『Cabo Summer Bite: Marlin Action Heating Up as Warm Water Pushes In』のカバーアート

Cabo Summer Bite: Marlin Action Heating Up as Warm Water Pushes In

Cabo Summer Bite: Marlin Action Heating Up as Warm Water Pushes In

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
This is Artificial Lure with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. We’ve got classic Baja summer conditions offshore right now: warm blue water pushing 81–84 degrees on the Pacific side and into the high 80s in the Sea of Cortez. Light morning breezes, building to 10–15 knots out of the west in the afternoon, with a mild chop once that wind turns on. Skies are mostly clear, with a few coastal clouds early, burning off fast. Sunrise is right around 6:40 a.m., with sunset about 8:10 p.m. The bite has been best on that grey light window through about 9:30 a.m., then again on the late-afternoon push. Tides are running a moderate morning high with a decent drop through midday; that falling water has been kicking bait up and waking things up just outside the arches. Offshore, the fleets running out of the Cabo marina have been doing well on **striped marlin**, with a few **blue marlin** showing and scattered **sailfish** mixed in. Most boats working the 95 Spot, 1150, and the Golden Gate/Banco San Jaime edges are reporting several marlin raised a day, and 1–3 fish released when the crew is on it. Dorado are around but not thick—more of a one‑here, one‑there deal, mostly peanuts with an occasional 20‑ to 25‑pounder. A few **yellowfin tuna** have been found under porpoise schools a bit farther out, but it’s not a wide‑open tuna bite yet. Best offshore lures right now are: - Small to medium **black/purple and blue/white skirted trolling lures** - **Natural‑color cedar plugs** for the tuna - Bright **lime green or pink feathers** for dorado Teasers and a **dead ballyhoo or caballito pitched back** to tailing marlin are paying off. If you’ve got live bait, a **live caballito or mackerel bridled on 40–60 lb leader** is still king—keep it ready on a circle hook and drop it back the second you see a bill. Inshore and nearshore, the Pacific side points and rocky structure are giving up **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, and some solid **sierra and snapper**. The roosters have been cruising the beaches from Solmar up past Migrino, especially where there’s a little color change and nervous bait. They’re smashing: - 4–6 inch **surface poppers** in bone or mullet pattern - **White and olive bucktail jigs** - **Live mullet** slow‑trolled tight to the sand Snapper and cabrilla are tight to the rocks—fish a **1–2 oz jighead with a swimbait** or a chunk of cut bait right in the boiler zones when the swell allows. Early morning before the wind and traffic is best, with that first push of tide. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots to focus on: - **Golden Gate Bank** on the Pacific side for marlin and occasional tuna; work the edges, watch for bird piles and bait balls. - **95 Spot and 1150** on the Cortez side for mixed marlin, dorado, and scattered tuna when the life is there. Water clarity is good, plenty of flying fish and small bonito around, and when you find that concentrated bait, you’re in the game. Scale down your leaders if the bite is picky, but stay ready for a bigger marlin—there are some nicer fish starting to slide in with the warmer water. That’s the Cabo report from Artificial Lure—tight lines out there, and don’t forget to give your crew a good tip if they put you on fish. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure 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
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません