Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana Fishing Report Today

"Gator Grapple: Hotspots for Red-Hot Inshore Fishing on Louisiana's Gulf Coast"


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Artificial Lure here, reporting straight from the heart of Louisiana’s Gulf Coast waters on November 17th, 2025. We saw cool, crisp air slide in behind another autumn front last night, setting the stage for some of the best inshore fishing of the year right as the marshes light up in November. If you’re launching out today, sunrise hit at about 6:21 AM with sunset set for 5:08 PM—a short window, but plenty of time to get on some fish before that evening chill settles in according to Tides4Fishing.

Tide action’s been moderate, with South Pass showing a late-morning high at 11:32 AM (rising to about 1.6 feet) before easing back down around 11 PM. You’ll want to target that moving water just before and after today’s high tide for the best chances at concentrated fish near cuts, drains, and points—classic marsh hotspots.

The bite is fire right now for speckled trout and redfish. Louisiana Sportsman says November is prime time to load up on specks as cooling water pushes bait out of the marsh and the fish stack up along current-washed edges. Reports from folks in the boats and on kayaks these past days show good numbers of specks coming from the outside bays and deeper drains. School-size trout are busting under birds over points in Black Bay, with 12–18 inch fish common and limits not hard to come by if you stay mobile. Slot reds are busting shrimp and mullet in the ponds around Hopedale and Delacroix, and both live shrimp under a popping cork and white swim jigs like the C-4 Swim Jig are producing. Around the rocks and grass, soft plastics in glow or opening night and natural-shad color jerkbaits are a winner, matching the hatch on all that marsh bait according to BBC Boards regulars. Don’t sleep on Vudu shrimp or Matrix Shad, especially when things get slow.

Top baits for reds today: weedless gold spoons along grasslines and Gulp! shrimp worked slow in those cooler pockets. Gar are also thick—if you want to tangle with them, try big cut bait or mullet strips.

If surf or rigs are your game, the nearshores off Grand Isle and Empire Jetty are giving up a mix of bull reds, the occasional snapper, and some strong reports of tripletail holding on buoys. With clean water and moderate northwest winds, these platforms are hot. Bring that 1-ounce double-willow spinnerbait if you’re searching for gizzard shad imitators—something many tournament anglers on the coast are finding deadly right now.

A couple local hotspots to circle on your map:
• Pointe à la Hache and the surrounding marsh: limits of trout before breakfast most days this week, especially hitting drains on a rising tide.
• Breton Sound edges: if the wind lays, drifting the oyster reefs and chasing birds will keep rods bent all day.

Remember to work those lures slow early, then speed up as the sun gets higher and the water warms a touch. Dress warm and keep an eye on the weather—it’s classic November where the water’s alive and the bite can change with the wind’s direction.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s report! Don’t forget to subscribe for all your Louisiana fishing updates and tips.
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Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai