『Winter Glass-Off: West Aussie Coastal Bite Guide』のカバーアート

Winter Glass-Off: West Aussie Coastal Bite Guide

Winter Glass-Off: West Aussie Coastal Bite Guide

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G’day, this is Artificial Lure with your West Aussie coastal fishing wrap. Along most of the Western Australian coast today we’ve had a classic winter pattern: a solid high sitting inland, cool morning offshore breezes and a fresh southerly–southwesterly sea breeze punching in by mid‑arvo. Skies have been mostly clear early, cloud building with that seabreeze change. Temps on the metro coast have hovered in the mid‑teens, nudging high teens in the arvo, a touch cooler further south and slightly warmer up toward Geraldton and Shark Bay. Sun was up just after 7 in the morning and ducked below the horizon around 5 in the evening, giving a short but productive bite window at both ends of the day. The pre‑dawn glass‑off and the last light slop have both fished best. Tides along the west coast are on the smaller side with a modest high through the morning and a lower but still workable high again toward evening. That mid‑morning run‑in and the late run‑out have lined up nicely with the better bites, especially around reef edges and channel mouths. Inshore metro and Peel have produced a steady mix. Land‑based fishos soaking baits off rock walls and groynes have picked up herring, skippy and the odd tailor, with squid showing around weed beds in the clearer water. Pilchard cubes, mulie tails and small strips of squid have done the damage, with lightly weighted ganged hooks or small paternosters the go. Off Perth’s inshore reefs, boaties drifting in 10–25 metres have found pink snapper, sand whiting and a few dhufish in the deeper lumps. The better snapper have come on first light, taking soft plastics in the 5–7 inch range in natural baitfish colours, along with slow‑pitch jigs and classic mulie baits on snelled rigs. Further south off Mandurah and Bunbury, the winter bottom fishing has been solid when the swell backs off. Mixed bags of dhufish, baldchin groper, snapper and breaksea cod have turned up on fresh squid, octopus tentacles and fillets of herring or mulie. Slow, subtle presentations have outfished noisy rigs in the clearer water. Up the coast toward Jurien and Geraldton, the pelagic action has eased with the cooler temps, but there are still tailor, bonito and the odd school of tuna cruising the inshore contours on the cleaner water lines. Metal slices, small stickbaits and diving minnows trolled around bait schools have produced. Squid fishing has been a highlight from Fremantle through to Rockingham and down into Geographe Bay. Clear water and gentle drift have seen good numbers on 2.5–3.0 size jigs in white, prawn and pilchard patterns. A slow, sharp lift and long pause has been the winning retrieve. For lures, pack: - 5–7 inch soft plastics on 3/8–1 oz jigheads for snapper and dhufish - 20–60 g metals and small minnows for tailor and bonito - 2.5–3.0 squid jigs in natural colours for the ink brigade Best baits right now are fresh squid, mulies, herring fillet, and for land‑based, humble bluebait and pilly cubes still doing plenty. A couple of hotspots to circle: - **Five Fathom Bank & surrounding reefs off Rockingham:** Pink snapper at dawn and dusk on plastics and mulies, plus skippy and King George whiting on the edges. - **Rottnest inshore reefs and weed beds:** Great mixed bag with snapper on the lumps and squid and sand whiting in the sand holes and weed fringes when the water clears. Fish activity has been noticeably better around the tide changes and during those low‑light periods, so plan your sessions around sunrise, sunset and the bigger pushes of water rather than the middle of the day seabreeze chop. That’s your coastal 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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