This is Artificial Lure with your Los Angeles coastal fishing report.
We’ve got a classic early‑March setup along the LA beaches: cool mornings, light marine layer, and a mellow bump of west swell. Air temps are riding mid‑50s at first light, climbing into the mid‑60s with light onshore wind through the afternoon. It’s jacket weather at dawn, T‑shirt by lunch.
Tides are friendly for surf anglers today. Tide‑Forecast’s Los Angeles table shows a predawn low around 5:30 a.m. at roughly 0.7 feet, a late‑morning high near 11:30 a.m. just over 3.5 feet, an afternoon low around 4:45–5:00 p.m. at about a foot and a half, then a solid evening high just under 5 feet around 11:15 p.m. Sunrise is about 6:15 a.m. and sunset right before 6:00 p.m., so you get prime light with moving water both morning and evening.
Water’s still chilly, sitting in the upper‑50s to low‑60s along Santa Monica Bay and down toward the Harbor. That’s kept the exotics quiet, but the bread‑and‑butter coastal stuff is very much alive. Local reports from piers and harbors this week mention a steady pick of barred surfperch and yellowfin croaker in the suds, plus legal halibut starting to wake up on the inside. The breakwalls and harbor mouths are giving up calico bass, sand bass, and the odd sculpin at night, with a few short white seabass sniffing around the sand edges.
On the numbers side, most surf guys are seeing half‑a‑dozen to a dozen perch in a morning tide if they move and cover water, with a mix of hand‑size fish and the occasional 12‑ to 14‑inch model. Croaker counts are spottier but chunky where you hit them—two or three quality fish per angler when you find a good trough. Halibut are still more “hunt” than “stack,” but there’ve been a handful of legals a day reported out of the Harbor and Marina del Rey boats, with a lot of shorts in the mix.
Best baits: in the surf it’s hard to beat **soft‑shell sand crabs**, lugworms, and bloodworms on light Carolina rigs. Mussel and ghost shrimp are working around rocks and in the harbors. For artificial fans, small **2–3 inch swimbaits** in baitfish colors, **Gulp! sandworms** in camo, and 1/2‑ to 3/4‑ounce chrome or anchovy‑pattern spoons are solid producers. Halibut want 3–4 inch paddle‑tails in smelt or sardine, or a fluke‑style jerkbait on a 1/4‑ to 3/8‑ounce head, slow‑rolled just off the bottom.
A couple hot spots to circle:
• **Dockweiler to El Porto** – That Santa Monica Bay stretch has good structure right now, with defined cuts and bowls lining up on the mid‑morning rising tide. Target perch and croaker along the inside seams; fish the low tide to actually see the troughs, then come back on the flood and work them with sand crabs or Gulp! worms. Light line, 6‑ to 8‑pound fluoro, and small size 4–6 hooks will put fish in your hands.
• **Port of LA / San Pedro area** – The outer Harbor and breakwall zones are a solid bet for bass and halibut. Evening high tide is prime: slow‑crank swimbaits along the rocks for calico and sand bass, then slide out to the sandy pockets for a shot at flatties. Fresh dead anchovy or sardine on a dropper loop still gets bit if you’re not throwing plastics.
If you’re more into easy pier duty, both Santa Monica and Manhattan piers have been giving up perch, small mackerel, and a few thornback rays on cut squid—good family setup, especially around that late‑morning high.
Overall fish activity is moderate but very tide‑dependent. The bite window has lined up best from first light through the late‑morning high, then again for that last hour of daylight into dark on the evening push. If you can only fish a short session, aim for moving water, not clock time.
That’s your LA coastal rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.
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