『Dominican Republic, Caribbean Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Dominican Republic, Caribbean Fishing Report Today

Dominican Republic, Caribbean Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Dominican Republic, Caribbean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the Caribbean's premier big-game and reef fishing paradise. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Dominican Republic's unique ecosystem—where Atlantic and Caribbean currents fuel world-class marlin, sailfish, and mahi-mahi action alongside vibrant coral reefs teeming with snapper, grouper, and tarpon—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI 旅行記・解説 日次 社会科学
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  • Dominican Republic North and East Coast Fishing Report: Marlin, Mahi, and Snapper Action
    2026/06/22
    This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Dominican Republic fishing report for the north and east coasts, from Puerto Plata and Sosúa down past Punta Cana and Bávaro. On the north coast, around Puerto Plata and Sosúa, the early-morning incoming tide has been lining up nice with first light. Local tide tables from Puerto Plata show a low in the dark hours and a steady push of water right through mid‑morning, with another drop early afternoon. That morning flood has been firing up the bait close to the breaks and river mouths. Weather’s been classic trade‑wind pattern: light breeze at dawn, building to 12–18 knots out of the east‑northeast by midday, then easing again late. Offshore, there’s a mild chop and a rolling swell around 3–5 feet. Skies have been partly cloudy with quick squalls sliding through, but nothing too wild. Sunrise is just after 6, sunset a bit after 7, so your prime windows are 6–9 a.m. and the last couple hours before dark. Offshore out of Cap Cana and Punta Cana, charter captains are reporting steady bluewater action the past few days. Boats working the 800–1,500 foot lines have been raising white marlin, the odd blue, plus good numbers of mahi and scattered yellowfin. Several crews mentioned 3–6 mahi per trip, schoolies with a few nicer gaffers mixed in, and at least one boat bringing in a pair of 40‑plus‑pound yellowfin. Most of that action has been on small to medium skirted lures in pink‑white, blue‑silver, and green‑yellow, run off outriggers and flat lines at 6–8 knots. Islanders, chuggers, and concave‑face heads have all been doing damage. For bait, rigged ballyhoo are still king, especially when dressed with a light skirt. Inshore around Sosúa, Río San Juan, and down toward Cabrera, locals are picking off king mackerel, barracuda, and the occasional wahoo just outside the reef lines at first light. Diving plugs in mackerel and bonito patterns, plus silver spoons and slim metal jigs, have been producing. Slow‑trolled live ballyhoo and blue runners are a solid play if you can get bait early. On the east side, inside the reef near Bávaro and Cabeza de Toro, the snapper bite has been reliable late afternoon into dark. Mutton snapper and mangroves are coming off patch reefs and ledges in 40–80 feet, with a few grouper mixed in. Best bets there are fresh cut ballyhoo, squid strips, or live pilchards on simple fish‑finder rigs with 30–40 lb fluorocarbon and enough lead to stay near the bottom in the current. A few boats are also reporting good jigging sessions on yellowtail at night around the anchored party boats and reef edges; small glow jigs and chunks of cut bait are doing the trick. For the shore anglers, the lagoons and river mouths near Puerto Plata and the mangroves around Punta Cana are holding tarpon and snook. Dawn and dusk, work soft plastics on jig heads, white bucktail jigs, or medium diving plugs in natural baitfish colors. Live sardines or small mullet under a float can be deadly when the tide is moving. Hot spots to circle on your map right now: • Offshore “FAD alley” off Cap Cana, where the fish‑attracting devices are holding mahi, tuna, and billfish in that deep blue. • The reef breaks and drop‑offs just east of Sosúa toward Río San Juan, especially on the incoming tide at first light for kings and ‘cudas. If you’re heading out, keep your spread simple: two skirted lures in bright colors, a pair of ballyhoo down the middle, and one diving plug or cedar plug in the wash. Inshore, think small and natural – light leaders, subtle colors, and baits that match the local sardines and ballyhoo. That’s your Dominican Republic fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. 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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    4 分
  • Dominican Republic Early Summer Bite: Marlin, Mahi, and Sunrise Reefs
    2026/06/21
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Dominican Republic fishing report for today, straight from the Caribbean. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern lining up. Around the DR coast, the trade winds are up by late morning, but sunrise is coming just after 6 a.m. local time and sunset close to 7:15 p.m., so the best window is that calm first light and the last two hours before dark. Tides are running moderate: a predawn high pushing good current along the reefs and a falling tide through mid‑morning, which is turning the bite on nicely inshore. Offshore, out of Punta Cana and La Romana, the bluewater bite has been solid. Captains in the charter fleet are reporting **white marlin**, scattered **blue marlin**, school‑size **mahi‑mahi**, and some consistent **yellowfin tuna** on the drop‑offs. Most of the marlin are coming on rigged ballyhoo pulled behind Ilander‑style skirts in blue‑and‑white, pink‑and‑white, and purple combinations, run around 6–8 knots. Tuna are hitting small cedar plugs and feather jigs in darker colors, especially when birds are working those breaking schools just outside the shelf. Closer to Santo Domingo and Boca Chica, boats working the 100–300 foot contour are finding **wahoo** and decent mahi on the early tide. High‑speed trolling with dark‑colored plugs and weighted skirts at daybreak has been the ticket for wahoo. Once the sun is up, downsizing leaders and switching to natural baits gets more bites. Inshore, around Puerto Plata and Sosúa, the reef edges and rocky points are giving up **yellowtail snapper**, **mutton snapper**, and some chunky **grouper**. Best action is right at first light on that moving water. Bottom fishermen are doing well with cut ballyhoo, squid strips, and live pilchards or small sardines on fish‑finder rigs. Don’t be shy about lightening your leader—these fish see a lot of hardware. On the flats and mangrove edges near Samaná and along quieter bays, there’s decent action on **bonefish**, **small tarpon**, and **snook** when the wind lays down. Fly anglers and light‑tackle folks are scoring with small shrimp patterns, white bucktail jigs, and soft plastics in natural colors. A slow, subtle presentation is beating the flashy stuff in the clear water. For lures, if you’re packing a box, make sure you’ve got: - Skirted trolling lures in blue‑and‑white, pink, and purple over rigged ballyhoo for marlin and mahi. - Cedar plugs and small feathers for tuna. - Diving plugs and heavy skirts for wahoo at speed. - 1/2–1 oz bucktail jigs, white or chartreuse, tipped with shrimp or cut bait for snapper and grouper. - Soft plastic paddletails in pearl or green‑back for inshore predators. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: - **Punta Cana drop‑off**: That edge where the bottom falls from a few hundred feet into the deep blue has been holding marlin, tuna, and mahi. Work your spread along the contour lines at first light. - **North Coast reef line off Puerto Plata**: Early‑morning drifting and anchoring along the reef in 60–120 feet is putting snapper and grouper in the box, especially on that falling tide. Overall fish activity has been best at dawn and dusk. Midday gets choppy and slower with the wind, so either go deep, fish live bait tight to structure, or take the siesta and hit it again for the evening bite. That’s the word from Artificial Lure here in the Dominican Republic. 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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    4 分
  • Dominican Republic Early Summer: Glassy Mornings and Moving Water Bites
    2026/06/20
    I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with today’s fishing rundown for the Dominican Republic and the surrounding Caribbean. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions on the north and east coasts. Around Punta Cana, Cap Cana, and Bávaro, the trade winds are up by late morning, but dawn starts are calm and glassy. Expect warm air in the high 80s, water temps sitting nicely in the low 80s, and the usual mix of short showers and bright sun. On the south side, around Santo Domingo, Boca Chica, and Bayahibe, seas are a little more protected, with a light chop building through the day. Tides along the DR coast are running small to moderate today. First light and the last couple hours before dark are lining up near moving water on most shorelines, so plan your casting around the incoming tide at sunrise and the falling tide toward evening. That moving water is what’s kicking bait up onto the reefs and near the river mouths. Sunrise hits just after six in the morning, with sunset a bit after seven in the evening, so you’ve got a solid window of low light on both ends. The bite has been noticeably better in those dim periods; once the sun gets high, the fish slide deeper and you need to work heavier jigs or live bait. Offshore, crews out of Cap Cana and Casa de Campo have been doing well. Recent trips have been putting blue marlin in the spread, with a few whites and the odd sail mixed in. Yellowfin tuna schools are cruising the drop-offs, and mahi-mahi are still around the weedlines and current edges, though not as thick as peak season. Boats are reporting several mahi per trip and steady tuna action when birds are working. Best offshore offerings right now are bright skirted trolling lures in blue-and-white or pink, rigged with ballyhoo, plus cedar plugs and small feathers for the tuna. Chunked bonito or sardine is getting bites when fish sound and you need to keep them under the boat. Inshore around Boca Chica, Bayahibe, and the reefs off Sosúa and Puerto Plata, there’s been good mixed-bag action: yellowtail and lane snapper, small groupers, barracuda, and jacks. Live sardines and small mullet are top baits, with cut ballyhoo doing work when the live stuff runs short. For artificials, white bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of squid, 3–4 inch soft plastics in pearl or chartreuse, and small metal jigs bounced along the bottom are all producing. Shore and pier anglers have picked off snook, tarpon, and jacks around river mouths and harbor lights at night. Topwaters and suspending minnow plugs in natural baitfish colors, worked slow with pauses, are getting crushed in the dark. A free-lined live shrimp or small baitfish near structure is still hard to beat if you can get them. Two hot spots to circle today: • The offshore drop-off east of Cap Cana: work the 1,000–3,000 foot contour for marlin and tuna, especially where you find temperature breaks and weedlines with birds working. • The reef edges off Bayahibe and Isla Saona: great for snapper, small grouper, and schoolie mahi when the current pushes bait across the flats into the deeper cuts. For boat anglers, start offshore at first light, then slide inshore once the wind and chop build. From shore, focus on dawn and dusk, and if you can, fish into the night around lights and moving water. That’s the word from Artificial Lure. 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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    4 分
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