『Central Chile Late Autumn: Rising Tides and Prime Morning Bites from Valparaiso to Concepcion』のカバーアート

Central Chile Late Autumn: Rising Tides and Prime Morning Bites from Valparaiso to Concepcion

Central Chile Late Autumn: Rising Tides and Prime Morning Bites from Valparaiso to Concepcion

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I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Chile fishing report. Along most of the central coast from Valparaíso down toward Concepción, we’ve got a stable late‑autumn pattern: cool mornings around 8–11°C, afternoons pushing 14–17°C, light to moderate southwest breeze, and a mix of low cloud and sun. Ocean temps are running cool, perfect for the cold‑water predators. Sunrise is right around a quarter past winter dawn and sunset late in the afternoon, giving a short but productive window, with the **prime bite** in the first two hours after sunrise and the last hour of light. Tides today are running a medium range. Expect a pre‑dawn low followed by a rising tide through the morning, topping out late morning to midday depending where you are on the coast. That incoming tide is the key: the water pushes bait tight to the rocks and river mouths, and that’s when the better fish have been chewing. Over the last couple of days, local captains along the Valparaíso and San Antonio coast report solid mixed bags: • Good numbers of **sierras** (chub mackerel) and smaller **jurel** (jack mackerel) just off the harbors and around bait schools. • Inshore rocky structure giving up **robalo** (snook‑like), **cabrilla** and **vieja** around kelp patches and ledges. • From the beaches, surf anglers are picking up **corvina** and **lenguado** (flounder) on the sandy pockets between rock fingers, especially where there’s a bit of whitewater. Fish activity has been best when the wind lays down mid‑morning and again with that late‑afternoon glassoff. If the swell is up, work the protected sides of points and inside coves; the fish are there, just tucked out of the heavy wash. Lure selection: • For sierras and jurel, throw **small metal jigs and casting spoons** in 20–40 grams, silver or blue‑silver. Fast, erratic retrieves are triggering most strikes. • Around the rocks for robalo and cabrilla, go with **4–5 inch soft plastics** on 1/2–1 oz jig heads, in natural baitfish, white, or motor‑oil colors. Slow roll them along the bottom and pause near structure. • For corvina in the wash, **shallow‑running minnows** and slim stickbaits in mullet or anchovy patterns have outfished everything else, especially in that low‑light window. Best bait right now: • Fresh **anchoveta** and **sardina** strips or whole, rigged on a running sinker or simple bottom rig. • For surf flounder, small live baitfish or shrimp tipped on a long‑shank hook. • Around the rocks, strips of squid and crab pieces are pulling the bigger, more cautious reef fish when the lure bite slows. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: • **Playa La Boca – Confluencia del Aconcagua, near Concón**: where the river meets the sea, that mixing water has been very productive for corvina, lenguado, and the odd robalo on the incoming tide. Work the channel edges and sandbars; bait and soft plastics both doing damage. • **Rocas de Santo Domingo / San Antonio area**: classic structure fishing. Cabrilla, vieja, and the occasional trophy robalo holding deep in the holes. Metal jigs vertically around the drops and big soft plastics slow along the bottom have produced some quality fish for patient anglers. If you’re heading farther south toward Talcahuano and the Arauco Gulf, expect similar patterns but slightly cooler water and heavier swell at times. Focus on lee shores and inside coves, and don’t be afraid to fish a bit deeper; winter fish hug the bottom. That’s the word from the Chilean coast today. 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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