『Monsoon Bite: Trevally and Grouper Heat Up Vietnam's Central Coast』のカバーアート

Monsoon Bite: Trevally and Grouper Heat Up Vietnam's Central Coast

Monsoon Bite: Trevally and Grouper Heat Up Vietnam's Central Coast

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This is Artificial Lure checking in with your coastal Vietnam fishing report. Along most of the central and southern coast today the weather settled into a classic southwest monsoon pattern: light morning breeze, building to 10–15 knots by afternoon, with scattered showers offshore. Air temps have been running mid‑20s to low‑30s Celsius, humidity thick, and a bit of haze on the horizon. Seas outside the islands are a gentle chop, but still very fishable for inshore boats hugging the lee side of headlands and reefs. Sunrise has been early, just after 5 a.m. local, with sunset a little after 6:30 p.m. That gives a tight but productive low‑light window. The best action has been in the dawn hour and again in the last 90 minutes of light, especially on moving tide. Local tide charts along the south‑central coast show a medium early‑morning high sliding to a late‑morning fall, then a smaller evening push. That dropping mid‑morning tide has really concentrated bait around river mouths and reef edges. Inshore, the usual suspects have been chewing. Near Nha Trang and down toward Phan Rang, boats working 10–25 meters have been getting good numbers of small to mid‑size trevally, queenfish, and the odd mackerel. A few boats reported half‑day totals of a couple dozen mixed trevally and queenfish, with some fish pushing 2–3 kilos, plus a handful of Spanish mackerel when the bait balls popped up. On the reefy ground and broken rock, the bottom guys have done well on grouper and snapper. Reports from small wooden boats out of Phan Thiet and Mui Ne mention steady picks of red snapper, emperor, and small grouper, with some crews icing 10–20 keeper fish on a short trip when they sit on the structure and keep the chum going. Farther south around Vung Tau, there’ve been scattered cobia and bigger grouper showing along deeper ledges when the current starts to run. For lures, think small and shiny inshore. Metal jigs in the 20–40 gram range, white or silver, have been killers when worked fast through surface busts. Slim stickbaits and small casting minnows in sardine or anchovy patterns have been productive for trevally and queenfish, especially at first light along beach points and river mouths. Soft plastics on 3/8 to 1/2 oz jigheads in natural baitfish colors are getting bit by everything from snapper to barra in brackish stretches. Bait anglers are still doing damage. Fresh prawns, small live mullet, and cut sardine or scad have outfished frozen stuff by a mile. A simple running sinker rig dropped into current lines or along the edge of the reef is all you need. In the estuaries and mangroves up by Da Nang and central lagoons, live prawns have been the ticket for barra and mangrove jack tucked under overhanging trees and bridge pylons on the turn of the tide. Couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: • The outer reefs and islands off Nha Trang – work the up‑current sides at dawn with metals and stickbaits for trevally and mackerel, then switch to bait once the sun gets high. • The sandbars and drop‑offs outside the river mouths near Mui Ne and Phan Thiet – dawn and dusk on a falling tide with small jigs or live bait have been turning up mixed trevally, queenfish, and the occasional big surprise. If you’re fishing from shore, hit rocky points and harbor walls at first and last light with small metals and shallow‑running minnows, and bring a few prawns to soak if the lure bite slows. That’s it for today’s coastal Vietnam 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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