『Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today

Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from one of Asia's most biodiverse marine fishing destinations. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on Malaysia's exceptional coastal waters—home to over 1,979 marine species including sailfish, marlin, tuna, and trevally—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI 日次
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  • Coastal Malaysia Evening Bite: West Coast Breakwaters and East Coast Reefs Heat Up
    2026/06/09
    Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your coastal Malaysia fishing report. Along the west coast, from Port Klang down to Port Dickson, the afternoon brought hot, humid weather with light onshore breeze, scattered clouds, and seas running mostly calm to slight. Air temps sat in the low 30s, sea around 29–30 degrees. Sunrise was roughly around 7 this morning with sunset near 7:30 this evening, giving a solid daylight window for both inshore and nearshore work. Tides along the Straits were on a moderate cycle today: a decent morning flood, slack around midday, then an evening ebb that really switched on the bite along mangroves, river mouths, and rock walls. On the east coast, from Kuantan up through Terengganu and into the islands like Redang and Perhentian, seas were a bit livelier offshore but still fishable, with similar heat and a light to moderate breeze. The evening falling tide there set up nicely around reef edges and current breaks. Action-wise, the inshore scene has been lively. Around Klang, Carey Island, and Sungai Besar, local boys reported steady **siakap** and **jenahak** on the morning flood around structure and drop‑offs, with a mix of **gelama** and **sembilang** keeping rods bent for those soaking bait on the bottom. Over at Port Dickson’s stone breakwaters and the PD marina area, **cencaru**, **kembung**, and the odd **tenggiri kecil** showed up chasing bait schools just before sunset. On the east coast, near Kuala Terengganu and out toward artificial reefs, boats picking their weather windows have hit good numbers of **kerapu**, **jenahak**, and **ebek**, plus some **tenggiri** and **cupak** on jigs and live bait. Around the island reefs, small to mid‑size **GT** and **cudas** have been smashing surface lures during the low‑light hours. For lures, stick to natural baitfish profiles. Inshore, 3–4 inch soft plastics in white, anchovy, or green‑back on 7–14 gram jigheads are doing damage on siakap and mangrove jack. Shallow‑running minnows and small metal spoons are working well for pelagics like cencaru and kembung along current lines. Offshore, 40–80 gram slow jigs in pink, blue, and silver have been hot on jenahak, kerapu, and ebek when worked near the bottom with a slow lift‑and‑fall rhythm. Poppers and stickbaits in the 80–120 mm range shine for GT and tenggiri in the early morning and late evening chop. If you’re a bait angler, keep it simple and fresh: **live tamban**, **selar**, and **bilis** are gold for tenggiri, ebek, and big siakap. Fresh squid strips and small prawns score consistent bites from gelama, sembilang, and plate‑size snapper. Around structure at night, live or cut prawns fished just off the bottom can tempt better‑grade siakap and MJ. A couple of hot spots to mark down: First, the **Port Dickson stone breakwaters and nearby reef patches** – good mixed bag of cencaru, kembung, and the odd tenggiri on metals and small jigs during the evening run‑out, with bottom rigs picking up snapper and grouper. Second, the **Kuala Terengganu artificial reefs and nearby wrecks** – prime territory for jenahak, kerapu, ebek, and tenggiri on slow jigs and live tamban when the current is moving but not ripping. Time your trip around that changing tide and you’re in the game. That’s the coastal Malaysia fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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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    4 分
  • Malaysian Coast Bite Report: East Side Heat, Pelagics Running Hot at Dawn and Dusk
    2026/06/06
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your saltwater rundown for the Malaysian coast. Along most of the west and east coasts today we’ve had light to moderate seas, with the east coast a bit livelier under the southwest monsoon pattern. Afternoon winds off Terengganu and Pahang were in that 10–15 knot range, enough chop to put some life in the water but still safe for small boats hugging the shore. Skies have been partly cloudy with on‑and‑off showers, typical for this time of year, and temps sitting hot and sticky in the low 30s. Sunrise came in just after 7 a.m. for the west coast and a touch earlier on the east; sunset is landing around 7:20–7:30 p.m. That gives us solid low‑light windows at first light and again in the last hour before dark. Fish have been most active in those dawn and dusk slots, with a clear slowdown in the late morning heat, then a second wind when the sea breeze kicks in mid‑afternoon. Tides along the east coast have been running a decent mid‑range, with a useful push on the incoming. The bite has lined up best in the two hours leading into high tide, especially around river mouths and sandbars. On the west coast—Port Klang down to Melaka—the murkier water means you want that moving tide even more; slack water there has been pretty dead. Recent catches from local boats off Kuala Terengganu and Kuantan have been encouraging. Anglers have reported good numbers of **pelagics**: small to mid‑size tenggiri (narrow‑barred mackerel), some todak (needlefish), and plenty of tamban and selar (baitfish) schooling tight. Around the reefs and nearshore structure, guys are boating kerisi (threadfin bream), merah (snapper), jenahak (golden snapper), and the odd kerapu (grouper). Nothing crazy in size, but consistent table fish, especially for those who stick through the tide changes. Artificial‑wise, this has been a solid week for **metal jigs** in the 20–60 g range worked mid‑water over bait schools. Chrome, sardine and pink backs are doing damage on tenggiri and todak. For casting from shore and small boats, slim minnow plugs and sinking stickbaits in natural green/blue are getting followed and hit when there’s a bit of chop. At night, small glow jigs and micro metals around lighted jetties are very effective on selar and kembung. If you’re a bait angler, you can’t go wrong with **live tamban or selar** slow‑trolled or drifted behind the boat for tenggiri and bigger predators. On the bottom, squid strips and fresh prawn are accounting for most of the snapper and grouper. In the estuaries and mangrove edges, live prawns and small mullet fished near structure have been pulling siakap (barramundi) and mangrove jack when the water’s moving and a bit stained. A couple of hot spots to consider: - **Kuala Terengganu – Redang / Bidong area**: Work the drop‑offs and reef edges early morning on the incoming tide with slow‑pitch jigs and small metals. Good chance at tenggiri, snapper, and reef species if you stick to the current lines and bait marks. - **Kuantan – Beserah / Cherating stretch**: Nearshore reefs and rough ground in 10–30 m have been giving up a nice mix of kerisi, jenahak, and occasional kerapu. Bottom rigs with squid or prawn during the tide swing, then switch to jigs when you mark mid‑water bait. Closer to the cities, Port Klang area anglers are still finding action around the shipping lanes and artificial structure, but water clarity is up and down with the rain. Bright, noisy lures and strong‑scented bait help there. Down south around Johor’s east coast, inshore reefs and island channels are holding good numbers of small pelagics—perfect if you’re just looking for steady bites and fresh dinner. That’s the coastal rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide change and bite 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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    4 分
  • Malaysia's Southwest Monsoon: Siakap, Mangrove Jack, and Dawn Tide Action
    2026/06/22
    This is Artificial Lure with your coastal Malaysia fishing report. Along the west coast from Port Klang down to Port Dickson, and over on the east side from Kuantan to Kuala Terengganu, we’re sitting on light to moderate southwest monsoon conditions. Winds are generally 8–15 knots from the southwest, with a slight chop in the afternoons and calmer pockets at first light and near dusk. Daytime temps are sitting around 30–32°C, with humid, partly cloudy skies and the usual chance of short evening showers along the coast. Tides today are running in a typical mixed semidiurnal pattern. Expect a pre‑dawn low, building into a decent mid‑morning high, then dropping off again mid‑afternoon with a smaller evening push. That early flood tide after first light and the last hour of the afternoon ebb have been the most productive windows. Sunrise is around 7:00 am for the west coast and a touch earlier on the east, with sunset just after 7:20 pm. The bite has lined up nicely with those low‑light periods, especially where current edges meet structure. Inshore around mangroves and river mouths, anglers have been reporting good numbers of **siakap (barramundi)** and **mangrove jack**, with some solid 2–4 kg fish mixed in. Recent chatter from Klang and Carey Island area mentions small but steady sessions: half a dozen siakap in the 1–2 kg range on the morning tide, plus the odd larger fish that busted leaders near the snags. Along sandy beaches and nearshore reefs, **gelama**, **jenahak (golden snapper)**, and **senangin (threadfin)** have been coming over the gunwale for bottom‑fishing crews. Boat anglers off Port Dickson and Morib are talking about 10–20 mixed fish per short trip when the current is not ripping too hard. On the east coast, near Kuantan and Cherating, light‑tackle jigging with 20–40 g metal jigs has picked up **kerapu (grouper)** and small **tenggiri (mackerel)** when the water cleans up. Best lures right now: - For siakap and MJ in the mangroves: shallow‑running **minnows in natural baitfish patterns**, 3–5 inch **paddle‑tail soft plastics** on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, and small **topwater walkers** at first light. Work them tight to structure, slow and deliberate. - For nearshore pelagics: slim **metal jigs** in silver or sardine patterns, worked fast through bait schools and current lines. Small **casting spoons** also doing damage when birds are working. - For reef and rubble: slow‑pitch or micro jigs in pink, gold, or blue, hopped just off the bottom. Best baits: - **Live prawn** and **live mullet or tamban** are still king for siakap and MJ. Rig them on a light fluorocarbon leader and let them swim naturally along the edge of the mangroves. - For bottom fishing, **squid strips**, **sardine cut bait**, and **cockle or clam meat** are getting consistent bites from gelama, jenahak, and assorted reef species. - On the east coast, small live tamban slow‑trolled or drifted have tempted the tenggiri and larger kerapu. A couple of hot spots to keep an eye on: - **Pulau Angsa and the surrounding reefs** off Kuala Selangor: good mixed bottom fishing with a chance at jenahak and kerapu on the slower parts of the tide. - The **rocky patches and reefy areas off Tanjung Tuan, Port Dickson**: productive for bottom species and the occasional pelagic run‑through, especially on the morning flood. Overall, fish activity has been better when the water has some colour but not full “teh tarik.” If the water is too muddy after rain, slide a little further out to cleaner edges or focus on deeper structure where visibility is slightly better. That’s your coastal Malaysia fishing roundup from Artificial Lure. 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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    4 分
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