Artificial Lure here with your latest fishing report for Wednesday, October 29, 2025, from the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans area.
We’re kicking off the day with a stout east wind—steady 20 to 25 knots, pushing gusts up to 35 knots offshore. Seas are rough, 5 to 8 feet, with a few sets rolling in higher. Bring rain gear: showers and scattered thunderstorms are likely to stick around. If you’re headed out early or late, watch for clearing through tonight and lighter southeast winds tapering back to 10–15 knots after midnight, with waves down to 3–5 feet according to the National Weather Service marine zone forecast.
Sunrise hit at 7:15 AM, with sunset rolling in about 6:15 PM. With daylight shifting, those first and last couple hours are golden for a strong bite window. On the tide chart, we have a recent high around daybreak and falling water deeper into the morning. That’s prime for redfish action—look to target marsh drains and inlets about two hours before and after low tide, letting your bait sweep through the current for natural presentations.
Speckled trout are stacking up around oyster reefs and bridge pylons in Lake Pontchartrain and down toward Calcasieu, feeding aggressively on these cooler October mornings. Topwater lures at dawn are bringing solid blowups, then switch to soft plastics under a popping cork once the sun’s up—a local classic like a Matrix Shad in lemonhead or shrimp color can be the ticket.
Redfish are cruising marsh edges and working the drains especially well on falling tide. Gold spoons, live shrimp, or cut bait like mullet are producing solid slot reds, and cut crab or mullet is turning over some hefty bull reds at the jetties near Grand Isle and Venice. If you're rigging for big reds today, beef up that tackle—they’re running thick.
Flounder are moving in around current-swept pockets and passes. Slow-roll paddle-tail soft plastics along the bottom. Keep your bait low and slow, and look for those subtle taps; they’re loading up for fall.
On the freshwater side, largemouth bass in the spillways and backwaters are still chasing shad. Crankbaits on windblown banks scored well after last week's front, and finesse worms picked up a few extra keepers as the bite slowed mid-morning. Blue catfish are active in deeper river bends—cut bait took several nice fish last weekend, especially with improved water clarity after north winds.
As for hotspots, locals are finding consistent trout action at the Chef Pass bridge pilings, and redfish are pounding marsh points in Bayou Bienvenue. If you need a reliable mixed-bag spot, try the area just southeast of Seabrook Bridge—oyster shell, moving water, and proximity to deeper channels draws everything from specks to slot reds.
Bait recommendations today:
- Live shrimp for trout, reds, and flounder.
- Cut mullet and crab for bull reds.
- Soft plastics for marsh trout and bass.
- Gold spoons if you want a classic, proven redfish bite.
Remember, north winds after a cold front will clear the water but make the bite more technical—try lighter leaders and natural colors for finesse, but beef up after rains and in muddy water.
That wraps up a brisk and blustery October report, folks. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to hit subscribe to stay on top of the Gulf bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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