A near-zero afternoon low makes Thursday a prime window for wading, clamming, and shallow-water fishing along the St. Lucie coast.
Thursday's tide cycle at Fort Pierce Inlet offers one of the better shallow-water windows of the week — and that afternoon low is the reason.
TODAY: Partly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms typical of early rainy season. High near 89 degrees.
TONIGHT: Partly cloudy and warm. Low near 76 degrees. Isolated showers possible before midnight.
ON THE WATER: The day opens with a modest low of 0.4 feet at 5:44 a.m. — workable for anglers who want to run the flats at first light before the tide floods. The morning high of 2.1 feet arrives at 11:38 a.m., pushing baitfish and snook into the mangrove edges along the North Fork of the St. Lucie River. Plan your drift accordingly.
The afternoon brings the headline number: a near-zero low of 0.1 feet at 5:37 p.m. That is as shallow as the lagoon gets. Waders, clammers and sight-fishermen working the grass beds between the Inlet and Taylor Creek should be in position well before 4 p.m. to catch the falling tide. Expect exposed oyster bars — watch your hull.
ALERTS: No active NWS watches, warnings or advisories are in effect for St. Lucie County as of Thursday morning, according to NOAA CO-OPS data. Monitor VHF Weather Radio Channel 2 — WXJ-51, Fort Pierce — for any afternoon storm updates before heading offshore.
*Tide predictions courtesy of NOAA CO-OPS, Fort Pierce station.
This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.
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