Winter Patterns and Finicky Bay Fish - Your San Francisco Fishing Update
11 January 2026

Winter Patterns and Finicky Bay Fish - Your San Francisco Fishing Update

San Francisco Bay Fishing Report Today

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This is Artificial Lure with your San Francisco Bay fishing report.

We’ve got a classic winter bay pattern lining up. According to Tides4Fishing for San Francisco, sunrise is around **7:24 a.m.** and sunset about **5:11 p.m.** today, so your prime windows are first light through mid‑morning and the last two hours before dark. Tidal swing is backing off; Tides4Fishing shows a **high tide around 5:32 a.m. at about 5.6 ft** and a **midday high around 12:41 p.m. just over 1 ft**, with a **low this evening around 7:25 p.m. at 3.6 ft**. That weaker movement means you’ll want to key on the steeper parts of the curves, not the slack.

Weather-wise, the Bay is sitting in a cool, light‑wind winter pattern: air in the low 50s in the morning, creeping into the high 50s/low 60s by afternoon, with typical patchy fog early and a light northwest breeze building late morning. Think layers and a windproof shell; cold fingers mean missed bites.

Fish activity is typical January: slower overall, but very catchable if you fish smart. Striped bass in the Central Bay are still chewing on the tide changes—more schoolies than cows, but enough legals to keep it interesting. The crab fleet out of Emeryville is still putting up numbers; NorCalFishReports shows party boats like the Pacific Pearl scoring **full limits of Dungeness crab** yesterday, which tells you there’s plenty of life and forage in that water.

On the lure side, this is **small and subtle season**. For stripers and halibut in the Bay:

- Best **lures**:
- 4–5" paddletails in smelt, anchovy, or white on 1/2–1 oz jigheads.
- 1–1.5 oz chrome or pearl spoons yo‑yoed near the bottom on the outgoing.
- Slim metal jigs for deeper channel edges when the tide’s pushing.

- Best **bait**:
- Live or fresh anchovies if you can get them.
- Grass shrimp and pile worms for piling‑hugging stripers and perch.
- Squid strips or herring chunks on a hi‑low for mixed bay bottom fish.

Recent counts around the region, via NorCalFishReports, show boats loading up on **crab limits out of Emeryville** and good mixed‑bag bottom fishing on the coast—rockfish, sanddabs, and a few lingcod before the closures kicked in—which tracks with the cooler but stable water. Inside the Bay, private boaters have been picking a mix of **schoolie stripers with a handful of keepers per boat**, plus the odd **legal halibut** for those grinding the flats when the sun warms the shallows a touch.

A couple of local **hot spots** to circle:

- **Alameda Rockwall / Encinal Flats**: Great striper lane on the outgoing; slow‑troll swimbaits just off the rocks or drift live bait when you’ve got some current.
- **Crissy Field to Fort Point line**: When the flood is rolling and the wind isn’t howling, bounce 1–1.5 oz swimbaits along the contour; schoolie stripers and the occasional winter halibut cruise that edge.

If you’re shore‑bound, the **Pier 7 and Ferry Building area** can still kick out schoolie stripers and pile perch on shrimp and worms, especially an hour or two either side of the stronger part of the tide.

Tackle tip from a local: downsize your leaders and slow your presentations. Clear winter water and finicky fish mean 12–15 lb fluoro for artificials and smaller hooks for bait; let that lure or bait just tick bottom, not plow it.

That’s your Bay rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide.

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