『Panama Pacific: Early Season Roosters and Offshore Tuna in the Wet Season』のカバーアート

Panama Pacific: Early Season Roosters and Offshore Tuna in the Wet Season

Panama Pacific: Early Season Roosters and Offshore Tuna in the Wet Season

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
This is Artificial Lure with your Panama Pacific Coast fishing report. On the Pacific side from Punta Burica up past Punta Chame, we’ve got classic wet-season conditions: warm, sticky mornings in the low 80s, building to near 90 by early afternoon, with scattered thunderstorms bubbling up after lunch and into the evening. Light offshore breeze at dawn, turning onshore by late morning, so the window for the best surface bite is early. Sunrise comes just after 6 a.m., sunset just after 6:30 p.m., giving us a nice, compact fishing day. First light to about 8:30 a.m. has been the money tide window near shore, with another decent push toward late afternoon. Big tidal swings typical of the Pacific here are creating strong current lines off river mouths and points. Inshore, the story has been roosterfish, cubera snapper, and jack crevalle. Local pangas out of Pedasí and Playa Venao have been reporting solid roosterfish action in 20–80 feet of water along rocky shorelines and current-washed beaches. Most boats are seeing 3–8 roosters per trip, with a few fish pushing 40–50 pounds. Big cubera have been chewing around rock piles and submerged ledges, especially where green river water meets clear ocean. Best lures inshore right now: - Large surface poppers in blue/white or green mackerel patterns for roosters and jacks. Work them aggressively at first light. - 5–7 inch soft plastics on heavy jig heads in pearl or bone around structure for snapper and grouper. - Medium diving plugs in red/white or sardine pattern slow-trolled tight to the rocks. Best natural bait: - Live blue runners, goggle-eyes, and small bonitos slow-trolled for roosters and cubera. - Cut bonito or skipjack dropped on the bottom around reefs for snapper and amberjack. Offshore, when the storms allow, the tuna bite outside the offshore seamounts and along current edges has stayed strong. Boats running 20–40 miles out of Punta Mala and the Azuero Peninsula have been getting yellowfin in the 40–100 pound class, with the occasional cow mixed in. Expect a handful of solid tuna per boat on a normal day, more when the spinner dolphins are easy to find. Top offshore offerings: - Butterfly jigs and speed jigs in 120–250 grams, blue/silver or pink, dropped under bird schools and spinner dolphins. - Live bait slow-trolled around floating debris or current lines. - For the billfish crowd, skirted trolling lures in purple/black or blue/white along temperature breaks. Two hot spots to circle: - The inshore reefs and points around **Isla Iguana and Punta Mala**: great for roosters, cubera, and big jacks when the tide’s moving. - The bluewater off **Hannibal Bank and nearby high spots**: classic run-and-gun tuna action with a chance at marlin when conditions line up. Overall fish activity is best early and late. Midday has seen a slower bite in the blazing sun, but dropping deeper jigs or soaking baits on structure is still producing. That’s the word from the water. 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
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません