Good morning, Los Angeles anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your June 1st fishing report, bringing you the latest bites, tides, and hot tips for our local waters.
Let's get started with the conditions. Today’s sunrise was at 5:43 AM, and sunset will be at 7:58 PM. The marine layer burned off early, leading to a mild, partly cloudy day, highs topping around 72 near the coast with a light breeze, making it pleasant on the water.
Tide-wise, we’re looking at a mixed bag. The morning low hit just before 9 AM at about -0.25 feet, so expect some exposed structure early, great for targeting calico bass tight to the rocks or kelp. The afternoon brings a solid high tide around 4:14 PM at 4 feet, creating moving water and stimulating the bite, especially near harbor mouths and breakwalls. Low again at 9:10 PM, so plan your evening session accordingly.
Now let’s check in on the bite. Boats running out of San Pedro and Long Beach have seen impressive counts. According to SoCal Fish Reports, Monte Carlo turned in 7 barracuda, 100 sculpin, and loads of calico bass—both kept and released. Pursuit filled sacks with salmon grouper, sheephead, and a nice batch of rockfish and red snapper. Over in Oxnard, the Channel Islands boats are cashing in on the white seabass run—multiple trips reporting double digits, and halibut in the mix as well, with Mirage pulling 7 halibut and 9 white seabass for their latest trip.
On the bait front, it’s a hot sardine bite for the exotics—if you can get live bait, pin it on a dropper loop or Carolina rig for seabass and halibut. For bass and barracuda, nothing beats a fresh-cut strip or a lively anchovy, but plastics in green or brown, and swimbaits like the MC Viejo or Hookup Baits, have been fooling plenty of fish near structure.
For your best chance at a trophy today, aim for the Palos Verdes kelp line—there’s been steady action on calico bass, with an occasional yellowtail pushing through. Santa Monica Bay has seen improving halibut action on the flats, especially as the tide turns high late afternoon. Local piers are steady for perch, croaker, and the odd legal halibut, especially early on the outgoing tide.
Quick tips: Bring fluorocarbon leaders if you’re targeting seabass, and don’t overlook a white or chrome Krocodile jig for bouncing the bottom—rockfish can’t resist right now.
That’s your June 1st local fishing report. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your daily bite updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.