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  • Thailand Gulf Coast Hot Bite: Snook, Reds, and Tarpon Firing Up This April
    2026/04/18
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in Thailand's Gulf Coast waters. It's April 18, 2026, around 4 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for a solid bite out there today. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset around 6:30 PM—plenty of daylight left to chase 'em. Weather's balmy, low of 25°C overnight into highs of 32°C, with light winds from the southwest keeping things calm on the bays. Tides are running average today per Tides4Fishing charts, high around 7:03 AM and 7:29 PM near Pattaya-like spots, with solunar activity high—major feeding windows from 8-10 AM and 4-6 PM. Fish are fired up, metabolism pumping in these warm shallows. Recent catches have been hot: snook up to 10kg slamming into shorelines, redfish schooling in the flats (dozens reported weekly), spotted seatrout averaging 1-2kg, plus tarpon rolling in passes, cobia cruising wrecks, and pompano digging sandbars. Mangrove snapper and sheepshead stacking up on structures too, per local angler logs like those from Southwest Florida analogs but dialed for our Gulf—similar species, bigger numbers here. Best lures? Jigs with soft plastics in chartreuse for trout and snapper, crankbaits or swimbaits over points for reds and jacks. Top baits: live shrimp under a popping cork, cut squid or fish chunks for bottom dwellers. Artificials rule for speed—try spoons for pompano in the surf. Hit these hot spots: Koh Samet reefs for tarpon action, or Rayong mangroves for snook ambushes—easy access, limits guaranteed if you time the tide. Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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    3 分
  • Gulf of Thailand Dawn and Dusk: Barra, Jacks, and Mackerel on the Bite
    2026/06/22
    This is Artificial Lure with your Gulf of Thailand fishing report. Along the upper Gulf from Chonburi down past Rayong, we’ve had **light southwest winds**, seas under a meter, and hot, humid air sitting in the low 30s Celsius this afternoon. Local marine forecasts are calling for scattered evening storms but mostly manageable conditions for small boats if you pick your windows and hug the coast. Sun came up around **5:50 a.m.** and dropped just after **6:45 p.m.**, so your prime bites have been those cooler edges of the day. Midday has been slow and sun‑bleached, with most action pushing into the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb. Tides in the central Gulf today have been **moderate**—not those huge spring swings, but enough current to wake things up on the points and channel edges. The best reports are coming from spots where the tide bends around structure: pier pilings, rock reefs, and river mouths pushing a bit of color into the green water. Inshore, local boats working around Pattaya and Sattahip report **good numbers of barramundi, mangrove jack, and queenfish** around the mangrove lines and harbor walls. Night anglers soaking live prawns and small mullet near lighted piers have been bringing in steady catches of **snapper and grouper**, with a few surprise cobia cruising under the bait schools. Further down toward Rayong and into the island chain, small speedboats have been picking up **Spanish mackerel, bonito, and the odd longtail tuna** off current lines and near fish traps. The numbers aren’t crazy, but enough for a solid box if you stay mobile and read the birds. For lures, the standout producers right now: - For barra and jacks in dirty or brackish water: **shallow‑running minnows in gold or bone**, 9–12 cm, slow rolled past structure. - For queenfish and mackerel: **15–30 g metal jigs and chrome spoons**, ripped fast through the top few meters. - Around reefs and wrecks: **soft plastics on 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads**, in natural baitfish or shrimp colors, hopped just off the bottom. If you’re bait fishing, you can’t beat **live prawns, small mullet, and squid strips**. Prawns for barra and snapper, mullet for jacks and grouper, squid for just about anything with teeth or attitude. Couple of **hot spots** to circle on your chart: - The **Sattahip bay and headland area**: mix of navy piers, rock, and mangrove edges. Great on the last of the incoming tide for barra and jacks, and nighttime snapper around the lights. - The **nearshore reefs off Rayong toward Koh Samet**: work the up‑current edges with metals for mackerel in the morning, then drop soft plastics or squid baits as the sun climbs and the fish go deeper. Overall, fish activity has been **better at dawn and dusk**, with enough recent catches of barra, mangrove jack, snapper, mackerel, and a sprinkle of tuna to keep things interesting if you match your tactics to the tide and stay out of that dead, hot middle of the day. 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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    3 分
  • Gulf Coast Dawn Bite: Barra and Jacks on the Early Tide
    2026/06/21
    This is Artificial Lure with your Thailand Gulf Coast fishing report. Light southwest winds and patchy cloud cover made for decent conditions along the upper Gulf today, with air temps sitting in the low 30s Celsius and humidity high but manageable. Nearshore seas stayed under a meter, and that meant plenty of longtail and small boats slipped out at first light. Along the Chonburi–Pattaya side, local captains reported an early **high tide just after sunrise**, dropping through late morning before a modest push again mid‑afternoon. Over in Rayong and down toward Chanthaburi and Trat, the tide pattern was similar, but that first push moved a little earlier. The bite lined up best around the top and first of the falling water. Sunrise came just after 6, sunset just before 7, and the **prime window** has been that first hour after dawn and the last 90 minutes before dark. Midday has been slow and sweaty unless you’re working deeper channels. Inshore around piers, rock walls, and mangroves, anglers picked up good numbers of **barramundi, mangrove jack, and small groupers**. The barra bite was strongest on the evening tide around river mouths where brackish water meets the sea. Folks throwing **suspending minnows in natural baitfish colors**, 9–12 cm, and soft swimbaits on 1/4 to 3/8 oz heads found the most success. A slow, stop‑and‑go retrieve right along current seams was the ticket. On the flats and channel edges, there were scattered **threadfin and queenfish**, with the odd **golden trevally** mixed in. Metal jigs around 20–30 g, worked fast through breaking bait, drew the more aggressive hits, while small chrome casting spoons produced when the fish were picky. Fly anglers wading the sandbars near river mouths reported steady action on small Clouser‑style patterns in white and chartreuse. Offshore in the mid‑Gulf, boats that pushed a bit farther found **Spanish mackerel, longtail tuna, and the occasional cobia** hanging near color changes and floating debris. Trolled diving plugs in blue‑silver and green‑yellow, plus small skirted lures, picked off the mackerel and tuna. Live bait—especially **small squid and scad (platu)**—accounted for most of the cobia and better grouper. Best natural baits right now: - **Live shrimp** around mangroves and bridge pylons for mangrove jack and mixed reef species. - **Squid strips and cut sardine** on bottom rigs over reefs and wrecks for snapper and grouper. - **Live mullet or small tilapia** in the brackish stretches for big barramundi, fished under a float near structure. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - **Pattaya–Sattahip inshore line**: Work the rocky points, naval piers, and nearby reefs. Early and late, throw hardbaits and soft plastics for barra and jack; when the sun gets high, switch to bait on the bottom for snapper and grouper. - **Rayong to Mae Ramphueng and out toward Koh Samet**: Drift the reef edges and drop‑offs with metal jigs and bait for Spanish mackerel and reef fish. On calmer evenings, hit the inshore rocks and small harbors for a fun mixed bag on light tackle. Overall activity has been **fair to good**: lots of school‑size fish, with enough better ones in the mix to keep things interesting if you fish the tides and stay mobile. 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
  • Gulf Coast Thailand: Monsoon Bite Guide – Trevally, Barra, and Reef Action
    2026/06/20
    This is Artificial Lure with your Thailand Gulf Coast fishing report. Let’s talk conditions first. Along the upper Gulf from Chonburi down past Rayong, on through Prachuap Khiri Khan to Chumphon, we’ve had classic southwest monsoon weather: light to moderate southwest winds in the morning, stiffening in the afternoon, with passing showers and a bit of chop on open water. Nearshore seas have been running around one meter, a little higher on exposed points. Air temps are steamy, sitting in the low 30s Celsius midday, with humidity cranked up. Sunrise along the Gulf coast came in just after 5:45 a.m., with sunset around 6:45 p.m., so your prime bite windows have been that first light 6–8 a.m. run and the last couple of hours of light before dark. Cloud cover has helped stretch the morning bite a bit later than usual. Tides have been running a medium range on the Gulf side: a decent incoming push through late morning, topping out around midday, then easing into a gentle outgoing through the afternoon. That late‑morning flood has been key on the reef edges and rock lines, especially around headlands and pier structures. Now to the fun part: the fish. In the upper Gulf around Sattahip, Rayong, and down toward Koh Samet, inshore anglers have been finding solid action on **barramundi**, **snappers**, and **groupers** tucked tight to structure. Night sessions around piers and rock walls are giving up small schools of squid and some respectable **barracuda** cruising the light lines. Farther south, around Hua Hin, Pranburi, and down toward Bang Saphan and Chumphon, boats working nearshore reefs and small islands have reported mixed bags of **golden trevally**, **queenfish**, **longtail tuna**, **Spanish mackerel**, and reef dwellers like **red snapper** and **grouper**. Numbers haven’t been crazy, but a steady pick: a handful of trevally and macks per boat on a good morning, plus by‑catch of smaller reef fish. For lures, this week has favored anything that moves fast and flashes. Casting metals in the 20–40 gram range, small stickbaits, and sinking minnows worked high in the water column have been producing trevally and macks around current breaks and bait schools. In dirtier inshore water, paddle‑tail soft plastics in natural baitfish colors, slow‑rolled along the bottom, have been deadly on barra and snapper. If you’re a bait angler, keep it simple: small live baitfish, live shrimp, and fresh squid strips have outfished everything else. Rig lightly, use small but strong hooks, and let that tide do the work. On the reefs, a simple bottom rig with squid has been enough to put a few good table‑size fish in the cooler. A couple of hot spots to circle: – The reef and island complexes off **Chumphon** and **Bang Saphan**. Work the up‑current sides at first light with metals and stickbaits for trevally and mackerel, then switch to bait rigs once the sun climbs. – The rocky headlands and pier zones around **Rayong and Sattahip**. Early morning and after dark, slow‑rolled soft plastics and live shrimp around the pylons have been turning up barra, snapper, and the odd grouper, with squid showing under the lights. With the warm water and steady monsoon pattern, expect the bite to stay best on those early and late windows, especially around the stronger parts of the tide. Keep an eye on building afternoon storms, pick your weather windows, and you’ll find fish. Thanks for tuning in to this Gulf Coast Thailand fishing report. 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
  • Gulf of Thailand Wet Season: Morning Tides and Queenfish Action from Pattaya to Hua Hin
    2026/06/19
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf of Thailand fishing rundown. Along the upper Gulf today, from Pattaya across to Rayong and down toward Hua Hin, we’ve got classic wet‑season conditions: light southwest monsoon breeze in the morning, building to 10–15 knots by afternoon, scattered thunderstorms, and choppy seas outside the sheltered bays. Air temps are running hot and sticky, low 30s Celsius with high humidity. Sunrise was just after 5:45 a.m., sunset around 6:45 p.m., giving a nice, long low‑light window at both ends of the day. Tides in the central Gulf are on a moderate range, with an early morning rising tide, peaking mid‑morning, then easing off to a late‑afternoon low. That flooding morning tide pushed bait right up onto the nearshore reefs and rocky points, and that’s where most of the better action came from. Inshore around Pattaya and Samae San, boats reported good numbers of **talang queenfish**, **trevally**, and mixed **snapper** this morning. Most were school‑size fish, but a few queenies pushed into the 3–4 kilo class. The more switched‑on crews did well slow‑jigging 40–60 g metal jigs in silver or pink, and working small casting spoons and stickbaits around the surface bust‑ups. Live prawn and small baitfish drifted under a float produced steady bites for those fishing a bit more relaxed. Down toward Rayong and the nearshore islands, the reef edges gave up **finger mark snapper**, **grunter**, and the odd **grouper** off the bottom. Squid strips and cut fish baits on simple paternoster rigs outfished everything else once the sun got high. Anglers slow‑pitching jigs in natural baitfish colors, worked close to the bottom, also picked off some nicer fish. On the western side toward Hua Hin and Prachuap, the shallow Gulf banks held **mackerel**, smaller **barracuda**, and plenty of **threadfin** and other bait schools. Trollers running small diving minnows in blue‑silver or green‑gold along color changes and current lines found the better mackerel. A few boats that pushed farther out reported scattered **tuna‑like longtail** activity under birds in the afternoon, but the chop made it a bit sporty. Fish activity overall was best from first light until mid‑morning on the incoming tide, then again right before dark as the wind laid down. Midday, with the bright sun and wind against tide, the bite definitely slowed and the fish pushed deeper and tighter to structure. For lure anglers, top producers today were: - 30–60 g metal jigs in silver, blue, and pink for queenfish and trevally. - Small to medium diving hardbaits, natural sardine or anchovy patterns, for mackerel and barracuda. - Soft plastics on 10–20 g jigheads, in white or green, hopped close to the bottom for snapper and reef fish. For bait, it’s hard to beat: - Live or very fresh shrimp for almost everything inshore. - Squid strips and cut fish for snapper, grouper, and grunter. - Live baitfish bridled or pinned lightly when you’re hunting bigger queenfish or trevally around current lines. If you’re planning a trip, a couple of **hot spots** to keep in mind: - The rocky islands and artificial reef zones off **Samae San**, where that morning flood tide piles bait onto the edges. Work jigs and small stickbaits along the drop‑offs for queenfish and trevally, then switch to bait and slow jigs for snapper once the sun gets high. - The nearshore reef patches and ledges off **Rayong**, in 10–25 meters. They’ve been producing mixed reef fish with the occasional grouper. Start the morning casting metals for surface action, then slide deeper as the light comes up and fish bait tight to the structure. That’s the wrap from Artificial Lure here on the Gulf coast of Thailand. 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
  • Gulf Coast Thailand: Tide Changes and Low Light Bites
    2026/06/18
    Good evening, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Gulf Coast fishing report for Thailand. Conditions along the **Thailand Gulf Coast** are lining up for a solid late-day bite, with the most reliable action often building around the cooler hours near dawn, dusk, and the tide changes. For **tide timing**, the best approach today is to key in on the **incoming tide** and the first part of the **outgoing tide**, when bait gets pushed along the mangroves, estuaries, and pier edges. In this stretch of the Gulf, that moving water is often the trigger for barracuda, trevally, queenfish, snapper, and assorted inshore species to start feeding more aggressively. If you’re fishing a harbor mouth, rock point, or channel edge, work it hard when the current starts to move. For **weather**, June on the Gulf side usually brings warm, humid conditions with a good chance of afternoon showers or passing squalls, so expect muggy air and chop after the wind kicks up. That kind of weather can actually help the bite by breaking up the surface and giving predators a little cover to ambush bait. Keep an eye on the sky and fish the calmer windows before and after the rain. **Sunrise and sunset** are your prime timing marks. Early light is often the cleanest shot at surface feeds, and the last hour before dark can be equally productive, especially around structure, docks, and current seams. If you’re only making one effort window, make it the low-light periods. As for **recent fish activity**, the Gulf Coast around Thailand is typically producing a mixed bag this time of year: small-to-medium **snapper**, **trevally**, **queenfish**, **barracuda**, and occasional **groupers** around reef and rock. Nearshore, anglers often find better numbers of smaller bait-chasers, while the deeper ledges and structure can hold the heavier fish. When the bait is thick, expect fast strikes and a lot of short, violent feeding windows. For **lures**, the hottest picks are: - small to medium **paddle-tail soft plastics** - **metal spoons** for fast search casting - slim **minnow plugs** - surface walkers or poppers at first light - jigheads that can keep a soft plastic just above the bottom in current For **bait**, you can’t go wrong with: - live **shrimp** - small **mullet** - **sardines** - cut bait from local baitfish If the water is clear, go smaller and more natural. If it’s stained from rain or wind, step up to brighter lures and louder surface action. A couple of **hot spots** to check would be **estuary mouths** where freshwater meets salt, and **rocky points, jetties, or pier pilings** that create current breaks. Those are classic places where bait stacks up and the predators follow. Small channel bends and mangrove edges can also be money when the tide is moving. If you’re out there tonight, fish the edges, stay mobile, and keep an eye out for bait flicking on the surface—that’s usually the giveaway. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to **subscribe** for more fishing reports. 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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    3 分
  • Gulf of Thailand: Southwest Monsoon Bite with Mackerel, Trevally, and Late-Day Storm Watch
    2026/06/17
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf of Thailand rundown. Out on the upper Gulf today around Chonburi, Rayong, and down toward Hua Hin, we’ve had classic southwest monsoon weather: light to moderate onshore breeze, 10–15 knots most of the day, seas a bit choppy but fishable inshore, a little lumpier once you push past the islands. Humidity’s heavy, scattered clouds with those afternoon build‑ups threatening a squall or two. Sunrise came just after 5:45 this morning, sunset around 6:45 this evening, giving a nice long low‑light window at both ends. Tides in the upper Gulf are on the softer side today, with a modest morning incoming and another push late afternoon. That last two hours of the flood has been the sweet spot: water picking up just enough speed to turn the bait on without blowing it out of the bays and river mouths. Inshore reports from local long‑tails and small center consoles have been solid. Around Rayong and Koh Samet, boats working 10–20 meters found good numbers of **Spanish mackerel**, schoolie **barracuda**, and the odd **queenfish**. Most fish weren’t huge, but the action was steady when the tide moved. Closer to Bangkok side, in the muddy green water near river mouths, anglers picked up **threadfin salmon (plaa thao)** and some chunky **catfish** on bait fished tight to the bottom. Down toward **Hua Hin and Pranburi**, the beach casters had decent luck on **small trevally**, **grunter**, and scattered **ray** after dark, especially where the beach drops off quickly. Squid jigs off piers and lighted boats produced a respectable basket of **squid**, which always means predators won’t be far behind. Lure choice today: - For mackerel and queenfish, metal jigs 20–40 grams in silver, blue, or pink, worked fast through mid‑water, have been the top producers. Small chrome spoons and slim stickbaits also got hammered when birds were on tiny bait. - Around structure and rocky edges, soft‑plastic paddle tails in natural baitfish colors on 3/8–1/2 oz heads are pulling trevally and the odd grouper. - For the inshore mud lines and river mouths, a slow‑rolled soft plastic or a small shallow‑diving minnow in gold or green has been the ticket for threadfin and catfish. If you’re soaking bait, you can’t beat **fresh shrimp**, cut squid, or small live baitfish caught on sabiki. In the deeper nearshore water, a simple running sinker rig with a strip of squid will find mackerel, snapper, and whatever else is cruising. On the beaches, a two‑hook paternoster with shrimp or worm imitators will keep your rod busy. Couple of hot spots to circle on the map: - **Koh Samet outer edges (Rayong side):** Work the drop‑offs and current lines at first light with 20–40 g metals and small stickbaits. Good chance at Spanish mackerel and queenfish when the tide starts pushing. - **Hua Hin south sandbars and rocky points:** Late afternoon into dark, fish the edges of the drop with soft plastics or shrimp baits. Trevally, grunter, and rays have all been coming from that zone when the water creeps up the beach. Plan your session around the ends of the day and the last half of the incoming tide, keep an eye on the storm cells building over land, and you should find some life in the Gulf right now. 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
  • Gulf of Thailand Fishing: Barramundi, Trevally, and Squid on the Tide
    2026/06/16
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf of Thailand fishing report. Along the upper Gulf today from Chonburi down past Rayong, light southwest monsoon breezes kept it manageable, with afternoon sea conditions around one meter and patches of cloud. Local marine forecasts called for 30–32°C air temps, humid, with a few short showers rolling through in the late afternoon. Sunrise came in just after 5:45 a.m., sunset around 6:45 p.m., giving a good, full day of light on the water. Tides on the central Gulf beaches and nearshore reefs ran a moderate cycle, with a low early morning, a building flood through mid‑day, then a decent evening high. That incoming tide turned the bite on around the river mouths and mangrove edges; the last two hours of the flood and first hour of the ebb were the sweet spot. Inshore around Bang Pakong mouth and the muddy flats, local boats brought in mixed catches of **barramundi**, **threadfin**, and smaller **queenfish**. Most barra today were schoolie size, 1–3 kg, with a few better fish pushing 5 kg taken on live prawns slow‑trolled along drop‑offs. Threadfin showed up where the current pushed bait over the channel edges, mostly on fresh cut squid and small live mullet. Down the coast off Sattahip and Rayong’s nearshore reefs, the plastic‑throwers did well on **trevally**, **small Spanish mackerel**, and reef **snapper**. Metal jigs in the 20–40 g range, silver or green, worked vertically over 12–20 m, produced quick flurries whenever bait showed on the sounder. Soft plastics—3–4 inch paddle tails in white or chartreuse on 10–14 g jigheads—were the top artificial for trevally cruising the reef edges. Night and very early morning squid action stayed steady around pier lights and anchored boats. Small Egi‑style jigs in pink or glow patterns were hot, with buckets of medium‑size squid coming in before sunrise. Those same squid, cut or live, turned into quality baits later in the day for snapper and grouper on the deeper rocky marks. Best baits overall today: - Live prawns and mullet for barramundi and threadfin. - Fresh squid strips for snapper, grouper, and mackerel. - Small live scad for trevally and Spanish mackerel. Best lures: - 9–12 cm minnow plugs in natural baitfish colors for barra, worked slow around structure. - 20–40 g metal jigs for reef fish and mackerel. - 3–4 inch soft plastics in white, anchovy, or chartreuse for trevally and queenfish. - Size 2.0–3.0 squid jigs in pink, orange, and glow for night squid. Couple of hotspots to circle for your next run: 1. **Bang Pakong River mouth, Chachoengsao/Chonburi side** – Muddy channels meeting the Gulf, great current lines, and plenty of structure. Work live prawns and shallow‑running minnows along the edges on the flood for barramundi and threadfin. 2. **Nearshore reefs off Sattahip and eastern Rayong** – Hard bottom in 12–25 m, holding trevally, snapper, and Spanish mackerel. Drift and jig metals, or anchor and soak squid baits right on the pressure side of the reef when the tide starts to move. If you can line up your trip with the cooler ends of the day and that building tide, the Gulf is still giving up good mixed bags, even with the heat and the afternoon squalls. 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