Artificial Lure here with your Friday, October 17th Florida Keys fishing report—let’s dive into the conditions and action out on the water.
We had a sunrise at 7:26am and expect sunset at 6:58pm tonight. The tides ran as follows for Key West: low tide at 1:14am, high at 8:04am, second low at 2:00pm, and a second high at 8:43pm. Water movement is solid today, with a tidal coefficient around 70, meaning moderate current and decent fish activity, especially near the peak tides according to Tide-Forecast.
Weather’s holding fairly steady, mornings mild with a gentle northeasterly breeze, and afternoons pushing into the low 80s. Avoid midday heat; best action’s early or late. If you’re chasing the bite, watch as the tide turns and gets that water moving over flats, bridges, and channels.
Now, what’s getting caught? The crews out of Key Largo and Marathon have been busy this week. Snook and tarpon are making decent showings around mangrove lines and bridges. Mangrove snappers are everywhere, and plenty of anglers have boxed limits—these guys are chewing best near structure on the falling tide, especially at dusk. Some big Goliath grouper are showing on the deeper wrecks, and loads of blacktip and nurse sharks for the thrill-seekers. Most folks are also reporting catches of redfish and permit inside Florida Bay and the flats, both solid options right now, as reinforced by this week’s catches featured at FishingBooker and Coastal Angler Magazine.
For those tossing lures, the bite’s hot on the classics. Paddle tails like the Slam Shady and Mullet HD in natural colors are outperforming most, especially on snook and snapper. Topwater plugs are working at dawn for tarpon rolling off bridge edges. If you’re fishing deeper or near wrecks, bucktail jigs tipped with shrimp or pinfish produce grouper and mutton snapper. For bait, live pilchards and shrimp are the MVPs—the pilchards pull in tarpon and snapper, while shrimp are irresistible to all the bottom dwellers.
If you’re after a true Florida Keys mixed bag, here are a couple of hotspots worth hitting:
- **Seven Mile Bridge**: Morning incoming tide is legendary for tarpon and snappers. Bridge pilings hold big predator fish and steady snapper action.
- **Channel 5 Bridge**: Afternoon outgoing tide, best for permit, sharks, and snook. Good depth transitions mean constant activity.
- **Hawk’s Channel Patch Reefs**: Mid-morning high tide sees yellowtail snapper and grouper swarming; chum the water and drop light leader for solid hookups.
Best techniques? Light spinning tackle for snapper, heavier setups for those big grouper pulls. Don’t forget sight-casting in skinny water with soft plastics for redfish and permit on the flats—these visuals bites are heart stoppers.
Quick tips for success: Match your lure color to prevailing light and water clarity; natural patterns on bright days, darker profiles at dusk. Keep a livewell stocked with pilchard or pinfish if you can net ‘em up, and approach quietly in the shallows—the fall bite is on but the water’s still clear.
Thanks for tuning in to your Florida Keys fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for all the latest on tides, bites, and hot spots. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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