1. EachPod

Late Summer Fishing Bonanza Off California's Coasts

Author
Quiet. Please
Published
Wed 03 Sep 2025
Episode Link
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/late-summer-fishing-bonanza-off-california-s-coasts--67617405

Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Ocean, California fishing report for Wednesday, September 3, 2025.

Today’s sunrise hit at 6:37am and sunset will wrap things up at 7:32pm according to Tide-Forecast.com. Tides are mellow with a low at 6:57am, a small high at 12:13pm, and another low at 6:40pm, which means currents are on the slower side and best bite windows should be just as the new tide rolls in or out. Tidal coefficients are low, so expect modest flows—ideal for subtle bait presentations and extra finesse[2][8].

Weather’s typical late-summer California: cool morning marine layer burning off by midday then blue skies. Conditions like these get pelagics moving but finicky inshore species might demand lighter tackle and downsized presentations.

Let’s talk fish action. Offshore boats keep hauling limits and big counts. Fisherman’s Landing and H&M Landing report outstanding bluefin runs—Tomahawk returned with 34 bluefin for 26 anglers; Constitution checked in with 40 bluefin up to 150 lbs and Islander brought 64 bluefin for just 25 folks. Pacific Queen continues to see double-digit bluefin, many up to 140 lbs. Yellowfin and yellowtail are popping up regularly, especially around the banks and paddies. Most boats tagged 2-4 yellowtail and a handful of yellowfin per run. Lucky B Sportfishing scored 12 yellowtail (18-25 lbs)—pretty solid for a freelance trip[4][9].

Closer to the coast, half-day trips in SoCal and the Bay are stacking up rockfish, calico bass, sandbass, and sheephead. Dolphin AM and PM returned with over 130 rockfish, 38 sandbass, and 14 sheephead for their combined trips yesterday. Northern Cal party boats like Pacific Pearl out of Emeryville landed 16 striped bass and a leopard shark today—classic late summer bay action[4][7][10].

This week’s hot lure advice: offshore, you can’t beat heavy colt snipers and flat falls for big bluefin, and sardine or mackerel chunk bait is still king. For yellowtail, irons like the Salas 7X and live mackerel do most of the damage. On the inshore grounds and kelp beds, downsizing your gear brings more hook-ups—grab a 2-inch Cordell Spot or small jerk bait, especially in clear water lakes or rocky coastal spots, as In Deep on the Delta with Steve Cooper recently demonstrated. For bay bass and stripers, soft plastics in shad or baby bass provide killer results. Live anchovy and cut squid always land sandbass and sheephead where structure’s present[3].

Regulations just got looser for groundfish out of Point Conception north—new Quillback Rockfish stock assessment opened up all-depth fishing in these waters as of August 28, so if you’re itching for mixed bag trips, now’s prime time for lingcod, rockfish, and vermillion, especially off Monterey, Santa Cruz, and Half Moon Bay. According to the California Collaborative Fisheries Research Program, these changes mean more opportunity and better stock health than we saw in past seasons[1].

Today’s hot spots:
- The 43 Fathom Spot and Tanner Bank offshore for tuna and dorado.
- San Clemente Island—yellowtail, calico, and sheephead on structure and kelp.
- Inside San Francisco Bay—Pier 7 and Alameda Rockwall for stripers and leopard shark.
- Monterey Bay—Lingcod and rockfish now open for all depths, lots of action on hex bars and squid strips.

That’s the scene out here—good fish, stable weather, and relaxed regulations. Tight lines to all the salty locals and visitors alike.

Thanks for tuning in to the report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite window or regulation update. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.

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