『Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise with Tidal Windows and Low-Light Patterns』のカバーアート

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise with Tidal Windows and Low-Light Patterns

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise with Tidal Windows and Low-Light Patterns

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This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern in the Bay. Japan Meteorological Agency reports light south to southeast winds this afternoon, around 3–6 m/s, with air temps hovering in the mid‑20s Celsius, partly cloudy, and humidity on the higher side. That means comfortable but a bit sticky on the water, with just enough chop to give your lures some life. Sunrise around the Bay was just before 4:30 a.m., with sunset a little after 7 p.m., so we’ve got a long daylight window. The low-angle light of first light and the last hour before dark are still the key feeding times, especially around structure and current edges. Tidal data from the Tokyo Bay tide tables shows a moderate to fairly strong semi‑diurnal tide today, with a decent run on the morning push and another solid movement late afternoon into evening. Those windows around the top and bottom of the tide, plus the first hour of the flow, have been lining up with the best bite. Recent reports from local anglers and tackle shops around Yokohama, Urayasu, and Kawasaki say the **seabass (suzuki)** bite has picked up again, especially at night and in low light around piers, bridge pilings, and harbor mouths. Plenty of school‑size fish with a few 60–70 cm class mixed in. Light‑game fans are still getting **chinu and kisu** on the flats, and there’ve been steady catches of **aori‑ika** from deeper harbor walls for those working egi patiently. For lures, think natural and subtle in the daytime, more silhouette and vibration at night. For seabass, small to mid‑size minnow plugs in 9–12 cm, silver or sardine patterns, and slim metal vibes have been doing damage along rip lines and around bait schools. At night, switch to darker colors, shallow‑running minnows, and soft plastic shads on 10–20 g jigheads; work them slow and steady along the bottom or just off structure. Shore jigging guys have been scoring with 20–30 g metals in blue‑silver and pink‑silver off breakwaters. Bait anglers are still getting reliable action with **live shrimp, sardine strips,** and **lugworms (isome)**. On the sandy areas inside the Bay, small long‑cast rigs tipped with isome are taking good numbers of kisu when the tide is moving. Around rocky patches and tetrapods, crab and shell baits are tempting better chinu. Two spots to circle on your map: 1. **Tokyo Gate Bridge / Wakasu area** – Strong current lines and plenty of structure. Seabass are cruising the shadow lines at dawn and dusk, and anglers working metals and minnows from the park seawall are seeing regular hookups when the tide turns. 2. **Yokohama Bay Bridge to Daikoku Pier zone** – Lots of shipping structure, light at night, and bait holding in the eddies. Night‑game seabass with small plugs and soft plastics has been consistent, and egi anglers probing the deeper edges are still pulling aori‑ika when they slow things down. If you’re heading out this evening, time your session around the main tidal push, bring a mix of 10–30 g lures to cover the water column, and don’t forget a lighter leader if the fish are shying off in the clear water. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on‑the‑water updates and local tips. 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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