Listen "Autumn Ambush: Snook, Reds, and Spooky Flats Fish Bite in the Florida Keys"
Episode Synopsis
Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your fresh Florida Keys and Miami fishing report for October 21, 2025. Let's dig in.Sunrise today in Miami is at 7:22 AM, with sunset clocking in at 6:47 PM. Key Largo gets sun a few minutes later, at 7:27 AM sunrise and 6:54 PM sunset. Around Snipe Point, you’ve got new moon vibes—the moon rises nearly in sync with the sun, which often triggers frenzied fish feeding at dawn and dusk.Tidewise, we’ve got solid water movement. In Miami, your first low tide hit just after 2:30 AM with high rising at 8:55 AM up to 3.3 feet, another low at 3:00 PM, and a 3.1-foot high at 8:56 PM, according to Tides4Fishing. Down in Snipe Keys, you saw a 3.82-ft high at just after midnight, dropping to 0.51 ft at 7:47 AM, then building right back for a 3.17-ft high at 1:10 PM. That healthy swing means strong current for much of the day—prime for predators to ambush bait.Weather from the National Weather Service says we’ll be looking at east winds around 10 knots, seas 2 to 3 feet—comfortable inshore and near the reefs, with maybe a moderate chop in the Intracoastal later on and just a slight chance of showers. Air temps are riding in the low 80s, with water temps 80 to 83°F. In other words: absolute classic South Florida fall fishing conditions.Bite reports have been heating up with this strong tide cycle and cooling water. Inshore, the grass beds and mangrove edges near Biscayne Bay and Blackwater Sound are holding good numbers of **snook**, **redfish**, and **sea trout**, with live pilchards and pinfish being top baits. For lures, nothing’s been outproducing a white or rootbeer paddle-tail on a 1/4-ounce jig, especially around the outgoing tide.Moving offshore, the fall run is bringing in schools of **king mackerel**, **bonito**, and even a few early **sailfish** working the color changes from Miami Beach down to Conch Reef. Pilchards on flatlines and flashy trolling spoons have been drawing savage strikes at first light. The patch reefs just south of Elliott Key are thick with **yellowtail snapper**—bring chum and be ready to drop back a small piece of cut bait or a silverside for fast action.The bridges connecting the Upper Keys are still producing nice **mangrove snapper** under the lights at night, and a few hefty **tarpon** are starting to make a show again around Channel 5—best bet is a live mullet drifted on moderate current. For the flats junkies, the cloudy water hasn’t stopped the redfish from tailing west of Flamingo and out toward Snipe Point; small gold spoons and shrimp imitations are the go-to.For hotspots, I’d set your sights on:- Long Key Bridge for a mixed bag—snapper, jacks, the odd snook, maybe a surprise.- Oceanside grass flats east of Islamorada for sight-casting reds and trout.- Around Soldier Key in Biscayne Bay for snook and specks at dawn, especially fishing moving water.Remember, the best windows for the most aggressive bite will be on the tide switches—first couple hours of flood and ebb, plus that sunrise solunar peak. Keep your lure selection simple: white bucktails, gold spoons, paddle-tail plastics, and classic Rapalas cover bases from surface to bottom.Reports from local captains, and Florida Insider Fishing Report, all agree—this week’s combo of tides and cooling water has fired up a bite Miami to Marathon. Just don’t forget the chum if you’re targeting snapper and keep the leaders light for spooky flats species.That’s your Florida Keys and Miami fishing report from Artificial Lure—tight lines to everyone heading out today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local knowledge and real-time action updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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