This is Artificial Lure with your Gulf Coast fishing report for August 23, 2025, live from the heart of Louisiana.
Sunrise hit at 6:29 a.m. this morning and we’re looking at a sunset right at 7:31 p.m., giving us a solid 13 hours of daylight to wet a line. Today’s tides are pumping, with the Grand Isle tidal coefficient sitting at 69 at dawn, rising to 80 by late evening—so you’ve got some lively water movement out there. That means major currents and prime feeding times, especially as those coefficients climb[Grand Isle Tide Chart].
Weather offshore is classic high summer: expect southwest winds 5 to 10 knots and seas sitting at 1 foot or less, though showers and thunderstorms are in the mix, so keep your eye on the sky and have that slicker handy. Local forecast says winds and seas could kick up near thunderstorms, but in between, the water’s smooth and inviting[National Weather Service].
Now, let’s talk fish activity. The reds are thick—folks are pulling limits out of big outer bays like Lake Robin, Lake Coquille, Two Trees, and Lake Campo. Guide reports confirm bird action over big schools of bulls. If you want keeper slot reds, Little Lake, Lake Fausan, and Shrimp Lagoon are all producing. Toss live or dead shrimp under a cork for steady bites, or grab a beetle spinner if you want to cover ground. Redfish are quick to strike in these conditions, especially with solid water movement and cloud cover holding temps down[Louisiana Sportsman][Saltwater_Therapy on TikTok].
Speckled trout are making their transition runs into inshore bays, chasing shrimp and baitfish wherever you find moving water and grass just coming off those drop-offs. Early morning is best, especially near submerged structure in Lake Machais or Oak River Bay.
In the bayous and marsh, ultralight setups are putting bluegill, chinquapin, and even big crappie in the boat. The ticket is the small spinner bite. Beetle spinners fished around long points and submerged wood are catching a mix of panfish, but some anglers are reporting bonus reds and specks when fishing brackish edges. Slow-roll that spinner over grass and pause to let it flutter down—it’s deadly for bigger bream and shellcrackers. For deep water, tip a 1/24-ounce leadhead jig with the Bobby Garland Itty Bit or a hair jig, and add a split shot for those drop-off bites[Louisiana Sportsman].
Bass are in their late summer sulk, but you can tempt a big one with the new salt-impregnated YUM Scutter Bug. Fish it Texas-rigged through thick cover or on a swim jig—Threadfin shad colors are producing best, especially when used as a buzzbait trailer. For open water, work a C-4 Swim Jig (JuneBug color is a local favorite) with a twitch to mimic a dying baitfish. The swim jig’s balanced head keeps the bait running straight, but gets erratic when you pop it, triggering reaction strikes from both bass and big specks[BassResource][T&T Tackle].
Recent catches have been solid: Redfish limits are being reported across the outer bays, with speckled trout making up mixed bags in Delacroix and Barataria hotspots. Panfish numbers are strong in local marsh ponds and canal edges. Bigger reds are showing up along current lines and cuts, and a handful of flounder are being taken near sand bottom and grass edges.
If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, you won’t go wrong with:
- **Lake Robin** for bull reds—work the banks and look for bird action over current lines.
- **Little Lake** for slot reds and specks, especially around points and cuts near moving water.
- **Grand Isle pier** for mixed species on ultralight—early and late bites have been best.
Best bait today: live or dead shrimp under a cork for reds and trout, beetle spinners and small jigs for panfish, and shad-color soft plastics for bass.
That’s the scoop for August 23rd, straight out the marsh and off the Gulf. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s fishing report—make sure to subscribe, and tight lines to y’all!
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