Tarpon Springs Snook Fishing Report – Hi

Май 23, 2026 Tarpon Springs 1 фото
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The higher tides this week have pushed quality snook deep into the mangrove islands from Clearwater Beach to Tarpon Springs and New Port Richey. We’ve been getting exciting sight fishing opportunities at fish over 30 inches cruising flooded shorelines and laying tight to mangrove pockets in extremely shallow water. The challenge has been getting these fish to commit. Calm conditions and clear water have made presentations critical, with many snook following or inspecting baits before turning away at the last second. Long casts, quiet boat positioning, and natural presentations have been the key to getting bites. Soft plastics, weightless presentations, and live bait have all produced depending on current flow and water clarity. Redfish and a few trout are still mixed in along oyster edges and shallow mangrove points as well. The 3-hour and 4-hour private inshore charters continue producing the best action during these prime feeding windows, especially around moving water and cleaner tides. If you’re looking for technical shallow-water sight fishing along Florida’s Gulf Coast, this is one of the best times of year to target big snook in the backcountry. ? Clearwater • Dunedin • Palm Harbor • Tarpon Springs • New Port Richey ? Tightlines Charter – Private Inshore Fishing Trips
Paul Duffey
Tarpon-springs, Florida, United States
TIGHTLINES CHARTER - Inshore Light Tackle thumbnail
Stalk redfish, snook, trout, and seasonal tarpon in some of Florida's most productive shallow-water habitat. These are active, hands-on fishing trips focused on hunting fish in skinny water along grass flats, mangrove shorelines, oyster bars, and tid...

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Clearwater–Tarpon Springs Inshore Fishin
Clearwater–Tarpon Springs Inshore Fishin
Май 26, 2026
Redfish, Snook, and Tarpon are fired up! This week's fishing report for Tarpon Springs, New Port Richey, Dunedin, and Clearwater. The big three are in full force right now—overslot redfish on high-tide flats, trophy snook staged on current edges, and tarpon sliding across sand bars and shallow grass. Conditions: Water temp: mid 80s Clarity: generally clear with light stain on windward shores (lots of floating grass) Tides: strong highs with productive outgoing cycles Wind: light morning breeze, increasing mid‑day Moon: moving toward stronger tides; expect better current windows Best window: first light through late morning high, then the first half of the outgoing What’s biting Redfish — Some of the biggest reds of the year are pushing onto knee‑deep flats on the top of the high. Look for wakes and backs over turtle grass and pothole edges. Quiet approaches, long casts, and patient presentations are key. Once these fish spook they are extremely hard to catch. Snook — Quality fish are laid up along shaded mangrove edges and also stacked on deeper creek/current edges. When the water moves, they pin baits on the seam and crush anything that drifts naturally. Look for the sand color change line into deeper water on the bends of the creeks. Float your baits with the current and allow time for the bait to sink. Tarpon — Consistent 30–80 lb fish are showing on the sand bars, rolling across shallow grass, and even slipping back onto mangrove flats with the redfish on higher water. Watch for happy rollers and push wakes in protected stretches. Where and how Tarpon Springs — Work the outside sand bars at dawn for tarpon, then slide to nearby grass flats as the sun rises. On high water, check mangrove pockets for laid‑up snook and cruising tarpon. Redfish have been cruising shallow flats adjacent to cuts. New Port Richey — Deeper creek bends with steady current are holding big snook. On the top of the high, redfish are spreading onto clean grass with scattered potholes—approach from downwind, stake out early, and let the fish come to you. Keep an eye on bars near passes for midday tarpon glides. Clearwater / Dunedin — Expect similar patterns on outer bars and the first trough off the beach for tarpon; sheltered mangrove edges will hold snook during stronger afternoon tides. Tactics that worked Live bait: Live shrimp and live greenbacks presented up‑current to snook on creek edges; let them sweep naturally through the seam. For redfish on high, a shrimp pitched quietly ahead of a cruiser is deadly. Cut bait: Soaking fresh cut bait on the high‑tide flats has pulled oversized reds that are rooting around; give it time and keep noise low. Artificial lures: Subtle paddletails and jerk shads in Z-Man Houdini and Pearl on 1/8–1/4 oz heads for reds and snook; slow, level presentations over grass. For tarpon on the flats, keep a white soft jerkbait nose hooked and ready to slide in front of a roller between live-bait drifts. Stealth has been key. Drifting quietly; keep the trolling motor low and off when possible. Long leaders (25–40 lb depending on species) and accurate first casts are paying off. Family & beginner tip Morning 3 hour trip has been producing steady action without midday heat. Simple shrimp under a popping cork or float along calmer mangrove stretches keeps kids engaged and puts trout, snook, and occasional redfish in reach. Fly angler note Tarpon: intermediate lines with small crab or EP baitfish in olive/black or tan; present well ahead of the line and let them swim into it. Reds: unweighted shrimp/crab in tan/olive over knee‑deep grass; keep shots under 50 feet and land softly. Snook: black/purple or white deceivers pinned to the current seam. Outlook (next 7–10 days) With strengthening tides and stable temps, expect the high‑tide redfish sight game to stay hot, snook to feed harder on the first of the outgoing, and tarpon presence to build on bars and shallow grass during calm mornings. If winds stay light, plan for early tarpon then slide to snook / reds as sun and traffic increase. Keep an eye on the rain, storms are forecasted for almost every day in the 10 day forecast. Best trip length this week: 4‑hour inshore fishing charter for balanced redfish / snook action on the high and first of the outgoing; 6‑hour if you want a tarpon window plus time to shift to snook or reds. Prime morning tides are filling—if you’re eyeing tarpon or high‑tide reds, book soon. FAQ What time of day is best right now? - First light through late‑morning high, then the first of the outgoing for snook and reds; tarpon are most consistent at dawn with light wind. Which trip length should I choose? - 4‑hour for mixed inshore action; 6‑hour to include a serious tarpon shot plus time to change patterns. What baits are producing? Live shrimp and greenbacks, cut bait for overslot reds, and subtle paddletails / jerkbaits on light jigheads for stealthy presentations.
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