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  • Early Summer Bass on the Rise: Your Irish Coastal Fishing Guide
    2026/06/17
    Name’s Artificial Lure here with your coastal Ireland fishing report. Along the south and west coasts it’s classic early‑summer stuff: light swell, mostly west to southwest winds 8–15 knots, with a few heavier showers rolling through. Met Éireann has the air sitting in the mid‑teens Celsius by day, dropping back into single figures at night, so bring the layers and the waterproofs. First light is creeping in not long after 4:30 in the morning, with sunrise just before 5. Sunset is pushing on towards 10 in the evening, giving you a lovely long twilight for a last drift or a few more casts off the rocks. On the tide, most coasts are working small to mid‑range springs right now. Low is falling around early morning with the flood building nicely through the forenoon, and another low late evening or into the night depending on your bit of coast. That flooding water has been the key; mark the two hours either side of high and you’re in business. Bass reports from Wexford, Waterford and Cork have picked up. Local chat from surf lads on Curracloe and Morriscastle says schoolies are common with the odd better fish to 6–7lb in the evening surf. The usual crab baits are working well after dark, but there’s been a cracking topwater bite on calm evenings: small walk‑the‑dog plugs in bone or silver, 10–13cm, and soft‑plastic paddletails on 10–15g heads in dirty water. Keep it subtle and slow over sandbars and gullies. Around Cork Harbour and Youghal, boat anglers are hitting mixed bags over the reefs: pollack to 7–8lb, codling, pouting and plenty of mackerel on the feathers. Simple 30–60g metal jigs in blue or mackerel pattern are doing the damage on the pollack when fished tight to the kelp. If you’re baiting, mackerel strip and lug are still the go‑to. Up on the Clare and Galway coasts, the rock marks are producing solid pollack and wrasse. Local lads are doing well with weedless soft plastics in natural browns and greens for the wrasse, and bright orange or pink shads for pollack on the drop. A bit of crab or ragworm will still out‑fish artificials some days for the wrasse, especially on a lazy swell and clear water. Further north towards Donegal, the charter boats out of Killybegs and Burtonport have been reporting good whitefish over the banks: ling, haddock, and plenty more mackerel moving in now. Sabiki rigs tipped with a sliver of mackerel are filling the bait buckets fast. Once you’ve got that, run a simple flowing trace with a whole mackerel or big fillet for tope and try your luck into dusk. For shore anglers, two hot spots worth a look: First, **Tramore Bay, Co. Waterford** – lovely surf shape on a light southwest, and the bass have been cruising the first and second gutters. Best bets here are fresh peeler crab, razor or lug on a pulley rig, or a white/pearl paddletail at first light. Second, **Brandon Bay, Co. Kerry** – big spread of sand with plenty of features. Bass and flounder along the edges of the channels, and a chance of sea trout where the streams run in. Small silver spoons and slim minnows, plus rag and lug baits, have all taken fish this week according to local word. General pattern the past few days: mornings on the last of the ebb have been quiet enough, but as soon as the tide turns and starts pushing, the switch flicks and fish come on hard for a couple of hours. Evenings have been kind, especially where the wind drops and the surf settles into a nice lazy push. Best all‑round lures right now around the Irish coast: - 10–20g silver metals for mackerel and pollack - White or natural‑bait‑coloured soft‑plastic paddletails for bass - Weedless creature baits or small paddles in brown/green for wrasse Top baits: peeler crab, lugworm, ragworm and fresh mackerel strip – in that order if you can get them. Mind the swell on the rock marks, watch those weed‑covered ledges, and give the fish a chance where you can – a couple for the pan is plenty. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. 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
  • Coastal Ireland Fishing: Bass, Pollack and Perfect Timing This Week
    2026/06/23
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Ireland fishing round‑up. Along the south and west coasts we’ve a fairly settled spell: light to moderate west–southwesterlies, fresher on the Atlantic headlands, with broken cloud and good clear spells overnight, and only the odd light shower pushing through. Met Éireann has sea temps running 13–15°C around most coasts, just warm enough to perk the fish up after that cooler spring. Air temps are mild, so it’s comfortable to stay out into the dark runs. Tides are running mid‑size neaps to building mediums on most coasts, with decent movement at first light and again toward late evening. Low water is falling nicely into dusk on many west and south marks, which is perfect for working gullies and rough ground for bass and pollack. On the east coast, the flood into darkness is the banker for tope and hounds. First light is around half‑four, with proper sunrise not long after; sunset is close to ten in the evening, giving a long, soft‑light window when the wind eases and the inshore fish push tight to the surf line and rock ledges. Reports from charter skippers and local clubs over the past few days have been encouraging. Cork Harbour and the beaches from Youghal to Ballycotton have produced good numbers of schoolie and mid‑range bass, plus coalies and the odd sea trout. Up the west, Galway Bay and the Clare rock marks are giving pollack into the high single pounds, wrasse close in, and some decent mackerel shoals starting to show on the flood. Wexford and Wicklow are seeing smooth‑hound packs on crab baits and a few early tope for the lads soaking big baits into the deeper channels after dark. On lures, keep it simple and local: – For **bass** over surf beaches and estuary mouths, slim soft‑plastics on 10–14 g jig heads, white or sandeel‑green, are doing damage. Shallow‑running hard plugs in bone or silver work well over rough ground at dusk. – For **pollack and coalies** off the rocks, 20–40 g metal jigs and weedless soft shads in natural baitfish colours are the go‑to. Let them sink and work them with a slow lift‑and‑drop. – For **wrasse**, small creature‑style soft plastics or simple rag/lug on a light running ledger close to the rock faces. Best baits just now: fresh peeler crab is king for hounds and bass; sandeel or mackerel strip for rays, dogfish and tope; lugworm and rag for mixed surf species like flounder, dabs and smaller bass. Fresh is far better than frozen, so hit the tackle shops early. A couple of hotspots to consider: – **Copper Coast, Co. Waterford** – the coves and headlands between Tramore and Dungarvan are fishing nicely for bass, pollack and wrasse on the flooding evening tide. Work soft‑plastics tight to the reefs and into the white water. – **Bridges of Ross, Co. Clare** – classic rock‑hopping territory with pollack, wrasse and the chance of a surprise ling or big coalie. Best on a flooding tide with a light west breeze and a bit of swell rolling in. Fish activity has been best at first and last light, with the middle of the day quieter unless you’re dropping baits into deeper water from boats. If you can line up that dusk tide with a bit of cloud cover and a gentle onshore ripple, you’re in with a real shout at a decent bass or a bend‑to‑the‑butt pollack. That’s your coastal Ireland report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next session. 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
  • South Coast Bass and Pollack: Early Summer Neap Tide Tactics for Irish Waters
    2026/06/22
    Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your coastal Ireland fishing report. Along the south and west coasts today, we’re sitting under a settled, early‑summer pattern: light west to northwest breezes 5–12 knots, with clearer skies in the east and more cloud and patchy drizzle brushing the Atlantic seaboard. Met Éireann is calling it mild and calm enough for comfortable sessions off the rocks and beaches, though that west coast swell is still rolling a metre or two on the more exposed headlands, so mind your footing. Sunrise has been creeping in just after 5 a.m., with sunset sliding in around 10 p.m., giving a long window to work those key bites at first and last light. Low light has been the money time lately for bass and pollack in tight to the shore, especially when it lines up with the pushing tide. Tides are on the smaller side of the cycle now, with moderate highs mid‑morning and late evening along the south coast and a slightly later phase on the west. On these neaps you don’t get the big rips, but the fish have been nosing in confidently on the last half of the flood and the first of the ebb. Plan your rock marks so you’re in position as that flood starts to build. Reports from local charter skippers out of Cork Harbour and Kinsale say good numbers of schoolie and the odd better‑sized bass showing on the inner reefs and estuary mouths, with mixed bags of pollack, codling, coalies, and a few ling offshore. Shore lads around Youghal, Tramore, and Wexford beaches have been picking up bass, flounder, and schoolie smoothhounds, with smaller numbers of ray on crab baits. Around the west, Galway Bay and Clare rock marks are turning up plenty of pollack, wrasse, and mackerel when they push in, with some decent tope showing to the boat crews running fresh mackerel flappers. Lure choice has mattered. For bass, slim **white or sandeel‑pattern soft plastics** on 10–20 g heads, and **shallow‑running minnows** in natural baitfish colours have been out‑fishing most else over clean sand and broken ground. Over rougher rock marks, heavier **paddle‑tails** and **metal jigs** are picking out pollack and coalies holding mid‑water. Wrasse are still hammering **crab imitations** and small, scented soft plastics bounced tight to kelp. Bait anglers are doing best with **peeler and soft crab** for bass and smoothhound, **lugworm and rag** for flatties and general scratching, and **fresh mackerel strip** for rays, dogs, and gurnard. Fresh is beating frozen by a wide margin, especially on the clearer‑water days. A couple of hotspots to have on your radar: • Cork Harbour to Roches Point: plenty of mixed species potential, with bass on the edges of the channels at dawn, mackerel running the outer marks, and wrasse and pollack on the rough ground. • Clare and Galway rock marks from Black Head down towards Loop Head: solid pollack and wrasse fishing on the flood, with an evening bass chance where surf pushes over sand and reef. Fish light, move until you find them, and be ready to switch between lures and bait as the tide and light change. The fish are there if you put in the legwork. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for 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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    3 分
  • Early Summer Bass and Mackerel: Ireland's Coast-to-Coast Fishing Report
    2026/06/21
    This is Artificial Lure with your coast-to-coast Ireland fishing report. We’ve a settled, early-summer pattern along much of the Irish coastline tonight. Light westerlies to south‑westerlies on many coasts, a bit fresher and cooler up along Donegal and the North Coast, milder and more humid from Wexford round to Cork. Cloud is drifting through but there are long clear spells in the south and east. According to Met Éireann’s coastal outlook, seas are slight to moderate and barometric pressure is fairly steady, which usually keeps the fish on a steady feed. Tides are running on decent mids. Around Dublin Bay and the east coast, high water falls roughly around the middle of the night and again late morning, with lows in the early evening. Over on the south coast – Cork Harbour, Youghal, Dungarvan – high water is a touch earlier than the east, with good flooding tides lining up nicely with first light. On the Atlantic side – Galway Bay, Clare, and Mayo – there’s a bit more range and the push on the flood is strong over reefs and headlands. These building or dropping tides are giving the best bites, especially in the two hours either side of high water. Sunrise is creeping in very early, about quarter past four to half four depending where you are, and sunset hangs on toward ten in the evening. That long low‑light window is tailor‑made for bass and pollack close in, so dawn and dusk sessions are where you’ll get the most action. In terms of recent catches, local reports along the Wexford and Waterford surf beaches mention schoolie and slot‑size bass moving in tight on the flooding tide, with the odd better fish nudging 7–8 lb. Anglers around Cork Harbour and the outer estuary are seeing good numbers of mackerel and scad, plus a pick of pollack and coalfish over rough ground. Out west, from Clare up through Connemara, shore lads are finding pollack, wrasse, and the first better runs of mackerel off the rocks. The odd ray and dogfish are showing on clean ground marks, and there are whispers of a few early tope from deeper surf beaches and boat marks, especially where the tide pulls hard. For lures, I’d be packing: - Slim, shallow‑running hard plugs in natural silver or sandeel patterns for bass over reef and surf tables. - Soft plastic paddletails and straight tails, 4–6 inches, in olive, white, and blue for both bass and pollack. Fish them slowly just above the weed. - Small metal jigs and casting wedges, 20–40 g, for mackerel and schoolie bass when they’re chasing bait near the surface. Bait anglers should do well with fresh lugworm and ragworm for bass and flatties on surf beaches, sandeel or mackerel strip for rays and tope, and peeler crab where you can get it – still one of the best big‑bass baits on rough ground marks. A simple two‑hook flapper on clean ground and pulley rigs over rough stuff will cover most bases. A couple of hotspots to think about: - Along the south coast, the general area from Youghal to Dungarvan has been fishing well for bass on evening surfs and for mackerel and pollack off the rocks when the tide is moving. - On the west coast, the rock marks around north Clare and into south Connemara are producing pollack, wrasse, and mackerel, especially on the evening flood and again at first light for those willing to make the walk in. Fish the changing light, line your sessions up with those stronger parts of the tide, and keep mobile until you find the bait. 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
  • Irish Summer Bass: Copper Coast and Loop Head Hotspots | Evening Coastal Report
    2026/06/20
    Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your late‑evening coastal report for Ireland. Along the south and west coasts we’ve a fairly settled Atlantic pattern tonight and into tomorrow: light to moderate west–southwesterlies, cooler on the west with a bit more breeze, milder and calmer along Wexford and Waterford. Met Éireann is calling it mostly dry with broken cloud and only isolated showers, so it’s decent fishing weather with just enough ripple to bring predators in close. Tides are running mid‑cycle on most coasts, with respectable highs pushing weed and bait up into the kelp lines, then a steady drop. As usual, the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb are the sweet spot off the surf beaches and rock marks. On the estuaries, the push of the making tide is turning fish on hard. Sea temperatures are comfortably in the summer range, and fish activity has picked up. Bass are working the surf and estuary mouths, especially where there’s a bit of colour in the water. Pollack and wrasse are tight to rough ground and kelp, with mackerel and scad moving in shoals just off the headlands when the light drops. Dogfish are still thick on many sandy marks if you’re soaking bait. From recent club talk and local tackle‑shop chat, there’ve been good numbers of schoolie and slot‑size bass off the Copper Coast, Tramore to Dungarvan, with the odd better fish after dark. Galway Bay rock marks are giving pollack to lures and mackerel to feathers. Cork Harbour has produced mixed bags of bass, flounder, and a few thornbacks for bait anglers. Lure choice: for bass, slim soft plastics on light jig heads in natural sand‑eel colours, or small metal spoons and shore‑casting minnows for covering water in the surf. In coloured water, go darker: black, olive, or blue‑backed plugs. For wrasse, weedless rigged creature baits or chunky paddle tails bounced through the kelp. For mackerel and scad, standard silver or holographic feather rigs or small 20–40 g metals will do the job. Best bait: peeler crab and fresh lug or rag for bass and flatties; mackerel strip and squid for ray and dogfish; ragworm for wrasse if you prefer bait over plastics. Fresh is beating frozen on most marks at the minute. A couple of hotspots to put on your list: First, the Copper Coast in County Waterford – spots like Bunmahon and Annestown. Work the flooding tide into dusk with surface lures and shallow‑diving minnows for bass, then switch to soft plastics as the light goes. Second, West Clare rock marks around Loop Head and Kilkee. Deep water close in, perfect for pollack and wrasse on soft plastics by day and a real chance of a better bass as the light fades, especially when there’s swell pushing bait against the rock faces. Sunrise and sunset are giving long low‑light windows now, with bright early mornings and lingering evenings; make the most of those edges of the day, as that’s when the bigger fish are slipping in tight. That’s the coastal 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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    3 分