『Tokyo Bay Seabass: Ride the Tide Lines at Odaiba and Ukishima』のカバーアート

Tokyo Bay Seabass: Ride the Tide Lines at Odaiba and Ukishima

Tokyo Bay Seabass: Ride the Tide Lines at Odaiba and Ukishima

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This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’re sitting on a weakening moon phase and middling tide pattern today, so timing your session matters. Around Tokyo Bay, the morning **low tide** hit just after dawn, with a **steady flood** building mid‑morning into early afternoon, then easing toward an evening **ebb**. The best bite window lined up with the **first half of the incoming** and the **start of the outgoing**, when current picked up along channel edges and structure. Weather around the bay stayed typical early summer: warm, humid, and mostly stable. Light southerly breeze, seas generally calm inside the bay, a bit more chop near the mouth. Skies were mixed clouds and sun, enough light penetration for sighting bait schools along the surface slicks. Sunrise came early, just after 4:25 a.m., with sunset around 7 p.m., so there was a long low‑light shoulder at both ends of the day—perfect for seabass. Fish activity has been solid but not crazy. Tokyo Bay seabass have been grouping around river mouths and man‑made structure: pilings, breakwalls, and bridge legs. Early this morning, local boats working the edges off the **Kawasaki–Ukishima area** reported steady schoolie seabass with a few fish pushing the 60 cm class. Shore anglers around **Odaiba** and the **Rainbow Bridge piers** picked up smaller fish in short flurries right at first light and again as the evening ebb started pulling bait off the flats. As for species, recent catches have centered on: - **Seabass (suzuki)**: the main player; numbers good, size mixed. - **Flounder (hirame)**: a few decent fish from the shipping channel drops and sandy edges near river mouths. - **Black seabream (kurodai)**: poking around rock walls and tetrapods; mostly bait bites. - Inside canals and backwaters, some **mebaru** and smaller rockfish showing on finesse rigs after dark. Lures doing the work today have been classic Tokyo Bay staples. In the low light, **shallow‑running minnows** and **slim sinking pencils** in natural bait colors—anchovy and sardine patterns—produced best. Once the sun climbed, downsizing to **7–9 cm minnow plugs** and **vibration baits** fished deeper in the channel seams kept bites coming. For seabass pushing micro‑bait, small **metal jigs** and **blade baits** hopped mid‑water were key. Bait anglers found success with: - **Live or fresh sardine and horse mackerel strips** for seabass and flounder. - **Crab and shellfish baits** for kuro­dai along rock walls and pilings. - Small **ragworm** or **sandworm** pieces for mebaru and smaller bottom fish in the inner harbor. If you’re heading out tonight or early tomorrow, I’d focus on two hot spots: 1. **Odaiba – Rainbow Bridge area** Work the bridge shadows, light lines, and current breaks with small minnows and sinking pencils on the first of the incoming and first of the outgoing tide. Cast tight to structure and let the lure swing with the flow—most bites come on the drift. 2. **Ukishima–Kawasaki industrial shoreline** From boat, target current edges along the channel markers and factory walls with vibration plugs and 20–30 g metals. From shore, pick apart any lit structure and outflow pipes after dark with soft plastics on jig heads. Water clarity in much of the bay has been slightly stained but fishable; brighter patterns or lures with a bit of flash help them find your offering. Keep your retrieve speed moderate with occasional twitches—fish aren’t super aggressive but will commit to an easy, wounded‑bait presentation. That’s the latest from Tokyo Bay. 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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