『South Coast Summer Bass: Settled Weather, Lively Tides, and Consistent Action from Dorset to Sussex』のカバーアート

South Coast Summer Bass: Settled Weather, Lively Tides, and Consistent Action from Dorset to Sussex

South Coast Summer Bass: Settled Weather, Lively Tides, and Consistent Action from Dorset to Sussex

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. On the Channel side from Dorset through Hampshire to Sussex, we’ve had a run of settled high‑pressure weather: light north‑westerlies easing through the day, mostly dry, with broken cloud and good visibility. Air temps are sitting low teens at dawn, pushing up towards high teens by late afternoon. Sunrise is just after 4:40 a.m. with sunset around 9:20 p.m., giving a long, bright fishing window. Tides along the central South Coast are on the bigger side, with a lively flood pushing in mid‑morning and again late evening, and plenty of movement over the banks and in the harbour mouths. The stronger parts of the flood and the first of the ebb have been the key bite times, especially for predators. Inshore, bass fishing has perked up nicely. Local charter skippers out of Brighton and Shoreham report consistent schoolies with a fair few fish nudging the 4–6 lb mark coming off the rough ground and in the surf lines. Weymouth boats have also seen mixed bags of bass, pollack, and the odd codling from the inshore wrecks. Shore anglers working evening tides along Chesil and the shingle marks in Sussex have picked up bass, smoothhounds, and plenty of dogfish. Flatfish action has been steady rather than spectacular. Plaice are still showing on clean sand marks off Hayling and Bracklesham, with smaller fish common and the odd better plate‑sized one mixed in. Bream fishing over inshore reefs off Selsey and the Isle of Wight has been good, with some tidy double‑figure bags on the right tides. For lures, bass are falling to **white or silver sandeel‑style soft plastics**, slim paddle tails, and 20–30 g metal jigs worked fairly briskly through the mid‑water in that pushing tide. In clearer water, natural baitfish colours and subtle presentations are doing best; when it colours up, a bit of chartreuse or pink is turning lookers into takers. Surface plugs and walk‑the‑dog stickbaits are worth a go at first light over shallow reefs and surfy beaches. For bait, **lugworm and ragworm** still top the list for general clean‑ground work, with peeler crab a must if you’re targeting bass and smoothhounds along the surf beaches. Fresh mackerel strip or squid cocktail is doing the business for rays and dogfish, and small squid or worm baits are accounting for plaice and bream. A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on: - **Chesil Beach (Dorset)** – Especially the Portland end into the evening flood. Good chance of bass in the surf, smoothhounds and rays further out, plus the usual dogfish and pout. Keep mobile, look for colour lines and working gulls. - **Selsey to Bracklesham (West Sussex)** – The banks and gullies here have produced bass, bream, and rays on both bait and lures. Work the flooding tide along the channels, and don’t ignore the last light surface activity close in. If you’re heading out, fish the stronger parts of the tide, keep an eye on the wind against tide making it choppy over shallows, and pack both lures and bait to stay flexible. 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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