Cabo San Lucas, Mexico Fishing Report Today

Inception Point AI

Tune in to the "Cabo San Lucas, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world-renowned sportfishing capital at the tip of the Baja California Peninsula. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on Cabo's legendary billfish waters, offshore banks, and productive inshore zones where nutrient-rich Pacific currents create one of the ocean's greatest natural fish traps, and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 1h ago

    Cabo San Lucas Summer Peak: Marlin, Roosters, and Perfect Conditions

    This is Artificial Lure with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. Down here at Land’s End, summer patterns are in full swing. We’re sitting on a warm blue Pacific with sea temps generally in the high 70s to low 80s, light morning breeze and a bit more bump in the afternoon as the onshore wind picks up. Skies have been mostly clear to partly cloudy, with just enough chop later in the day to kick the bite along. Tide-wise, we’re working a moderate swing today around the full–to–waning moon phase. Think higher water pushing late morning and dropping through the afternoon. Early-morning incoming and the first part of that outgoing have been the sweet spots, especially tight to structure and along current edges. Sunrise is right around that 6 a.m. mark, with sunset close to 8 p.m., so you’ve got a long window. The best bites have been: - Inshore: first light to about 9:30 a.m. - Offshore: mid-morning once the sun’s up and the bait balls show, then again late afternoon if the wind doesn’t get too wild. Offshore, boats working the Pacific side off the Golden Gate and out toward the 1150 and 95 spots have been seeing solid striped marlin action with a few blue marlin mixed in. Dorado numbers are picking up, mostly schoolies with the occasional better bull. Tuna have been hit-or-miss, but when they’re in, it’s footballs to 40–60 pounds on the temp breaks. Inshore along the Cabo arches, the Lighthouse, and up toward Migrino, the roosterfish bite has been classic early-summer: fish cruising tight to the beach harassing sardina schools. Sierra are thinning but still around in pockets, plus jack crevalle and some decent snapper around the rocks and pinnacles. Productive counts from local charter docks this week have been a handful of marlin per boat on good days, plus dorado for the table, and mixed inshore bags of roosters, jacks, and snappers. Slow days still usually mean at least a couple of solid hookups if you stick with it and work the structure. For lures offshore, pull a spread of medium-size skirted trolling lures in bright pink-and-white, blue-and-white, and guacamaya colors for marlin and dorado. Small to medium feathers and cedar plugs are still the go-to for tuna when they show. Add a couple of rigged ballyhoo or caballito in the pattern if you can get them—billfish love a well-swum natural bait. Inshore, live bait is king. Sardina and caballito slow-trolled or drifted near the surf line will draw roosters and jacks. For artificials, throw 2–4 oz surface poppers in blue, bone, or hot orange, and metal spoons or stickbaits when the sun is high and fish are a bit deeper. Don’t be afraid to fish heavier leader for roosters and jacks; they’re not shy in the churned-up water. A couple of current hot spots to focus on: - The **Lighthouse to Migrino stretch** on the Pacific side: work just outside the breakers at first light for roosters and jacks, then slide a bit deeper for snappers once the sun is up. - The **Golden Gate Bank**: excellent for marlin and occasional tuna when the current stacks up bait; run a clean spread and watch the temp and bird life. That’s your Cabo San Lucas fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on-the-water updates and local insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  2. 1d ago

    Cabo Early Summer Bite: Marlin Banks to Beach Roosters

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. Out on the cape this morning we’ve got classic early-summer conditions. Skies are mostly clear with a light onshore breeze building by late morning, and afternoon highs pushing into the low 30s Celsius, upper 80s to low 90s Fahrenheit. Humidity is up, so it feels warmer once that sun gets overhead. Seas on both sides are generally moderate, a little more chop on the Pacific, calmer on the Sea of Cortez side as the day wears on. Sunrise slid in early over the Sea of Cortez, and sunset will drop behind the Pacific in the evening, giving you a long, bright fishing window. The low-light bites are still the best: first light to mid‑morning, then again late afternoon into dusk once the glare eases and temps back off. Tide-wise, we’re running a typical mixed cycle: softer movement mid‑day, with stronger incoming and outgoing flows bracketing the morning and evening. Work the beginnings and ends of those stronger swings; that’s when the bait stacks and the gamefish pin them. Offshore, the striped marlin bite remains the headliner around the 1150 and out toward the Golden Gate and San Jamie banks. Boats working ballyhoo and caballito live baits, slow‑trolled, are raising multiple fish, with a decent mix of 1–3 marlin days for boats putting in the time. A few blue marlin and the odd sailfish are showing as the water pushes warmer and bluer offshore. Keep a spread of brightly colored trolling lures—purple/black, petrolero, and green/yellow skirts have been solid producers. Yellowfin tuna are hit‑and‑miss but still in the picture. Look for porpoise schools and bird piles outside the main banks. Small to medium feathers in pink, blue/white, and cedar plugs are getting bites, and if the school comes up, pitch sardinas or chunked squid to keep them around the boat. Bring lighter tackle for the schoolies; it makes the long drifts more fun. Closer in, dorado are starting to show better numbers, especially along current lines and around any floating debris between Cabo Falso and the 95 spot. Trolled skirted ballyhoo, small jet heads in green/gold, and fast‑moving stickbaits will draw them up. Once you hook the first mahi, keep a chunk bait or live sardina ready to double up. Inshore, the roosterfish action along the beaches from Solmar around the corner toward the Lighthouse and up the East Cape side has been steady. Bigger roosters are cruising right in the wash. Live mullet and caballito slow‑trolled tight to the sand are your best bet, but big surface poppers in blue/white or bone, and 2–4 ounce bucktail jigs, are turning some real trophy fish for the casters. Expect mixed jacks, sierra, and the odd snapper in the same zones. Two local hot spots to put on your list: - The Golden Gate Bank on the Pacific side for striped marlin and occasional tuna when the current is right. - The Gordo Banks on the Sea of Cortez side for a mixed shot at tuna, dorado, and a few early-season billfish, plus bottom species when the surface bite slows. Best overall approach today: fish early and late, stay mobile, and match your offerings to the visible bait—if you’re seeing small flying fish or sardinas on the surface, downsize your lures; if larger baits are around, don’t be afraid to run bigger skirts and plugs. That’s your Cabo San Lucas fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  3. 2d ago

    Cabo's Early Summer Bite: Dorado, Tuna, and Roosterfish in the Dawn and Dusk Window

    Good morning, anglers—this is **Artificial Lure** with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report for today. Around Cabo and the tip of the peninsula, the bite is shaping up like a classic early-summer run, with **dorado, yellowfin tuna, striped marlin, and roosterfish** all worth targeting as the water warms and the bait starts stacking up near the beaches, fingers, and offshore color changes. For the **tide**, plan your best action around the moving water—especially the **first push of tide at daybreak** and the **last of the outgoing around sunset**. That’s when bait gets pushed tight to structure, and predators get greedy. Along the East Cape side and inside the bay mouths, a moving tide can really light things up for roosterfish and jacks. For the **weather**, June in Cabo usually means **hot mornings, bright sun, and warm, steady water**, with light-to-moderate winds early before the afternoon breeze builds. That makes the first light bite the money window, and if the wind stays manageable, there’s good reason to stay after it offshore. **Sunrise** is early enough to get the first cast in well before the heat turns up, and **sunset** gives you a solid evening window for beach fishing and nearshore action. If you’re planning a full day, the sweet spot is still dawn through mid-morning, then again late afternoon into dusk. Recent local action has been centered on **mixed bags offshore and nearshore**, with boats reporting **dorado on floating weed lines, tuna on porpoise schools and bird activity, and striped marlin on the troll**. Closer in, **roosterfish, cabrilla, and pargo** are the kind of fish that can make your day if you work the right beaches and points. When the bait is around, expect a few fish per trip to turn into a real bite window rather than a grind. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and deadly: - **Feather jigs and cedar plugs** for tuna and troll fish - **Small skirted trolling lures** for marlin and dorado - **Poppers and stickbaits** for roosterfish on the beach and along rocky points - **Metal jigs** when bait is deep or the fish are hanging under birds For **bait**, the best bets are **live mackerel, caballito, sardines, and small bonito chunks** when you can get them. If the bait is nervous and breaking on the surface, that’s your cue to match the hatch with something lively and natural. Two **hot spots** I’d keep on the radar: - **The San José del Cabo estuary and nearby beach stretches** for roosterfish on moving water - **The Corridor’s nearshore drop-offs and bait edges** for dorado, tuna, and the occasional marlin If you’re running offshore, keep your eyes peeled for **bird piles, terns dipping, and any floating debris or weed lines**—that’s where the good stuff tends to show up fast. If you’re fishing from shore, work the **point rips, tide cuts, and sandy channels** with a steady retrieve and be ready for a violent hit. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to **subscribe** for more bite-sized fishing intel. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  4. 3d ago

    Cabo Summer Bite: Marlin Action Heating Up as Warm Water Pushes In

    This is Artificial Lure with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. We’ve got classic Baja summer conditions offshore right now: warm blue water pushing 81–84 degrees on the Pacific side and into the high 80s in the Sea of Cortez. Light morning breezes, building to 10–15 knots out of the west in the afternoon, with a mild chop once that wind turns on. Skies are mostly clear, with a few coastal clouds early, burning off fast. Sunrise is right around 6:40 a.m., with sunset about 8:10 p.m. The bite has been best on that grey light window through about 9:30 a.m., then again on the late-afternoon push. Tides are running a moderate morning high with a decent drop through midday; that falling water has been kicking bait up and waking things up just outside the arches. Offshore, the fleets running out of the Cabo marina have been doing well on **striped marlin**, with a few **blue marlin** showing and scattered **sailfish** mixed in. Most boats working the 95 Spot, 1150, and the Golden Gate/Banco San Jaime edges are reporting several marlin raised a day, and 1–3 fish released when the crew is on it. Dorado are around but not thick—more of a one‑here, one‑there deal, mostly peanuts with an occasional 20‑ to 25‑pounder. A few **yellowfin tuna** have been found under porpoise schools a bit farther out, but it’s not a wide‑open tuna bite yet. Best offshore lures right now are: - Small to medium **black/purple and blue/white skirted trolling lures** - **Natural‑color cedar plugs** for the tuna - Bright **lime green or pink feathers** for dorado Teasers and a **dead ballyhoo or caballito pitched back** to tailing marlin are paying off. If you’ve got live bait, a **live caballito or mackerel bridled on 40–60 lb leader** is still king—keep it ready on a circle hook and drop it back the second you see a bill. Inshore and nearshore, the Pacific side points and rocky structure are giving up **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, and some solid **sierra and snapper**. The roosters have been cruising the beaches from Solmar up past Migrino, especially where there’s a little color change and nervous bait. They’re smashing: - 4–6 inch **surface poppers** in bone or mullet pattern - **White and olive bucktail jigs** - **Live mullet** slow‑trolled tight to the sand Snapper and cabrilla are tight to the rocks—fish a **1–2 oz jighead with a swimbait** or a chunk of cut bait right in the boiler zones when the swell allows. Early morning before the wind and traffic is best, with that first push of tide. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots to focus on: - **Golden Gate Bank** on the Pacific side for marlin and occasional tuna; work the edges, watch for bird piles and bait balls. - **95 Spot and 1150** on the Cortez side for mixed marlin, dorado, and scattered tuna when the life is there. Water clarity is good, plenty of flying fish and small bonito around, and when you find that concentrated bait, you’re in the game. Scale down your leaders if the bite is picky, but stay ready for a bigger marlin—there are some nicer fish starting to slide in with the warmer water. That’s the Cabo report from Artificial Lure—tight lines out there, and don’t forget to give your crew a good tip if they put you on fish. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  5. 4d ago

    Cabo Early Summer: Marlin Banks and Roosterfish at First Light

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern in Cabo. Light to moderate morning breeze, building a bit in the afternoon, with mostly clear skies and that steady Pacific–Sea of Cortez mix that keeps water temps warm enough for pelagics but still comfortable inshore. Plan on calmer seas early; by mid‑day you’ll see more chop and a bit of swell wrapping around the cape. Tides around the cape are running a typical mixed semidiurnal cycle: a good pre‑dawn high easing down through the morning, then a push again late afternoon. That first tide swing of the day is your money window inshore; offshore, the bite has been best on the turn of the tide, especially when it lines up with the sun getting up over the hills. Sunrise is hitting the Pacific side early, with good gray‑light visibility about half an hour before. Sunset over the Pacific is giving you a nice golden hour for roosterfish and jacks cruising the beaches. If you like pitching surface baits tight to the sand, that low‑sun light is prime time. Offshore, the fleet running out of the Cabo marina and Puerto Los Cabos has been finding consistent **striped marlin**, scattered **blue marlin**, some **sailfish**, plus decent **yellowfin tuna** and a handful of **dorado**. Boats working the 95 and 1150 banks, plus the Gordo area, have been putting multiple billfish in the spread most days, with a mix of releases and a few kept when legal. Yellowfin are showing in small‑to‑medium grade schools; enough 20–40 pound fish coming over the rails to make it worth the fuel. Dorado numbers are spotty but when you find debris or a temperature break, there are pairs and small packs hanging around. Best offshore offerings right now: - For marlin and sails, run **smoke‑trail plastic skirted lures** in darker colors on the long lines and a couple of **natural‑color ballyhoo or caballito** rigged on the shorts. - For tuna, keep **small feathers and cedar plugs** handy, plus a rod ready with a **live sardina** or chunk when they boil up. - Dorado are eating **bright green/yellow skirts**, **live baits**, and **cut chunk** around any floating structure. Inshore and surf, the story is **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, and some **sierra and snapper** tight to the rocks. Roosters have been cruising the beaches when the swell is manageable, especially where you get a defined drop‑off and nervous mullet. Jack schools are hammering bait on the surface early and late. Best inshore and surf baits: - **Live mullet, caballito, and sardina** slow‑trolled just outside the breakers. - For artificials, throw **surface poppers**, **pencil poppers**, and **walking plugs** in white, bone, and blue‑back patterns. - **Metal spoons and small stickbaits** are taking sierra and smaller gamefish around rocky points. A couple of local hot spots to key on: - **The Corridor** between Cabo San Lucas and San José del Cabo: slow‑troll live baits just off the beaches for roosters and jacks, especially around points and small coves. - **Lands End and the Lighthouse area on the Pacific side**: good for inshore action at first light, and a traditional starting lane for boats heading to the offshore banks for marlin and tuna. Match your plan to the conditions: hit inshore at gray light on that early tide swing, then slide offshore once the sun’s up and the wind still hasn’t filled in. Midday is better for trolling the banks; swing back in for a last shot at roosters and jacks around sunset if the wind drops. That’s your Cabo San Lucas fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  6. 5d ago

    Cabo Early Summer: Marlin Bite Heating Up, Roosters on the Rise

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from Cabo San Lucas with your morning fishing rundown. We’ve got typical early-summer Cabo conditions: light morning breeze, building to a moderate onshore wind by midday, then settling again toward sunset. Skies are mostly clear, temps running warm and humid, and the offshore chop staying manageable in the 1–3 foot range for most of the day. Sunrise is right around early six o’clock local, with sunset roughly twelve hours later, giving you a nice, long fishing window. Tides today are in a gentle cycle, with a softer morning high and a stronger push in the afternoon. That afternoon incoming is going to be your prime window, especially for inshore roosters and jacks cruising the beaches, and for marlin pushing bait closer to the surface offshore. I’d plan serious effort around the last two hours of the rising tide and the first hour of the fall. Offshore, the big story continues to be striped marlin with a few blue marlin and sailfish mixed in, plus solid numbers of dorado and some yellowfin tuna when you find the right temperature breaks. In the last few days, local charter docks have been reporting boats raising multiple marlin per trip, with many landing one to three fish, plus a grab bag of dorado from schoolies up into the 20–30 pound class. Yellowfin have been a bit more hit or miss, but when they show, boats are picking several footballs with an occasional larger fish. Best offshore spread right now is a mix of medium-size skirted lures and ballyhoo or caballito rigged dead baits. Run darker patterns like black/purple or petrolero early and late, and brighter options like zucchini or pink/white once the sun gets higher. Live bait shows—slow-trolled caballito or mackerel—are still converting the lazy marlin that just window-shop the lures. For tuna, small cedar plugs, feathers, and dark soft plastics behind the spread are doing work when you mark them deeper. Inshore, the beaches around the Pacific side and the corridor are seeing good roosterfish activity, with fish from school-size up into the 40–50 pound range, plus jack crevalle, sierra, and the odd snapper tight to the rocks. Roosters are cruising bait in the morning low light and again when that afternoon tide starts pushing. Slow-trolled live mullet or caballito right along the color line are the ticket, but big surface poppers and stickbaits in bone, blue/white, or mullet patterns are drawing explosive strikes for those who like to cast. For bait, think local: live caballito, mullet, and mackerel are top of the list. If the bait guys are thin, frozen ballyhoo and chunked squid will still get dorado and tuna interested. Bring fluoro leaders in the 30–60 pound range offshore, a bit heavier for inshore roosters and snapper near the rocks. Couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: offshore, the Golden Gate and the San Jamie Bank on the Pacific side are still producing marlin and dorado when the current is right. Closer to town, the 95 and 1150 spots off the Sea of Cortez side are worth a look for billfish and tuna on the temperature breaks. Inshore, the stretch from Playa Migrino down the Pacific beach and the rocky points along the tourist corridor toward Chileno and Santa Maria are solid bets for roosters and jacks when that tide starts to move. That’s the rundown from Cabo for now. Rig smart, fish the tide, and keep an eye out for birds and bait – they’ll tell you most of what you need to know. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  7. 6d ago

    Cabo Summer Heat: Marlin Bites, Tuna Runs, and Prime Inshore Action This Week

    This is Artificial Lure with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. We woke up to light early-morning breezes out of the northwest, seas generally calm to a light chop, and warm, humid air pushing into the high 80s by afternoon. Skies are mostly clear with a few coastal clouds. Sunrise came early over the Sea of Cortez and sunset will bring a long twilight, great for that last-hour bite. Tides today are modest but important: a lower tide through the pre-dawn, building to a mid‑day high, then easing back late afternoon. That rising mid‑morning water has been kicking the inshore bite into gear, and the last of the evening fall has been good for jacks and roosters cruising the beaches. Offshore, the water is classic Cabo summer—blue and warm. Recent charter chatter at the marina has striped marlin still the headline, with multiple boats going 2 to 4 fish released on an average full day, a few boats seeing 6 or more shots when the bait balls pop up. A handful of bigger blue marlin have started to show on the Pacific side, plus scattered sailfish in the mix. Yellowfin tuna have been running with the porpoise schools outside the Jaime and Golden Gate banks, mostly footballs to 40‑pound fish, with the odd 60‑ to 80‑pounder. Dorado numbers are creeping up—still not wide‑open, but enough mahi around that trolling a spread is rarely coming home empty. Wahoo are spotty but worth a high‑speed pass when you hit a current edge or color change. Best offshore offerings right now are: - For marlin: medium‑size skirted lures in purple‑black, petrolero, and guacamaya colors, plus ballyhoo or caballito bridled on circle hooks when fish are tailing or free‑jumping. - For tuna: small cedar plugs, feather jigs in blue‑white and zucchini, and live sardina or chunked squid when you find them under birds or with spinner dolphins. - For dorado and wahoo: bright green‑yellow and orange‑black lures, rapala‑style diving plugs, and rigged ballyhoo with a bit of flash. Inshore, the story has been solid action for roosterfish along the beaches from Playa Solmar around the corner to Migrino, and on the Sea of Cortez side from Costa Azul up toward La Playa. Most roosters are in the 10‑ to 25‑pound class with some 40‑plus bruisers mixed in. Sierra have thinned a bit with the warming water, but there are still some around in the mornings, along with jack crevalle and the occasional snook tight to structure. For the surf and panga crowd, the hot tickets: - Live bait: caballito and mullet slow‑trolled just outside the break for roosters and big jacks. - Lures: surface poppers in blue‑white or bone, 2‑ to 3‑ounce spoons, and stickbaits worked fast at first light and the last hour of daylight. - On the rocks and inshore reefs: small jigs and cut bait picking up snapper, triggerfish, and cabrilla for the table. A couple of local hot spots to circle: - The 1150 and Gordo area on the Sea of Cortez side for mixed marlin, tuna, and dorado when the current lines up. - Golden Gate Bank on the Pacific side for striped marlin and tuna running with the life—look for birds, bait, and porpoise. Plan your day around that rising mid‑morning tide and the golden light of dawn and dusk. Keep your tackle versatile—one rod rigged with a marlin lure, one tuna setup, and a smaller outfit ready for dorado or inshore action. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  8. Jun 13

    Cabo Sunrise Bite Firing: Marlin, Dorado, and Roosters in Peak Form

    This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Around the cape this morning we’ve got light wind early, building to a moderate onshore breeze by midday, with typical desert heat pushing the afternoon into the upper 80s and low 90s. Skies are mostly clear, and the Pacific side will feel a touch cooler than the Sea of Cortez as usual. Humidity creeps up in the afternoon, so the best comfort and bite are early and late. Sunrise is right around six-thirty local time, with sunset just after eight. That gives a nice long low-light window, and those first two hours after the sun peeks up have been the money time offshore. Evening inshore sessions have also been productive once the sun drops toward the Arch. Tides around Land’s End are running a fairly standard mixed set, with a predawn high easing toward a late-morning slack, then a falling tide through the afternoon and a modest push again after dark. That mid-fall tide has lined up nicely with the late-morning offshore bite the last couple of days, while the inshore roosterfish have liked the push of water onto the beaches during the evening flood. Offshore, the story out of the Cabo fleet has been good action with scattered billfish and dorado. Local captains report striped marlin still hanging on the temperature breaks 15 to 25 miles out, with boats raising multiple fish most days and converting one or two on average when the crew is sharp. Dorado counts are picking up, with several boats returning with 3 to 6 school-size mahi plus the odd nicer bull mixed in. A few yellowfin tuna are around, mostly footballs with an occasional 40–60 pounder for the patient crews working farther offshore. Best offshore offerings right now are classic Cabo spreads: bright skirted trolling lures in pink-and-white, blue-and-white, and petrolero colors pulled at 7–9 knots, plus live caballito or mackerel bridled and slow-trolled once you mark fish or see tailers. Pitch baits are critical—keep a rigged ballyhoo or live bait ready for marlin that come up window-shopping behind the teasers. On the inshore side, both the Pacific beaches toward Migrino and the Sea of Cortez coastline up past Palmilla have been giving up some quality roosterfish and jack crevalle. Most roosters are in the 10–25 pound range, with the occasional bruiser bigger than that. Jacks have been marauding bait balls tight to the sand, giving plenty of surface mayhem for anyone throwing plugs. For inshore lures, big surface walkers and stickbaits in bone, mullet, or sardine patterns are doing damage, along with chrome spoons ripped fast through the whitewater. Live mullet, caballito, or small jacks slow-trolled just outside the breakers remain the most reliable bait for a trophy rooster. Run a heavy fluorocarbon leader; the fish aren’t leader-shy in that churned-up surf, and they fight dirty. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: the 95 and 1150 banks offshore have been steady for marlin and dorado when the current lines up, and the Golden Gate Bank on the Pacific side continues to hold life when the bait stacks. Inshore, the stretch from Playa Solmar around the corner past the Arch toward Chileno, and up the Pacific beaches near Gaspareno and Migrino, have all been producing when the swell isn’t too heavy. Overall fish activity is solid for anyone willing to match the conditions: get out early, fish that low light and moving water, and don’t be afraid to move until you find birds, bait, or surface life. When you do, keep the lures in the water and the livewell full. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min

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Tune in to the "Cabo San Lucas, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world-renowned sportfishing capital at the tip of the Baja California Peninsula. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on Cabo's legendary billfish waters, offshore banks, and productive inshore zones where nutrient-rich Pacific currents create one of the ocean's greatest natural fish traps, and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.