Artificial Lure here with your Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans fishing report for Monday, November 3rd, 2025. Sunrise came in at 6:58 this morning and you can expect the sun to dip behind the marsh at 6:37 this evening, giving us about 11 hours of daylight—plenty of time to wet a line.
Weather’s starting out in the mid-60s with a gentle north wind. That’s clearing the water inshore, making things just right for sight-fishing those marsh reds and speckled trout. According to the National Weather Service, surface winds should stay light all day with mild, partly cloudy skies—perfect fall conditions for fishing the marsh, bays, and barrier islands.
We’re on a low tidal coefficient today—about 41, dipping to 37 at midday—which means don’t expect strong tidal swings or fast-flowing currents. High tide peaked early this morning, and it'll start easing down toward slack in midday before a subtle rise in the evening. While the tides are soft, that’s prime time for sneaking up on fish stacked near deeper channels, oyster reefs, and marsh drains. Best bite’ll be at dawn and dusk: lower light, lighter winds, and moving water.
Fishing is definitely picking up with these fall fronts. The last couple days saw plenty of speckled trout action around Lake Pontchartrain and the bridges, where soft plastics under a popping cork are landing solid stringers. Early morning, try a topwater plug like a Rapala Skitter Walk or Heddon Super Spook Jr., then switch to Matrix Shad or Vudu Shrimp when the sun rises. As for reds, look for them tight to marsh edges and drains out by Hopedale and Delacroix. Gold spoons, spinnerbaits, and live shrimp under a cork are the ticket.
Anglers in Venice are still pulling in some hefty bull reds around the jetties and passes—these brutes are hitting cut mullet and crab. A few nice flounder have turned up in current-swept pockets inside the bays; slow-rolling a paddle tail jig right on bottom is the classic tactic.
If you want to tangle with bass, those Atchafalaya spillway drains are holding decent largemouths that are pushing shad—crankbaits on windy banks are getting smoked early, while finesse worms on drops are producing as the day goes on.
Recent catches have included limits of speckled trout in the 14-20 inch range, plenty of slot redfish, and the occasional big drum and flounder mixed in. Some guides are reporting 25-50 trout per boat on a good morning, especially working moving water and oyster shell.
For bait, you can’t go wrong with live shrimp—either freelined or under a cork—but don’t overlook artificial lures today. Water clarity’s good, and that north wind makes for confident fish. Chartreuse and purple plastics are working well. Fresh cut mullet or blue crab chunks are catnip for bull reds at the outer passes and bay mouths.
If you’re looking for a hot spot, check out the bridges on Lake Pontchartrain for specks early, especially along the I-10 and Highway 11 bridges. For reds and mixed bag in skinny water, the drains and bayous around Hopedale and Delacroix are firing this week—just cruise slow and look for nervous water or wakes in that knee-to-thigh deep grass.
That’s your November 3rd rundown. Thanks for tuning in to your Gulf fishing update—be sure to subscribe for tomorrow’s report, and until then, tight lines and don’t forget your net.
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