『Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Prime Dry Season Conditions and Top Lure Tactics』のカバーアート

Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Prime Dry Season Conditions and Top Lure Tactics

Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Prime Dry Season Conditions and Top Lure Tactics

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for this arvo. We’ve had classic dry‑season conditions up here: light to moderate southeasterly trades, clear skies, and good barometric pressure – the sort of weather that keeps the reef pretty friendly and the water nice and clean. Daytime temps are warm but not cooking, with cooler nights helping the pelagics push in tight on the pressure points and current lines. Tides on the outer reef today are running a fairly standard neap‑to‑mid pattern, nothing too wild. That gentler run has kept the water clearer over the bommies and along the reef edges, which is perfect for sight‑casting and working lures over shallow structure. The slower movement has meant the bite has been best on the tide changes, especially first light and late afternoon. Sunrise came early over the Coral Sea, with that prime dawn window turning on the inshore bait schools. Sunset is falling just early enough to give you a solid last‑light bite before the evening chill drops in. The low‑light periods have absolutely been the key; the middle of the day has been quieter unless you’re working deeper edges or live‑baiting. Fish activity around the reef edges, pressure points and isolated bommies has been solid. The reef flats have produced good numbers of coral trout and sweetlip, with the odd red emperor and spangled emperor coming from the slightly deeper rubble patches. On the bluewater side, small to mid‑size Spanish mackerel have been shadowing bait balls, and there have been scattered reports of yellowfin tuna and the odd wahoo out wider where the current is pushing harder along the shelf. Recent catches from local charter skippers and tackle shops up and down the coast point to coral trout as the main player – plenty of legal fish, with a few real brutes pulled off the edges in 15–25 metres. Mixed in have been schools of trevally, including GTs smashing bait on the current lines, plus longtail tuna working the surface when the bait gets nervous. Inshore rubble and wonky holes are still producing good numbers of nannygai at night for those patient enough to sit on a mark. Best lures at the moment have been bright‑coloured diving hardbodies and 4–6 inch soft plastics in natural baitfish tones for trout and sweetlip, worked tight to the reef face and across the tops on the run‑in. Metal slices and stickbaits have been doing damage on mackerel and tuna; keep a spin outfit rigged with a wire‑tipped leader ready for when the surface bust‑ups kick off. For the bait crew, fresh squid, pilchards, and cut mullet have outfished frozen stuff by a mile, especially when pinned on simple paternoster rigs and dropped right into the pressure side of structure. If you’re chasing hot spots, put some time in around: - The outer reef edges east of Cairns and Port Douglas, especially any sharp points where the current wraps – prime ground for coral trout, trevally and passing Spaniards. - Mid‑shelf shoals and wrecks off Townsville and the central reef – great for nannygai, red emperor and mixed reefies once the sun dips and the current eases. As always, keep an eye on the marine forecast and remember reef closures and size and bag limits – the Great Barrier Reef only fishes this well if we look after it. 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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