『Atlantic Bass Heat Up: Biscay Dawn Sessions Firing Right Now』のカバーアート

Atlantic Bass Heat Up: Biscay Dawn Sessions Firing Right Now

Atlantic Bass Heat Up: Biscay Dawn Sessions Firing Right Now

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Coast France fishing report. Along the Biscay shoreline from La Rochelle down past Arcachon, a weak high‑pressure edge kept things mostly stable: light to moderate west–northwest breeze, 10–18 km/h, with a leftover swell around 1–1.5 m. Air sat in the high teens to low twenties, cooler at dawn, a bit muggy in the afternoon. Skies ran mixed—clear early, building fair‑weather cloud but not much in the way of serious rain. Coastal tide tables from Météo‑France and SHOM showed a medium range today: morning low around first light, pushing into a solid mid‑morning flood, then an afternoon high easing off toward evening. That rising water really woke things up along outer sandbars and estuary mouths. Sunrise came just after 6 a.m. along most of the coast, with sunset around 10 p.m., so we had long low‑light windows. The dawn incoming and the last two hours of the evening ebb fished best. Fish activity picked up nicely compared with the last couple of slow days. Surf casters along the Charente‑Maritime beaches reported steady **bar** (European sea bass), mostly schoolies 35–45 cm with the odd better fish brushing 60. Anglers around the Pertuis d’Antioche straits saw short, sharp feeding bursts on the edge of the current lines. In the sud‑ouest, from Cap Ferret to Mimizan, the bass were tighter to shore on the flood, working the first and second bars where the sand eels pushed in. On the bait side, **ragworm**, **lugworm**, and fresh **lançon** (sand eel) outfished frozen. A simple running ledger in the deeper gutters did the job. For lures, local tackle shops in La Rochelle and Arcachon reported **white or natural‑sandeel shads** on 15–30 g jig heads as the day’s top producers, with 12–13 cm size the sweet spot. Slim **surface walkers** in bone or translucent patterns drew violent strikes at first light over shallow banks, especially when worked fast and paused near bait flickers. Around the rockier zones near La Palmyre and the outer islands, guys drifting soft plastics and small metal jigs picked up mixed bags: pollack to about 2 kg, a few decent wrasse, and some by‑catch of small maigre. The bite there turned on when the tide started moving again after the slack, so no need to rush out at dead low. Water temps sat in the high teens to about 20°C near shore, clear but with just enough colour along the sandy stretches to keep the fish comfortable. With that, the bass stayed active longer into mid‑morning, only really sulking when the sun got high and the wind dropped out. Two local hot spots to circle for your next outing: 1. The **northern end of Île de Ré**, working the current lines around the reefy points on a rising tide with sandeel‑style shads and small topwaters at dawn. 2. The **south pass of the Bassin d’Arcachon**, playing the channels at the end of the flood and first of the ebb with 20–40 g jigs and live or fresh sand eels. If you’re planning a session tomorrow, aim for that same pattern: pre‑dawn into the early flood, or the last light drop, keep your lures slim and natural, and don’t ignore the slightly dirtier water along the first bar. 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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