『Gold Coast Winter Fishing: Tailor, Bream and Reef Action - Seaway to Broadwater』のカバーアート

Gold Coast Winter Fishing: Tailor, Bream and Reef Action - Seaway to Broadwater

Gold Coast Winter Fishing: Tailor, Bream and Reef Action - Seaway to Broadwater

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G’day crew, Artificial Lure here with your Gold Coast fishing wrap. We’ve got a classic winter pattern on the Coast right now: light offshore breeze early, cool mornings, and clear skies. The westerlies have been keeping the seas pretty flat in close, with just a bit of leftover swell on the open beaches. Overnight temps are cold enough for a beanie at dawn, but it’s warming up nicely by mid‑morning. Sunrise is around twenty past six, with sunset just before five, so your prime bite windows are those first and last couple of hours of light. Tides are running a fairly standard mid‑range cycle: a morning high pushing in through the Seaway, then draining out over the middle of the day, with another push back in late arvo. That flooding morning tide has been the key in the Broadwater and along the rock walls, while the run‑out is fishing better up around the river bends and drains. Inshore, the Seaway has been producing solid tailor, school jew and the odd snapper hugging the pipeline and north wall. Best bite has been the top of the tide into the first of the run‑out. Metal slugs around 20–40 g, white 5‑inch jerk shads on 3/8 to 1/2 oz jigheads, and soft vibes have been the standout artificials. For bait, pilchards, mullet strips and live yakka or pike are getting eaten quickly if you’re on the bait schools. The Broadwater’s holding good numbers of winter whiting, flathead and a few elbow‑slapper bream around the bridges, jetties and rock bars. Drift‑fishing the channels with paternoster rigs and small long‑shank hooks, loaded with live yabbies, bloodworms, or peeled prawn, is putting fish in the esky. On lures, 3‑inch paddle tails in natural colours and small blades hopped along the bottom are working well on the lizards. Up the Nerang and Coomera, those chilly mornings have the bream stacking deep on structure. Light leaders, tiny hardbodies, and 2‑inch grubs slowly wound past pontoons and rock edges are the go. Night sessions around the bridges with live herring or strip baits are finding better‑quality bream and the odd school jew lurking under the lights. Offshore, when the wind drops enough to duck out, the 18 and 24‑fathom reefs have been fishing nicely. Snapper, tuskfish and a few pearl perch are coming over the side, especially on the dawn change. Floating whole pilchards or squid back down the berley trail has been deadly, with 5–7‑inch soft plastics and micro‑jigs picking up the more active fish. There are still a few mackerel ghosts hanging about, but they’re patchy; focus more on snapper and reefies now. For beach fishos, the tailor run is ticking along the surf gutters from Burleigh up through Narrowneck and further north when the swell isn’t too big. Metal slugs, pilchard gangs and whole bonito baits in the deeper gutters at dusk have been the recipe. You’ll also find dart and the odd whiting mixed in on pippis and worms. Couple of hot spots to circle for this week: – The **Gold Coast Seaway north wall and pipeline** on the top of the morning tide for tailor, jew and the odd snapper. – The **Broadwater channels between Wavebreak and Crab Island** for flathead and whiting on the drift with yabbies and small plastics. Keep an eye on the wind shifts, fish those tide changes hard, and pack a mix of small natural‑coloured plastics, a few metals, and good fresh bait. That combo will see you right across most of the Coast’s options at the moment. 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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