Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report for the day. Around Nassau, Bimini, and the Exumas, we’re sitting under a classic early-summer pattern: light to moderate east–southeast trades, 10–15 knots, a few passing showers, and plenty of sun once the squalls slide by. Air temps are running high 80s, water temps low to mid‑80s, and the sea’s holding a light chop on the banks with a bit more roll offshore on the drop. Sunrise slid in just after six, with sunset due just after seven‑thirty, giving you a long, bright window. The real push has been early morning and that last two hours of light, when the heat backs off and the bait comes shallow. With the moon waning, tides are moderate: a good incoming push late morning on the ocean side and a nice outgoing in the afternoon across the flats and cuts. Work your sessions around those turns. Offshore, the big story the last couple days has been mahi and tuna on the edge from about 600 to 1,200 feet. Crews running the tongue off Nassau and the pocket off Chub Cay have been picking up decent gaffer mahi with a few slinger schools mixed in, plus blackfin and the odd yellowfin when birds are stacked tight. Boats trolling small skirted ballyhoo, blue‑and‑white or pink‑and‑white, along with naked ballyhoo on long rigger lines, have been scoring the best. A couple charters reported half‑dozen mahi in the 8–15 pound range by mid‑morning, plus a handful of blackfin around 5–10 pounds on feather jigs. In the deeper stuff, 1,500–2,000 feet, daytime swordfish drops have put a few fish on decks south of Bimini and east of Cat Island. It’s not fast action, but patience with heavy squid baits and strobe lights has paid off with the occasional 100‑plus‑pound sword. On the reefs and nearshore, the bite’s been steady. Mutton snapper and yellowtail are chewing around channel edges and high spots in 40–90 feet. Pilchards, squid strips, and chunks of ballyhoo on light leaders are the ticket. A couple local skiffs reported cooler‑filling yellowtail hauls, with fish in the 1–3 pound class and some nicer muttons mixed in just before the tide change. Grouper are still there on the deeper breaks and ledges; big live pinfish and grunt baits fished just off the bottom will tempt blacks and reds, but mind your seasons and limits. On the flats, bonefish are acting like they own the place. Rising water over skinny sand and turtle‑grass flats has been prime, especially when the breeze lays down. Fly anglers tossing small tan and pink shrimp patterns, size 4–8, are doing work, while spin guys are connecting on 1/8‑ounce jigs tipped with fresh shrimp or little Gulp! shrimp in natural and new penny. Average bones are 3–5 pounds, with the odd 7–8‑pound cruiser pushing around the deeper edges. For lures, keep it simple: – Offshore, go with small to medium skirted ballyhoo, cedar plugs, and feather jigs in blue/white, green/yellow, and pink. – On the reef, yellow or chartreuse bucktail jigs tipped with bait, plus small metal jigs for blackfin. – On the flats, light jigheads, shrimp imitations, and subtle‑colored soft plastics. A couple hot spots if you’re heading out: – The southwest drop off Nassau, working from 600 to 1,200 feet for mahi, tuna, and the odd wahoo on the temperature breaks and weedlines. – The reef edges and cuts around the Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park boundary, where current funnels bait and keeps the snapper and grouper stacked. That’s your Bahamas fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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