『Early Summer Seabass on the Lisbon Coast: Tides, Lures, and the Sweet Spot at First Light』のカバーアート

Early Summer Seabass on the Lisbon Coast: Tides, Lures, and the Sweet Spot at First Light

Early Summer Seabass on the Lisbon Coast: Tides, Lures, and the Sweet Spot at First Light

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I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lisbon Coast fishing report. We’re fishing a calm early-summer pattern along the Cascais–Lisboa stretch, from Carcavelos up past Cabo Raso and down into the Tejo mouth. Tidewise, we’re working classic Atlantic semi-diurnals: an early morning low pushing into a mid-morning flood, then another ebb building late afternoon into evening. That incoming tide around first light has been the sweet spot on the open beaches, while the first part of the drop is turning on in the river and rocky points. Weather is settled: light to moderate northerlies, that typical “nortada,” keeping the air fresh but kicking up a bit of chop on exposed west-facing shores. Skies have been mostly clear to partly cloudy, with good visibility. Sunrise is around half past five, sunset just after nine, so there’s plenty of low-light fishing time to play with. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Along the surf beaches from Carcavelos to Guincho, folks have been picking up **robalo** (European seabass) in the 40–60 cm class, with the odd better fish pushing past 70 cm. Numbers aren’t crazy, but consistent: two to four decent bass per dedicated session has been realistic when you hit the tide right and keep moving. On the rocky ledges near Cascais and out towards Cabo Raso, **sargos** and **douradas** have been active on the flood, especially where there’s some whitewater and structure. Mixed bags of five to ten fish are common for bait anglers, mostly plate-sized, with the occasional better gilthead showing when the current eases. Inside the Tejo mouth and along the marinas, night sessions are producing smaller bass and the odd **corvina** for those soaking bait or working soft plastics slow and deep. No massive runs reported this week, but there’ve been some solid stories of one or two big hits per tide if you stay patient. Lure-wise, this has been a great week for **slim minnows** in natural sardine or anchovy patterns for the surf and rocky points, especially models that run just under the surface over shallow reefs. **Soft plastics** on 10–20 g jig heads in white, pearl, or olive are killing it around structure and in the river, particularly when you crawl them near the bottom. At night or in low light, a **black or dark topwater** or a noisy walker has been drawing out the better bass around the river mouth and calmer bays. For bait, classic is still king: **ragworm**, **lugworm**, and fresh **sardine strips** for bass and bream, with **crab** or **camarão** (shrimp) doing damage on the douradas. In the river and marinas, small **livebaits** or cut fish baits have been tempting the bigger fish, especially on the first push of the flood when the current isn’t too wild. If you’re looking for hot spots, two to highlight: - **Carcavelos Beach**: work the channels and sandbars on the rising tide at first light with minnows and soft plastics for bass. If the swell is gentle and the water slightly colored, your chances jump. - **Cabo Raso area**: for experienced rock anglers only, but when the sea is reasonable, the sargos and robalos patrol those whitewater edges hard on the flood. Time your session with a medium swell, safety first, and keep your gear streamlined. That’s your Lisbon Coast rundown from Artificial Lure. 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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