Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your reef report from out around the **Great Barrier Reef**. Out wide today the weather’s been classic dry‑season stuff: light E/SE trade winds early, 10–15 knots most of the morning, building a touch after lunch, with seas around a metre and a half on the outer reef and much calmer in the lee of the bommies. Overnight temps have been cool but the days are sitting in the mid‑20s, with high cloud drifting through but plenty of sun on the water. Sunrise was just after 6:30 this morning along the reef line, with sunset due a bit before 6 this evening, giving a nice compact bite window around dawn and again late arvo. The reef edges and pressure points fired right on first light, then tapered off mid‑morning before picking up again on the run‑out tide. Tides on the mid‑reef are running a modest high just after dawn, falling through late morning to a mid‑arvo low, then pushing back in around sunset. That dropping water really switched the pelagics on along the drop‑offs and current lines. Fishing’s been solid rather than crazy, but the quality is there. Boats working the outer edges have put good numbers of **coral trout**, **redthroat emperor**, and a mix of **spangled** and **red emperor** in the eski, plus the odd **nannygai** from the deeper rubble patches. Out wider on the blue line, trolling has produced **Spanish mackerel**, **yellowfin tuna**, and a few **wahoo** on the faster stretches. On the lures, reef casting has been all about medium stickbaits and poppers in natural fusilier and pilchard colours, with 40–80 gram sinking stickbaits doing the damage over the ledges. Soft plastics in the 5–7 inch range on 1–2 ounce jigheads, in pink, white, and nuclear chicken patterns, have been deadly on trout and redthroat in 20–35 metres. For the pelagics, hardbody minnows running 4–8 metres, plus high‑speed metal slices, have been the better options. If you prefer bait, the standouts are still **fresh squid**, **pillies**, and cut **strip baits** from mullet or tuna. Lightly weighted baits drifted back into the pressure edges have been nailed quickly when the current’s right. On the deeper rubble, paternoster rigs with squid or fish strips are pulling the better reds. Fish activity has lined up tight to the low‑light periods. Topwater for GTs and Spaniards around sunrise has been short but intense; once the sun gets up, dropping plastics and baits tight to structure has been the key. Midday has been slower and a good time to move, sound around, and set up for the afternoon push. Couple of **hot spots** to keep in mind: - The pressure edges and current lines off the **outer reefs east of Cairns and Port Douglas**, where the clean blue water first hits the wall – great for mackerel, tuna, and wahoo when the run‑out’s pushing. - The lagoon and bommie country on the **middle reef sections off Townsville and the Whitsundays**, especially any isolated pinnacles in 20–30 metres – prime ground for coral trout, redthroat, and spangos. That’s the wrap from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to hit subscribe so you never miss a reef 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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