Artificial Lure here with your Pacific-side California fishing report.
We’re in a classic winter coastal pattern: cool, mostly clear mornings, light offshore breeze early, then a little west wind and lump in the afternoon. Water temps are running low 60s in SoCal and upper 50s pushing north, which has the pelagics thinning out but the **bottom fish chewing**.
Tides first. Tide-Forecast for San Diego shows a strong morning high pushing over 5 feet around 3:30–4:00 a.m., dropping to a late-morning low a bit over a foot, then a modest afternoon high and an evening low. Sunrise is right around 6:50 a.m., sunset about 4:50 p.m. That gives you prime moving water at first light and again mid‑afternoon.
Up the coast, Half Moon Bay and Santa Cruz tide tables show similar big pre‑dawn highs, late‑morning lows near a foot, and secondary highs right around the evening bite. That lines up with decent solunar activity through the afternoon.
Fish activity has slid into winter structure mode. Fisherman’s Landing in San Diego reports the Dolphin half‑day boats recently stacking up **limits of bonito plus rockfish**, with trips posting around 280 bonito and 60+ rockfish on the morning runs, and solid counts of **sheephead and sculpin** on the afternoon sets. 976‑TUNA’s latest coastal roundup had 13 trips with nearly 1,200 rockfish and 700‑plus bonito, so the whole coast from San Diego through the Channel Islands is in that mixed‑bag groove.
Channel Islands Sportfishing and Santa Barbara reports show classic winter sacks: heavy on **rockfish, lingcod, whitefish**, with some bonito still hanging around the outer edges. NorCal party boats are seeing steady rockfish and the odd ling when the weather lets them out.
Best offerings right now:
- **Lures:**
Small 1–2 oz metal jigs in blue/white, scrambled egg, and chrome for bonito and rockfish; 4–6 inch swimbaits on 1–2 oz heads for shallow rockfish and calico; diamond jigs and heavy knife jigs for lingcod in 150–300 feet.
- **Bait:**
Strips of squid and cut anchovy are king for rockfish, whitefish, and sculpin. Fresh dead or live anchovy/sardine for bonito and any stray yellowtail. For sheephead, tip a small dropper‑loop hook with mussel, clam, or shrimp.
A couple of hotspots to circle:
- **La Jolla / Point Loma hard bottom, San Diego:**
Fish 180–300 feet on that early dropping tide with double‑dropper loops and squid. You’ll tap quality reds, bocaccio, and a few lings. Slide inshore around the mid‑afternoon high with a 1‑oz Colt Sniper or similar metal and you’ve got a shot at schools of bonito still roaming the edges.
- **Hueneme Canyon / East Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands:**
Ride out of Ventura or Channel Islands Harbor and drop in 240–320 feet on the canyon edges with shrimp‑fly rigs and squid strips. Boats have been posting full limits of mixed rockfish plus a sprinkling of lingcod and whitefish. If the wind lays down, slow‑pitch jigs in 100–150 grams are absolutely deadly right now.
If you’re shore‑bound, that late‑morning low sets up some good surf windows. Work Carolina‑rigged sand crabs or Gulp sandworms in the troughs for barred surfperch and yellowfin croaker, then switch to a small Kastmaster or Lucky Craft for halibut and schoolie stripers up north as the tide floods.
That’s it from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide, a bite, or a hot lure tip.
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