『Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the crystal-clear atolls and coral reefs of the Indian Ocean. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Maldives' spectacular coastal waters and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI
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  • Maldives Monsoon Bite: Chase the Tides and Work the Edges
    2026/06/22
    Artificial Lure here with your Maldives fishing report for this evening. Around the atolls, the water has that clean tropical look anglers love, and the bite is still strongest on the moving tide—especially the last of the outgoing and the first push of the flood, when bait gets pulled off the edges and the predators slide in behind it. For **tides**, the best window today is the **turn of the tide** around reef points, channel mouths, and lagoon cuts. In the Maldives, that moving water is the whole game: no flow, slower bite; good flow, better hunting. If you’re out after dark, work the same spots on the stronger moon-driven movement and keep an eye on any current seams. For **weather**, expect typical June southwest-monsoon conditions: humid, warm, with passing showers possible, a bit of chop on exposed outer reefs, and calmer water on the lee sides of the islands. That rougher surface can actually help the predators, because wind and rain push bait tight to structure. For **sunrise and sunset**, plan your strongest topwater bite right at dawn and again through the last light before dusk. Around the Maldives, those low-light windows are prime time for trevally, tuna, barracuda, and reef species pushing shallow. On **recent fish activity**, the waters around the atolls have been producing a mixed bag: - **Giant trevally** on reefs, drop-offs, and channel edges - **Yellowfin tuna** busting bait offshore and along current lines - **Skipjack tuna** in feeding packs - **Barracuda** on the outer reef and sand edges - **Snapper, grouper, and emperor** around reef structure - **Bonefish** and small trevally on the flats and lagoon edges The best report from a local stand is this: when bait is thick and birds are working, cast fast and stay ready. If the water is quiet, fish the edges and let the lure do the talking. For **lures**, the top picks are: - **Topwater poppers** for GTs and tuna at first light - **Stickbaits** when fish are spooky or the chop is up - **Metal jigs** for deeper channels and midwater tuna - **Soft plastics** on reef edges for snapper and grouper - **Small surface flies or tiny plastics** for bonefish on the flats For **bait**, the locals still trust the natural stuff: - **Live baitfish** when you can get them - **Fresh cut sardine, scad, or small tuna strips** - **Squid** for reef dwellers and night fishing - **Shrimp** on the flats and lagoon edges A couple of **hot spots** to work: - **Channel mouths between islands**, where current funnels bait through a narrow lane - **Outer reef corners and drop-offs**, especially where the tide hits hard and creates foam line or color change If you want one simple rule for tonight: fish the moving water, cast to the edges, and don’t leave when the bait shows up. The Maldives rewards anglers who stay alert and keep a lure in the strike zone. 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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    3 分
  • Maldives Monsoon Bite: Tuna Schools and Giant Trevally on the Fall
    2026/06/21
    This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report. Light southwest monsoon flow kept things calm on the inner atolls today, with moderate chop and a 10–15 knot breeze on the outer rims. Local met offices called for scattered clouds, humid air in the high 20s Celsius, and only a slight chance of showers, so it was a fine day to be on the water. Sunrise slipped in around ten to six this morning, with sunset close to ten past six this evening. Those first two hours after dawn and the last hour of light were the prime bite windows. Skies stayed bright enough that mid‑day action slowed in the shallows, but the deeper edges and current lines stayed productive. Tide charts from local harbors showed a mid‑morning high and a late‑afternoon low, giving us a nice falling tide for most of the day. That dropping water pulled bait off the reef flats and stacked predators along the outer walls, channel mouths, and kandu entrances. Anywhere the current pinched, the fish were there. Off the eastern edges of North Malé and Vaavu atolls, boats trolling along the drop‑off raised good numbers of yellowfin tuna and skipjack. Several crews reported double‑digit hookups on smaller yellowfin in the 5–15 kilo range, with a few bigger models mixed in. Most of the action came on small to medium skirted lures in blue‑silver, purple‑black, and pink‑white run close to the surface. Feather jigs and cedar plugs also produced when run tight to the prop wash. Inshore on the reefs, jig and popper anglers did well on giant trevally, bluefin trevally, and jobfish. Early morning casts with big white or natural‑colored stickbaits over the surf‑washed corners produced a handful of solid GTs, while smaller 40–60 gram metal jigs dropped along the steep edges picked up jobfish, grouper, and the odd snapper. Live fusilier and small scad remained the top bait for serious GT hunters, slow trolled along the edge of the whitewater. For bait anglers on dhonis and smaller skiffs, fresh cut bonito and squid were the stars. Dropped straight down on the outer reef slopes they produced red snapper, emperor, and mixed reef fish for the table. Around the FADs and current lines, chunked bonito brought in tuna and the occasional wahoo when the current picked up. Best lures today: - Medium skirted trolling lures in **blue‑silver** and **purple‑black** for tuna and wahoo - Large floating stickbaits and poppers in **white**, **baitfish**, and **mackerel** patterns for GT - 40–80 gram metal jigs in **silver** and **sardine** finishes for jobfish and mid‑water predators Best natural bait: - **Live fusilier**, **live scad**, and **live mackerel** for GT and big reef predators - **Fresh bonito strips** and **squid** for snapper, grouper, and mixed reef fish A couple of hot spots to keep an eye on: - The **outer eastern drop‑offs of Vaavu Atoll**, especially near the main kandu passes, have been holding strong tuna schools on the falling tide, with birds and surface bust‑ups giving them away. - The **south‑facing corners of South Malé Atoll**, where the swell wraps around the reef, have been turning up quality GT at first light for those willing to cast big surface lures into the foam. If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan around that early push of current, keep your eyes on the birds, and match your lure size to the bait you see on the surface. Light leaders will get more bites from tuna, but step up to heavy gear around the reef if you are hunting GT – they’re unforgiving around coral. 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
  • Maldives Dry Season: Channel Bites and Pelagic Action in the Indian Ocean
    2026/06/20
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Maldivian fishing report from the middle of the Indian Ocean blue. We’ve got classic dry‑season style conditions across most atolls today: light to moderate west–southwesterly breeze, seas generally calm inside the atolls, with just a gentle swell outside on the ocean side. Skies have been partly cloudy with long sunny spells, heat building fast by mid‑morning, and a slight afternoon chop where the lagoon drains through the channels. Sun popped over the horizon just after 6 a.m. local time and slipped back under a little after 6 p.m., giving us a solid 12‑hour window. The cooler edges of the day are still fishing best. Early morning outgoing tide through the channels has been the money time, with another little push of activity late afternoon as the light drops. Tides around the central atolls have been running a medium range: a decent pre‑dawn high falling through the morning, then a slower build toward the evening high. That falling water has flushed bait out of the lagoons and stacked predators on the channel mouths and outer reef corners. When the current’s really pulling, the bite has been short but furious. Pelagics have been lively offshore. Boats trolling the drop‑offs are reporting good numbers of yellowfin tuna with a sprinkling of dogtooth, plus the usual skipjack. A few sailfish have shown where birds are working tighter bait balls. Inside the atolls and along the reefs, giant trevally have been active on the pressure points, with bluefin trevally, green jobfish, and red bass (two‑spot snapper) mixed in. Reef bottom sessions have turned up coral trout, emperors, and assorted groupers in solid numbers. Lures doing damage offshore: medium‑size skirted trolling lures in pink/white, lumo green, and purple/black, run around 6–8 knots, plus diving minnows and stickbaits when birds pin bait near the surface. Inside the atolls, big cup‑faced poppers in blue or white, sinking stickbaits in natural baitfish colors, and 40–80 g metal jigs have been the go‑to for GT and trevally. Work them fast across the current lines and around any visible bait. For bait anglers, fresh skipjack strips, small tuna chunks, and live scad or fusiliers are the top producers. On the bottom rigs, squid strips and cut reef fish have been taking emperor and grouper. Around the jetties and sand flats, a simple bit of prawn or small pieces of sardine will still keep you busy with smaller reef species. A couple of local hot spots worth your time: 1. Outer channel corners of North Malé Atoll, especially where the outer reef meets deep blue water. On the morning falling tide, GT, dogtooth, and yellowfin have been pushing bait right up on the edges. Get there before the sun’s too high. 2. The eastern drop‑offs of Ari Atoll. Trolling that first major ledge off the reef has produced consistent yellowfin and the odd sailfish, with good jigging for dogtooth when the current runs along the wall. If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan to be on your chosen spot by first light, focus on current and bait, and keep an eye on the birds. Swap to smaller, more natural presentations once the sun gets high and the water clears. 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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    3 分
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