『Puerto Vallarta Early Summer Bite: Roosters Inshore, Marlin Offshore』のカバーアート

Puerto Vallarta Early Summer Bite: Roosters Inshore, Marlin Offshore

Puerto Vallarta Early Summer Bite: Roosters Inshore, Marlin Offshore

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
This is Artificial Lure with your Puerto Vallarta fishing report. We woke up to classic early-summer conditions on the bay: light morning breeze, calm seas, and warm, humid air. Local marine forecasts are calling for temps in the high 80s to low 90s later today, with typical afternoon onshore winds but nothing too crazy. Sunrise is around 6:15 a.m., sunset near 7:30 p.m., giving us a long fishing window. Tides are running moderate today, with a decent morning incoming push and an afternoon outgoing. That first couple of hours of the flood and the start of the afternoon ebb have been the sweet spots lately, especially around structure and color changes in the water. In Banderas Bay, that moving water really wakes things up. Inshore, the bite’s been solid. Roosterfish, jack crevalle, and a few sierra are cruising the beaches from Boca de Tomatlán down past Mismaloya and around to Punta Negra. Live goggle-eyes and mullet slow-trolled just outside the breakers are producing, but plenty of fish are coming on artificials. Pack surface poppers in blue/white or bone, 1–2 oz bucktail jigs, and 4–5 inch swimbaits in sardine patterns. The roosters have been picky at times, so don’t be afraid to downsize leaders to get bit. Around the rocks and reefs near Los Arcos and off Punta Mita, snapper and grouper are still chewing. Fresh-cut bonito and squid on bottom rigs are doing work, especially in 60–120 feet. Jigging metal slabs or knife jigs in 60–150 grams is a great way to cover water and pick up not only snapper, but the occasional amberjack and big jack crevalle. Early morning before the sun gets high has been best. Offshore, the warm blue water has pushed in close. Boats working outside the bay toward the Marietas and out to El Banco and Corbetena are seeing striped and some early-season blue marlin, plus consistent sailfish and yellowfin tuna. Recent reports from local captains on the Vallarta docks have tuna in the 30–80 pound range, with a few bigger models mixed in. They’re coming on live bait slow-trolled on the edges of bait balls and under birds, as well as slow-pitched jigs and cedar plugs trolled at a moderate clip. For offshore tackle, think small to medium skirted lures in green/yellow and pink/white for billfish, plus diving plugs and feathers in purple/black or blue/white for tuna and dorado. Don’t skip the kite or balloon if you’ve got it—those flying fish-style baits and live goggle-eyes are getting some spectacular surface eats when the wind cooperates. Dorado numbers are picking up, mostly school-sized fish, but a few quality bulls have been hanging around floating debris and current lines. Two hotspots to keep on your radar: - Inside the bay around Los Arcos and the south shore points for roosterfish, jacks, and mixed reef species. - Offshore around Corbetena and the high spots near El Banco for tuna, sailfish, and marlin when the water is clean and the bait is stacked. Best overall strategy today: hit the inshore structure for a morning rooster and snapper shot on the incoming tide, then slide offshore late morning if the wind stays manageable. Keep an eye out for birds and bait showers—find the life, you’ll find the fish. 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
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません