Hey there, folks! Artificial Lure here with your Monday morning fishing report for May 12th, 2025. Let me tell y'all what's happening on our beautiful Gulf waters today.
Weather's looking mighty fine this morning with light winds from the southwest around 5-10 knots. We're expecting partly cloudy skies with temperatures climbing into the mid-80s by afternoon. Keep an eye on the horizon though – there's a chance of scattered thunderstorms later in the day, typical May pattern for us.
Sunrise was at 6:42 AM and we're looking at sunset around 8:05 PM, giving you plenty of daylight hours to get those lines wet. As for tides, we're seeing a high tide around 7:30 AM running about 2.5 feet with another high coming in late afternoon around 5:45 PM at about 3.2 feet. Low tide will be hitting around 1:15 PM, so plan accordingly.
The bite has been absolutely phenomenal lately! Water temps are sitting right in that sweet spot in the mid-70s, and the fish are responding. Inshore, trout and redfish are feeding aggressively around oyster beds and drop-offs. Several anglers reported limit catches of speckled trout last weekend using live shrimp under popping corks or Gulp baits on a jighead.
Pompano action along the beaches has been red hot. Folks using FishGum, Sand Flea Fishbites, or fresh shrimp are filling coolers. Cast about 15-25 feet toward those sandbar breaks for best results.
Spanish mackerel are running strong along the beaches too. Silver spoons are your best bet there – just reel 'em fast and hang on!
Offshore, it's getting better by the day. Kingfish are absolutely crushing baits, especially in the early morning and late evening. Wire leaders are a must! Several kings in the 30+ pound range have been boated this past week. Blackfin tuna are showing up in good numbers too, and we're starting to see the first wave of mahi-mahi moving through.
For hot spots, I'd recommend checking out the area near the bird sanctuary and remnants of the old bridge for steady black drum and whiting action. Another can't-miss is working the oyster beds in the back bays for those redfish and trout. If you're heading offshore, the artificial reefs in 60-90 feet of water are holding plenty of kingfish and snapper.
Bait shops are well-stocked with live shrimp, pinfish, and finger mullet. If you're throwing artificials, MirrOlures and Gulp shrimp have been doing the damage inshore, while silver spoons and Gotcha plugs are your best bet for the mackerel.
That's the word from the water today, folks. Y'all get out there and enjoy this beautiful May fishing – doesn't get much better than this! This is Artificial Lure signing off until next time. Tight lines!