『Hokkaido Early Summer: Rainy Season Bite, Long Days, and Harbor Structure Gold』のカバーアート

Hokkaido Early Summer: Rainy Season Bite, Long Days, and Harbor Structure Gold

Hokkaido Early Summer: Rainy Season Bite, Long Days, and Harbor Structure Gold

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Artificial Lure here with your Hokkaido fishing report. Up here the rainy season is creeping in, and today most of Hokkaido is sitting under broken clouds with cool, early-summer air. Along the Pacific side from Kushiro to Muroran it’s breezy and damp, with light on‑and‑off showers and daytime temps in the mid to high teens Celsius. The Sea of Japan side around Otaru and Ishikari is a touch calmer, with scattered clouds and a lighter northwest wind. Sunrise was just after 3:50 a.m., sunset just before 7:20 p.m., giving us a long fishing window and a solid evening bite. Tides around Ishikari Bay and Otaru are running moderate: a decent morning high, a lazy midday low, then another push toward dark. Around Muroran and Tomakomai, that afternoon flood is lining up nicely with sunset, and that’s been triggering good activity in the top five meters of the water column. River mouths on both coasts are still carrying snowmelt and recent rain, so water is cool and slightly stained, which the trout and sea‑run fish are loving. Nearshore reports this week have been encouraging. From Otaru to Yoichi, small boats and shore casters have been picking up solid numbers of rockfish, greenling, and decent‑sized flounder, with the occasional surprise sea bass mixing in at dusk. Around Tomakomai and Muroran, boats working structure with metal jigs and soft plastics have been boxing good hauls of rockfish and cod, with some anglers reporting double‑digit catches on the better tides. Along the Kushiro and Nemuro coasts, surf anglers have been seeing reasonable numbers of flatfish and the odd sea‑run char near river mouths. Fish activity has been best at first light and again in the last 90 minutes before dark. Midday has been slower unless you’re fishing deeper rock or harbor structure. In the rivers of central and eastern Hokkaido, anglers swinging small spoons and minnows have been into good numbers of rainbow and white‑spotted char, especially under overcast skies. For lures, think small and natural. In the harbors, 7–14 g metal jigs in blue‑silver or pink‑silver, lightly hopped along bottom, have been the go‑to for rockfish and flounder. Soft plastics on 5–10 g jigheads in brown, green, or clear with silver flake are killing it along wall edges and tetrapods. For sea bass and any roaming salmonids near river mouths, slim minnows in sardine or ayu patterns, worked with a stop‑and‑go retrieve, have been producing. If you prefer bait, fresh shirauo or small sardine strips for rockfish and cod, and ragworm or salted clam for flounder and other bottom fish, are your best bet. Two hot spots to circle for the next few days: 1. Ishikari Bay / Otaru Harbor: Long breakwaters and inner harbor walls are holding mixed rockfish, greenling, and flounder. Focus on the outer edges during the evening flood tide with small jigs, and switch to bait if the wind chops up the surface. 2. Muroran West Harbor and surrounding headlands: Good structure, steady current, and that nice afternoon tide. Work metal jigs near bottom for cod and rockfish, then swap to minnows and topwaters at dusk in case sea bass push bait into the harbor. If you’re heading out tonight, bring a light jacket for the sea breeze, a headlamp for those long northern evenings, and scale down your tackle for more bites in the clear water. 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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