『Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Sea Bass, Flounder, and the Perfect Dusk Bite』のカバーアート

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Sea Bass, Flounder, and the Perfect Dusk Bite

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Sea Bass, Flounder, and the Perfect Dusk Bite

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This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. Around Tokyo Bay today the weather settled into early summer mode: humid, with afternoon highs in the upper 20s to low 30s Celsius, light south to southeast winds and a mix of sun and clouds. Local forecasts call for only spotty showers, so visibility on the water has been good and the chop has stayed mild. Sunrise came just after 4:25 a.m. and sunset will be a little before 7:00 p.m., giving a long window around the low‑light periods. Those dawn and dusk edges have been the prime bite, especially where the bay’s murky water meets clearer tidal flow. Tides around the bay followed a typical semi‑diurnal pattern: a decent morning high, dropping to a mid‑day low, then building again toward an evening high. On the outgoing tide, current pushed nicely along the piers and rock walls, turning on the predators tight to structure. The incoming has been best inside the rivers and canals, where bait stacks up along current breaks and bridge pilings. Fish activity has been solid. Tokyo Bay’s signature **sea bass (suzuki)** have been active around river mouths like the Arakawa and Edogawa, and along the Yokohama and Kawasaki wharf lines. Anglers have been reporting good numbers of school‑size fish with the occasional 60‑70 cm class mixed in. Night sessions around lighted structures have also produced steady action. **Flounder (hirame)** and **rockfish (mebaru)** are coming from the sandy drops and riprap edges, especially where the bottom transitions near shipping channels. In the inner bay, small **chinu** and **kurodai** (black sea bream) are nosing around the tetrapods and harbor walls, taking baits fished close to the bottom. A few **aori‑ika** (squid) are still showing in the outer bay on the deeper edges for those working jigs patiently. Best lures today have been compact, natural‑colored offerings that match the small sardines and anchovies running the bay. For suzuki, think: - 7–9 cm **minnow plugs** in pearl, sardine, or clear with a touch of chartreuse, worked with a stop‑and‑go retrieve along current seams. - Slim **metal vibes** and **blade baits** hopped near the bottom around channel edges when the sun is high. - 3–4 inch **soft plastics** on light jig heads in shirasu (white bait) colors for both sea bass and flounder. For bait anglers, fresh **sardine strips**, **clam (asari)**, and **ragworm (isome)** on simple bottom rigs have been producing black sea bream and by‑catch of small rockfish and gobies. Around piers and harbor walls, tiny pieces of shrimp under a float continue to be deadly on mebaru and smaller suzuki. A couple of current hot spots: - **Yokohama Bay Bridge to Honmoku Pier line**: Working the pilings and surrounding riprap on the dropping tide has been very productive for sea bass, especially just after sunrise and in the first dark after sunset. - **Arakawa River mouth and nearby canals** on the Tokyo side: Good mix of schoolie suzuki and black sea bream, with soft plastics and small minnows doing damage along the edges where the river flow meets the bay. If you can time your session to hit that last of the incoming into the first of the outgoing around dusk, you’re in the sweet spot: bait rises, current strengthens, and the better fish come up to feed. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Tokyo Bay update. 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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