『Gold Coast Winter: Tailor, Flathead & Bream on the Seaway and Nerang Run』のカバーアート

Gold Coast Winter: Tailor, Flathead & Bream on the Seaway and Nerang Run

Gold Coast Winter: Tailor, Flathead & Bream on the Seaway and Nerang Run

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G’day, Artificial Lure here with your Gold Coast fishing report. Light winter westerlies and a cool, clear morning made for classic inshore conditions today, with the breeze freshening onshore by mid‑arvo. Local forecasts from the Bureau of Meteorology have temps sitting in the mid‑teens at dawn, nudging low‑20s by lunchtime under mostly sunny skies. Sunrise was around twenty past six, with sunset a touch before five. According to tide tables for the Seaway, we had an early morning high pushing in around sunrise, then a run‑out through the late morning and a second high into the evening. That first push of clean ocean water fired things up around the bar and north wall; the late arvo run‑in is the next prime bite window. Reports from Seaway regulars this week mention solid numbers of tailor, school jew, and the odd big flathead along the edges of the channel and rock walls. A few boats drifting live yakka and pike have picked up jewies into the low‑meter range, with plenty of rats mixed in. Land‑based anglers spinning metals off the north wall have been into chopper tailor in small packs, with the better fish right on first light. Up the Nerang and Coomera, local estuary fishos are finding good winter flathead on the run‑out, plus bream stacked on the rock bars and pontoons. Several bait shops around Southport and Labrador report consistent feeds of pan‑size bream and the odd 70‑plus lizard from the deeper bends, especially when there’s a bit of tide and just enough colour in the water. For lures, the standout has been small soft plastics in the 3–4 inch range on light jigheads for flathead and school jew, worked along drop‑offs and the edges of sandbanks. In the Seaway itself, 20–40 gram chrome slugs and small stickbaits have been doing damage on tailor when they’re pushing bait to the surface. At night, soft vibes and small paddle‑tails hopped close to the bottom are tempting the jew. If you’re soaking bait, you can’t beat live mullet or herring for jew and big flathead around the Seaway and bridge pylons. For bream, local shop owners say peeled prawn, mullet gut, and chicken soaked in tuna oil are getting whacked on the top of the tide around pontoons and rock walls. A simple running sinker rig is all you need. Couple of hotspots to circle: First, the **Gold Coast Seaway north wall and nearby eddies**. Fish the first of the run‑in or last of the run‑out with plastics or live baits for tailor, jew, and big flathead. Keep an eye on swell and current and stay safe on the rocks. Second, the **Nerang River rock bars and bridges around Southport**. Work the deeper edges on the run‑out with vibes or lightly weighted plastics for flathead and bream, and sit a live bait in the shadow lines after dark for a shot at a jew. Plan your session around those tide changes, fish light and natural in the clear water, and you’re a good chance of bending a rod. 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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