『Puerto Vallarta, Mexico Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico Fishing Report Today

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Puerto Vallarta, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the legendary Pacific waters of Banderas Bay and world-class offshore reefs like La Corbeteña. 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 Puerto Vallarta's year-round big-game action, seasonal billfish runs, and diverse coastal ecosystem 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 日次 生物科学 科学
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  • Puerto Vallarta Early Summer: Roosters, Jacks, and Offshore Sailfish Heating Up
    2026/06/22
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puerto Vallarta fishing report, straight from the dock. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions on the bay. Light morning breeze, building mid‑day, then laying back down toward evening. Air temps are running warm and sticky, sea surface hovering in the low‑80s Fahrenheit, just what we like for pushing bait in tight along the points and offshore structure. Sunrise is hitting early, with first usable light cracking the horizon not long after 6, and sunset giving you a nice long golden hour to work topwater. Tides today are on the mild side, more of a steady roll than a big dump. That means the key windows are going to be the last couple hours of the incoming and the first push of the outgoing. When that water starts to move across the reefs and river mouths, the bite has been turning on quick, then tapering off once the current eases. Inshore, the story this week has been **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, and **sierras** holding around current lines and bait balls. Roosters have been cruising the beaches near Boca de Tomatlán and down toward Cabo Corrientes, smashing mullet and small bonitos. Jacks are stacked in the mouth of the Río Cuale and Río Ameca when the tide’s running, with plenty of hard pulls for anyone willing to grind. Offshore, the boats working the outer edges of Bahía de Banderas and out to the banks have been seeing **sailfish**, **dorado**, and a few early **yellowfin tuna**. Recent trips are reporting multiple sailfish releases in a day when the water’s clean and blue, plus dorado in the 10–20 pound range under debris lines and around any floating structure. The tuna are still a bit hit‑and‑miss but there’ve been some solid fish for crews patient enough to stay on the life. For lures, keep it simple and loud. Inshore, big surface plugs and poppers in white, blue, and bone are pulling roosters right into the wash. Stickbaits and metal spoons burned fast are doing damage on the jacks and sierras. Soft plastics on jig heads, in natural baitfish colors, are a good backup when the topwater show slows down. Offshore, run a spread of small to medium skirted trolling lures in pink‑white, blue‑white, and green‑yellow for sails and dorado. Cedar plugs and feather jigs are still money for schoolie tuna. If you can find birds and breaking fish, switch to live bait or casting jigs immediately. Best baits right now are **live goggle‑eyes, mullet, sardinas, and small bonitos**. Slow‑trolled live bait just off the rocks and points is deadly on roosters. For the offshore bite, bridled live bait around any temperature break, color change, or floating trash is your highest‑percentage play. A couple hot spots to circle on your mental chart: – **El Morro and Corbeteña**: classic offshore structure, holding sails, dorado, and tuna when the water’s right. Work the edges, not just the high spot. – **Cabo Corrientes and the beaches around Boca**: prime roosterfish territory at first light and late afternoon, especially with any chop on the water and bait tight to the sand. If you’re fishing from shore, hit the rocky points at gray light with a medium rod and a surface plug, work fast, and be ready—most bites come in the first few cranks right in the foam line. That’s the word from the water. 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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    4 分
  • Puerto Vallarta Summer Bite: Roosters, Jacks, and Offshore Dorado on the Rise
    2026/06/21
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puerto Vallarta fishing report. Out on the Bahia de Banderas, we’ve got classic summer conditions. Light morning breeze, building chop by midday, and generally stable weather with warm, humid air and only a slight chance of an afternoon squall. Skies are partly cloudy, and the heat is already pushing the bait out of the shallow surf and onto the inshore structure. Tides today are running a moderate morning incoming, peaking mid‑day, then easing into an afternoon drop. That rising water early is the sweet spot: it’s pushing bait tight to the rocks, river mouths, and beach points. First light to about two hours into the flood has been the money window. Sunrise is right around six‑thirty, with sunset close to eight‑thirty local time, so you’ve got a generous low‑light bracket on both ends. The pre‑dawn grey and the last hour of light are when the bigger predators have been sliding in shallow and getting brave. Inshore, the story lately has been solid numbers of **roosterfish**, **jack crevalle**, **sierra mackerel**, and some **snook** around the river plumes. Local captains have been reporting multiple roosters per morning when the bait stacks, with jacks mixed in and the odd big corvina or pargo when you’re tight to rock and reef. Roosters have been running mostly schoolies, with the occasional bruiser pushing past the 40‑pound mark. Jacks are all attitude, plenty in the 10–20 pound class. Offshore, boats running the edge of the bay and beyond have been seeing **dorado** starting to show on the temperature breaks and floating debris, with a few **sailfish** and **striped marlin** tagging the spread. Dorado counts have been one to four fish per boat on a decent day, with some peanut‑sized fish and enough keepers to keep things interesting. When you find clean blue water and bait, the sails haven’t been shy. Best lures right now: for inshore roosters and jacks, work **surface poppers** and **stickbaits** in sardine or mullet colors, and keep a **chrome or blue‑silver casting jig** ready when they pin bait on top. Snook and pargo are chewing **soft plastics** on jig heads in natural browns and greens and small **suspending hardbaits** around river mouths and mangrove edges. Live bait is still king—live sardina or mullet slow‑trolled or free‑lined will out‑fish hardware when the sun gets high. Offshore, pull a spread of **small skirted trolling lures** in green‑yellow and blue‑white, plus at least one natural rigged ballyhoo. Dorado have been smashing smaller offerings on the long rigger, while sailfish and marlin are favoring slightly larger, darker skirts with a good smoke trail. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: • **Corbetena “The Rock”** – Offshore seamount that’s been holding dorado and the odd billfish when the current is right. Work the up‑current side, watch for birds and bait showers, and don’t be afraid to drop a jig if you mark fish deep. • **El Morro and around the Marietas** – Great structure on the edge of the bay for roosters, jacks, and the occasional pelagic cruising through. Cast poppers tight to the rock and let them work over the drop‑off. Closer to town, the beaches near the river mouths—like where the Rio Cuale and Ameca spill out—have been producing snook and smaller roosters at first light on topwaters and live bait. Walk‑and‑cast with light gear and keep your eyes on nervous bait and bird activity. That’s the bite for today from Puerto Vallarta. 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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    4 分
  • Puerto Vallarta Early Summer Bite: Roosters Inshore, Marlin Offshore
    2026/06/20
    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
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    4 分
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