Low Tides Expose Stuart Flats for Prime Fishing Tuesday
A 0.2-foot low at 7:06 a.m. and -0.2-foot low at 7:14 p.m. reveal grass flats and sandbars along the St. Lucie River, ideal for Treasure Coast anglers.
A 0.2-foot low at 7:06 a.m. and -0.2-foot low at 7:14 p.m. reveal grass flats and sandbars along the St. Lucie River, ideal for Treasure Coast anglers.
Treasure Coast anglers and boaters get two high tides and a deep afternoon low amid mostly sunny skies and warm temperatures on March 23, 2026.
Residents in Martin, St. Lucie and Indian River counties enjoy highs near 82 degrees and 20% rain chances through midweek before possible onshore moisture.
Dry weather holds through Tuesday with highs in the lower 80s before rain chances rise Wednesday, forecasts the National Weather Service in Melbourne.
Anglers in St. Lucie County waters gain prime wading and flats fishing windows from the extreme low tide at 5:27 p.m., per NOAA predictions.
Martin County boaters and anglers can expect a shallow morning low at -0.1 feet for prime fishing, followed by a 2.7-foot high tide pushing currents through local inlets.
Clear skies prevail with no rain and light winds shifting east by afternoon, as lows dip to upper 50s overnight and the mild pattern holds through Tuesday, per NWS Melbourne.
As South Florida counties lift restrictions, officials explain the coordination — and the gaps — behind one of emergency management's most consequential calls
St. Lucie County boaters, anglers and beachgoers can seize prime conditions for wading, clamming and offshore runs amid strong tidal swings on March 21.