『Tahiti Lagoon Fire: Mahi, Trevally, and Perfect Tide Windows This Morning』のカバーアート

Tahiti Lagoon Fire: Mahi, Trevally, and Perfect Tide Windows This Morning

Tahiti Lagoon Fire: Mahi, Trevally, and Perfect Tide Windows This Morning

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Artificial Lure here with your Tahiti fishing report. Out on the big lagoon and outer reef this morning, we started under a calm sky: light trade winds from the east around 10–15 knots, a gentle chop on the lagoon, and clearer blue water on the reef edge. Air temps are hovering in the upper 70s to low 80s, humidity high, but the breeze keeps it comfortable. Clouds are scattered, with a chance of a brief squall rolling off the ocean later this afternoon. Sunrise came in early over Moorea’s shoulder and the first good bite lined up with the morning high tide, which peaked not long after first light. We’ve got a falling tide through late morning, then a modest low early afternoon, before it fills again toward sunset. That dropping water pushed bait off the shallows and really turned on the reef edges and passes. Near the passes of Papeete and Paea, boats working the drop-offs found solid action on **mahi-mahi**, **wahoo**, and a few nice **yellowfin tuna** hanging deeper. Several boats reported multiple mahi in the 10–20 pound class, and at least a couple of wahoo pushing past 30 pounds. Yellowfin have been a bit scattered, but patient crews chunking and live-baiting around the current lines scratched out a handful of fish in the 25–40 pound range. In the lagoon and inside the reef, the **GTs (ulua)** and **bluefin trevally** are active on the moving tide, especially around bommies and channel mouths. Shore casters and kayak anglers picked up a mix of trevally and **jobfish** in the low double digits overall, with plenty of follows and blowups even when they didn’t connect. Reef anglers soaking bait on the deeper edges also found **parrotfish** and **goatfish** for the table. Lure-wise, the offshore crews did best pulling medium to large skirted trolling lures in blue/white, green/yellow, and pink over the 200–1000 meter line, especially along temperature breaks and bird activity. A couple of boats switching to deep-diving plugs and metal jigs around bait balls picked off extra yellowfin when the surface bite slowed. Inshore, topwater is king right now. Big stickbaits and poppers in natural mullet and flying-fish patterns lit up the GTs at dawn and on the evening push. When the sun got high, downsizing to 60–90 mm stickbaits, sub-surface minnows, and 1–2 oz metal jigs produced more consistent hookups, especially for bluefin trevally and jobfish. For bait, fresh cut bonito, squid, and small live reef fish pinned near structure continue to be the most reliable options. If you’re planning a session, timing it around the tide changes is the move: first light through mid-morning on the outgoing, then again late afternoon as it starts to fill. Wind may stiffen a bit later, so morning boats should have the better conditions; evening shore casting along the west side will benefit from that sunset silhouette and cooling temps. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: - The **Taapuna and Paea passes** on the west coast: great current lines, regular mahi and wahoo outside, and strong trevally action just inside the reef. - The **Faa’a airport reef edge and drop-off**: consistent for trevally, jobfish, and the occasional tuna cruising close, especially on the falling tide. If you’re heading out, fish smart, respect the reef, and keep an eye on the weather and the tide. Thanks for tuning in, 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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