『Dubai Evening Bite: Shamal Winds and Prime Dawn Fishing on the Coast』のカバーアート

Dubai Evening Bite: Shamal Winds and Prime Dawn Fishing on the Coast

Dubai Evening Bite: Shamal Winds and Prime Dawn Fishing on the Coast

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Artificial Lure here with your Dubai fishing report. Light shamal breeze over the city this evening, northwest 8–12 knots along the coast, easing overnight. Air temps are sitting around 34–36°C at sunset, dropping to high 20s after dark. Humidity is moderate, so it’s warm but fishable, especially once the sun is off the water. Along the Jumeirah and Umm Suqeim stretch, today’s high tide peaked mid‑afternoon, with the ebb running into evening and another push of water expected closer to the early‑morning hours. Around Dubai Creek and Deira side, that moving water is key; the bite’s been noticeably better on the first two hours of the incoming. Sun slipped behind the skyline not long ago, with first light tomorrow coming early, just after 5:30 a.m. Those dawn and dusk windows are your prime times right now, especially with the heat pushing the bigger fish to feed low light and after dark. Offshore reports out of Jebel Ali and Dubai Offshore Sailing Club boats this past week have been solid. Skippers are talking about decent **queenfish**, scattered **kingfish**, small **tuna**, and the odd **cobia** on the 10–20 mile line. Numbers aren’t crazy, but a handful of quality fish per trip is realistic when you work the birds and current lines. Inshore, guys soaking bait around rocks and breakwaters — especially near the Jumeirah piers and the Palm fronds — have been finding **hamour**, **safì**, and **small sheri**. Night sessions on the rock walls are producing steady table fish if you’re patient. Out toward Jebel Ali’s industrial walls and the artificial reefs, boats are picking up **hamour** and **farsh** on bottom rigs, along with plenty of smaller reef species. Fish activity pattern right now: - Early morning: surface action from queenfish and small trevally smashing bait balls just outside the surf line and around channel markers. - Midday: slower, fish dropping deeper; better for bottom fishing hamour and other reef fish. - Evening into night: good for hamour creeping up the structure, and for kings and cobia cruising edges if you’re trolling or drifting baits. Best **lures** to carry: - 20–40 g metal jigs and casting spoons in silver/green or blue for queenfish and trevally from shore or boat. - Shallow to medium‑diving minnows in natural sardine patterns for trolling kings just off the drop‑offs. - 4–6 inch soft plastics on 1/2–1 oz jig heads in white or pearl for working along rock walls and over reef edges. Best **bait**: - Fresh sardine or squid strips on a simple bottom rig for hamour and reef fish. - Whole or fillet sardine slow‑trolled or drifted for kingfish and cobia. - Small live baitfish (when you can get them) are deadly around markers and reef corners. A couple of current hot spots to try: - **Umm Suqeim / Jumeirah breakwaters**: fish the edges at first light with metals for queenfish and trevally; after dark, drop bait down the rocks for hamour. - **Jebel Ali area**: the industrial walls and nearby artificial structure; bottom fish with squid or sardine in the evening, and troll diving plugs just outside the structure line at sunrise for kings. Tackle tip: scale down leaders for finicky queenies in the clear water — 25–30 lb fluorocarbon — but bump up to 40–60 lb around heavy structure where hamour will try to reef you instantly. That’s it from me, Artificial Lure, your local angling addict in Dubai. 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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