Artificial Lure here with your October 30th Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana fishing report, and folks—it’s classic fall on the coast. Expect a **chilly, blustery start:** New Orleans marine advisories have reported gale winds and rough seas through 7 a.m. today, so it’s a good morning to check the weather window before heading out. Winds should lay down a bit mid-morning, but keep those life jackets zipped while running the big water.
**Sunrise hit at 7:03 a.m.** with sunset on tap for 6:04 p.m. That means you’re working with right at 11 hours of daylight according to Tides4Fishing—plenty for wade and boat anglers to get after it.
Tides are a bit on the slack side. This morning’s **high tide came in around 5:47 a.m.**, topping out at about 1.4 feet, while low hits this evening near 5:30 p.m. at just 0.3 feet according to Tide Forecast. Tide coefficients hover in the low-to-mid 30s, meaning not much moving water—you’ll need to key in on wind and current seams, shell banks, or deeper guts for the best action.
Recent catches have been impressive: Louisiana Sportsman reports bull reds are running heavy along Grand Isle beaches and in the Buras-Venice system. Anglers are hauling in plenty of **speckled trout**, **slot reds**, and even some flounder and mangrove snapper around the passes and jetties, echoing updates in the Texas Parks & Wildlife coastal reports just west of us. Shrimp is the top bait—live or dead—and finger mullet is a close second, especially for those bull reds. Free-lined or under a popping cork, that’s your ticket if you want consistent bites.
For those throwing hardware, it’s tough to argue with results seen last week: jerkbaits are hot in mixed brackish water, with local video reports showing Lake Pontchartrain trout smacking suspending and slow-sinking jerkbaits worked along the bridges and points. Soft plastics in chartreuse or “Sweet Heat” colors (think glass minnow or purple/yellow tail) have also been slaying keeper reds in the bay systems—work ‘em around rafts of mullet or bait activity. For topwater action, reach for something like a Strike King Ploppin Cork or a loud walk-the-dog bait at first light.
**Hot spots:**
- **Grand Isle**: Surf and sandbars for bull reds—try behind Elmer’s Island or the rock groins.
- **Venice jetties**: Slot redfish and trout chasing shrimp and mullet drifted close to structure.
- **South Barataria Bay**: Protected shorelines have great numbers of specks and reds on falling tides.
A few pro tips: with the water a tad off-color and bait thick, make sure your lures produce a little sound and vibration. Shrimp-scented soft plastics or a rattle cork can be the difference when visibility is down after the blow.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Gulf Coast report—tight lines out there, and please remember to subscribe for the latest. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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