『Costa Rica Central Pacific: Green Season Marlin, Roosters, and Prime Low-Light Bites』のカバーアート

Costa Rica Central Pacific: Green Season Marlin, Roosters, and Prime Low-Light Bites

Costa Rica Central Pacific: Green Season Marlin, Roosters, and Prime Low-Light Bites

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This is Artificial Lure with your Costa Rica Pacific Coast fishing report. Out on the Central Pacific this morning, from Herradura down through Quepos and Dominical, we’ve got a typical green season pattern: light offshore breeze at first light, then building onshore by late morning with scattered showers in the afternoon. Local forecasts are calling for air temps in the high 70s to mid‑80s, humid, with seas generally 2–4 feet early, building as the wind comes up. Sunrise is right around 5:15 a.m., sunset close to 6 p.m., giving you a nice, tight window for those prime low‑light bites. Tides along the central coast are running big and pushy with the moon phase, so expect a strong morning high, a good outgoing mid‑day, and another decent push late afternoon. The best inshore action has been right at the beginning of the outgoing, when that water starts moving bait off the beaches and out of the river mouths. Offshore, the word from local captains out of Los Sueños and Quepos is steady marlin and good sailfish a bit farther out, with yellowfin tuna and dorado mixed in when you find the birds and the pods of spinner dolphins. Most boats are raising several sails a day, with a shot or two at blue marlin if you work the temperature breaks and current edges. Tuna in the 20–60 pound range have been fairly consistent; a few cows bigger than that are still showing. Best offshore offerings right now are classic Costa Rica spreads: medium‑size skirted lures in blue‑white, green‑yellow, and black‑purple, combined with rigged ballyhoo. Tuna are chewing on poppers and stickbaits when they’re busting — think blue or sardine patterns — and on live bait, especially small bonita and sardines, when they get finicky. Dorado will climb all over bright trolling lures and chunked bait around any floating debris or current lines. Inshore, it’s been a solid week for roosterfish, jacks, and a few snook. River mouths and rocky points near Parrita, Savegre, and down toward Dominical have been holding bait and fish. Roosters in the 15–40 pound class are taking live sardines, blue runners, and mullet slow‑trolled along the breaks. Top artificials have been white or bone‑colored poppers, 1–2 ounce bucktails tipped with a strip of bait, and swimbaits in natural baitfish colors. Snook are biting best on a softer, early‑morning tide around the rivermouths, with live shrimp, mullet, and small paddletails doing the work. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, target: - The **Quepos / Manuel Antonio** area: work the offshore FADs and current lines for marlin, sails, tuna, and dorado, then slide in tight to the points and rivermouths for roosterfish and snook. - The **Dominical / Uvita** stretch: rocky points and reefs for roosters and big jacks on the morning tide, and offshore humps and drop‑offs for tuna and dorado when the birds show. Overall fish activity is good early and again late, with a bit of a lull in the mid‑day heat, especially inshore. Plan to be on your spot in the dark, ready to fish at grey light, and then again for that last hour before sunset. Bring a mix of live bait, a few proven trolling lures, and some topwater and jig options, and you’re in the game. 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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