『Cabo San Lucas Summer Peak: Marlin, Roosters, and Perfect Conditions』のカバーアート

Cabo San Lucas Summer Peak: Marlin, Roosters, and Perfect Conditions

Cabo San Lucas Summer Peak: Marlin, Roosters, and Perfect Conditions

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This is Artificial Lure with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report. Down here at Land’s End, summer patterns are in full swing. We’re sitting on a warm blue Pacific with sea temps generally in the high 70s to low 80s, light morning breeze and a bit more bump in the afternoon as the onshore wind picks up. Skies have been mostly clear to partly cloudy, with just enough chop later in the day to kick the bite along. Tide-wise, we’re working a moderate swing today around the full–to–waning moon phase. Think higher water pushing late morning and dropping through the afternoon. Early-morning incoming and the first part of that outgoing have been the sweet spots, especially tight to structure and along current edges. Sunrise is right around that 6 a.m. mark, with sunset close to 8 p.m., so you’ve got a long window. The best bites have been: - Inshore: first light to about 9:30 a.m. - Offshore: mid-morning once the sun’s up and the bait balls show, then again late afternoon if the wind doesn’t get too wild. Offshore, boats working the Pacific side off the Golden Gate and out toward the 1150 and 95 spots have been seeing solid striped marlin action with a few blue marlin mixed in. Dorado numbers are picking up, mostly schoolies with the occasional better bull. Tuna have been hit-or-miss, but when they’re in, it’s footballs to 40–60 pounds on the temp breaks. Inshore along the Cabo arches, the Lighthouse, and up toward Migrino, the roosterfish bite has been classic early-summer: fish cruising tight to the beach harassing sardina schools. Sierra are thinning but still around in pockets, plus jack crevalle and some decent snapper around the rocks and pinnacles. Productive counts from local charter docks this week have been a handful of marlin per boat on good days, plus dorado for the table, and mixed inshore bags of roosters, jacks, and snappers. Slow days still usually mean at least a couple of solid hookups if you stick with it and work the structure. For lures offshore, pull a spread of medium-size skirted trolling lures in bright pink-and-white, blue-and-white, and guacamaya colors for marlin and dorado. Small to medium feathers and cedar plugs are still the go-to for tuna when they show. Add a couple of rigged ballyhoo or caballito in the pattern if you can get them—billfish love a well-swum natural bait. Inshore, live bait is king. Sardina and caballito slow-trolled or drifted near the surf line will draw roosters and jacks. For artificials, throw 2–4 oz surface poppers in blue, bone, or hot orange, and metal spoons or stickbaits when the sun is high and fish are a bit deeper. Don’t be afraid to fish heavier leader for roosters and jacks; they’re not shy in the churned-up water. A couple of current hot spots to focus on: - The **Lighthouse to Migrino stretch** on the Pacific side: work just outside the breakers at first light for roosters and jacks, then slide a bit deeper for snappers once the sun is up. - The **Golden Gate Bank**: excellent for marlin and occasional tuna when the current stacks up bait; run a clean spread and watch the temp and bird life. That’s your Cabo San Lucas fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on-the-water updates and local insight. 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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