『Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today

Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the pristine tropical waters surrounding Fiji's 300+ islands. 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 Fiji's legendary big-game fishery, vibrant reef ecosystems, and nutrient-rich pelagic zones, 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
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  • Fiji Fishing Report: Trade Winds Up, Mahi Stacked, Bite Best at Dawn and Dusk
    2026/06/22
    This is Artificial Lure with your Fiji fishing report. Around the main islands today the trade winds are humming along, mostly easterly 10 to 20 knots, a bit fresher over open water, with a light chop inside the reefs and a sloppy swell out wide. Skies are partly cloudy with the odd shower sweeping through, but plenty of clear windows between squalls. Humidity is up, heat’s building fast after sunrise, and the lagoon waters are warm and clear in the lee of the islands. Sun came up just after 6 this morning and will duck out again just after 5:30 this evening, giving a tidy bite window right on dawn and that last hour of light on the reefs and flats. Tide is running a typical South Pacific pattern: decent morning flood pushing up onto the fringing reefs and sand flats, then draining hard mid‑day before filling again late afternoon. Those top and bottom turns have been the best bite periods the last few days. Offshore, the bluewater has been lively. Local skippers out of Port Denarau and Pacific Harbour have been raising good numbers of mahi‑mahi and yellowfin tuna on the current lines, with the odd wahoo and sailfish mixed in. Most crews are reporting multiple yellowfin in the 10–25 kilo range on a half‑day troll, with some bigger models smashing live baits deeper down. Mahi have been stacked under floating debris and FADs, often in small packs; once you find them, keep the lures circling. Best offshore offerings have been medium‑size pusher heads and slant‑face lures in lumo green, pink‑white, and blue‑silver, run short in the prop wash. Skirted lures over 8/0–9/0 hooks are doing the damage, with deep‑set live baits or chunked skipjack picking up fish when the sun gets higher and the surface bite goes quiet. Wire traces are a good idea with wahoo about; a few bite‑offs have been reported this week. On the reefs, the inshore action has been solid for coral trout, emperor, and sweetlip, especially where that morning tide is washing bait across bommies and drop‑offs. A mix of pilchard, squid, and fresh strip baits has been putting fish in the eski. Soft plastics in natural baitfish colours and small metal jigs hopped down the ledges have also been producing, especially for those working from smaller pangas and tinny style boats. For the light‑tackle crew, the flats and mangrove edges have had good numbers of trevally harassing bait schools on the flooding tide. Small surface stickbaits and poppers in white, bone, and chrome, plus lightly weighted soft plastics, are ideal. Keep casts tight to structure and be ready for that hit in the first few cranks. A couple of current hot spots: – The reef edges off Nadi and the Mamanuca Islands: good mixed bag of mahi, yellowfin, and wahoo along the drop‑offs, with coral trout and emperor on the inside edges when you switch to bait or jigs. – Beqa Channel and the reefs off Pacific Harbour: steady offshore pelagic bite along the current lines, and strong bottom fishing on the neap tides with less current roaring over the structure. Overall fish activity has been best at first light and late afternoon, with a noticeable slow patch during the high‑sun, slack‑tide period in the middle of the day. Plan your effort around the moving water, keep an eye on those fast‑building trade‑wind chop lines, and work the lee sides for cleaner water and less boat slam. That’s your Fiji fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips. 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
  • Fiji Fishing Report: Warm Waters, Reef Action, and the Perfect Tide Turn
    2026/06/21
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fiji fishing report from out here in the South Pacific, where the water’s warm and the reef’s been talking. Around Viti Levu and the Mamanuca–Yasawa line, we’ve had light trades this morning, 8–15 knots, easing a bit toward midday. Skies are partly cloudy, with that classic blue dome and passing white puffs. Seas are moderate outside the reef, calmer inside the lagoon. Humidity is up, but not brutal. Sun popped over the horizon just after six, and she’ll slide back down just after six again, giving us a nice, even day. The early morning run between first light and about 9 a.m. was the sweet spot. Evening bite should kick again in the last hour of light, once the glare drops and the bait pushes tight to the structure. Tides today are on a smaller run – not a huge spring tide, more of a gentle push. That means less current on the flats but still enough movement on the reef edges and channels to keep things honest. The turn of the tide, both midmorning and late afternoon, has been the trigger for most of the better bites. Offshore, the bluewater crews working the 200–1000 m line south of Kadavu and off the Coral Coast have reported a mix of yellowfin tuna, mahi-mahi, and a few striped and blue marlin. Most action has been on small to medium skirted lures in lumo green, purple–black, and pink–silver. Pakula‑style pushers, bullet heads, and jet heads run on the long rigger have been doing the damage. A couple of boats pulled in schoolie yellowfin in the 5–15 kg range, with the odd 30 kg class fish in the mix, plus decent mahi to about 10 kg. Closer to home, the reef edges and drop‑offs around Beqa, Malolo, and the outer Nadi passages have produced solid GTs, coral trout, redthroat emperor, and a few hefty jobfish. Poppers and stickbaits have been the stars for GT: think big cup‑face poppers in white, bone, and mackerel patterns, and long, slow‑glide sticks in natural baitfish colors. The more subtle presentations have outfished the loud ones once the sun got higher. On bait, fresh is king. Skipjack and small kawa kawa cut for strip baits have been deadly on trout and emperors, fished on simple running sinker rigs down the bommies. Squid and pilchards are solid backups, but the local boys will always reach for fresh tuna first. For inshore and flats action, live mullet and hardy baitfish slow‑trolled along the mangrove edges have been pulling in barracuda, queenfish, and the odd GT pushing into the shallows. A couple of hotspots to circle on your mental chart: First, the Malolo barrier reef passes off Nadi – those channel mouths where the blue meets the lagoon. Work the pressure edges on a moving tide with poppers up top and jigs dropped down the ledges for mixed reef thugs and roaming pelagics. Second, Beqa Channel – that stretch between Beqa Island and Viti Levu. Troll skirts along the contour in the morning for tuna and the chance of a marlin, then slide in to the reef edge with jigs and baits once the sun’s up. Overall, the fish are around, just asking for a bit of patience and smart timing. Aim for tide changes, keep an eye on the wind lines, and match your lure size to the smaller bait that’s been thick on the reef. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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
  • Fiji Dry Season Fire: Tuna, Trout, and Golden Light Fishing Report
    2026/06/20
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fiji fishing report for this afternoon. Around Viti Levu and the Mamanuca and Yasawa groups, we’ve had a classic dry‑season pattern: light to moderate southeast trade winds, clear skies, and a steady barometer. Temps are sitting in the high 20s Celsius, with a bit of chop on the windward reefs and calmer water on the leeward sides. Sunrise came in just after six this morning, and sunset will slide in just before six this evening, giving us a solid low‑light window at both ends of the day. Tides are running a medium range on the reef edges. The morning incoming pushed good current over the drop‑offs, and the early afternoon outgoing is draining bait off the flats and out of the lagoons. Around the top and bottom of the tide the bite slowed, but once that water started moving again, the fish woke up. Offshore, the bluewater has been alive. Local charter skippers out of Port Denarau and Pacific Harbour have reported solid yellowfin tuna schools working birds and bait, with fish from schoolie size up to around 40 kilos mixed in with skipjack. A few wahoo and the odd mahi have been picked up along the outer reef lines and FADs. Troll spreads with medium‑sized skirted lures in purple‑black, blue‑silver, and pink have been doing damage, along with cedar‑style hardbodies. For bait, rigged gar, flying fish, and strip baits slow‑trolled along temperature breaks have all produced. On the reefs, the story has been strong. Jig and bait guys on the deep edges have found dogtooth tuna, GTs, and hefty coral trout holding around 40–80 metres. Vertical jigs in 80–150 grams, natural bait colours with a bit of flash, worked fast on the first few cranks then fluttered back down, have drawn aggressive strikes. Those fishing bait have done well with fresh skipjack chunks and squid dropped just off the bottom. Inshore, the lagoon and fringing reef channels have held good numbers of trevally, bluefin and brassy, plus longnose emperor and snapper. Early‑morning and late‑afternoon surface sessions have been hot, especially along the current lines and pressure points where the tide hits the reef. Medium stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in blue‑white or baitfish patterns have been the stars, with soft plastics on 3/8 to 1/2‑ounce jig heads cleaning up when the surface bite backs off. For the bait crew, live sardines, fresh mullet strips, and peeled prawn fished on light leaders have picked up a steady mix of reefies. If you’re after a feed, the inside edges of the reef around Malolo and toward the Mamanucas have been giving up good‑eating coral trout, sweetlip, and spangled emperor on lightly weighted baits and small metal jigs. Just remember to respect local size and bag limits and avoid the known ciguatera‑prone species and zones. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: First, the Navula Passage area off western Viti Levu. Work the drop‑offs and current lines on the changing tide for GTs, doggies, and the passing pelagics. Big poppers, heavy stickbaits, and 100‑gram plus jigs are the tools of choice there. Second, the outer reef edges off Kadavu. When the trades ease, trolling along the reef face and working jigs over the deeper ledges has been turning up quality tuna, wahoo, and serious bottom fish. Right now, the best windows are first light through mid‑morning and then again in the last couple of hours before dark, especially when that tide is pushing. Keep your leaders fresh, hooks sharp, and don’t be shy to mix lures and bait until you find what they want. 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
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