『Greek Islands Early Summer: Meltemi Patterns, Dawn Bass Runs & Offshore Bonito Schools』のカバーアート

Greek Islands Early Summer: Meltemi Patterns, Dawn Bass Runs & Offshore Bonito Schools

Greek Islands Early Summer: Meltemi Patterns, Dawn Bass Runs & Offshore Bonito Schools

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Artificial Lure here with your Greek Islands fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up across the Aegean and Ionian. Most islands are seeing light to moderate north–northeasterly meltemi breeze in the afternoon, easing off nicely at night. Skies mostly clear to lightly hazy, air temps running mid‑20s to low‑30s Celsius on the bigger islands, water temps hovering around 23–25°C inshore. Expect calm to slight seas on the leeward sides, with a bit more chop where that meltemi funnels between islands. Tides around much of Greece are small but still matter for the bite. The better windows today are the couple of hours around first light and again just before sunset, when the weak incoming push lines up with cooler temps and bait moving tight to shore. Sunrise is right around half‑past five in the morning, sunset just before nine in the evening depending on the island—prime time to be on your spot and not rigging on the beach. Fish activity has been solid this week. Inshore, locals around Naxos and Paros report steady **sea bass (lavraki)** and **gilt‑head bream (tsipoura)** on the dawn shift, with smaller **saddled bream** and **wrasse** keeping rods busy through the morning. Near rocky points and harbor mouths, night anglers are picking up **common dentex** and the odd **dusky grouper** on live or cut bait. Offshore crews from Crete and Rhodes have had runs of **bonito**, **small tuna**, and **amberjack (litses)** on the edges of drop‑offs and channel mouths, especially when the wind lays down. Numbers-wise, expect a handful of quality fish per focused session rather than huge hauls: two to four good lavraki or tsipoura inshore is realistic, plus plenty of smaller reef fish if you’re fishing shrimp or bits of prawn. Boat anglers trolling the bluewater ledges are reporting several bonito per pass when the schools are up, with occasional jacks and small tunas mixed in. Lure choice: for shore spinning at dawn and dusk, bring **small metal jigs** and **slim minnows** in natural baitfish patterns—sardine, anchovy, and subtle blues and greens. A 10–30 g jig hopped along the bottom near rocky structure is money for bass and dentex. Surface walkers and small poppers work well when you see bait getting pushed on top. For offshore trolling, run **feather jigs**, **small skirted lures**, and **metal spoons** around 10–15 cm, in blues, pinks, and silver. Best bait: you can’t beat **fresh shrimp**, **squid strips**, and **small live baitfish** (sardine or bogue) on light leaders for tsipoura, bream, and grouper. At night, larger squid baits on a strong rig near reef edges will tempt the bigger predators. Keep your fluorocarbon on the lighter side in clear water—around 0.20–0.26 mm inshore—and step up offshore. A couple of hot spots to consider: - **Southern Naxos reef edges**: the rocky drop‑offs just outside the sandy beaches are holding lavraki at dawn and tsipoura and saddled bream through the morning. Work small minnows tight to the wash and metals along the bottom. - **Lindos and Prasonisi area, Rhodes**: current around the points is pulling bait tight; shore casters are finding bonito and jacks when the wind isn’t too heavy. Early‑morning metals and fast‑retrieved spoons are the ticket. If you’re on a smaller island, look for harbor mouths, rocky headlands, and any place with visible bait flickering at first light—that’s your sign to stop and cast. 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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