『Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Suzuki on the Bite, Tides Running Strong』のカバーアート

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Suzuki on the Bite, Tides Running Strong

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Suzuki on the Bite, Tides Running Strong

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This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’re on a classic early-summer pattern now. Water temps in the mid‑20s Celsius have lit up the bay, especially around structure and current seams. The south wind has been light to moderate most of the day with partly cloudy skies, decent visibility, and only a slight chop inside the bay. Air temps have been warm and humid, typical for late June. Sunrise was around 4:25 a.m. and sunset about 7:00 p.m., so you’ve got long low‑light windows to work with. Today’s tide cycle around Tokyo Bay has been running a decent range on the semi‑diurnal pattern: a good push on the incoming through late morning and another productive moving-water window mid‑afternoon into evening. The bite has clearly lined up with that flow; slack periods have been noticeably slower. Sea bass – suzuki – are the headliners right now. Tokyo Bay boat anglers have been reporting steady numbers of schoolies with a few better fish mixed in, especially around bridge pylons, shipping channel edges, and lighted structures. Shore casters along the Odaiba area, the Nagisa Park shoreline, and the piers near Yokohama have picked up a handful each in the low‑light hours, with the more patient crews hitting close to double digits on the better tides. Lures doing most of the damage: - For boat game, small metal jigs around 20–40 g, slim minnows, and vibration baits worked mid‑water in the current. - From shore, think 9–12 cm sinking minnows in natural baitfish colors, 14–21 g metal jigs you can launch, and compact topwaters for the first and last light. Keep retrieves crisp but not too fast; a stop‑and‑go or short jerks followed by a pause has been triggering hits. Chinu and kurodai (black sea bream) have been active around rock and concrete structures, especially in slightly stained water. Recent catches from inner-bay tetrapods and harbor walls have been solid, with a few anglers reporting 3–5 fish sessions. Best bets are: - Bait: crustaceans, small crabs, and shell pieces fished tight to structure on light rigs. - Lures: small soft plastics on jig heads or tiny vibration plugs crawled along the bottom. Aji (horse mackerel) are around the lighted piers at night. Sabiki rigs tipped with a tiny bit of shrimp or just bare, worked mid‑depth under the lights, have produced small but steady numbers. For those wanting a bit of fun on ultralight, aji‑ing style with 1–2 g jig heads and small soft lures is worth your time once the sun is down. If you’re keen on hot spots, here are two to circle: - Odaiba and the Rainbow Bridge area: Great for shore casting suzuki at dawn and dusk. Work the shadow lines, bridge pilings, and any visible current breaks with minnows and vibration baits. When the wind lines up with the tide and pushes bait into the corners, the bite can switch on fast. - Yokohama Bay area – especially around Daikoku Pier and nearby harbor structures: Excellent mixed fishery. Suzukis around lights and pilings, chinu tight to the walls, and some aji after dark. Rotate between jigging metals, working minnows, and dropping down bait rigs when the fish mark deeper. General rule today and over the next few similar days: fish the moving water, lean on natural-silver or sardine-pattern lures in clear conditions, and switch to darker silhouettes or chartreuse when the water muddies up or clouds roll in. Keep your leaders on the thin side; the bay fish see plenty of pressure. That’s the Tokyo Bay report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide and lure breakdown. 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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