
30 August 2025
Louisiana Fishing Report: Redfish Crush, Trout Slam & Jetty Beasts
Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana Fishing Report - Daily
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Artificial Lure here with your Gulf of Mexico Louisiana fishing report for Saturday, August 30th, 2025.
Sun’s up at 6:30 a.m. sharp and sets at 7:45 p.m., giving us just over 13 hours of daylight. The wind is light early, picking up a touch by noon, but nothing to keep you off the water. Expect mid-80s by late morning, humid, but at least skies look mixed with a little cloud cover for those redfish to push shallower around marsh edges.
Tides today are rolling in strong, too: the tidal coefficient in the South Pass area is peaking at 88 by midday and rising to 94 near sunset, meaning you’ve got aggressive current—perfect for working bait around cuts and points. Best fishing windows will sync up with the tidal swings close to dawn and late afternoon, so don’t sleep in or you’ll miss the bite, especially with water movement moving those bait schools around. As always, fish move to find the comfort zone in this heat—look for that cooler, moving water.
Redfish are fired up right now. According to Louisiana Sportsman, those transition reds are pushing into the marshes, following the shrimp and mullet. They’re big, aggressive, and busting the banks in Delacroix, Hopedale, and Venice, especially when the tide’s pushing in strong. Live shrimp under a popping cork is classic Louisiana, but today those Gulp! swimming mullets and chartreuse paddle tails are knocking ’em dead. If it’s calm, toss a surface plug or a topwater spook at first light—those reds will explode all over it.
Speckled trout action’s picked up—recent field reports from Louisiana Sportsman show plenty of trout caught on moving tides off Lake Borgne and Breton Sound, slotting up on pink and clear soft plastics and live croaker when you can get it. Topwater bites are hanging on but work best around sunrise. Trout are sitting deeper as the sun rises, so shift to jigging plastics around shell beds or channel edges as the light gets higher.
Bull reds are inshore and they’re thumping gear—bring stout tackle if you want to tangle with the big girls. For flounder, work the drains and marsh points with pink curly tail jigs or gulp swimming minnows; they’re laying in ambush on the outgoing tides.
A quick warning: the US Coast Guard just cleared a mess of illegal longline gear out there, so keep a sharp eye out for stray lines and give those Coasties a thank you if you see ’em.
Best baits today: live shrimp is always hot, but in this heat, scented plastics like Gulp! or Matrix Shad get plenty of hits. Trickworms are a secret weapon for inshore bass and reds, especially on a slow fall. If you’re going deep, bull reds are whacking chunk mullet and crab off the river jetties.
A couple of today’s hot spots: the mouth of Bayou Gentilly east of Delacroix, working the little cuts at high tide; and the north side of Breton Sound, where bait and birds are stacking up. Don’t overlook the outer edges at South Pass—those tidal swings are going to push bait and trout to the nearshore bars.
Remember, barometric swings mean fish are moving, so if the bite slows, cover water till you find them. Downsizing baits and staying tight to structure is key when that sun gets high.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for daily tips and local action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
Sun’s up at 6:30 a.m. sharp and sets at 7:45 p.m., giving us just over 13 hours of daylight. The wind is light early, picking up a touch by noon, but nothing to keep you off the water. Expect mid-80s by late morning, humid, but at least skies look mixed with a little cloud cover for those redfish to push shallower around marsh edges.
Tides today are rolling in strong, too: the tidal coefficient in the South Pass area is peaking at 88 by midday and rising to 94 near sunset, meaning you’ve got aggressive current—perfect for working bait around cuts and points. Best fishing windows will sync up with the tidal swings close to dawn and late afternoon, so don’t sleep in or you’ll miss the bite, especially with water movement moving those bait schools around. As always, fish move to find the comfort zone in this heat—look for that cooler, moving water.
Redfish are fired up right now. According to Louisiana Sportsman, those transition reds are pushing into the marshes, following the shrimp and mullet. They’re big, aggressive, and busting the banks in Delacroix, Hopedale, and Venice, especially when the tide’s pushing in strong. Live shrimp under a popping cork is classic Louisiana, but today those Gulp! swimming mullets and chartreuse paddle tails are knocking ’em dead. If it’s calm, toss a surface plug or a topwater spook at first light—those reds will explode all over it.
Speckled trout action’s picked up—recent field reports from Louisiana Sportsman show plenty of trout caught on moving tides off Lake Borgne and Breton Sound, slotting up on pink and clear soft plastics and live croaker when you can get it. Topwater bites are hanging on but work best around sunrise. Trout are sitting deeper as the sun rises, so shift to jigging plastics around shell beds or channel edges as the light gets higher.
Bull reds are inshore and they’re thumping gear—bring stout tackle if you want to tangle with the big girls. For flounder, work the drains and marsh points with pink curly tail jigs or gulp swimming minnows; they’re laying in ambush on the outgoing tides.
A quick warning: the US Coast Guard just cleared a mess of illegal longline gear out there, so keep a sharp eye out for stray lines and give those Coasties a thank you if you see ’em.
Best baits today: live shrimp is always hot, but in this heat, scented plastics like Gulp! or Matrix Shad get plenty of hits. Trickworms are a secret weapon for inshore bass and reds, especially on a slow fall. If you’re going deep, bull reds are whacking chunk mullet and crab off the river jetties.
A couple of today’s hot spots: the mouth of Bayou Gentilly east of Delacroix, working the little cuts at high tide; and the north side of Breton Sound, where bait and birds are stacking up. Don’t overlook the outer edges at South Pass—those tidal swings are going to push bait and trout to the nearshore bars.
Remember, barometric swings mean fish are moving, so if the bite slows, cover water till you find them. Downsizing baits and staying tight to structure is key when that sun gets high.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for daily tips and local action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn