『Puerto Vallarta Fishing Report: Yellowfin, Dorado, and Dawn Bites』のカバーアート

Puerto Vallarta Fishing Report: Yellowfin, Dorado, and Dawn Bites

Puerto Vallarta Fishing Report: Yellowfin, Dorado, and Dawn Bites

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This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Puerto Vallarta fishing report. We’ll start offshore. Out past El Faro and the banks, the blue water is in good shape and temps are running warm, pushing the mid‑80s. Light morning breeze, a bit more chop in the afternoon as the sea breeze kicks up. Skies are mostly clear with some coastal haze, and humidity is high, so plan on a sweaty ride home. Sunrise comes just after 6:00 a.m., with sunset a bit after 8:30 p.m. First light is giving the best bite window; once that sun gets high the fish are sliding deeper and getting picky. Tides are on a moderate cycle, with a rising tide through the early morning and a softer outgoing in the afternoon, so plan your inshore sessions to straddle that incoming. Offshore, the story this week has been yellowfin and dorado. Most tuna are schoolie‑size footballs with the occasional stronger model mixed in. Dorado numbers are improving around current lines, floating debris, and any clean color breaks. Both species have been smashing small cedar plugs, feather jigs in blue/white and zucchini, and slow‑trolled ballyhoo. Live goggle‑eyes and caballito are still king if you can sabiki them early around the lights. There are scattered reports of striped marlin and a few sailfish working bait balls outside the bay. If you’re hunting billfish, pull a spread of chugger‑head lures and skirted baits in purple/black and blue/silver around the 1,000‑fathom line and over any temperature or bait marks on the sounder. Keep one rigged pitch bait ready; the lazy ones are just window‑shopping in the prop wash. Inside the bay, the water is a touch cooler but still warm, with a decent morning bump in surface activity. Around Los Arcos and over toward Mismaloya, anglers are picking up jack crevalle, bonito, and the odd small roosterfish. These fish are hammering small metal spoons, white bucktail jigs, and topwater plugs at first light. Once the sun is up, switch to live sardina or small mullet fished deeper. On the structure side, the rocky points and reefs near Punta de Mita and around El Morro are holding snapper and cabrilla. Drop down 2–4 oz jig heads tipped with fresh cut bait or vertical jigs in 60–120 feet. Natural colors with a bit of glow are doing well, especially on that last push of the incoming tide. Don’t be shy about bumping up leader size; the rocks here don’t play nice. For surf anglers, the beaches north of Bucerías up toward La Cruz have been giving up some roosterfish and snook at dawn and dusk when the wind backs off. Big surface poppers, live mullet, or fresh slab baits tossed just beyond the shore break are your best bet. Watch for nervous bait and birds working tight to the sand. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart this week: - El Morro and the outer side of Los Arcos for mixed reef fish, jacks, and the occasional pelagic cruising by. - The offshore banks northwest of Punta de Mita for tuna, dorado, and billfish when you find the right temp break and bait. Best general‑purpose lures right now: small to medium trolling feathers, 4–6 inch skirted lures, and mid‑size poppers in blue/white, dorado, and bone. For bait, you can’t beat live sardina, caballito, and mullet; fresh cut bonito will get attention when the bite slows. That’s your Puerto Vallarta fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. 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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