『Coastal Malaysia Fishing: West Coast Siakap and East Coast Grouper Action This Week』のカバーアート

Coastal Malaysia Fishing: West Coast Siakap and East Coast Grouper Action This Week

Coastal Malaysia Fishing: West Coast Siakap and East Coast Grouper Action This Week

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Name’s Artificial Lure here with your coastal Malaysia fishing rundown, straight from the Straits to the South China Sea. Along the **west coast** from Penang down to Port Klang, we’re sitting in the tail end of the southwest monsoon pattern: light to moderate southerly winds in the morning, building a bit after lunch, then easing again toward evening. Skies are partly cloudy with a few passing showers, but nothing that should chase you off the water if you keep an eye on the horizon. Humidity is heavy as usual, but seas are manageable inshore, around 0.5–1 m outside the islands and breakwaters. Sunrise along the west coast was just after 7, and sunset is around 7:30 this evening, so you’ve still got a nice **golden-hour window**. Tides today are running a **moderate semi‑diurnal** pattern: one higher high in the late morning and good moving water again in the late afternoon. Around Port Klang and Melaka, the flood has been pushing bait right up against the mangroves and rock walls an hour either side of the high; that’s when most of the better fish have come over the gunwale. Recent bites in the west have been solid for **siakap (barramundi)**, **gelama (croaker)**, and the usual **catfish and shovel-nose** in deeper mud channels. Local boatmen out of Kapar and Kuala Selangor report steady barra in the 1–3 kg class, mostly taken on live prawn and small mullet drifted along the mangrove edges. Soft-plastic paddle tails in natural baitfish colours, 3–4 inch, rigged on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, have outfished hardbaits when the water’s a bit stained. If you’re chasing **queenfish and trevally** around Penang Bridge and Pulau Jerejak, fast‑worked metal jigs (15–30 g) and chrome spoons have been the ticket, especially when you see bait sprayed on the surface. A few Spanish mackerel have popped up just outside the main shipping channel, taken on deep‑trolled diving minnows in blue‑silver patterns and small feathered trolling rigs. On the **east coast**, from Kuantan up through Terengganu and Kota Bharu, the South China Sea is treating the early‑riser crowd well. Mornings are the calmest, with light offshore breeze, glassy conditions in close, and a slight chop building toward midday. Afternoon thunderstorms are bubbling up inland, but most coastal spots get a good window till mid‑afternoon before the clouds really stack. Tides on the east side are a touch smaller today but still enough current around river mouths and rocky points. First light until about 9 a.m. has been the **prime bite**. Small boats off Kuantan and Dungun have reported **kerapu (grouper)** in the 1–2 kg range and **jenahak (golden snapper)** from reef patches in 10–20 m, mostly on cut squid and fresh fish strips. A few bigger fish have fallen to slow‑pitch jigs in the 40–80 g range, worked close to the bottom. Inshore around river mouths like Kuala Terengganu, there’s been good action on **senangin and small GTs** ambushing bait at the colour change where river water meets the sea. Here, your best bet is a size 2/0 circle hook with live prawn or small tamban, either free‑lined or under a light float, drifted naturally with the current. If you prefer artificials, 10–15 g casting jigs and small topwater stickbaits twitched along current seams have drawn plenty of strikes when the water’s clearer. For **shore anglers**, evening has been kind. Beach casters along Cherating and Pantai Batu Burok are picking up **threadfin, small rays, and occasional pomfret** using fresh prawn, squid, and cut selar on long‑cast rigs with 3–4 oz sinkers. Keep your leaders abrasion‑resistant; there’s still a bit of surf and plenty of hidden rubble. Hot‑spot wise, a couple of places to circle on the map: - **Kuala Selangor mangrove channels, west coast** – Work the last hour of the rising tide and first of the fall for siakap and mangrove jacks. Small live mullet and prawns are king; if you’re throwing lures, use shallow‑running minnows and prawn‑style soft plastics tight to structure. - **Inshore reefs off Kuantan (within 15–25 m dept Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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