Artificial Lure here with your Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana fishing report for Friday, May 30, 2025.
Sunrise splashed over our coast at 6:00 AM and you’ve got until 7:56 PM—plenty of daylight to chase your trophy. Weather’s stable, warm, and mostly clear, with light winds carrying over from a beautiful May stretch. The water’s sitting pretty, and bait is thick from the marshes out to the nearshore rigs.
Tides today are showing a gentle morning drop, with low tide at 10:12 AM and a nice high tide push coming at 10:25 PM according to Tide-Forecast. That incoming evening tide should turn on the feeding switch, especially around major passes and the mouth of the bays. If you’re chasing specks or reds, prime time is that midday-to-late afternoon window, letting that clean water move in and spark up the bite.
Speckled trout action continues to sizzle. Reports from Louisiana Sportsman and recent podcasts highlight limits coming quick around Lake Borgne, the Biloxi Marsh, and out at the Three Bayous. Boats have been stacking trout up to three pounds, with bigger fish showing up around current lines and oyster reefs. Topwater lures at sunrise—like a classic chrome/blue She Dog—are drawing explosive hits, but as that sun climbs, folks are turning to Matrix Shads in shrimp creole or avocado under a popping cork. And don’t overlook the good old Vudu shrimp in natural patterns, which have been deadly around grass edges and shell piles.
If you’re after reds, Marsh Island’s Oyster Lake is a hot spot right now. Trevor Huval’s been working live cocahoes and dead shrimp around the grass edges and coming away with upper-slot bruisers. Timbalier and Terrebonne bays are also seeing strong action, especially as the big trout finish their move from the marshes. Captain Aaron Pierce notes that the nearshore rigs and reefs in these bays are holding solid numbers of both trout and redfish. For live bait, shrimp and finger mullet are the top producers.
Snapper season is on, and boats running out to the nearshore rigs are hauling in easy limits of red snapper and a mixed bag of mangroves. The snapper are stacked in 40 to 100 feet, and the best bite’s been on cut pogies and squid dropped just off the bottom.
Bream are bedding up in the back marshes and dead-end canals—grab some crickets or a beetle spin and you’re in business. Black drum and sheepshead are keeping things interesting along rock jetties and shell banks, with 50-pound drum not out of the question for the patient angler.
To sum up, best baits right now are live shrimp, cocahoes, and finger mullet. For artificials, stick to topwater plugs at dawn and switch to soft plastics under corks or Vudu shrimp as the day heats up.
Hot spots:
- Lake Borgne and Biloxi Marsh for trout
- Oyster Lake and Marsh Island for reds
- Nearshore rigs in Terrebonne and Timbalier for snapper
Thanks for tuning in, fishermen. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.