『Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise with Evening Tides and Gate Bridge Action』のカバーアート

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise with Evening Tides and Gate Bridge Action

Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise with Evening Tides and Gate Bridge Action

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This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’ve got classic early-summer bay conditions right now. Around Tokyo Bay, sunrise was just before 4:30 this morning and sunset will be a bit after 7:00 this evening, giving us a long, bright window to work the edges and structure. Local tide tables from the Tokyo Wan area show a decent daytime swing today, with a flood building through late afternoon and a good evening ebb. Those moving-water periods are when the bite has been best, especially an hour either side of the high and low. Weather-wise, it’s typical muggy Kanto early summer: warm, a light southerly sea breeze, and some haze. Cloud cover has been in and out, which is perfect for keeping seabass and black bream higher in the water column. The wind is light enough for small boats and kayaks inside the bay, but remember that the open middle can still get choppy when that southerly pushes against the tide. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Charter skippers working the inner bay and river mouths have been reporting solid Tokyo Bay seabass action, with a mix of 40–60 cm fish and the odd 70-up showing on the evening tides. Daytime has been slower and more finesse-oriented, but once that sun drops, fish are pushing bait up around lighted structure and bridge shadow lines. For seabass, minnow plugs and vibration baits in natural baitfish colors are the main players. Locals have been doing well on 9–12 cm hardbaits in sardine or halfbeak patterns, plus 3–4 inch soft plastics on 7–14 g jigheads, especially around river mouths feeding into the bay. At night, switch to darker silhouettes and slow your retrieve—let the current work the lure. Tokyo Bay chinu (black sea bream) are active along rock walls, tetrapods, and piers. Shore anglers soaking bait report steady action on shrimp, clam, and small crab baits fished close to structure. For those who prefer lures, small creature baits and compact jigs hopped along the bottom are taking fish, but be prepared to lose some tackle in the rocks. Flounder and flatfish are still an option on sand patches off the main channels and near river estuaries. Fish are holding tight to the bottom, so use heavier jigheads or metal vibes to stay in the zone. Natural colors with a bit of flash are working when the sun is higher; go more subdued as the light fades. If you’re a lure angler, pack: - 3–4 inch soft plastics in baitfish and shrimp tones - Minnow plugs around 10 cm, shallow to mid-running - Vibration baits and metal jigs in 20–40 g for deeper edges - A few small creature baits for chinu near structure Bait anglers should bring: - Fresh shrimp and prawn - Clam strips - Small shore crabs if you can gather them As for hot spots, two areas are worth your time right now: First, the **Tokyo Gate Bridge and surrounding shipping channel edges**. The current lines and structure there concentrate bait and seabass, especially on the evening ebb. Work your lures along the pilings and current seams, but watch traffic and regulations. Second, the **mouths of the Arakawa and Edogawa rivers** on the east side of the bay. When the tide is moving, these river mouths have been producing seabass and chinu for both bait and lure anglers. Fish the mixing line where the river water meets the bay and any visible rip or color change. That’s the Tokyo Bay 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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