『Winter's On: Perth Tailor, Snapper, and Squid in the Afternoon Flood』のカバーアート

Winter's On: Perth Tailor, Snapper, and Squid in the Afternoon Flood

Winter's On: Perth Tailor, Snapper, and Squid in the Afternoon Flood

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Western Australia fishing report. Light winter pattern along most of the west coast today – cool mornings, light to moderate southerly–southwesterly sea breeze this arvo, easing into a gentle offshore overnight. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy, with a small swell running, generally 1–1.5 metres along the metro and lower west coast, a touch bigger around the Capes. Around Perth, sunrise was about 7:15 am and sunset around 5:20 pm, giving you prime low-light bite windows either side of work hours. Similar timings run up and down the coast with only a few minutes difference. Tides along the west coast are on the modest side – a gentle morning high, dropping into a mid‑day low and creeping back for an afternoon push. That afternoon flood has been the key, especially around reef edges and inshore lumps. Fish activity has picked up with the cooler water. Inshore along the metropolitan beaches, tailor and herring have been active on the dusk high, with a few solid tailor nudging 50 cm. Plenty of bread‑and‑butter herring on most groynes and rock walls, along with the odd skippy mixed in. Whiting are still over the sand patches behind the shore break. Off the rocks and reefs from Lancelin to Jurien, there’ve been reports of pink snapper in close after the blow, with fish in the 60–80 cm bracket coming from the reefy gutters at first light. Down south, around Bunbury and Busselton, squid numbers are good over the shallow weed beds, with anglers picking up 8–12 squid in a short session. Best lures today: - For tailor and herring: small metal slices 15–30 g, white or pilchard‑pattern stickbaits, and 3–4 inch paddle-tail soft plastics in natural baitfish colours. - For squid: size 2.5–3.0 jigs in pink, orange, or khaki, worked slowly with long pauses. - For demersals offshore: 4–5 inch soft plastics on 1–2 oz jig heads and slow‑pitch jigs around 60–100 g over lumps in 20–40 m. Best bait: - Tailor: whole or half pilchards on ganged hooks. - Herring and skippy: pieces of prawn, mulies, or squid strips with a light berley trail. - Pink snapper in close: fresh fillets of mullet, herring, or squid heads on a running sinker rig. - Whiting: live or fresh beach worms and small pieces of squid. A couple of hot spots to try: - **North Mole and South Mole, Fremantle** – tailor and herring on the evening high, plus a by‑catch of skippy and the odd mulloway after dark if you soak a big bait. - **Cottesloe and City Beach groynes** – great for families, with herring, whiting, and the chance of a tailor on metals as the sun drops. - **Two Rocks to Guilderton reefs** – pink snapper on the inshore lumps after a bit of swell, work the change of light and the flooding tide. - **Busselton Jetty and adjacent weed beds** – reliable squid sessions, especially on the clearer evenings with a bit of water movement. Keep an eye on that afternoon sea breeze: great for a bit of chop and baitfish movement, but it can make casting and boat positioning tricky, so plan to be set up before it peaks. Low-light periods tied to the turning tides are still your best bet for quality fish rather than numbers. Thanks for tuning in, 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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