『Finland Midsummer: Pike Shallow, Zander Deep, Perch Schooling Tight』のカバーアート

Finland Midsummer: Pike Shallow, Zander Deep, Perch Schooling Tight

Finland Midsummer: Pike Shallow, Zander Deep, Perch Schooling Tight

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This is Artificial Lure with your Finland lakes fishing report. On the big inland waters it’s classic midsummer conditions: long bright nights, coolish water, and fish pushing shallow during the low‑light windows. There’s no real tide to worry about on the lakes, so think in terms of wind‑driven currents and evening–night feeding instead. Around Central and Eastern Finland — Päijänne, Kallavesi, and Saimaa arms — locals are waking up to light just after four and it doesn’t get properly dark until close to eleven. Air temps have been hovering in the mid‑teens Celsius during the day, dropping a few degrees at night, with light to moderate west–southwest winds and only scattered showers. That gentle chop has been helping the bite on windward shores and rocky points. Pike have been very active, especially in 1–3 meters of water over weed edges and flooded reeds. Anglers are reporting good numbers of hammer‑handles with a solid sprinkling of 70–90 cm fish, and the odd meter‑class coming from deeper saddles and drop‑offs. Bright chartreuse or firetiger soft shads, 12–18 cm, and classic silver‑blue spoons are producing well. In the clearer lakes, more natural roach and perch patterns are outfishing loud colours. Zander (kuha) have shifted to their summer pattern. The best action has been in 4–8 meters, on humps and the tops of mid‑lake bars, especially right after sunset and again around midnight. Jigging with 3–4 inch soft plastics in motor‑oil, white, or UV yellow on 10–20 g heads has been the ticket. Many boats are reporting steady numbers of 40–55 cm fish, with the better schools holding just off the main crowds. If you see baitfish on your sonar hanging mid‑column, work your jig just above them. Perch are schooling tight and feeding hard on fry. You’ll find them on warm, rocky bays and around small islets. Light spinning tackle with tiny 3–7 g spoons, micro‑cranks, and 2–3 inch grubs in pumpkinseed or plain white has been putting good pans of 100–300 gram fish in the boat. For kids on the jetty, a simple worm under a float is still hard to beat. Trout and landlocked salmon in the bigger, deeper basins have been a bit more demanding, but trolling over 15–30 meters with slender wobblers in silver, blue, or copper, run a bit higher in the water during the evening, has picked off some fish. Think long, sweeping S‑turns along contour lines and keep your speed modest. Best natural baits right now are small roach or bleak for pike and zander on live‑ or deadbait rigs where allowed, and worms or maggots for perch and roach. Always check local regulations before bait fishing — rules can change between waters. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: • Southern Päijänne: the rocky points and island chains near the main basin have been giving mixed bags of pike, zander, and perch, especially on evenings with a light on‑shore breeze. • Northern Saimaa bays: shallow, weedy pockets off the main channels are holding aggressive pike and good perch, with zander staging on the nearby drops after dark. Focus your serious efforts around the evening calm and the first hours of the night, keep your lures moving just a bit slower than you think you should, and don’t ignore that last half‑meter of water under the surface — a lot of better fish have been striking right at the rod tip. Thanks for tuning in, and remember 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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