『Oman Coast: Dawn and Dusk Bite Report - Tuna, Emperor, and Queenfish On』のカバーアート

Oman Coast: Dawn and Dusk Bite Report - Tuna, Emperor, and Queenfish On

Oman Coast: Dawn and Dusk Bite Report - Tuna, Emperor, and Queenfish On

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This is Artificial Lure with your Oman coast fishing report. Along the Muscat to Quriyat stretch, we’ve had a light northwest sea breeze easing off this evening, with air temps sitting around the low 30s Celsius on the water and humidity creeping up. Skies have been mostly clear with a slight haze. According to the Oman Meteorology office, winds are generally under 10 knots nearshore, with a slight chop but no serious swell, so it’s comfortable for small boats and kayaks. Sunrise this morning was just after 5:15, with sunset around 7:00 in Muscat. That gave a solid low‑light window at dawn and again in the last hour before dark, and those were the best bites today. Local boat skippers out of Marina Bandar Al Rowdha and Al Mouj have been reporting the action picking up as the light dims and the heat backs off. Tides along the central coast have been in a moderate range, with an early morning rising tide and a dropping tide through late afternoon into evening. That afternoon ebb pushed bait off the reef edges and out of the small bays, and that’s where most of the predators have been found. Shore anglers working the rocky points around Yiti and Qantab on the outgoing water did well. Catch reports from charter captains out of Muscat today included decent numbers of yellowfin tuna and longtail tuna just offshore of the drop‑off, with a few dorado mixed in under floating debris lines. Nearshore, anglers reported spangled emperor, hamour, and some chunky sheri off the reefs, plus queenfish and small GTs smashing bait around current lines. Several boats also picked up Spanish mackerel in 15–25 meters of water trolling along the contour. For lures, the standout today has been medium diving hardbaits in natural sardine and mackerel patterns, trolled at 5–7 knots for tuna and mackerel. Casting 40–60 gram metal jigs and chrome spoons into surface activity has been deadly on the longtails and queenfish. Poppers and stickbaits in the 100–150 mm size, especially in blue‑silver or bone, drew explosive strikes from GTs and queenfish around reef edges and marker buoys. Bait fishers did best with fresh squid strips and small live sardines. On the bottom, squid and cut bonito produced hamour and emperor on simple running rigs. Around the harbour walls, shrimp and small bits of cut bait picked up plenty of smaller reef species and kept things busy. Two hot spots to keep an eye on: 1. The reef systems off Bandar Khayran: work the current edges on the falling tide with jigs and soft plastics for emperor and hamour, and keep a popper rod ready for sudden surface bust‑ups. 2. The drop‑off line off Al Mouj and Seeb: troll diving plugs and feathers along the color change early and late for tuna and Spanish mackerel, and watch for bird activity marking bait schools. Overall fish activity has been solid in the low‑light windows, slower in the midday heat. Plan your sessions around the tide turns and first and last light, and you’ll stay into the fish. 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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