Anglers and paddlers can target exposed snook spots at 10:14 a.m. before an afternoon high tide stirs bait through the inlet at 4:28 p.m.
Saturday delivers a textbook spring-tide cycle to Fort Pierce Inlet, with four distinct turns in a 24-hour window that should keep anglers and paddlers busy from first light to last cast.
TODAY: Conditions begin with an overnight high already in the books — waters peaked at 2.7 feet at 3:59 a.m. The morning low arrives at 10:14 a.m., dropping to just 0.2 feet and exposing grass flats and oyster bars that are productive snook territory in late April. An afternoon high of 2.4 feet is predicted at 4:28 p.m., offering a second push of current through the inlet that typically stirs bait and draws predator fish into structure.
TONIGHT: The day's best number comes after dark. A near-zero low of 0.1 feet is forecast at 10:32 p.m. — a hard negative-style pull that will drain tidal creeks and concentrate fish at channel edges. Experienced night anglers know these extreme lows can produce exceptional action along the North Fork of the St. Lucie River and around the Fort Pierce Inlet jetties.
ON THE WATER: The 2.6-foot range between the morning low (0.2 feet) and the early-morning high (2.7 feet) represents a strong tidal exchange — well above the Treasure Coast's typical one- to two-foot diurnal range in calmer spring weeks [UNVERIFIABLE — editor must confirm]. That moving water benefits both drift-fishing and fly-fishing on the flats. The prime fishing windows Saturday fall during the incoming tide from pre-dawn through mid-morning, and again on the afternoon push beginning around 2 p.m. ahead of the 4:28 p.m. high.
ALERTS: No active NWS Melbourne watches, warnings, or advisories are associated with this forecast period.
Tide predictions are issued by NOAA's Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services. Saturday's near-zero 10:32 p.m. low is the headline number of the day — plan your evening accordingly, whether you're wading the flats or pulling crab traps along the Intracoastal.
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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