Symmetric highs at 2.5 feet in the morning and evening bracket a 0.2-foot midday low, delivering ideal conditions for local anglers and boaters on April 13.
The tide clock at Fort Pierce Inlet will run like a metronome Monday, offering one of the cleaner tidal setups of the spring season for anglers, paddlers, and anyone planning to work the water.
TODAY: An early high tide peaks at 5:38 a.m. at 2.5 feet — arriving before most alarm clocks ring — then drops steadily through the morning to a shallow low of 0.2 feet at 11:45 a.m. The cycle resets with an evening high at 6:01 p.m., matching the morning's 2.5-foot mark almost exactly, according to NOAA CO-OPS tidal data.
ON THE WATER: That symmetry matters. The incoming flood tide rolling in through the mid-afternoon creates prime conditions along the Fort Pierce waterfront and inside the Indian River Lagoon. Baitfish concentrate along the edges as water fills the grass flats, and snook, redfish, and trout follow. For captains running offshore out of Fort Pierce Inlet, the outgoing morning ebb will push current hard through the cut between roughly 6 a.m. and noon — manageable for experienced operators but worth timing carefully for smaller vessels.
The near-zero low at 11:45 a.m. will expose oyster bars and shallow seagrass beds along the lagoon's western shoreline. Kayakers and shallow-draft skiff anglers who know those flats can work the edges of the drop on either side of low — some of the most productive two hours in a spring tidal cycle.
ALERTS: No active NWS watches, warnings, or advisories are in effect for St. Lucie County as of publication.
All tide predictions are referenced to Mean Lower Low Water (MLLW) at the Fort Pierce gauge, according to NOAA data. Actual water levels may vary with wind, barometric pressure, and rainfall runoff from upstream.
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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