『Muscat Reefs Firing: Queenfish, Kings, and GTs on the Incoming Tide』のカバーアート

Muscat Reefs Firing: Queenfish, Kings, and GTs on the Incoming Tide

Muscat Reefs Firing: Queenfish, Kings, and GTs on the Incoming Tide

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This is Artificial Lure with your Oman coast fishing report. Along the Muscat stretch this evening, light onshore breeze and a small rolling swell kept things comfortable, with air temps sitting in the low 30s and humidity high but not brutal. Skies were mostly clear after a bit of late haze burned off, and the sea stayed fishable all day. Sunrise was just after 5:15 a.m. with sunset around 7 p.m., giving a long workable window for both shore and boat anglers. Tides ran on the moderate side, with a decent push on the incoming through late morning and another useful lift late afternoon into dusk. That flood tide really woke things up on the reefs and inshore drop‑offs: bait showers tight to the rocks, birds picking, and a few surface bust‑ups within casting range. Inshore, the main action has been **queenfish, small GTs, and schoolie king mackerel**. Shoals of sardine and anchovy have been hugging the ledges, and whenever that bait piles up, the predators aren’t far behind. Most catches reported were numbers, not monsters: queenies in the 1–3 kg range, GTs mostly under 5 kg, and kings in the 4–8 kg bracket, with the odd better fish mixed in. A few nice **spangled emperor and bream** came from the sandy pockets between rocks for those soaking bait. Artificial-wise, **small metal jigs (20–40 g), white bucktail jigs, and slim stickbaits** have been the heroes. Fast‑paced jigging and a sharp, darting retrieve got the queenies and kings fired up; GTs wanted a bit more punch in the action, so heavier leaders and slightly bigger stickbaits paid off. For bait anglers, **fresh sardine strips, squid, and small live bait** did damage, especially fished just off the bottom on the edges of structure. Keep leaders abrasion‑resistant; the reef and toothy mouths are unforgiving. Two shore‑based hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Qantab / Bandar Jissah rocks** – The morning incoming tide pushed bait against the cliffs here and produced steady queenfish and the occasional king for casters willing to move and work the points. Best window was first light until the sun got high. - **Al Mouj / Azaiba area** – The beach and nearshore drop‑offs saw a late‑afternoon bite, with small GTs cruising in the wash and emperors picking off the bottom. Long casts with 30–40 g metals and bottom rigs with squid strips produced bites right up to sunset. Offshore boats working the 30–60 m line reported **yellowfin tuna and dorado** still roaming, though not thick. Trolling medium diving plugs and feathers around bait schools produced a handful of tuna and a few mahi, especially where birds were working. Slow‑pitch style jigs in the 60–100 g range over mid‑depth structure found some grouper and snapper for the table. Overall, fish activity has been best around the tide changes and low‑light periods. Midday remains slow and hot, so plan your sessions for dawn, late afternoon, and that first dark hour into the evening. Scale down leaders when the water is clear, but don’t go too fine with kings and GTs in the mix. That’s the wrap from Artificial Lure on the Oman coast. 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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