『Patagonia, Argentina Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Patagonia, Argentina Fishing Report Today

Patagonia, Argentina Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Patagonia, Argentina Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from one of the world's premier fly-fishing destinations. 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 Patagonia's pristine rivers, crystal-clear lakes, and trophy trout 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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  • Patagonia en Junio: Truchas y Pejerreyes con Marea Perfecta
    2026/06/22
    Soy Artificial Lure, tu guía de pesca por la Patagonia argentina. Arrancamos por el clima: en la cordillera, zona Bariloche–Río Pico–Esquel, el amanecer llega alrededor de las 8:45 y el sol se esconde cerca de las 17:45. Frío temprano, heladas débiles, mínimas cerca de 0 °C y máximas entre 7 y 10 °C, con nubosidad variable y poco viento, ideal para vadear. En la costa atlántica, de Puerto Madryn a Rawson y Camarones, amanecer cerca de las 8:40, atardecer 17:50, cielo parcialmente nublado, 6–12 °C y brisa del oeste. Marea en el Golfo Nuevo y zona Rawson: pleamar fuerte en la mañana y otra entrada marcada a media tarde; la bajamar del mediodía deja buenos verilitos y pozones para pejerrey y róbalo en canaletas y bocas de arroyo. En estas horas de agua corriendo es cuando más se activa la pesca de costa. En los ríos de trucha, el agua va fría y clara, con caudal medio tirando a bajo. La mejor ventana de actividad se está dando de media mañana a media tarde, cuando el sol pega un poco en el agua. Los guías locales comentan una pesca pareja de **trucha arco iris** y **marrón** en tamaños de 30 a 45 cm, con alguna marrón más gorda rondando el kilo y medio en pozones profundos. Los lagos están dando arco iris muy sanas, sobre todo en las bocas de arroyos. Lures y moscas que vienen rindiendo: - En ríos claros: cucharas ondulantes chicas en plateado y dorado, cucharillas tipo Mepps n° 1–2 con algo de rojo, y spinners negros para los tramos más sombreados. - Con mosca: ninfas tipo Pheasant Tail y Hare’s Ear en tamaños chicos, streamers negros u oliva con poco brillo para la mañana, zonkers más pesados en la tarde para peinar los pozones. - Bait: lombriz gorda y trocitos de mojarra funcionan bien donde está permitido; siempre revisar la normativa de cada ambiente. En la costa patagónica, los últimos días se viene dando buena pesca de **pejerrey escardón**, **róbalo** y algunas **corvinas rubias** rezagadas en playas profundas. De muelle y canaletas, los locales están sacando pejerreyes de 25–30 cm con algunos mejores. Mejores cebos: camarón pelado bien fresco, langostino y tiras finas de magrú. Andan muy bien las boyas chicas y los aparejos delicados, línea de dos anzuelos y plomo liviano. Para róbalo, señuelitos blandos blancos o perlados y cucharas plateadas recuperadas lento sobre el fondo. Hot spots recomendados: - **Río Limay inferior**: excelente para arco iris combativas y alguna marrón grande. Las correderas largas near la confluencia con el Neuquén están muy firmes. - **Área de Esquel – Río Grande/Río Futaleufú argentino**: truchas bien alimentadas, agua clara y fácil acceso. - En la costa, **Playa Paraná y Punta Cuevas** en Puerto Madryn cuando la marea está subiendo, y la **boca del río Chubut en Rawson** para pejerrey y róbalo con las corrientes fuertes. Consejo de la casa: ir liviano, caminar la costa o el río, leer bien el agua y no encariñarse con un solo señuelo; cambiar color y tamaño hasta encontrar lo que quieren comer hoy. Y siempre respetar tallas mínimas y cupos, que la Patagonia nos tiene que durar. Gracias por escuchar, y no te olvides de suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca. 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
  • Patagonia Late Fall: Dropping Tides and Deep Trout on the Limay
    2026/06/21
    This is Artificial Lure with your Patagonia fishing report. Along the **Golfo Nuevo and Golfo San José** near Puerto Madryn, dawn broke cool and calm, with light west winds and a clear sky letting the sun warm the surface quickly. Local weather services are calling for a stable high‑pressure day: light breezes under 15 km/h, cool morning in single digits Celsius, climbing into the mid‑teens by afternoon, almost no rain, and good visibility. That’s classic late‑fall/early‑winter comfort fishing: cold, but not brutal, and very fishable. On the **Atlantic side**, tide charts for the Península Valdés area show a solid morning high followed by a dropping tide through late morning, then a low midday and a rising push toward late afternoon. That falling tide after sunrise is the window you want on the beaches and rocky points: it pulls bait out of the shallows and concentrates predators on the edges. Surf anglers around Madryn and Rawson have been reporting steady numbers of **pez gallo (silverside)**, **pejerrey**, some **sargo**, plus the odd **burriqueta** and **pescadilla** when the water colors up a bit. Folks fishing the canal near Rawson have picked up modest but consistent mixed bags—half a dozen pejerrey in a couple of hours is realistic when you hit the moving water right. Best baits: **fresh shrimp**, **anchovy strips**, and **clam**, all fished on light gear with small sharp hooks and long fluorocarbon leaders. A bit of bright bead or float above the hook is turning more bites in the clear water. If you’re throwing lures from shore, go with **thin metal spoons** and **small white or pearl soft plastics** on 1/4–1/2 oz jig heads, worked quickly just above the bottom on that dropping or first-of-the-rise tide. The clearer the water, the more natural you want the color. Early and late, a chrome spoon with a red tail has been a local favorite. Swinging inland toward the **Andean lakes and rivers** around Bariloche, Junín and Esquel, winter patterns are setting in hard. Mornings are frosty, air hovering near freezing, and water temps low. Skies are mostly clear with light winds, which is good for casting but makes for spooky trout in gin‑clear water. Recent reports from guides on the **Limay** and **Malleo** talk about fewer but bigger **brown** and **rainbow trout**, especially in the deeper, slower runs. Expect quality over quantity—one to three good fish in a session is a solid outing now. Nymphing is king: **small mayfly and caddis nymphs**, size 16–20, and **tiny midges** under an indicator or tight‑line style. Add a **small tungsten beaded fly** as the anchor to get down. When the sun gets up and the breeze riffles the surface, a **streamer**—olive or black woolly bugger, or a white sculpin pattern—swung low and slow can wake up a cruising brown. Lure anglers on the lakes like **Nahuel Huapi**, **Lácar**, and **Futalaufquen** have been moving fish with **small minnows and spoons** in silver/blue and olive. The bite is best at first light and again in the last hour before dark, with the low, angled sun and long shadows giving predators more confidence. A couple of **hot spots** to circle on your map: - **Playa Paraná and the rocky points just north of Puerto Madryn**: excellent structure for pejerrey and sargo on the dropping tide, especially mid‑morning as the sun warms the shallows. - **Lower Limay River, big pools below the classic access points**: deep seams and tailouts there are holding some heavy browns; work them patiently with nymph rigs or sink‑tip streamers. Overall fish activity today will be **moderate**: slower at first light in the cold, then picking up as the sun warms both sea and river, and tapering again as the evening chill sets in. Plan your sessions around **moving water and the warmest part of the day**, and you’ll stack the odds in your favor. That’s your Patagonia fishing report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update. 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
  • Winter Patagonia: Cold Water, Patient Hands, and Solid Mixed Bags from Madryn to the Lakes
    2026/06/20
    This is Artificial Lure with your Patagonia fishing report. Along the Atlantic side, from Puerto Madryn down toward Comodoro, we’ve got a cool, stable winter pattern. The national meteorological service is calling for morning temps near freezing inland, 6–9°C on the coast, with light west to northwest winds and only scattered high clouds. A weak high-pressure system keeps seas relatively calm, under a meter in most sheltered gulfs. Sunrise is landing right around 9 AM, sunset close to 6 PM, so your real bite windows are late morning and that last hour of light. The naval tide tables for Golfo Nuevo show a decent morning rising tide and a stronger evening high, which is perfect for the rock points and harbor mouths. On that flood, expect mullet and pejerrey to push shallow, and the sea trout and robalo to slide in right behind them. Around Puerto Madryn, local clubs have been reporting good mixed bags: decent numbers of **robalo (snook-like corvina rubia)** in the 1–2 kg range, some **pejerrey escardón**, plus the odd **chucho** and smaller **gatuzo** for the bottom anglers. Folks soaking bait off the rocky points did best with strips of fresh anchovy and shrimp on running rigs, 3/0 hooks, just enough lead to hold bottom. Night sessions earlier this week brought a few better gatuzo and some elephant fish to those patient enough to sit through the cold. Spin anglers are quietly doing well on robalo and sea trout at first light and dusk. The hot producers: 10–20 g silver spoons, small white jig heads with soft plastics, and slim minnow plugs in natural baitfish colors. Work them slow and low; the water is cold and the fish are lazy. When you find a cut or current seam, make a few extra casts—most of the better fish came after really covering a small piece of structure. On the freshwater side, many classic trout rivers in northern Patagonia are in their late-season, shoulder period. Guides out of San Martín de los Andes and Bariloche have been talking about solid **browns and rainbows** in the lakes and lower river pools, especially on sinking lines and streamers. Big, dark woolly buggers, olive sculpin patterns, and articulated streamers have been taking fish, with nymphs like prince and hare’s ear picking up numbers when the light is higher. Browns over 50 cm have been reported from the deeper lake drop-offs by anglers working slow, steady retrieves near the bottom. Best bait overall right now on the coast: fresh anchovy, shrimp, and small fillets of pejerrey or sardine. Inland, if you can’t fly fish, small spinners in copper or black and gold, plus 5–7 cm floating minnows in brown trout patterns, are catching plenty. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - The rocky ledges near Punta Cuevas by Puerto Madryn: rising tide, light west wind, and you’ve got a strong shot at robalo and pejerrey. Cast parallel to the rocks and retrieve slow. - The mouth sections of the Limay and Chimehuín rivers: deep pools and tailouts are holding good browns. Fish heavy streamers or nymphs close to the bottom and be ready for a subtle take. Bundle up, fish the tides and low-light windows, and don’t rush—this is a “slow hands, slow retrieve” kind of day all across Patagonia. 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
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