Artificial Lure here with your Gulf of Mexico Texas fishing update for Saturday, November 1, 2025. Sunrise rolled in at 7:27am and we’re looking at sunset right around 6:39 this evening, giving us plenty of daylight to work those fall tides, which are shifting fast right now. Texas City and much of the upper coast are swinging through almost two feet of tidal movement—1.6-foot low just after midnight, then highs pushing close to 1.7 feet before 10am and another around 9:30pm, so keep your eye on that tide chart.
We’re waking up to cool, breezy fall air after a light front. According to NOAA’s marine forecast, expect fresh north winds and a moderate chop inshore, so pack your windbreaker and fish leeward when you can. Water clarity’s been on the rise, especially right after these cold snaps, which is ideal for targeting finicky fish on the flats and in the bay systems.
The bite is heating up almost everywhere. Corpus Christi reports schools of redfish running the shorelines and upper Laguna Madre flats, with slot and over-slot reds landed recently both on artificials and live mullet. Early morning trout are active over grass and potholes—pick your favorite topwater before the sun hits, then switch to a paddle tail soft plastic as the light climbs. Flounder are stacking up at channel edges and marsh drains, making for strong stringers, while black drum and sheepshead are holding tight around jetties and pilings.
November’s also the beginning of some solid migrations: Spanish and king mackerel making their way south from the upper bays, so if you see birds working offshore or bait getting sprayed near Port Aransas or the Galveston jetty, it’s time to troll a silver spoon, especially at the edge of those bait schools. According to Coastal Angler Magazine, using a 50lb mono leader for Spanish or bumping up to a wire leader for those bigger kings is your best bet to keep from getting cut off.
Live bait is still king, with finger mullet and shrimp bringing in the majority of inshore action. For artificials, soft plastics rigged on light jigheads—think natural colors in clear water and chartreuse in stained—are real producers. Paddle tails, gulp shrimp, and paddle tail grubs are top picks. Gold spoons remain a classic for redfish, especially around mullet schools.
Don’t forget about the bass and sheepshead minnow bite if you slide inland or up a river mouth. Several Corpus anglers have been landing good numbers of slot bass and the occasional hefty pickerel using Texas-rigged plastic craws, especially in brackish pockets where river meets salt. Strike King's Rage DB Craw and anything in a dark watermelon or black-blue has been solid.
Some real hot spots this week:
- **Packery Channel** for flounder and trout on a moving tide.
- **Bird Island Basin** for redfish and trout, particularly along wind-protected shorelines.
- **North and South Jetties at Port Aransas** for bull reds, drum, and late-run kings.
- **JFK Causeway and nearby spoil islands**—work these with a light north wind for best effect.
Whatever you’re doing, plan your casts around the moving tide, hit structure, and follow the bait. Suspension baits and midwater crankbaits, especially those that mimic local shad or mullet, are getting bit, and don’t leave out a soft jerkbait for shallow, grassy areas. Early and late are prime, but you can extend that bite if the water’s moving and the birds are active.
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