『Lisbon Coast Early Summer: Bass, Squid, and Perfect Tide Windows』のカバーアート

Lisbon Coast Early Summer: Bass, Squid, and Perfect Tide Windows

Lisbon Coast Early Summer: Bass, Squid, and Perfect Tide Windows

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lisbon Coast fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up along the Costa de Lisboa, from Cabo da Roca down past Cascais and into the Tejo. Expect light to moderate northerlies onshore through the afternoon, easing at night, with stable barometric pressure and relatively small Atlantic swell. Skies are mostly clear with some coastal haze. Sunrise is around twenty minutes past six, sunset just before nine, giving plenty of low‑light fishing windows. Tides are running medium to strong, with a solid flood pushing in mid‑morning and again in the evening, and good outgoing water around first light and late night. On this coast, the best shore bites are lining up around the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb, especially around rocky points and the river mouth where current accelerates. Sea temperatures are sitting in the upper teens Celsius, enough to keep the predators interested. Recent outings up and down the line have seen decent numbers of **robalo (European sea bass)** tight to structure, plus **sargos** and **bream** on the rough ground, and **choco** and **lulas** still showing after dark from piers and sheltered bays. Off the beach, there’s been a sprinkling of **tacorón / palometas** and smaller **corvina** on bait, with the better fish coming on days with a bit of chop. For lures, keep it simple and local: - For robalo at dawn and dusk from Carcavelos to Guincho: long‑casting **metal jigs** in natural sardine patterns, 20–40 g, and **slim minnows** or **topwater stickbaits** when the sea’s calm. Work them over sand channels that cut between rock patches. - Around rocks and harbour walls for mixed bag: **soft plastics** on jig heads, 10–20 g, in white or olive, bounced along the bottom. - At night near lights: small **metal jigs** or **silicone eels** for squid and the odd marauding bass. Best baits right now: - For bass and corvina: **sardinha** fillet or whole small sardine, and **lingueirão** (razor clam) where you can get it. - For sargos and other rock fish: **camarao** (shrimp), **mexilhão** (mussel), and crab baits. - For squid: **paternoster rigs** with small fish strips or dedicated **egi jigs** under a slow drift or gentle retrieve. Activity has been classic “pick your window” stuff: slow in the bright middle of the day unless there’s wind and white water, much better in the dim light. Night tides with some movement have produced the more serious bass, especially for the anglers willing to wade and work long casts parallel to the shore. A couple of hotspots to put on your list: - **Guincho and the surrounding points**: When the swell is moderate, the white water and channels here concentrate bait and draw in quality robalo. Fish it carefully and respect the sea, but when it lines up it can be electric. - **Cais do Sodré to Belém, along the Tejo**: Not pretty like the open coast, but loaded with current seams, drop‑offs, and lights. Great for night sessions for bass, bream, and squid, especially around the stronger parts of the tide. In short: aim your sessions at first light, last light, and the stronger parts of the tide, lean on natural‑pattern lures that fly far, and always carry a bit of fresh sardinha in case the plastics get snubbed. 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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