『Oman Coast Evening Bite: Tides, Structure, and Simple Lures for Hamour and Mackerel』のカバーアート

Oman Coast Evening Bite: Tides, Structure, and Simple Lures for Hamour and Mackerel

Oman Coast Evening Bite: Tides, Structure, and Simple Lures for Hamour and Mackerel

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This is Artificial Lure with your Oman coast fishing report. Along the Muscat to Quriyat stretch we had light to moderate northwesterlies this evening, around 8–12 knots, with seas generally calm to slight. Coastal temps sat in the low 30s Celsius with high humidity. Sunrise was just after 5:15 a.m. and sunset wrapped up a little after 7 p.m., giving a long, bright fishing window. Tides along the Oman coast ran a modest swing today: a predawn high, a late‑morning ebb, and a second push late afternoon into evening. That afternoon flood brought the best bite, especially where the current wrapped points and reef edges. Inshore bait showers were visible off Seeb and Al Mouj around the top of the tide. Inshore, anglers working the rocks and nearshore reefs reported steady action on **sherri**, **hamour**, and small to mid‑size **queenfish**. A few boats dragging spoons just outside the surf picked up **Spanish mackerel** in the 2–5 kg range, with some boats boating half a dozen fish on a short troll. Closer to the drop‑offs, jigging over structure turned up decent **hamour** and the odd **coastal amberjack**. Offshore from Muscat and Quriyat, those who pushed past 80–100 meters found scattered **yellowfin tuna** and **longtail tuna**, mostly schoolies, plus the occasional **dorado** around floating debris. Crews running simple spreader bars and small skirted lures raised a handful of fish per boat when they stayed on the temperature breaks and birds. Fish activity has been best at first light and again in the last two hours before dark, especially when that evening tide starts climbing. Midday has been slower unless you’re dropping jigs deep on structure or soaking baits tight to the rocks and harbor walls. For lures, keep it simple and local-style: - Inshore spinning: small to medium **metal jigs** (20–40 g), **silver/chrome spoons**, and slim **minnow plugs** in natural bait colors are producing queenfish and mackerel. Fast, erratic retrieves are key when they’re on small bait. - Over reefs: 40–80 g **slow-pitch jigs** in pink, blue, or glow are doing the job on hamour and snapper; short lifts, let them flutter back to bottom. - Offshore: small to medium **skirted lures** in blue/white, purple/black, and green/yellow, plus diving plugs, are raising tuna and dorado. For bait, **fresh sardine**, **squid strips**, and **fresh-cut mackerel** are still king. Float a live sardine near the surface at dawn along the reef edges for queenfish and the odd cobia, and drop chunk baits straight down on structure for hamour and snapper. On the beaches, a simple bottom rig with squid or shrimp will pick up sherri, rays, and the occasional small guitarfish in the evening. A couple of hot spots to think about: - **Al Mouj / Seeb offshore line**: Work the 20–40 m contour at first light with metals and diving plugs; good for Spanish mackerel and queenfish, with a chance at tuna if birds are working. - **Quriyat ledges and reef edges**: Jig the deeper edges late afternoon into evening on the flooding tide for hamour and snapper, and keep one live bait out for a cruising kingfish or cobia. That’s your Oman coast fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. 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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