skirts, especially blue and pink. Recent full moon has mutton snapper feeding like crazy at dusk—bottom rigs with fresh ballyhoo chunks or live pinfish are your best bet for keeper-sized muttons near wrecks and patch reefs from Miami down to Islamorada.
Backcountry and flats action's been steady. Bonefish are tailing, and if you’re into sight fishing, the flats around Lower Matecumbe and Ocean Reef have been producing well on small shrimp-tipped jigs and synthetic crab imitations. Tarpon schools are staging early mornings at bridges—try free-lining crabs or big mullet at Seven Mile or Long Key.
Some lucky anglers have been pulling in Grouper and Tilefish on the deep drop, especially in the 300-foot zones off the Middle Keys. Drop rigs with squid or cut bonito are getting hit hard. For reef fishing, double hooked chicken rigs tipped with fresh shrimp keep the mangrove snappers coming over the rail two at a time.
Bait of choice this week is live pilchard if you can net ‘em, otherwise fresh ballyhoo is acing both surface and bottom action. Artificial lures: go with Hogy or Yo-Zuri hybrid jigs for the tunas, pink and yellow bucktail for mahi, and big swimbaits for the grouper deep.
Hot spots you shouldn’t skip today:
- **Alligator Reef:** Always a crowd pleaser for snapper and mahi, especially during a strong incoming tide.
- **Channel Five Bridges:** Killer for tarpon and snook bites at dusk.
- **Islamorada Humps:** If you’re heading offshore, the Blackfin and mahi are stacked up shoulder-to-shoulder.
Before you go, be sure to check those afternoon storms—the bite's best right before the rain, but safety stays first. And remember, the US Coast Guard reminds everyone to avoid illegal charters and always file your float plan.
That wraps it up for your Florida Keys and Miami fishing report. Thanks for tuning in and tight lines out there. Don’t forget to subscribe to get your daily download of local angling intel—this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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