『Bahamas Summer Bite: Glassy Flats and Deep Water Action Off Nassau』のカバーアート

Bahamas Summer Bite: Glassy Flats and Deep Water Action Off Nassau

Bahamas Summer Bite: Glassy Flats and Deep Water Action Off Nassau

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report. We woke up to a light easterly breeze sliding 10–15 knots across most of the islands, with a gentle 2–4 foot swell outside the reefs and calm, glassy water tucked in behind the cays. Skies are mostly fair with passing showers out on the banks. Air temps are running warm and sticky in the mid‑80s, and the barometer is steady – classic summer pattern that turns fish on when the tide starts moving. Tides today around Nassau and much of the central Bahamas are on a classic two‑high, two‑low cycle, with an early morning incoming pushing up over the flats and another good flood building through the afternoon. That morning rise is prime for bonefish tailing skinny, and the late‑day push sets up nicely for reef and channel action. Slack water is short, so you don’t wait long for current. Sun popped up early over the Atlantic and will drop behind the banks late this evening, giving you a long window of low‑light at both ends of the day. That first hour of light and the last hour before dark are when the bigger predators have been chewing hardest along the edges. On the **flats** around Andros, Exuma, and Abaco, the word is plenty of bonefish moving in loose schools, with a few bigger singles ghosting the skinny water. Anglers have been putting good numbers in the book on small tan and olive shrimp patterns, #4 to #6, and light crab flies hopped slow across sand pockets. Spin guys are doing well with 1/8‑ounce jigheads tipped with fresh shrimp or small Gulp! shrimp in natural colors. Keep casts short and soft; these fish are spooky on clear, calm mornings. Out on the **reefs and patchy bottom** off Nassau, Eleuthera, and the Berry Islands, mutton snapper, yellowtail, and mangrove snapper have been coming over the rail steady. Cut ballyhoo, squid, and fresh conch on knocker rigs dropped just up‑current of structure are producing. Chumming with cut glass minnows or ground bait is pulling yellowtail right into the slick. A few nice grouper still showing in deeper pockets; work a live pinfish or grunt down on heavier leader and be ready to turn their head fast. Farther offshore along the **drop‑off and blue water**, boats have been picking at mahi‑mahi, blackfin tuna, and the odd wahoo riding cooler pockets and color changes. Skirted ballyhoo in blue‑and‑white or pink‑and‑white, small tuna feathers, and Islanders over bait have been the hot trolling spread. Keep an eye out for birds, weedlines, and floating debris – most of the action has been tight to that structure. A vertical jig dropped around 200–400 feet is finding blackfin and the occasional deep snapper when the sun gets high. For **local hotspots**, keep an eye on: - The Tongue of the Ocean edges off Nassau and the Berry Islands for pelagics working rips and color breaks. - The Middle Bight and South Bight of Andros for bonefish on that rising tide, especially where darker turtle grass meets sand. If you’re land‑based, small docks and channels around New Providence and Grand Bahama have been giving up jacks, small mackerel, and snapper on pilchards, sardines, and silver spoons. Scale down your tackle and fish moving water – bridges and cuts on the tide change are your friends. Best overall baits right now: live pilchards, fresh ballyhoo, squid strips, conch, and shrimp. Best artificials: bucktail jigs in white or chartreuse, soft‑plastic paddletails on 1/4‑ounce heads, small silver spoons, and shrimp‑style flats flies. That’s the word from the islands. 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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