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Algarve, Portugal Fishing Report Today

Podcast von Inception Point AI

Englisch

Kultur & Freizeit

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Tune in to the "Algarve, Portugal Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from Europe's premier Atlantic coast fishing destination. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Algarve's diverse ecosystem—from big game tuna and marlin in offshore waters to sea bass and bream along rocky shores, plus freshwater bass and carp in scenic reservoirs—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Episode Algarve Early Summer: Bass, Bream, and Dawn Feeding Windows Cover

Algarve Early Summer: Bass, Bream, and Dawn Feeding Windows

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions along the south coast. Light northerlies overnight, settling into a gentle onshore breeze from the southwest by late afternoon. Air temps sitting mid‑20s Celsius by day, dropping into the high teens at night. Skies mostly clear with a bit of haze over the water, so expect bright sun mid‑morning and again late afternoon once the sea breeze settles. First light is hitting not long after 5:50 in the morning, with sunrise a touch after that, and sunset just before nine in the evening. That gives you long, lazy feeding windows at dawn and again in the last two hours of light. Night anglers are seeing enough glow off the horizon to work lures comfortably without overdoing the headlamp. Tides are running on a mid‑range cycle, not the biggest springs but with enough movement to stir things up around the points and reef edges. The stronger push is on the afternoon tide, with a nice draw along the rocky headlands and the mouths of the rias. Work that last hour of the flood and the first of the ebb if you’re chasing predators. Fish activity has picked up nicely the past few days. Off the rocks around Lagos and Sagres, anglers have been finding good numbers of **sea bass (robalo)**, mostly schoolies with the odd better fish pushing into the 60‑plus‑centimetre bracket. Around the inshore reefs and broken ground, there have been steady **bream**—sargos and douradas—plus small **wrasse** and the usual pickers. Night sessions from the beaches between Albufeira and Vilamoura are turning up **ray**, **smooth‑hound**, and the occasional better **gilt‑head bream**, especially where there’s a bit of structure or a channel close in. Closer to the estuaries and marinas, light‑tackle folks are finding plenty of **mackerel**, **horse mackerel**, and the odd **bluefish** mixed in when the bait balls push tight to shore. Lure choice: for bass off the rocks, bring **15–25 g metal jigs**, slim minnows in natural sardine patterns, and soft plastics on 10–20 g jig heads. Early and late, a small surface walker or pencil can be deadly over shallow reef—just keep the retrieve steady and subtle. In the clearer water, go natural: silver, bone, translucent; when the wind chops things up or the water muddies near the river mouths, don’t be shy about a bit of chartreuse or a flashier profile. For bait, **fresh sardine strips**, **small squid strips**, and **ragworm or lug** are doing the damage. On the beaches, a cocktail of worm and a tiny sliver of sardine is hard for bream to refuse. For the rays and smooth‑hounds, step up to a chunk of squid or a tougher sardine head and fish it on a pulley rig with a long snood. Around the marinas and harbour walls, tiny pieces of shrimp or sardine on size 10–12 hooks will keep you busy with smaller fish and are great fun on ultralight gear. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: • **Ponta da Piedade, Lagos** – Work the edges of the cliffs and the nearby reefs at first light with surface lures and small minnows for bass. As the sun comes up, switch to metals and soft plastics a bit deeper. Watch the swell and don’t push your luck on the ledges. • **Praia da Falésia to Vilamoura stretch** – Ideal for night beach fishing. Target the deeper gutters with worm and squid baits for bream and rays, especially over the top of the tide and the first of the ebb. Keep an eye out for baitfish busting just outside the shorebreak—perfect time to fire a metal for mackerel. If you’re heading out, travel light, keep moving until you find bait or current, and match your presentation to the clarity: subtle and natural in clean water, a bit more flash and vibration when it colours up. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

11. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Algarve Early Summer: Bass, Bream, and Perfect Tidal Windows Cover

Algarve Early Summer: Bass, Bream, and Perfect Tidal Windows

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. Along the south coast from Sagres to Vila Real de Santo António, we’ve had classic early-summer conditions: light north to northwesterly winds easing in the morning, picking up a bit in the afternoon, and relatively calm seas close to shore. Skies have been mostly clear, with warm afternoons and cooler, pleasant nights. Sunrise is coming early, roughly around six in the morning, and sunset toward nine in the evening, which gives you long, fishable light. Tides are running on a modest cycle right now – nothing extreme, but enough movement to matter. The most productive windows have been the last couple of hours of the flood and the first of the ebb, especially on the outer points and near rocky structure. On the beaches, the push of the incoming has been key, lining up baitfish in the gutters. Inshore, sea bass have been the main attraction. Local anglers working the rocky points around Lagos, Albufeira, and Portimão have picked up decent numbers of schoolies with the odd better fish mixed in. They’ve been responding well to small to medium hard plastics in natural baitfish colours, slim metal jigs, and soft plastics on light jig heads. Night sessions around harbor lights and jetties have also produced bass on simple bait rigs with sardine and mackerel strips. Along the open beaches, there’s been a steady pick of bream and the occasional gilt-head seabream for those fishing lighter surf gear. Fresh shrimp, small crab, and lug or korean worm have outfished frozen baits. If you can get fresh cuttlefish strips, that’s been a solid option for targeting the better-sized fish. The surf isn’t heavy, so a long cast to deeper gutters can make the difference. Offshore and slightly deeper inshore marks have given up some small dentex and other reef species for boats jigging or dropping baits over rough ground. Slow-pitched jigs in pink, blue, or natural sardine patterns, plus live bait where available, have been producing. When the current slackens, bites slow quickly, so time those drifts with the tide changes. For lures, pack: - Slim minnows and shallow-diving plugs in silver, white, and sardine patterns for bass. - 20–40 g metal jigs for covering water from the shore and vertical jigging from the boat. - Paddle-tail and jerk-style soft plastics in natural tones for working close to rocks and harbor walls. For bait, you can’t go wrong with: - Fresh sardine, mackerel strips, and squid or cuttlefish. - Live or very fresh worm baits and small crab for bream and gilthead. Two hotspots worth your time: first, the rocky shoreline and points around Ponta da Piedade near Lagos, especially working predawn and into first light for bass. Second, the Armação de Pêra and Galé area beaches, where the incoming tide has been lining up bream in the deeper cuts and channels, particularly on calmer evenings. That’s the Algarve report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a session. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

Gestern - 3 min
Episode Algarve Evening Report: Seabass and Mackerel in Clear Summer Conditions Cover

Algarve Evening Report: Seabass and Mackerel in Clear Summer Conditions

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from the Algarve with your evening fishing rundown. We’ve had a classic early-summer pattern along the south coast today – mostly clear skies, light north to northwesterly breeze, and air temps hovering in the low to mid 20s Celsius along the water. The barometer’s been fairly steady, and the sea state has been kind: small wind chop, but generally fishable from both shore and boat for most of the day. Tides along the Algarve coast ran on a medium range, with a decent morning high pushing in bait tight to the rocks and beaches, then easing into a falling tide through the afternoon and a smaller high into the evening. That morning flood put some nice colour on the water around river mouths and rocky points, which helped the predators move close. Sunrise came early over the Atlantic, with first light already bright enough for topwater work not long after. Sunset wrapped the day in that golden hour that every local here waits for; the last hour of light into dusk has been the most productive window, especially on the falling or first of the flood tide. Fish activity has been good for June. From Lagos through Albufeira and over toward Tavira, shore anglers and small boats have been finding **European seabass (robalo)**, **gilthead bream (dourada)**, smaller **bluefish/anchova**, and good numbers of **mackerel** and **horse mackerel (carapau)** roving the midwater. Offshore and around deeper structure, boats have reported **sargo**, **bogue**, some **dentex**, and a few early-season pelagics showing in the blue water. On the catch front, local chatter from tackle shops in Portimão and Albufeira is that nighttime and dawn sessions have produced the better seabass, with a mix of schoolies and the occasional solid fish in the 2–3 kg range. Beach ledgering anglers have picked off dorada and sargo on the sandy stretches near river mouths and in the deeper gutters, with some sessions numbering a half-dozen table fish when the tide and swell lined up. Boat anglers trolling small feathers and metal jigs reported strings of mackerel and carapau, perfect for the grill or for cut bait later. Lure choice has mattered. For robalo along the rocks and harbour walls, small **white or natural-pattern soft plastics** on 10–20 g jig heads, worked slow just above the bottom, have been steady producers. Slim **minnow plugs** in sardine or mackerel colours, and **topwater pencils** in the low light, have raised fish around points and harbour mouths when there’s a bit of ripple. For the mackerel and carapau, small **metal jigs** and **sabiki-style rigs** dropped through the marks have been deadly. If you’re fishing bait, you can’t beat **fresh sardine**, strips or chunks, on a running ledger or simple bottom rig. **Ragworm** and **lugworm** have been turning dorada and sargo on the beaches and near estuary mouths, especially on that last push of the flood and first of the ebb. Around rocky ground, bits of **prawn** or **crab** have tempted the fussier bream when the water’s clear and calm. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: – **Portimão / Alvor area**: The breakwaters and nearby beaches, especially around the Arade mouth and toward Praia da Rocha, have been giving seabass at dawn and mackerel schools when the tide’s moving. Work your lures along the current seams and around the rock edges. – **Ria Formosa / Tavira side**: The lagoon channels and inlets have been holding dorada and sargo on bait, with robalo prowling the edges at first and last light. Focus on the bends and drop-offs where the current accelerates. Timing is everything this week: aim for that overlap of a moving tide with low light – either first light or the last glow of sunset into dark – and keep your presentations natural and not too heavy. The water’s clear enough that fluorocarbon leaders and a bit of stealth go a long way, especially on the calmer evenings. That’s your Algarve fishing wrap from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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

9. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Episode Algarve Early Summer: Dawn Floods and Clear Water—Timing the Bite on South Coast Reefs Cover

Algarve Early Summer: Dawn Floods and Clear Water—Timing the Bite on South Coast Reefs

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer setup along the south coast. Light north to northwest winds through the day, picking up a bit in the afternoon, with air temps running mid‑teens at first light and pushing mid‑20s by mid‑afternoon. Skies have been mostly clear, with just enough haze to keep the sun from feeling brutal at dawn and dusk. On the tide, we’re sitting on a decent mid‑range cycle. Expect a low just before first light, then a steady push of water through the morning, topping out around late morning to midday, easing off into a gentle evening ebb. That dawn flood has been the money window the last few days, especially on the reefs and rock points. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., sunset just after 9 p.m., which gives us long crepuscular periods. The best bite has lined up with the 90 minutes either side of sunrise and the last light of the day. Midday is slower in the clear water unless you’re going deep or fishing shade lines tight to structure. Inshore, the usual suspects have been active. Shore anglers have been picking up good numbers of **sargos (white seabream)**, **robalo (European seabass)**, and smaller **douradas (gilthead bream)** along the rocky stretches and harbour mouths. Night sessions off the stones have produced a few better seabass, plus some **congro** from the deeper holes, with the odd **choco (cuttlefish)** still around for those soaking bait on the sand patches. Off the beaches, light surf has helped. Anglers working the gutters after dark have reported mixed bags of sargos and small rays, with an occasional better robalo pushing into the shallows when the wind drops. Boat guys working close in on the reefs have been doing well on **pargos**, a few **san‑peters**, and mixed reef fish on baited rigs. Lure fishing has been solid in the low light. Slim **minnow plugs** in natural baitfish colours, 11–15 cm, have produced most of the better bass, especially on the first of the flood. Soft plastics on 10–20 g jig heads, in white, olive, or sand‑coloured, have been a good bet when the fish are shy or the water too clear. For the breams, small **metal jigs** and **micro‑soft plastics** worked near the bottom on light gear are doing damage. For bait, you won’t beat **fresh sardine strips**, **choco**, and **mussel** on the rocks. On the beaches and mixed ground, **lugworm** and **americanas** are still top for dourada and sargo, with a chunk of sardine or mackerel good for rays and the chance of a proper bass. Keep the rigs simple: two‑hook paternosters on the reefs, long flappers on the sand. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – **Praia da Rocha / Alvor area**: The mix of harbour mouth, sand bars, and rocky points has been holding bass at first light and plenty of sargo after dark. Work the edges of the current with minnows on the flood; soak bait on the inside beaches as the tide tops out. – **Tavira to Cacela Velha**: The channels and outer bars around the Ria Formosa have been steady for dourada and bream on bait, with schoolie bass smashing small surface lures and soft plastics on the first of the incoming. Wading those flats at dawn with light gear has been very productive. Overall, fish activity is good if you time the tides and avoid the bright, wind‑rippled mid‑day. Travel light, cover water, and lean on natural‑looking presentations in that clear Algarve water. 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

8. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Mar Calmo e Peixe Ativo: Guia Completo de Pesca no Algarve Esta Semana Cover

Mar Calmo e Peixe Ativo: Guia Completo de Pesca no Algarve Esta Semana

Nome é Artificial Lure, a vossa voz da beira‑mar aqui no Algarve, a fazer o relato fresco da jornada de pesca. Hoje a costa algarvia acordou com céu limpo a pouco nublado, vento fraco de norte de manhã, a ganhar alguma força de noroeste durante a tarde, e mar relativamente calmo, ondulação de 0,8 a 1,3 metros, bom para trabalhar amostras e iscos naturais nas cabeças de pedra. Temperaturas a rondar os 18–20 ºC ao amanhecer e a subir para perto dos 26–27 ºC à tarde, água nos 19–20 ºC, já bem viva para a época. A maré anda de meia‑lua a caminhar para cheia, com enchente a dar o melhor pico de atividade nas primeiras horas da manhã e outra janela jeitosa ao cair da tarde, sobretudo em zonas de estrutura marcada e quedas de fundo. Nas últimas saídas, aqui pela banda de Portimão, Lagos e Albufeira, o pessoal tem feito bons robalos médios, alguns a rondar os 2–3 kg, mais uns sargos bonitos e douradas de criação nas zonas de areia misturada com pedra. À noite, junto aos portos e esporões, as taínhas também têm aparecido em cardumes grandes, com alguns exemplares bem acima do quilo. Para os **robalo** de costa, as amostras de superfície ao amanhecer estão a mandar: poppers pequenos em tons de branco e sardinha, e stickbaits de 11–13 cm trabalhados rápido sobre os caneiros. Quando o sol sobe, minnow afundante em cor ayu, sardinha ou transparente com brilho têm safado o dia. Em água mais parada, vinis montados em cabeçote de 10–20 g, cor branca, verde‑água ou “motor oil”, têm feito estragos. Nos **sargos** e **douradas**, o jogo é isco natural: camarão fresco, sardinha em filete e, para quem quer ser selectivo, casulo e lingueirão enterrado em baixios de areia com pedra. Apresentação leve, chicote fino e chumbo só o necessário para segurar no canal. As douradas maiores têm saído mais ao largo, mas ainda aparece surpresa da praia. Para **taínha** à noite nas docas e ribeiras, pão amassado com queijo ou pasta de sardinha continua a ser rei, montado em boia pequena e anzol fino, deixando a iscada cair devagar na zona iluminada. Dois **hot spots** para apontar no mapa: - Zona da **Ponta da Piedade até Porto de Mós** em Lagos: falésias, caneiros fundos e muita estrutura. Ao amanhecer, trabalhar amostras junto às pedras tem dado robalos e anchovas, e mais fora, a bóia com sardinha chama sargos graúdos. - **Molhes de Portimão**, lado de Ferragudo e Praia da Rocha: excelente à enchente e primeira da vazante para vinis e minnows ao robalo, e à noite para taínha e algum choco quando o mar está mais parado. Quem tiver embarcação ou charter, ao largo de Albufeira e Vilamoura andam a sair choupas, besugos e alguma corvina de porte, em fundos de 40–70 metros, com sardinha inteira e choco como isco e jigs metálicos de 80–120 g a trabalhar rente ao fundo. Em resumo, mar calmo, água com boa temperatura e peixe ativo nas janelas certas de maré. Vale a pena madrugar, levar meia dúzia de amostras de confiança, algum isco fresco e ir variando até encontrar o que eles querem naquele momento. Obrigado por terem estado desse lado e por ouvirem Artificial Lure. Não se esqueçam de subscreve Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

7. Juni 2026 - 3 min
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