『Oman Coast Night Bite: Tuna, Hamour, and Perfect Tidal Windows from Muscat to Sur』のカバーアート

Oman Coast Night Bite: Tuna, Hamour, and Perfect Tidal Windows from Muscat to Sur

Oman Coast Night Bite: Tuna, Hamour, and Perfect Tidal Windows from Muscat to Sur

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This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Oman coast fishing report. Along most of the Muscat–Sur–Masirah stretch this evening, we’ve had light onshore breeze, around 8–12 knots, and relatively calm seas, with a bit more chop on the open capes. Humidity is up, but the air is still cooler than the water now, which is good for the night bite. Around Muscat and Quriyat, high tide hit late afternoon with a steady fall into the night, giving us a nice bit of current pushing bait out of the bays and along the points. Down toward Sur and Ras Al Hadd, the tide is running slightly earlier, but the pattern is similar: moving water through dusk and into the first half of the night. Sunrise came early with clear skies, and sunset wrapped with just enough light cloud to keep temps comfortable as the fish pushed shallow. The last couple of days the nearshore action has been solid. Local captains from Muttrah and Al Mouj marinas have been reporting decent numbers of yellowfin tuna and longtail tuna working 3–8 miles off the drop-offs, mixed with dorado under the scattered debris lines. Inshore, anglers casting from rocks and small skiffs have been picking up queenfish, small GTs, and the odd cobia along current edges and reefy points. On the bottom, boats anchoring on structure have seen a steady pick of emperor, snapper, and the usual reef mix, with a few better hamour coming during the low light windows. Fish activity has been best at first light and again an hour before sunset into dark. The heat in the middle of the day is pushing most predators deeper, but any bit of breeze and surface chop has brought quick flurries of action as bait rises. Night anglers soaking baits close to shore have found catfish and smaller reef fish, but the more serious bites have been from hamour and the occasional ray or shark. For lures, if you’re chasing tuna and dorado offshore, pack metal jigs in the 40–80 gram range in blue-silver and pink-silver, plus small skirted trolling lures in green, blue, and black over purple. Nearshore, queenfish and GTs have been smashing chrome casting spoons, white bucktail jigs, and 20–40 gram stickbaits. Walk-the-dog topwaters in bone or natural mullet colors are producing explosive hits around dawn and dusk over reef edges. If you prefer bait, you can’t go wrong with fresh-cut sardine or small squid strips on a simple bottom rig. For hamour and snapper, fish those baits tight to structure with a slow, patient approach. Live bait—small scad, mullet, or sardine—rigged on a strong circle hook has been accounting for the better grouper and the surprise cobia. At night, a fresh squid strip on a light leader is deadly around pier lights and harbor mouths for mixed reef species. A couple of hotspots to keep on your list: • Ras Al Hamra and the neighboring points near Muscat: good for early-morning popping and jigging for GTs, queenfish, and the odd tuna pushing close when the bait stacks on the points. • Ras Al Hadd and the approaches to Sur: consistent offshore life this week, with tuna and dorado along the color lines and current breaks, plus solid bottom fishing on the inshore reefs for emperor and hamour when the tide is moving. If you’re heading out, time your trip around the tidal changes, fish the low light, and keep an eye on the birds—where they’re working, the fish are under them. 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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