Pick your preferred travel temperatures and travel week. The map colors each destination using a baseline estimate from several years of historical seasonal temperature patterns.
Set the minimum and maximum daily temperatures you'd like to travel in, drag the week slider, then click Update Map.
Set the minimum and maximum daily temperatures you'd like to travel in.
Drag the date slider to the week you want to check. The week range will update below the slider.
The dots on the map will change colors based on the expected temperature for that week in each location.
Important: This is a climate-baseline planner, not a live weather forecast. It looks back at several years of temperature data and uses those patterns as a baseline to estimate future comfort zones. For real travel decisions, check the current forecast before you leave.
Use the green dots as your best travel zones for the selected week. Blue and red dots are places outside your preferred temperature range.
The “Last Updated” date/time reflects the most recent update made by an individual shop and is not indicative of all shops being current.
Status information may be incorrect, delayed, or unavailable. Always contact a shop directly to confirm availability before traveling or purchasing.
HookedOnPortA.com are not responsible or liable for any errors, omissions, outdated information, or consequences arising from reliance on this dashboard.
Webcams, bars, and restaurants around Port Aransas and surrounding areas.
Along the Texas Coastal Bend, the bays and estuaries supported by the Coastal Bend Bays & Estuaries Program (CBBEP) are more than pretty backdrops for a day on the water. They are living, working nurseries that keep our fisheries alive and our coastal communities thriving. CBBEP exists to safeguard these systems while still supporting fishing, boating, and a strong local economy.
Nowhere is that balance more visible than in Port Aransas – “The Fishing Capital of Texas.” That title isn’t a trophy we won once and get to keep forever. It depends on healthy bays, strong fish populations, and a community of anglers who are willing to protect the very habitats that make Port A special.
And that starts with how we run our boats in shallow water.
The Coastal Bend holds a massive share of Texas’ seagrass, much of it in the shallow, clear flats that attract redfish, trout, drum, and flounder.
Seagrass meadows are not “just grass”:
They are nurseries where juvenile fish, shrimp, and crabs feed and hide from predators.
Their dense roots and rhizomes stabilize the bottom, preventing erosion and holding the bay in place.
They help keep the water clearer and more productive, supporting the entire food chain — from baitfish to trophy gamefish.
If you enjoy sight-casting to tailing reds on Lighthouse Lakes, poling over clear grass flats near Shamrock, or drifting the Laguna Madre for specks, you’re already relying on healthy seagrass meadows more than you might realize.
Modern shallow-draft boats make it tempting to run “just one more shortcut” across a grassy flat. But when a propeller or even a low-running motor plows through seagrass, it cuts a trench into the meadow — a prop scar.
Those scars are more than cosmetic:
The prop tears up the plants and the buried root system, leaving bare sand or mud behind.
These bare scars can take years to heal, and heavy scarring can fragment the meadow so much that it never fully recovers.
As seagrass disappears, so does the habitat complexity that young fish, shrimp, and crabs need to survive — meaning fewer adult fish for anglers later.
When we “power through” shallow grass rather than lifting our motors or choosing a deeper route, we are literally cutting up the nursery that supports our own future catches.
CBBEP and its partners spend years and millions of dollars restoring marshes, deltas, and seagrass habitats — like the Nueces Delta Preserve and the Nueces Bay Marsh Restoration Project — to rebuild the natural foundation that fish and wildlife rely on.
If anglers and guides continue to tear up seagrass in shallow areas, we work against those investments:
Fewer fish in the future – Less nursery habitat means lower survival of young fish, which eventually shows up as poorer fishing, smaller average sizes, and fewer “hero days” on the water.
More pressure on remaining spots – As healthy grass beds shrink, more boats crowd into fewer areas, multiplying the damage and the fishing pressure.
Economic ripple effects – Guides, bait shops, tackle stores, boat dealers, RV parks, hotels, and restaurants all depend on strong, reliable fishing. Damaged habitat undercuts that entire chain.
If we don’t take care of the habitat that supports our fishery, Port Aransas will slowly lose its grip on the title of “Fishing Capital of Texas.”
That title is built on reputation — on consistent, high-quality fishing and healthy bays. If we treat the seagrass and shallow flats like disposable racetracks, we’re quietly eroding the very thing Port A is famous for.
The good news: the solution is simple and completely in our hands.
CBBEP and Texas agencies promote a straightforward message for protecting seagrass: Lift, drift, pole, or troll.
On the water, that looks like this:
Plan your route using channels
Use charts, GPS, and markers to stay in deeper, established routes when running at speed. Avoid using shallow grass flats as shortcuts.
Watch your depth and your wake
If you see prop wash turning from clear to milky, or you see bottom grass just under the hull, you’re too shallow to be on plane. Trim up, slow down, and reassess.
Lift and idle or drift when it gets skinny
In shallow seagrass, trim your motor up or shut it off and drift across. You’ll spook fewer fish and avoid scarring the bottom.
Pole or carefully use a trolling motor
Use a push pole or a properly trimmed trolling motor in the shallowest areas. Don’t let the trolling motor dig a trench in the bottom.
Look behind you
A long muddy streak stretching away from your boat is a red flag that you just left a scar. Learn from it, mark that area mentally, and avoid repeating the mistake.
Every time an angler chooses to lift, drift, pole, or troll instead of “plowing” through, they keep a little more habitat intact — and that adds up across thousands of fishing trips every year.
CBBEP’s mission — to protect and restore the health and productivity of our bays while supporting economic growth and public use — only works if those of us who use the bays see ourselves as partners, not just customers.
That means:
Guides explaining seagrass etiquette to every client.
Friends calling out friends (respectfully) when they see someone tearing up a flat.
Marinas, bait stands, RV parks, and tackle shops posting reminders about shallow-water running and boating smart in the grass.
Anglers talking about habitat protection on docks, forums, and social media — not just bragging about the day’s catch.
We don’t protect Port Aransas’ reputation with slogans alone. We protect it with choices on the water and a willingness to share the message with everyone who launches a boat here.
When we protect seagrass, we protect:
the bait that draws in gamefish,
the structure that keeps young fish alive,
the clarity and productivity of our bays,
and the future of sport and commercial fishing in the Coastal Bend.
If we want Port Aransas to remain proudly known as “The Fishing Capital of Texas,” then boaters, guides, and the fishing industry must treat seagrass and shallow habitats as priceless infrastructure — not as expendable shortcuts.
Every pass across a flat is a choice:
Cut scars that will haunt our fishery for years, or glide over gently, leaving the meadow — and tomorrow’s catch — intact.
For the sake of our bays, our businesses, our kids, and Port A’s hard-earned title, it’s time for all of us to boat like the future of fishing depends on it – because it does!
Read more about the Coastal Bend Bays & Estuaries Program and its work to protect our Texas Coastal Bend bays in this EPA Success Story.
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This bait vendor has not yet agreed to provide status updats on our Bait Dashboard, but hope this could happen soon so that we can bring you more online choices. Check back often!
Last updated: October 3, 2025
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When you’re fishing the Gulf and bays around Port Aransas, one classic lure consistently puts fish on the deck: the Johnson Spoon . Born in 1923 and still a staple a century later, this spoon excels anywhere grass, shell, and current collide—exactly the kind of water we fish here every day.
Our local flats are rich with seagrass, potholes, and shell banks—great for redfish and trout, not so great for exposed treble hooks. The Johnson Spoon uses an upturned single hook and guard that slips through salad where other lures bog down. Cast confidently across turtle grass, along mangrove edges, and even over broken shell without turning every other retrieve into a clean-up job.
In bright Gulf sun or lightly stained bay water, the spoon’s tight wobble and hard flash mimic a fleeing baitfish. The Johnson Spoon can be fished plain, tipped with a strip of cut bait, or dressed with a soft-plastic trailer for extra thump. Keep a steady retrieve, tick the tops of grass, and let the spoon do the selling.
Targets in Port A:
Why Anglers Love It:
No fancy rod work required. The Johnson Spoon shines with a moderate, steady retrieve—fast enough to keep it ticking above grass, slow enough to keep that tight, fish-calling wobble. Add a brief pause when you clear a pothole or the edge of an oyster bar to trigger followers.
Heading out this weekend? Make room in the box for the Johnson Silver Minnow Weedless Spoon . It fishes where the bite lives—and turns near-misses into solid hookups across our Port A Gulf and bay waters.
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We are all thankful for YouTube video creators! There’s nothing like a video domonstration when it comes to learning how to tie fishing knots. We’ve hand picked a few that we think you will find helpful.