『Malaysia Coast Report: Monsoon Bite on Siakap, Snapper, and Tenggiri』のカバーアート

Malaysia Coast Report: Monsoon Bite on Siakap, Snapper, and Tenggiri

Malaysia Coast Report: Monsoon Bite on Siakap, Snapper, and Tenggiri

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coast report for Malaysia. Along the Straits of Malacca and east coast today, we’ve had typical inter‑monsoon style weather: hot, humid, light to moderate sea breeze in the afternoon, with clouds building and scattered showers inland. Coastal winds have been around 5–12 knots, mostly from the southwest on the west coast and more variable on the east. Seas are generally slight to moderate, so it’s comfortable for small boats if you keep an eye on those evening storms. Sun popped over the horizon just after 7 a.m. and slipped back down a little after 7:20 p.m., giving us long low‑light windows. Those first two hours after sunrise and the last two before sunset have been the prime bite, especially on the edges of the mangroves and around reefy headlands. Tides along the west coast around Klang and Port Dickson have been in a moderate range, with a morning incoming pushing bait tight to the shore, then a stronger drop this afternoon. Over on the east coast, around Kuala Terengganu and Kuantan, similar pattern: a nice flood through mid‑morning, then a steady ebb into evening. That moving water has been the key; slack tide has been predictably quiet. Inshore, anglers have been doing well on **siakap** (barramundi), **jenahak** (golden snapper), and **kaci** around structure and estuary mouths. Reports from local boatmen and tackle shops along Selangor and Melaka coasts say decent numbers of table‑size snapper and grunter, plus scattered grouper from the nearshore reefs and artificial structures. On the east coast, small to mid‑size **tenggiri** (narrow‑barred mackerel) and **cencaru** (torpedo scad) have been coming over the gunwales when the bait balls show on the sounder. For lures, keep it simple and “local style.” Best bets right now: - Small to medium **metal jigs** in 20–40 g, silver, green or pink for tenggiri and pelagics. Fast, erratic retrieve in mid‑water is doing the damage. - 9–12 cm **minnow plugs** and shallow cranks in natural baitfish or gold for siakap and mangrove jacks along the snags. - 3–4 inch **soft plastics** on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads, paddle tails in white or chartreuse, hopped along the bottom for snapper and grouper. For bait, the old favourites still rule: - Live or very fresh **tamban**, **selar**, and small squid are top tier for mackerel and bottom species. - Cut sardine or squid strips on a two‑hook paternoster will still fill the esky with grunter, snapper, and assorted reef fish when the lure bite slows. A couple of hot spots to consider if you’re heading out: First, the **Port Dickson nearshore reefs and FADs**. Work the early‑morning flood tide with small metals and sinking minnows around any visible buoys, FADs, or rough ground in 15–30 m. Watch your sounder for bait schools; once they stack, tenggiri and talang are usually not far behind. Second, the **Kuantan River mouth and adjacent coast**. On the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing, focus on the channel edges and sand bars with soft plastics and live bait. Siakap, mangrove jacks, and the odd grouper have been biting around structure, while those drifting a little further out to 10–20 m have found mixed reef species and the occasional mackerel when birds start working. Night sessions around lighted jetties and bridges have also produced good numbers of smaller pelagics and squid; bring the sabiki rigs and a small jig if you want fresh live bait on demand. 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 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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