
07 December 2025
San Francisco Bay Fishing Report: Strong Tides, Schoolie Bass, Sharks & Rays - Quiet Please
San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today
About
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your San Francisco Bay fishing report.
We’re on a **strong tide cycle** this morning. Tides4Fishing for North Point/Pier 41 shows an early **high around 2:12 a.m. near 5 ft**, rolling into a **mid‑morning high near 12:30 p.m. around 7 ft**, with a solid outgoing push late afternoon. That kind of swing usually fires up the bite on the edges and around structure.
According to Tides4Fishing, **sunrise is about 7:12 a.m. and sunset about 4:50 p.m.** Plan to be set up for the first light push and the afternoon drop; those are your prime windows.
Weather-wise, local marine forecasts have us in a **cool, partly cloudy pattern**, light morning winds building to a typical **afternoon westerly breeze**. Think jackets and beanies early, then a bit of chop later. Drifting stays manageable if you’re inside the Bay; outside the Gate will get lumpier as the breeze fills.
On the **fish front**, the bite’s still respectable for December. Flash Fishing’s Dec 5 report notes **limits of striped bass and a mix of sharks** on their last bay trip, so there are still quality schoolie bass pushing bait in the central and South Bay. Party boats and six‑packs are also reporting a steady pick of **leopard sharks and bat rays** on the flats.
Up the road in San Pablo Bay, the Marin Rod and Gun Club pier report from October logged **over 200 fish in a month**—striped bass, halibut, perch, sharks, rays, and a pile of smelt—showing the system’s still healthy and diverse even late season. That action typically tapers but doesn’t disappear; winter bass, rays, and the odd halibut still sniff around those channels and mudflats.
For **lures**, keep it simple and local:
- **Striped bass:** 4–5" white or chartreuse swimbaits on ½–¾ oz heads, Hair Raisers, and slim metal spoons jigged near the bottom. Small paddletails in “shad” or “anchovy” patterns are money around current seams.
- **Halibut (if you’re hunting a late one):** slow‑rolled swimbaits or trap‑rigged herring imitations along the bottom on the drift.
For **bait**, you can’t go wrong with:
- **Live or fresh anchovies, herring, or shiner perch** on a slider rig for bass and halibut.
- **Squid strips and anchovy chunks** for leopard sharks and bat rays on the flats.
- **Pile worms or shrimp** under a hi‑low for perch around rocks and pilings.
Couple of **hot spots** to put on your short list:
- **Alameda Rockwall / Ballena Bay side:** fish the edges of the channel on the outgoing this afternoon for schoolie stripers and sharks. Drift swimbaits or soak bait on the slope.
- **San Quentin / San Pablo Bay edges:** when the tide starts moving, work the drop‑offs with bait for bass and rays; keep an eye on your rod, that bite can be sudden.
- **Pier 32–40 / central waterfront:** if you’re shorebound, cast swimbaits and spoons along the shipping channel edges right after sunrise and into the first push of the flood.
Overall **activity** today: not wide‑open, but those who time the tides and move around should find **decent numbers of schoolie stripers, a steady pick of sharks and rays, plus perch for the patient pier rats**.
This is Artificial Lure, reminding you to match the hatch, respect the Bay, and pack out what you pack in.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We’re on a **strong tide cycle** this morning. Tides4Fishing for North Point/Pier 41 shows an early **high around 2:12 a.m. near 5 ft**, rolling into a **mid‑morning high near 12:30 p.m. around 7 ft**, with a solid outgoing push late afternoon. That kind of swing usually fires up the bite on the edges and around structure.
According to Tides4Fishing, **sunrise is about 7:12 a.m. and sunset about 4:50 p.m.** Plan to be set up for the first light push and the afternoon drop; those are your prime windows.
Weather-wise, local marine forecasts have us in a **cool, partly cloudy pattern**, light morning winds building to a typical **afternoon westerly breeze**. Think jackets and beanies early, then a bit of chop later. Drifting stays manageable if you’re inside the Bay; outside the Gate will get lumpier as the breeze fills.
On the **fish front**, the bite’s still respectable for December. Flash Fishing’s Dec 5 report notes **limits of striped bass and a mix of sharks** on their last bay trip, so there are still quality schoolie bass pushing bait in the central and South Bay. Party boats and six‑packs are also reporting a steady pick of **leopard sharks and bat rays** on the flats.
Up the road in San Pablo Bay, the Marin Rod and Gun Club pier report from October logged **over 200 fish in a month**—striped bass, halibut, perch, sharks, rays, and a pile of smelt—showing the system’s still healthy and diverse even late season. That action typically tapers but doesn’t disappear; winter bass, rays, and the odd halibut still sniff around those channels and mudflats.
For **lures**, keep it simple and local:
- **Striped bass:** 4–5" white or chartreuse swimbaits on ½–¾ oz heads, Hair Raisers, and slim metal spoons jigged near the bottom. Small paddletails in “shad” or “anchovy” patterns are money around current seams.
- **Halibut (if you’re hunting a late one):** slow‑rolled swimbaits or trap‑rigged herring imitations along the bottom on the drift.
For **bait**, you can’t go wrong with:
- **Live or fresh anchovies, herring, or shiner perch** on a slider rig for bass and halibut.
- **Squid strips and anchovy chunks** for leopard sharks and bat rays on the flats.
- **Pile worms or shrimp** under a hi‑low for perch around rocks and pilings.
Couple of **hot spots** to put on your short list:
- **Alameda Rockwall / Ballena Bay side:** fish the edges of the channel on the outgoing this afternoon for schoolie stripers and sharks. Drift swimbaits or soak bait on the slope.
- **San Quentin / San Pablo Bay edges:** when the tide starts moving, work the drop‑offs with bait for bass and rays; keep an eye on your rod, that bite can be sudden.
- **Pier 32–40 / central waterfront:** if you’re shorebound, cast swimbaits and spoons along the shipping channel edges right after sunrise and into the first push of the flood.
Overall **activity** today: not wide‑open, but those who time the tides and move around should find **decent numbers of schoolie stripers, a steady pick of sharks and rays, plus perch for the patient pier rats**.
This is Artificial Lure, reminding you to match the hatch, respect the Bay, and pack out what you pack in.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI