data brief
Solunar fishing times data released for Hobbs, New Mexico
FishingReminder has issued its daily solunar fishing advisory for Hobbs, New Mexico, publishing updated peak feeding windows, weather conditions, lunar phase data and a curated list of local angling hotspots for recreational anglers in the southeastern corner of the state.
The advisory, refreshed by the platform on June 14, 2026, breaks the day into major and minor solunar periods — the time slots statistically linked to heightened fish activity based on lunar positioning relative to the Earth. The calendar entry is accompanied by a short-range weather forecast covering temperature, wind speed and cloud cover, each of which influences angler strategy on the ground around Hobbs and the broader Lea County region.
Beyond the timing tables, the resource directs readers toward recognised freshwater and reservoir locations accessible from the city, supporting both weekend trip planners and visiting travelling anglers heading out from nearby oilfield service hubs. The data feed is part of FishingReminder’s broader US-wide network, which the company says is consumed by outdoor retailers, charter operators and tackle retailers seeking to align promotional activity with peak demand days.
For the international tackle trade, interest in granular, city-level fishing forecasts has continued to grow as manufacturers and distributors look to support end consumers with content marketing. Chinese rod, reel and lure exporters — many of whom already supply the US recreational market through major big-box retailers — increasingly bundle solunar apps, weather overlays and location-based notifications with their brand ecosystems, turning what was once a niche utility into a recurring touchpoint between manufacturer and angler.
The Hobbs advisory includes moonrise and moonset timestamps alongside the lunar illumination percentage, a detail that has gained traction among competitive bass and catfish anglers in the southern plains. Anglers checking the page on the morning of June 14 can use the data to plan cast counts around the two most active bite windows flagged by the platform, while also cross-referencing wind direction to position drifts on reservoirs such as those maintained by the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish.
FishingReminder confirmed the listing remains live through the platform’s national sitemap, allowing search-driven traffic from across the country to surface the Hobbs page alongside comparable city entries. The publisher has not announced any paid promotional tier for the data feed, but the granular city coverage illustrates how angling information services are extending deeper into secondary US markets far beyond the traditional coastal hotspots.
Found a mistake? See our corrections policy. Have a tip? Contact the editor.