『Gold Coast Winter Fishing: Flathead and Bream on the Fall - Light Conditions Perfect』のカバーアート

Gold Coast Winter Fishing: Flathead and Bream on the Fall - Light Conditions Perfect

Gold Coast Winter Fishing: Flathead and Bream on the Fall - Light Conditions Perfect

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gold Coast fishing report. Light winter pattern on the Coast right now: cool, clear and mostly calm. The morning started crisp with light westerlies, swinging to a gentle seabreeze through the day. Skies have been mostly clear with just a bit of high cloud and great water clarity inshore. Temps are mild enough for a comfortable session in a jumper at dawn, T‑shirt by mid‑morning. On the tide front, we’ve had a solid morning high pushing good water over the banks, easing into a mid‑arvo run‑out. That falling tide has been the pick for most of the bite, especially around the Seaway and the pinch points up the Nerang and Coomera. Low is later this arvo, then a smaller evening push back in. Sunrise came early over the ocean, with first light giving about an hour of prime topwater time. Sunset will drop fast this evening, so plan to be in position that last 60–90 minutes of light; that’s when the jewies and bigger flathead have been waking up. Inshore, the Broadwater and lower Nerang have been fishing well. Local crews report good numbers of **flathead**, mostly legal schoolies with the odd 70–80 cm fish off the edges of the channels and yabby banks. Best results have come from 3–4 inch paddle‑tail soft plastics in natural colours, worked along the drop‑offs, plus lightly weighted white pilchards and live herring. There are still some **bream** stacking on rock walls, bridge pylons and marinas. Small prawn‑style plastics, hardbody cranks and unweighted strip baits or yabbies have been doing damage, especially around the top of the tide and first of the run‑out. Expect plenty of fish in the 25–30 cm range, with the odd bigger model mixed in. Around the Seaway, there’s been intermittent **tailor** and **bonito** activity on the surface when the bait pushes in. Metal slugs around 20–40 g, fast‑burned through the bust‑ups, are the go. Live baits on the pipeline and along the north wall are accounting for the better **mulloway**; think live pike, slimey mackerel or mullet pinned on a running sinker rig, timed for the change of tide. Offshore, when the wind and swell line up, boats heading to the 18s and 24s have found mixed **snapper**, **pearlys** and the odd **trag** on the reefs. Soft plastic jerkshads in pink or nuclear chicken, plus pilchard and squid baits on paternoster rigs, have put some nice feeds in the box. It’s not on fire, but a patient drift over good shows is producing. A couple of hot spots to circle for the next day or two: • **Gold Coast Seaway – north wall and pipeline**: Focus on the last of the run‑in and first of the run‑out for jewies, tailor and a mixed bag of pelagics when the bait is there. • **Broadwater channel edges from Crab Island down towards Sundale Bridge**: Classic winter flathead country; work soft plastics and vibes along the 2–5 m edges and you should find fish. Best all‑round lures right now: 3–4 inch paddle‑tails in natural baitfish colours, 65–90 mm shallow crankbaits for bream and flathead in the creeks, 20–40 g metal slugs for tailor and bonito, and 5–7 inch jerkshads for offshore reef work. For bait fishos, you can’t go past live herring, mullet, pike, plus yabbies, prawns, pillies and squid. That’s the wrap from Artificial Lure on the Gold Coast. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t 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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