『Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Spring Tides and Night Bass Bite』のカバーアート

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Spring Tides and Night Bass Bite

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Spring Tides and Night Bass Bite

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This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern now: warm, humid, light southerly breeze most afternoons, and generally stable weather with passing clouds and the odd shower. Daytime highs are running in the upper 20s to low 30s, with nights staying mild. Sunrise is around 4:25 in the morning and sunset just after 7:00 in the evening, so you’ve got a long window to work the low-light bite. Tides in Tokyo Bay are in a solid spring phase around the moon, so expect **good current** on the bigger highs and lows. Morning sees a decent high turning to an outgoing flow mid to late morning, then another push in the evening. That moving water is key: when the tide slows, the bite drops off fast, but once the current starts sliding again, the fish switch on. Inshore, **sea bass (suzuki)** are still the main story. The night game around the river mouths and lighted structures has been productive, with small to mid-sized fish and a few good 60–70 cm class mixed in. Anglers have been picking them up on 9–12 cm minnows, sinking pencils, and 20–30 g metal vibes in sardine, chart-back pearl, and clear anchovy patterns. On calm nights, switching to a small topwater pencil can fire up a short but intense surface bite. Daytime sea bass are hanging deeper around bridge pilings, ship channels, and breakwalls. Jigging 20–40 g metals and soft plastics on 10–20 g jig heads, slow-rolled just off bottom, has been taking fish when the light’s high. Natural bait guys drifting **Iwashi (sardine)** or **aosa** near structure are also scoring. Further out in the central bay, the **sabiki game** is strong. Small sardine, horse mackerel (aji), and chibikko-size bait schools are thick around buoys and channel markers. Sabiki rigs in sizes 6–8 with tiny shrimp or glow heads are filling buckets, especially on the first half of the flood tide. Those bait balls are pulling in **chinu and kurodai** (black sea bream) around the rock piles and tetrapods; use small crab, clam, or shrimp on light leaders, or go with small bottom rigs and scented soft baits. **Flounder and hirame** are still a decent side target along sandy edges at the mouth of the bay and off the artificial islands. Try 30–40 g jig heads with 4–5 inch shads in white or chartreuse, dragged slow along the bottom on the outgoing. For lures this week: - For sea bass: 9–12 cm minnows, 20–30 g metal vibes, small sinking pencils, and compact topwater pencils. - For bait: live or fresh sardine, small shrimp, and crab for bream, plus worms for mixed bottom fish on sabiki or simple bottom rigs. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - **Tokyo Gate Bridge area**: strong current edges, plenty of structure, good for sea bass and bait schools when the tide’s moving. - **Near the Edogawa and Arakawa river mouths**: classic night-game sea bass, especially around lighted piers and bridges on the turning tide. Focus on early morning and after-sunset windows, line up with the stronger parts of the tide, and you should find some consistent action. 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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