『Early Summer Fire: Muscat to Quriyat – Tuna, Trevally, and Evening Floods』のカバーアート

Early Summer Fire: Muscat to Quriyat – Tuna, Trevally, and Evening Floods

Early Summer Fire: Muscat to Quriyat – Tuna, Trevally, and Evening Floods

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This is Artificial Lure with your Oman coast fishing report. Along the Muscat–Quriyat stretch, we’ve had classic early summer conditions: light to moderate afternoon sea breeze, bumpier by late day, then easing into a calm, humid night. Offshore winds have stayed generally light, so the inshore waters are reasonably clear with a bit of swell rolling in from the east. Tides along the central coast are running a medium cycle, with a pre‑dawn high that drops through the morning, then a solid afternoon push back in. That evening flood has been the money window: bait pushing tight to shore, predators sliding in behind them. Sunrise came early and fast, and the sun has been brutal by midmorning, so most serious action is happening first light and last light, with a little flurry again on the evening high. Skippers working 20–40 meters off Muscat and Seeb have reported steady numbers of yellowfin and longtail tuna schooling under birds. They’ve been taking small metal jigs, 20–40 grams, dropped into the bust‑ups and ripped back fast, as well as compact stickbaits in natural sardine patterns. A few sailfish have shown farther out, mostly to boats slow‑trolling ballyhoo or medium skirted lures in pink–blue and purple–black. Closer in, the rocks and reefy points around Qantab, Yiti, and Bandar Jissah have produced good mixed bags. Anglers soaking fresh prawn and cut sardine on the bottom have picked up emperor, sheri, and the odd hamour. The hamour bite has been better right on the turn of the tide, especially where there’s a bit of current wrapping around structure. Use heavier leader; they’re diving straight for the rocks. Spinning from the stones at first light has been lively. Queenfish, small GTs, and some angry brassie trevally have smashed mid‑size surface lures and 30–60 gram casting metals. Think white or chrome spoons, or stickbaits in bone and silver. Work them fast and erratic. If the fish are following but not committing, swap to a smaller profile and add a short length of fluorocarbon leader. Down toward Quriyat and Tiwi, the surf has carried a bit more energy, but that’s helped the shore bite. Beach casters have been picking up threadfin, small tuna, and the occasional kingfish on long casts with metal lures and live bait rigs. Fresh sardine, mullet, or small live baitfish have outfished frozen by a long shot. Night sessions are producing better numbers, especially a couple of hours before and after the evening high. For bait, fresh is king: locally caught sardine and squid are hard to beat. Squid strips on a simple running rig are accounting for plenty of table fish over the sand. Around reef and rock, live bait slow‑trolled or drifted just off the bottom has turned up some solid hamour and the odd cobia shadowing the schools. Best artificial picks right now: - Medium stickbaits and poppers in natural baitfish colors for trevally and queenfish. - Slim metal jigs and casting spoons, 20–60 grams, in chrome, blue, and green for tuna and kingfish. - Soft plastics on jigheads hopped near the bottom for emperor and smaller reef species when the bite gets fussy. A couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: the headlands and reefs around Bandar Jissah and Yiti, especially on the evening flood, and the beaches just north of Quriyat where the deeper gutters sit close to shore. Work those current lines and any visible bait activity; if you see birds, get there fast. That’s it from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next 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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