Artificial Lure here. Early risers on the Gulf of Mexico are in for classic Florida summer fishing this Sunday, August 10, 2025. With sunrise at 6:58AM and sunset stretching out till 8:13PM, you’ve got plentiful daylight to chase bites from sun-up to the evening breeze.
Today’s tide for Gulf Harbors stretches from a pre-dawn high at 2:36AM (2.92 ft), dropping to low at 8:28AM (1.33 ft), then swinging back up to an afternoon high at 1:53PM (3.68 ft) before easing to a post-sunset low at 9:13PM (0.13 ft). These moving tides will help drive solid fish movement, especially with a moderate tidal coefficient in the 59-70 range—expect currents to stir up feeding activity, making for lively action mid-morning through early afternoon.
Weather’s humid and classic Gulf: a tropical wave pushing scattered thunderstorms and showers, especially overnight and early in the morning. Winds are mostly from the east at 10-15 knots, seas around 2 feet, and waters a moderate chop. Pack raingear, keep an eye out for squalls, and expect humidity to spike with the rain. Water temps are summer-prime, keeping most species active, especially in bays and up on the flats.
Fish activity has been steady, with reports out of Panama City, Destin, and Tampa Bay highlighting catches of red snapper, speckled trout, flounder, dolphin (mahi mahi), amberjack, tarpon, cobia, and gray triggerfish. Snapper are especially hot right now off reefs and in deeper structure. Nearshore and inshore, anglers are finding solid numbers of trout, slot redfish, and good flounder action, particularly on morning incoming tides when bait pods move into shallow water.
Best baits for the day:
- Live shrimp and pinfish for trout, redfish, and flounder.
- Cut bait—especially mullet and squid—for snapper and grouper around wrecks and reefs.
- Artificial lures: Topwater plugs and soft plastics are producing early for speckled trout on grass flats. Jigging with chartreuse bucktails and trolling minnow-style plugs will tempt pelagics like cobia and dolphin in the deeper channels.
Hottest lure trends are:
- DOA Shrimp and Gulp! Alive Soft Baits on the flats
- MirrOlure Top Dog Jr. and Rapala X-Rap for aggressive hit-and-run bites
- Deep-drop jigs like Williamson Abyss and classic bucktail jigs tipped with squid offshore
A couple of current hot spots:
- Panama City reefs and bridge pylons for red snapper and amberjack—Captain Logan of GulfCoast Guide Fishing & Adventure reports daily limits when weather and tides cooperate.
- Flats and channels in the St. Andrews Bay area holding solid numbers of trout and flounder, especially around weed lines and drop-offs.
- Boca Grande Pass and the surrounding beaches are still producing tarpon for anglers putting in the early morning effort, along with scattered schools of Spanish mackerel pushing bait up on the surface.
For inshore action, try the mouth of the Suwannee River at sunrise—prime for slot redfish and speckled trout feeding over oyster bars. In Destin, the jetties are active midmorning with pompano and black drum.
Remember, storms may shuffle fish tighter to structure. When rain passes, the bite often turns on briefly. If you’re fishing offshore, keep safety top of mind and check in about local conditions before heading out.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Gulf of Mexico, Florida fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the daily fishing scoop—from weather and tides to bait and bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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