Good morning, anglers! This is Artificial Lure bringing you your Gulf of Mexico, Florida fishing report for Wednesday, August 13, 2025.
We had a solid sunrise at 6:59 AM and you can expect sunset around 8:11 PM, giving you plenty of daylight to spend on the water today. Tidal movement is healthy, with the first high tide rolling in at 3:59 AM at just over 3.2 feet, low tide at 10:45 AM, followed by the afternoon high at 4:24 PM, and wrapping up with another low at 10:57 PM according to Tide-Forecast.com. These big swings are stirring up the bottom and keeping bait moving, so you can count on fish being active during these windows.
Weatherwise, it’s a classic Florida summer day: muggy with temps pushing the low 90s and heat indices edging up to 105 by midday. Expect southerly breezes at 10 to 15 mph, making for manageable chop and drift, with a decent chance of scattered afternoon storms—so keep an eye on the sky if you’re heading offshore, as NOAA’s forecast out of Apalachicola predicts pop-up showers and the occasional thunderhead.
Fishing’s been good both inshore and offshore this week, with reports from Pine Island Eagle noting redfish starting to school up as we close in on mid-August. These tight pods of reds are cruising grass flats and oyster bars at higher tides—topwater lures at dawn, gold spoons, and live pinfish have all put fish in the box recently. Along mangrove edges and creeks, snook and a handful of overslot trout are pouncing on pilchards and cut ladyfish.
On the reefs, grouper action remains steady with both gag and red grouper in the mix; frozen sardines, squid, and large bucktail jigs tipped with cut bait are drawing strikes. Remember, the recreational gray triggerfish season has just reopened as of August 1st and will run through January, so now’s a prime time to target these tasty reef dwellers with squid-tipped jigs or fresh cut bait fished deep according to the Tampa Free Press.
Spanish mackerel are patrolling nearshore bait schools, and there have been decent catches of lane and mangrove snapper around structure—try chumming to keep them close and downsize your leaders for more bites.
In terms of the best lures today:
- Topwater plugs (think Skitter Walks or Zara Spooks) for early morning redfish and trout.
- Gold spoons and white paddle tails are working once the sun’s up.
- Offshore, stick with hefty bucktail jigs, vertical jigs, and natural baits for grouper and triggers.
- If you’re after snapper or smaller reef fish, shrimp-tipped jigs and small live pilchards are safe bets.
Hotspots I’d suggest include:
- The grass flats outside of Tarpon Springs for early morning reds and trout.
- Clearwater artificial reefs, where grouper, snapper, and now gray triggerfish are biting.
- The Cape San Blas shoals have been holding solid schools of Spanish mackerel and ladyfish, especially on moving tides.
With tidal coefficients running high, current and bait movement are triggering feeding windows—plan your peak effort around that pre-sunrise high tide and the late afternoon incoming.
Thanks for tuning in! Be sure to subscribe so you never miss a report, and tight lines out there.
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