『Seychelles, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Seychelles, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

Seychelles, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Seychelles, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from this world-renowned archipelago's pristine coral flats, reefs, and bluewater zones. 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 Seychelles' exceptional diversity of over 60 fly-fishing species, exotic giants like GTs and Indo-Pacific Permit, and remote atolls that 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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  • Seychelles Southeast Monsoon: Trevally, Tuna, and the Golden Hour Bite
    2026/06/22
    Artificial Lure here with your Seychelles fishing report, coming to you like a local leaning on the transom at the dock. Around Mahé and the inner islands today we’ve had light to moderate southeast trades, 10–18 knots, with a steady swell from the south‑southeast. Skies have been partly cloudy, with passing showers over the higher ground but mostly clear windows offshore. Air temps sat in the upper 20s, sea surface temps hovering around 27–28°C – classic southeast monsoon conditions that keep the water lively and just cool enough to keep the pelagics moving. Tides ran a gentle neap pattern: a fuller high around mid‑morning and another push late evening, with softer water through the early afternoon. The best bite lined up around the morning flood and again on that dusk push when the current picked up along the drop‑offs. Sunrise was just after 6, sunset just before 6:30, and you could feel the fish switch on during that first golden hour and last light. Inshore, the fringing reefs around Mahé, Praslin, and La Digue produced good numbers of bluefin trevally, green jobfish, and small GTs, with a few brutes in the mix bullying light tackle. Most action came on fast‑worked stickbaits in natural baitfish patterns, 40–80 g, and medium metal jigs fluttered down the reef edges. Soft plastics on 3/8 to 1 oz jigheads, in pearl and chartreuse, did the damage on snapper and emperors for those working closer to the bottom. A bit of fresh squid or small strips of cut bonito on the same jigheads outfished plain metal when the sun got high and the fish fussy. On the outer drop‑offs between the inner islands and the banks, the boats that pushed out reported steady yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kg class, with the odd bigger model, plus wahoo and skipjack mixed in. Small to medium bibbed minnows in purple‑black, bonito, or flying‑fish patterns trolled at 6–8 knots drew most strikes, with daisy chains and small lumo squids raising fish when the surface activity was patchy. Chunking with fresh tuna and drifting live baits – scads and small fusiliers – turned up a few nicer dogtooth tuna and amberjack for crews willing to work deeper. Casting around bird life and current lines paid off. Tuna were busting briefly then sounding, so fast‑sinking stickbaits and slim jigs in 60–120 g, fired ahead of the school and burned back at speed, were the ticket. Single hooks helped keep fish attached in the sloppy chop. Reef bait fishing stayed solid through the day. Fresh prawn, squid, and small fillet baits on simple running sinker rigs found red snapper, spangled emperor, and plenty of mixed reef species over rubble patches in 20–40 m. Lighter leaders got more bites, but the taxman – the ever‑present sharks – took his share when anglers went too fine. If you’re heading out, two hot spots to mark: first, the drop‑off edges southwest of Mahé towards Sainte Anne and Cerf, where the morning flood piles bait along the contour and brings in trevally and jobfish; second, the deeper blue line along the plateau edge north of Praslin, where the color change and current edges have been holding tuna, wahoo, and the occasional sailfish. Work those areas on the moving tide and you’re in the game. Best overall choices right now: medium stickbaits and poppers for trevally on the reefs, 60–120 g jigs for the channels and drop‑offs, plus a spread of small diving plugs and lumo skirted lures for the bluewater run. Always keep a rod rigged with a live‑bait hook or small circle ready when you mark something heavy mid‑water. That’s it from Artificial Lure in the Seychelles. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. 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
  • Southeast Monsoon Fires Up Trevally and Tuna Across the Seychelles Banks
    2026/06/21
    This is Artificial Lure with your Seychelles Indian Ocean fishing report. We’ve had a classic southeast monsoon pattern today: steady **SE trades 12–18 knots**, a bit stronger in the afternoon, with a light chop inside the reef and a lumpy swell outside on the banks. Skies were partly cloudy, humidity high, but good visibility on the bluewater edges. Around Mahé and Praslin, the day started calm then picked up as that SE breeze filled in. Tides ran a solid **morning high**, easing into a **midday fall** and a **late-afternoon low**, which turned fishy once the current began to push again on the evening flood. On the flats and inner reefs, that dropping tide pulled bait off the sand, waking up trevally and coral trout. Offshore, the moving water along drop‑offs and around current lines held the larger pelagics. Sun slipped up over the Indian Ocean just after **6 a.m.** and dropped behind the islands shortly after **6 p.m.** The hour around first light and the last hour before dark both fished best, especially where shade lines from the islands met clean, moving water. Inshore, boats and shore anglers reported **bluefin trevally, bigeye trevally, and a handful of GTs**, plus **jobfish, coral trout, and emperor** on the reef edges. A few local skippers mentioned double‑digit counts of trevally in the 2–5 kg range, with the usual story of one or two unstoppable brutes busting off in the whitewater. Offshore on the banks and around the FADs, crews raised **yellowfin tuna**, some **skipjack**, and scattered **wahoo and dorado/mahi**. Several charter captains talked about steady yellowfin in the 10–25 kg class, with the odd bigger fish mixed in, and enough wahoo to keep everyone honest on lighter leaders. Billfish were quieter but a couple of sailfish were seen free-jumping and one small marlin was reportedly released south of Mahé. Best **lures** today: - For GTs and trevally: big **surface stickbaits and cup-faced poppers** in natural baitfish or white/blue patterns worked over reef edges and island points. - For reef fish: **jigged soft plastics** and 40–80 g metal jigs in pink, chartreuse, and silver fished vertically over structure. - Offshore: **skirted trolling lures** in green/yellow and black/purple, plus small feather jigs and Christmas tree lures for tuna. Diving plugs and high‑speed lures picked up wahoo on the edges. Best **bait**: - Inshore: **fresh bonito strips, squid, and small live fusiliers or sardines** free‑lined along current seams. - Reef: cut squid and fish strips on simple bottom rigs did well for snapper, emperor, and jobfish. - Offshore: **chunked or live bait** bridled and drifted around FADs and current lines turned the better tuna. A couple of **hot spots** to keep in mind: - The **St. Anne Marine Park and northeast side of Mahé**, where the reef edges and island points catch the SE swell and current, have been holding trevally and reef fish, especially on the falling tide into evening. - The **drop‑offs off the Mahe Plateau and around the offshore banks near Denis and Bird** have been reliable for tuna and wahoo when the current is running, with birds and bait showing clearly when it turns on. Focus your efforts at first light and that last push of daylight, work the current lines hard, and match your lure size to the bait you see flicking on the surface. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from the Seychelles waters. 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
  • Seychelles Bluewater: Trevally, Tuna, and Tide-Line Magic in the Indian Ocean
    2026/06/20
    This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Seychelles fishing report from the middle of the Indian Ocean. We’ve just come off a solid stretch of trade‑wind weather: steady east‑southeasterlies around 10–18 knots, with the main islands seeing 1–2 meter swell on the windward side and friendlier, almost lagoon‑like conditions tucked in behind the reefs and on the leeward coasts. Skies have been partly cloudy with those classic passing showers, but plenty of blue in between. Air temps hovering around 27–29 degrees, sea surface about 27–28, just where the pelagics like it. Tides today ran a typical small‑range pattern for this time of year, with a morning high rolling over into a late‑morning drop, then a gentler push back in through the afternoon. The most consistent bite lined up with that falling tide mid‑morning and then again right as the water started moving on the afternoon flood. Inshore around Mahé’s eastern fringing reefs and the flats inside St. Anne Marine Park, the light‑tackle guys and fly anglers found good action on bluefin trevally, small GTs, and a mix of emperor and snapper nosing along the drop‑offs. Popping and stickbaits in natural baitfish colors, plus small chartreuse and white Clousers, have been the ticket. Livebaiters using small fusiliers and sardines along the reef edges picked up decent coral trout and a few chunky jobfish when the current picked up. On the flats around Alphonse and Poivre, bonefish are still playing the game: not huge numbers like peak season, but enough singles and small packs tailing on the firmer sand. Light shrimp patterns, tan or olive, fished with long, gentle presentations have been producing. A few triggerfish have been smashing crab flies on the harder coral patches when the sun is high enough to see them. Offshore from Mahé, Praslin, and La Digue, the bluewater crews working current lines and temperature breaks found a mixed bag: scattered yellowfin tuna in the teens to low 30‑kilo range, skipjack in big schools, and a few sailfish free‑jumping on the edges. Trolled lures in purple‑black, pink‑white, and blue‑silver, plus small feathers and cedar plugs, raised most of the tuna. Those chunking with fresh skipjack or live bait under birds did best when the sun was higher and the surface bite slowed. Marlin remain more of a pick than a blitz, but a few boats fishing wider, beyond the 1000‑meter line, reported the odd blue crashing spreader bars and larger pusher‑style lures in dark patterns. If you’re hunting a bill, run a staggered spread with a couple of big moldcraft‑style pushers, one darker, one brighter, plus smaller tuna lures on the short riggers for by‑catch. For bait, fresh is king: belly strips of tuna, live fusilier, and small rainbow runner are outfishing frozen every time. Inshore, prawns and small cut baits drifted near structure after sunset are finding snapper and grouper, especially on the first of the incoming tide. A couple of local hot spots to put on your list: – The drop‑offs and pinnacles southeast of Mahé, where the reef falls into 40–80 meters, have been alive with trevally, dogtooth tuna, and wahoo when the current is pushing. Work jigs and fast‑retrieved stickbaits here. – The channel edges and reef passes around Coëtivy and Platte, where ocean water funnels onto the flats, are holding GTs and milkfish. Tease the busting milkfish with small green plankton‑style flies, and keep a heavier rod ready for cruising GTs on top‑water. Sunrise and sunset are still prime windows. First light has seen the best top‑water bites inshore, and the last hour of daylight has been money for tuna and wahoo outside, especially when the wind eases and the birds group tight. That’s the word from the Seychelles this evening. 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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