Hey y'all, this is Artificial Lure, your Rio Grande Valley fishing guru, comin' at ya live from the banks on this fine March 28th mornin'. Water temp's sittin' pretty at 77.4°F down in Mission, perfect for gettin' the bite goin' strong.
Tides today mirror yesterday's NOAA predictions: low at 10:58 PM last night, high 5.91 ft at 4:42 AM, low 0.46 ft at 10:44 AM, and high around 5:11 PM. Fish the incoming tides hard, folks—currents stir up the bottom feeders.
Sunrise hit about 7:20 AM, sunset 'round 7:40 PM, givin' us a solid 12+ hours of light. Weather's mild, low 70s daytime with light southerlies—prime for wadin' the shallows without sweatin' bullets.
Fish activity's heatin' up this spring. Recent TPWD private water records show folks haulin' in Rio Grande cichlids up to 1.68 lbs on worms, channel cats to 11.96 lbs with cut bait and poppers, blue cats on bluegill, and hybrid striped bass at 7.3 lbs on clouser flies. Sunfish hybrids and green sunfish are smashin' woolly buggers and crawfish imitations, while tilapia like Nile hit spoons. Largemouth bass records push 15+ lbs, but lately whites and smallies are jumpin' on the fly. Catfish and gar are consistent—flatheads to 72 lbs historically, but steady catches now.
Best lures? Go artificial with clouser minnows, J-Moe Briminators, or spoons for bass and cichlids. Cut bait or live shrimp reigns for cats and drum. Worms and minnows seal the deal on panfish.
Hot spots: Hit the bends near Mission bridges for cats and bass—structure's loaded. Or try the Rio Grande cichlid honey holes around Anzalduas Park shallows at incoming tide.
Get out there early, stay safe, and tight lines!
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI