『Coastal Ireland Fishing: Bass, Pollack and Perfect Timing This Week』のカバーアート

Coastal Ireland Fishing: Bass, Pollack and Perfect Timing This Week

Coastal Ireland Fishing: Bass, Pollack and Perfect Timing This Week

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Ireland fishing round‑up. Along the south and west coasts we’ve a fairly settled spell: light to moderate west–southwesterlies, fresher on the Atlantic headlands, with broken cloud and good clear spells overnight, and only the odd light shower pushing through. Met Éireann has sea temps running 13–15°C around most coasts, just warm enough to perk the fish up after that cooler spring. Air temps are mild, so it’s comfortable to stay out into the dark runs. Tides are running mid‑size neaps to building mediums on most coasts, with decent movement at first light and again toward late evening. Low water is falling nicely into dusk on many west and south marks, which is perfect for working gullies and rough ground for bass and pollack. On the east coast, the flood into darkness is the banker for tope and hounds. First light is around half‑four, with proper sunrise not long after; sunset is close to ten in the evening, giving a long, soft‑light window when the wind eases and the inshore fish push tight to the surf line and rock ledges. Reports from charter skippers and local clubs over the past few days have been encouraging. Cork Harbour and the beaches from Youghal to Ballycotton have produced good numbers of schoolie and mid‑range bass, plus coalies and the odd sea trout. Up the west, Galway Bay and the Clare rock marks are giving pollack into the high single pounds, wrasse close in, and some decent mackerel shoals starting to show on the flood. Wexford and Wicklow are seeing smooth‑hound packs on crab baits and a few early tope for the lads soaking big baits into the deeper channels after dark. On lures, keep it simple and local: – For **bass** over surf beaches and estuary mouths, slim soft‑plastics on 10–14 g jig heads, white or sandeel‑green, are doing damage. Shallow‑running hard plugs in bone or silver work well over rough ground at dusk. – For **pollack and coalies** off the rocks, 20–40 g metal jigs and weedless soft shads in natural baitfish colours are the go‑to. Let them sink and work them with a slow lift‑and‑drop. – For **wrasse**, small creature‑style soft plastics or simple rag/lug on a light running ledger close to the rock faces. Best baits just now: fresh peeler crab is king for hounds and bass; sandeel or mackerel strip for rays, dogfish and tope; lugworm and rag for mixed surf species like flounder, dabs and smaller bass. Fresh is far better than frozen, so hit the tackle shops early. A couple of hotspots to consider: – **Copper Coast, Co. Waterford** – the coves and headlands between Tramore and Dungarvan are fishing nicely for bass, pollack and wrasse on the flooding evening tide. Work soft‑plastics tight to the reefs and into the white water. – **Bridges of Ross, Co. Clare** – classic rock‑hopping territory with pollack, wrasse and the chance of a surprise ling or big coalie. Best on a flooding tide with a light west breeze and a bit of swell rolling in. Fish activity has been best at first and last light, with the middle of the day quieter unless you’re dropping baits into deeper water from boats. If you can line up that dusk tide with a bit of cloud cover and a gentle onshore ripple, you’re in with a real shout at a decent bass or a bend‑to‑the‑butt pollack. That’s your coastal Ireland report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next session. 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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