Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baja fishing report. Up and down the peninsula, we’ve got classic early‑summer conditions. Along the Pacific side from Ensenada to Todos Santos, mornings are starting cool and gray with a shallow marine layer, light west breeze 5–10 knots, and afternoon bump building to 12–15. Air temps are running mid‑60s at first light, climbing into the high‑70s by midafternoon. On the Sea of Cortez side around La Paz, Los Barriles, and Cabo Pulmo, it’s warmer and calmer at dawn, with a light southeast breeze and air pushing low‑90s by midday. Sunrise is right around early morning local time with sunset in the early evening, giving you a fat, bright fishing window. Tides are moderate; near La Paz and Cabo San Lucas we’ve got a predawn high sliding to a mid‑day low, then a solid afternoon push. That morning peak and the first two hours of the flood in the afternoon are your best bets for surface activity. Water temps offshore from Cabo up toward Los Cabos corridors are sitting in the mid‑70s to low‑80s, Sea of Cortez side even a touch warmer inshore. Cooler pockets and green water are still hanging along parts of the Pacific coast, but the warm fingers are pushing in tighter every day. Offshore out of Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo, boats have been putting decent counts of school‑size yellowfin tuna on deck, with a few better grade mixed in. Dorado are showing more regularly now, mostly smaller “chickens” with a few respectable bulls around floating debris and current lines. Striped marlin remain the headliners on the banks and drop‑offs, with decent numbers tailing and free‑jumping when the wind lays down. A few sailfish and the odd blue marlin are starting to sniff around the temperature breaks. Inshore and nearshore, roosters are the main attraction along the sandy stretches from Cabo east to Los Barriles and up toward La Paz. Plenty of fish in the 10–25‑pound class, with bigger models cruising tight to the beach when the bait’s stacked in the gutters. Amberjack, pargo, and cabrilla are coming off the rocky points and reefs, especially where there’s good current and slightly off‑color water. On the Pacific side, there are still some yellowtail on the deeper structure and yo‑yo spots, though they’re more of an early‑morning game now. For lures, keep it simple and local. Offshore, run a spread of medium‑size skirted trolling lures in dark‑and‑bright combos—black/purple, petrolero, zucchini, and Mexican flag are putting fish in the boat. Cedar plugs and small feathers are still killers on school‑size tuna, especially when the birds are picking on scattered schools. A couple of rigged ballyhoo or caballito in the pattern will get the billfish’s attention when they’re shy on plastics. For bait, live caballito, sardina, and mackerel are gold. Slow‑trolled baits are producing marlin and bigger dorado on the edges of the banks and color changes. Inshore, live sardina pitched into nervous water is about as close as you get to a sure thing for roosters and jacks. When you can’t get live bait, a well‑worked surface plug or popper—white, bone, or blue over silver—will draw violent strikes from roosters and jacks in the skinny water. For the bottom fish, drop heavy jigs and knife jigs in blue/white or scrambled egg, or fish cut bait and live baits tight to structure with enough weight to stay vertical. A couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: first, the Gordo Banks off San Jose del Cabo. It’s been a solid all‑around zone with tuna, marlin, and some quality bottom fish when the current’s right. Second, the stretch from the Lighthouse at Cabo Falso around to Palmilla and then up toward Los Frailes—beautiful roosterfish beaches, scattered structure, and plenty of bait when the wind’s not howling. If you’re farther north, the reefs and humps off La Paz and around Isla Espiritu Santo are worth the run for dorado, pargo, and cabrilla. That’s the word from the water. Rig light for the mornings, be ready to bump up the tackle when the wind and sun come on, and always keep one rod ready for that mystery fish that blows up where you least expect it. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn