『Cabo Bite Report: Marlin, Tuna, and Roosterfish on the Rise This Morning』のカバーアート

Cabo Bite Report: Marlin, Tuna, and Roosterfish on the Rise This Morning

Cabo Bite Report: Marlin, Tuna, and Roosterfish on the Rise This Morning

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This is Artificial Lure with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. We woke up to light offshore breezes and a classic clear Cabo morning. Air temps are starting cool and climbing toward the upper 80s by early afternoon, with mostly sunny skies and only a slight chop on the Pacific side. Humidity’s up, but the breeze is keeping it comfortable on the water. According to Windy and regional marine forecasts, winds are running around 8–15 knots out of the northwest later in the day, easing in the morning, with seas 2–4 feet offshore. Closer to shore in the bay and along the corridor it’s calmer, ideal for pangas and smaller center consoles. Tide tables from local marina boards show a predawn high, dropping to a mid‑morning low, then a moderate afternoon flood. That falling tide at first light has been the sweet spot for inshore action, especially around rocky points and nearshore reefs when the current starts to move. Sunrise slid in just after 6 a.m., with sunset lined up for roughly 8 p.m., giving you a long window to work the early and late bites. The best action lately has been from gray light to about 10 a.m., then again in the last two hours before dark. Local charter docks around the marina are reporting solid mixed bags offshore. Boats heading to the 95 and 1150 banks and out toward the Gordo direction have been raising striped marlin with a few blue marlin starting to show, plus decent numbers of yellowfin tuna when you find the porpoise schools. Dorado counts are picking up, mostly school‑size with an occasional nicer bull. Skippers on the Pacific side toward the Golden Gate and San Jaime report good numbers of striped marlin and some lazy fish just window‑shopping, so keep the teasers working. Tuna have been on small hoochies and cedar plugs run a bit deeper, especially when the sun gets higher. Inshore, along the Cabo Falso area and up the corridor, boats are finding roosterfish tight to the beach, plus jack crevalle and sierra early when the water still has a little cool edge. A few snapper and cabrilla are coming off the rocks for those soaking bait or slow‑rolling jigs. For lures, the go‑tos right now offshore are: - Small to medium skirted trolling lures in zucchini, black‑and‑purple, and pink‑silver. - Cedar plugs and small feather jigs in darker colors for tuna. - Live caballito or mackerel pitch‑baits ready in the tubes for marlin that crash the spread. Inshore, bring: - Surface poppers in bone or blue‑back for roosterfish. - 4–6 inch soft plastics on jig heads in white or brown‑gold for snapper and cabrilla. - Small spoons and shallow‑running hardbaits for sierra when they’re slashing bait balls. Best bait has been live caballito, mackerel, and mullet near the beach. If you can make some fresh bait at gray light just outside the marina or off the Arch, you’re in business. Cut bait along the rocks is still turning up quality bottom fish when the tide starts to move. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: - The **Golden Gate Bank** on the Pacific side for striped marlin and tuna when the current is right. - The **95/1150 banks** off the Sea of Cortez side for a marlin–tuna–dorado mix, especially on that mid‑morning tide swing. - For inshore, the stretch from **Cabo Falso up the corridor** toward Chileno has been holding roosterfish when there’s bait tight to the sand. That’s the bite for Cabo today from your local friend, Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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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