『Atlantic Spain: Spring Tides and Switched-On Bass—Dawn to Dusk Fishing』のカバーアート

Atlantic Spain: Spring Tides and Switched-On Bass—Dawn to Dusk Fishing

Atlantic Spain: Spring Tides and Switched-On Bass—Dawn to Dusk Fishing

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This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report. Along the Galician and Cantabrian coasts the Atlantic has laid down nicely after the recent fronts. Light to moderate northwest breeze on most of the shelf, seas around a meter or less in many inshore spots, and cooler ocean air keeping it fresh at dawn. Skies are mixed—patchy low cloud early, brightening through the morning, with a bit of onshore breeze in the afternoon. Tides along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, are running a decent range on the springy side. Expect a strong flood pushing into the rías around first light and a draining ebb late morning into midday. Evening brings another good push of water, which is setting up nicely for an after‑work session on the rocks or beaches. Sunrise is roughly mid‑six in the morning local time, with sunset in the late‑nine window, so you’ve got long twilight periods—prime time for predators. That moving water has the fish switched on. The surf beaches and outer ría mouths are giving up good **lubinas**—European sea bass—especially on the flooding tide around dawn and dusk. Anglers working the whitewater pockets behind the sandbars are reporting small groups of schoolies with the odd better fish mixed in. Inside the rías there’s steady **sargo** and **robaliza** action around rocky points and harbor walls, plus some **julias** and **maragotas** for those dropping baits tight to structure. Off the harbor mouths and rocky headlands, light‑tackle guys are finding **caballa** and **jureles** moving through in bursts when the bait stacks up. A few **bonitos** have started to show a bit farther out, hinting that the pelagic season is waking up, but the more consistent catch inshore is still mackerel and horse mackerel. In the deeper pockets of the rías, boats soaking baits on the bottom are seeing **congrio** and some table‑sized **besugos**. Best lures right now: – For lubina in the surf, slim **surface walkers** and small **pencil poppers** in natural sardine or bone colors at first light, switching to **shallow‑running minnows** and **soft swimbaits** as the sun climbs. – On the rocks and harbor edges, 10–20 gram **metal jigs** and **casting spoons** are deadly for caballa and jurel—let them drop and burn them back fast with a few twitches. – Inside the rías, lightly weighted **soft plastics** on 7–10 gram jig heads, in white or olive, fished slow along the bottom, are tempting bass and wrasse when the surface bite dies. For bait anglers, classic options are winning: – Fresh **sardina** strips and **lançon** (sandeel) for bass and bream in the surf. – **Cangrejo**, **camarón**, and **navaja** for sargos and other rocky‑bottom species. – Small **tirillas de calamar** for mixed bottom fishing in the rías and off headlands. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: – The outer edges of the **Ría de Vigo**, particularly the rocky points near the Cíes‑facing side and the surf zones of Patos and surrounding beaches. The flood tide at dawn here is drawing in bait and, with it, quality lubinas and active sargos. – The **Costa da Morte** headlands around **Muxía** and nearby beaches. When the swell is manageable, the broken, foamy water around the points is holding bass, and the cleaner pockets just off the rocks are producing fast caballa and jurel action on metals. As always, keep an eye on the sea state, respect local regulations, and take only what you need. The fish are there for those who match the conditions and fish the tide hard. 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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