
Trout, Reds, and Toothy Gators - Your May 16th Gulf Fishing Report
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We kicked off the morning with light winds and temps climbing fast as the sun rose around 6:45 am, promising a classic warm, muggy Gulf day. Sunset will be just shy of 8:15 pm, providing a nice long window for those late evening runs.
Tidewise, we’re riding a moderate cycle today, with a high pushing through the early morning and another low mid-afternoon. That means prime action in the early hours and again as water moves later, both great opportunities to catch active feeders near sandbars and grass flats.
Fish activity has been strong across the board. Inshore anglers have been landing solid numbers of speckled trout and redfish, especially in the bays and around oyster beds, drop-offs, and grass edges. The trout bite has been best right around dawn, with topwater plugs and MirrOlure suspending twitchbaits putting in work, and live shrimp doing the trick if you’re a bait purist. Redfish have been fattening up along the flats, with paddle tail soft plastics and cut mullet or ladyfish as solid options[5].
Shore and surf fishing is prime for pompano and whiting right now. Cast your rigs 15 to 25 feet out past the first bar, using sand fleas, fresh shrimp, or FishBites. Spanish mackerel are working the beaches—grab a silver spoon and rip it through the wash for fast action as late spring runs get underway[5].
Offshore reports around deeper structure are heating up too, with red snapper and mangrove snapper showing strong past 100 feet. Kingfish are running the edges, some pushing over 30 pounds for the lucky few. Blackfin tuna and the odd mahi mahi have been popping up, especially in the early morning and late evening. Wire leaders are a must—these toothy critters are ready to shred through lighter tackle[2][4].
Local hot spots to note: Apalachicola Bay’s oyster beds are on fire for trout and redfish, and St. George Island’s surf is stacked with pompano and whiting. For offshore lovers, look for snapper around the artificial reefs off Destin and the kingfish bite along the 20- to 40-foot edge just south of Panama City.
Best baits: Live shrimp, cut mullet, sand fleas, and artificial paddle tails or silver spoons depending on your target. Keep a few MirrOlure suspending twitchbaits handy—they’re money for trout right now.
That’s the scoop for today. Tight lines and keep those drag washers ready—this May bite’s not slowing down any time soon.
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