『Gulf Coast Dawn Bite: Barra and Jacks on the Early Tide』のカバーアート

Gulf Coast Dawn Bite: Barra and Jacks on the Early Tide

Gulf Coast Dawn Bite: Barra and Jacks on the Early Tide

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This is Artificial Lure with your Thailand Gulf Coast fishing report. Light southwest winds and patchy cloud cover made for decent conditions along the upper Gulf today, with air temps sitting in the low 30s Celsius and humidity high but manageable. Nearshore seas stayed under a meter, and that meant plenty of longtail and small boats slipped out at first light. Along the Chonburi–Pattaya side, local captains reported an early **high tide just after sunrise**, dropping through late morning before a modest push again mid‑afternoon. Over in Rayong and down toward Chanthaburi and Trat, the tide pattern was similar, but that first push moved a little earlier. The bite lined up best around the top and first of the falling water. Sunrise came just after 6, sunset just before 7, and the **prime window** has been that first hour after dawn and the last 90 minutes before dark. Midday has been slow and sweaty unless you’re working deeper channels. Inshore around piers, rock walls, and mangroves, anglers picked up good numbers of **barramundi, mangrove jack, and small groupers**. The barra bite was strongest on the evening tide around river mouths where brackish water meets the sea. Folks throwing **suspending minnows in natural baitfish colors**, 9–12 cm, and soft swimbaits on 1/4 to 3/8 oz heads found the most success. A slow, stop‑and‑go retrieve right along current seams was the ticket. On the flats and channel edges, there were scattered **threadfin and queenfish**, with the odd **golden trevally** mixed in. Metal jigs around 20–30 g, worked fast through breaking bait, drew the more aggressive hits, while small chrome casting spoons produced when the fish were picky. Fly anglers wading the sandbars near river mouths reported steady action on small Clouser‑style patterns in white and chartreuse. Offshore in the mid‑Gulf, boats that pushed a bit farther found **Spanish mackerel, longtail tuna, and the occasional cobia** hanging near color changes and floating debris. Trolled diving plugs in blue‑silver and green‑yellow, plus small skirted lures, picked off the mackerel and tuna. Live bait—especially **small squid and scad (platu)**—accounted for most of the cobia and better grouper. Best natural baits right now: - **Live shrimp** around mangroves and bridge pylons for mangrove jack and mixed reef species. - **Squid strips and cut sardine** on bottom rigs over reefs and wrecks for snapper and grouper. - **Live mullet or small tilapia** in the brackish stretches for big barramundi, fished under a float near structure. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - **Pattaya–Sattahip inshore line**: Work the rocky points, naval piers, and nearby reefs. Early and late, throw hardbaits and soft plastics for barra and jack; when the sun gets high, switch to bait on the bottom for snapper and grouper. - **Rayong to Mae Ramphueng and out toward Koh Samet**: Drift the reef edges and drop‑offs with metal jigs and bait for Spanish mackerel and reef fish. On calmer evenings, hit the inshore rocks and small harbors for a fun mixed bag on light tackle. Overall activity has been **fair to good**: lots of school‑size fish, with enough better ones in the mix to keep things interesting if you fish the tides and stay mobile. 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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