Louisiana fishing reports
128 reports for Louisiana — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Mississippi at 547K CFS: Full Moon Crappie Spawn Peaks in Atchafalaya
The Mississippi River is running 547,000 cfs at Baton Rouge this morning (USGS gauge 07374000) — high spring flow that steers productive fishing away from the turbid main channel and into the back lakes and flooded timber of the Atchafalaya Basin. No gauge water temperature is available for today's report. Regional crappie news adds encouraging context: per Wired 2 Fish and Outdoor Hub, guide Trent Goss on Grenada Lake in north-central Mississippi landed a 4.10-pound white crappie on April 24, with heavyweight-limit catches described as routine as fish stage for spawning — forward-facing sonar was the tool of choice for locating staging fish. Today's full moon is a key biological trigger for sac-a-lait to move onto spawning beds in the Atchafalaya Basin. With no direct Louisiana on-water testimony this cycle, conditions below are synthesized from gauge data, that regional crappie pattern, and seasonal norms typical for early May in the lower Mississippi watershed.
Sac-a-Lait Push Into Spawn Windows as Full Moon Hits the Atchafalaya
A 4.10-pound crappie pulled from Grenada Lake on April 24 — reported by Wired 2 Fish — signals that heavyweight slabs are staging hard for the spawn across the mid-South, a pattern that typically tracks into Louisiana's Atchafalaya Basin and Mississippi River backwaters right on schedule. With the Full Moon falling on May 1, sac-a-lait should be pressed tight to cypress knees, laydowns, and shallow brushpiles in the 2–5-foot zone. No USGS gauge data is available for this reporting period, so current stage and water temperature should be confirmed locally before heading out. Largemouth bass are typical early-May movers in the Atchafalaya drainage, and channel catfish begin following warmer water into shallower flats this time of year. Wired 2 Fish noted that at Grenada Lake "heavyweight-limit catches are common" as fish stage for spawning — the strongest regional signal we have pointing toward a productive early-May window throughout the lower Mississippi system.
April Gulf Warmth Peaks at 78°—Moderate Swells Sustain Spring Opportunity
NOAA buoy 42001 recorded 78°F water off the outer continental shelf on April 26, with 2.3-foot swells and moderate 15-mph winds—typical late-April Gulf Coast conditions. The Delta-side reading (buoy 42067) logged 74°F water with lighter 9-mph wind, suggesting the usual spring cross-shelf temperature gradient as seasonal warmth pulses northward into productive inshore zones. Current angler-intelligence feeds lack specific reporting from Louisiana Gulf and Delta guides this weekend, but these readings align with the critical seasonal window when redfish and speckled trout shift into sustained shallow-water spawning and feeding activity, baitfish populations surge along marsh fringes and jetties, and deeper-water migrants (tarpon, king mackerel, wahoo) stage in Gulf passes and continental-shelf structures. Water temps in this 74–78°F band are where spring fishing historically transitions from early-season patterns into the high-activity phase that runs through May.
Redfish on Fire in the Louisiana Marsh
Bull reds and slot reds absolutely crushing it in the marsh. Poling the shallow ponds finding tailing fish on every flat.
Offshore Tuna Bite Heating Up Out of Grand Isle
Yellowfin tuna in the 30-80 lb range stacking up on the deepwater rigs. Charter boats finding consistent action at the Midnight Lump.
Pontchartrain Speckled Trout Run is ON
Specks schooling along the Causeway pilings and north shore points. Wade fishermen and boaters both getting into quality fish.
Toledo Bend Bass Tournament Season in Full Swing
Post-spawn bass staging on offshore structure. Points, humps, and timber in 8-15 feet holding good concentrations of fish.
Crawfish Boils and Sac-a-Lait in the Basin
Crappie (sac-a-lait) fishing is excellent throughout the Atchafalaya Basin. Fish holding in flooded timber and along levee drains.