『Lisbon Coast Early Summer: Bass on the Flood, Topwater at Dawn』のカバーアート

Lisbon Coast Early Summer: Bass on the Flood, Topwater at Dawn

Lisbon Coast Early Summer: Bass on the Flood, Topwater at Dawn

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lisbon Coast fishing report. Along our stretch from Cascais to Cabo Espichel we’re sitting under a stable early‑summer pattern: light northerly “nortada” in the afternoon, calmer mornings, and small to moderate Atlantic swell. Skies have been mostly clear with just enough breeze to ruffle the surface, perfect for lure work close to shore. Tides around Lisbon today run a **medium range**, with a low just before first light and a pushing flood through the early morning, then another low late afternoon into evening. That means the classic windows are on: first couple of hours of the flood after sunrise, and again the last light as the tide turns. Sunrise is just after 6 a.m., sunset close to 9 p.m., so you’ve got long sessions to play that golden light. Dawn and dusk have been the money times for both surf and rocks. Fish activity has picked up nicely in the last few days. Local boats and shore anglers are reporting: - Good numbers of **robalo (European sea bass)** on the rocky points and at the river mouths, mostly schoolies with the odd better fish over 3–4 kg. - Consistent **sargos and bogas** on the rougher ground and breakwaters, especially on the flood. - A few **douradas** showing on the cleaner sand patches and estuary edges. - Offshore and from kayaks, scattered **bonitos and small pelagics** on the occasional baitball when the nortada eases. Best producers: - For bass from shore, slim **topwaters and stickbaits** at dawn, then switching to **14–18 cm minnows and shallow divers** once the sun is up. Natural baitfish colours – sardine, mackerel, and ayu – are outfishing the bright stuff. - On rougher water and whitewater pockets, **metal jigs and casting spoons** in the 20–40 g range are finding fish when they’re not chasing on top. - Bait anglers are doing well with **fresh sardine strips**, **mackerel**, or **americano and Korean worm** on fine fluorocarbon for sargos and dourada. A small sliding sinker and long leader has been key in the clearer water. A couple of hotspots to put on your short list: - **Carcavelos to Parede**: The reefy patches and channels along this beach have been giving steady bass and sargos on the morning flood. Work topwater over the shallow reefs, then bounce minnows and soft plastics along the edges as the tide fills. - **Cabo Raso and the Cascais cliffs**: Classic Lisbon rock fishing. When the swell is moderate and the wind not too strong, bass patrol tight to the foam lines here. Long casts with heavy minnows and jigs are putting fish on the deck, but watch the sea and don’t push the ledges on bigger sets. Inside the **Tagus mouth**, the drop‑offs and channel edges are holding mixed fish – smaller bass, palmeta, and some dourada. Light spinning with 7–10 cm minnows or Carolina‑rigged worms is a fun option when the ocean’s too rough. If you’re heading out tonight into first light, I’d pack: - One rod rigged with a walking topwater, - One with a 15–20 g minnow in sardine or ghost, - A few 30 g metals, - And, if you bait fish, a box of fresh sardine and some worms plus size 2–1/0 hooks and 0.26–0.33 fluoro. Play the tide, fish the low light hard, and keep an eye on that nortada: when it lays down, the coast can come alive fast. 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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