1. EachPod

Late-Summer SoCal Fishing Bonanza: Bluefin, Yellowtail, Calicos and More!

Author
Quiet. Please
Published
Wed 13 Aug 2025
Episode Link
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/late-summer-socal-fishing-bonanza-bluefin-yellowtail-calicos-and-more--67353741

Artificial Lure here with your August 13, 2025, Pacific Ocean California coast fishing report.

Out on the water this morning, it’s already shaping up to be a classic late-summer bite. We kicked off the day with a low tide at 1:30 AM, rolling into a good high tide at 7:32 AM—then back down around lunchtime and another rise right after dark, peaking at 8:08 PM. The sun cracked the horizon at 6:18 AM and won’t duck out until 8:02 PM. Anglers can expect light to moderate winds, patchy clouds, and comfortable temps—you might want a windbreaker, but nothing too heavy. Water clarity has ranged from green-blue with scattered bait balls—perfect for targeting surface feeders, especially near kelp lines and reef breaks, according to Tide-Forecast.com and local dockside observations.

Now, let’s talk about the fish. Up and down SoCal, the sport boats have been on fire. Fisherman’s Landing out of San Diego is reporting lights-out bluefin tuna action—The Pacific Dawn limited out with 60 bluefin tuna up to 210 pounds for only 15 anglers, while the Pacific Queen checked in with 107 bluefin and 21 respectable yellowtail. Local day trips, like the Dolphin, are finding good numbers on yellowtail (19), solid rockfish counts (15), and school-sized barracuda. Calico bass are here in strong pods, especially around the kelp, with the PM trips releasing hundreds (78 caught, 250+ released) just yesterday.

Further north, in Morro Bay and Avila Beach, morning trips are returning loaded—expect hauls like 11 lingcod, ten reds, and hundreds of rockfish per half-day. Bodega Bay and Berkeley charters are bagging hefty lingcod (10–46 per trip), rockfish near limits, and halibut over 20 pounds. Albacore and even bluefin have pushed closer this week, with the Sorta Salty out of Bodega Bay landing 30 albacore (up to 25 pounds) and Berkeley boats putting a few bluefin on deck.

The best action has come on live sardines and anchovies—don’t skip the fresh stuff if you can get it at your local bait barge. Surface iron jigs like the Tady 45 and Salas 7X Junior in scrambled egg and blue/chrome are drawing thunderous strikes from yellowtail and bonito, echoing what anglers from Charkbait! and my own jetty stomps love to yell about. For bluefin, rigging up with sinker rigs and flat-fall jigs at night has been the hot ticket; don’t go under 60-pound fluorocarbon, and bring your heavy rod.

If you’re bass fishing off the rocks or inshore, creature baits like Rage Bugs and Keitechs in natural patterns are absolutely getting it done when bounced through eelgrass pockets. Pair those with a Texas rig or drop shot. For halibut, try drifting a live sardine or bounce a white swimbait along sandy troughs.

A couple of proven hotspots right now: The outer reefs off Point Loma are producing schoolie yellowtail and trophy bluefin at first light. Further north, the kelp edges in front of Laguna Beach and out by the Horseshoe Kelp are loaded with calico bass and barracuda—especially productive on the falling tide. Farther up, Monterey Bay is full of lings and big sacks of rockfish close to local points.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s California coast fishing update with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for your daily tide, weather, and hot bite breakdown, and remember—this has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.

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