Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure with your Mozambique coast fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today the weather stayed typical for early winter: light south to south‑easterly in the morning, building to a moderate onshore breeze by afternoon, with cooler, dry air and decent visibility. Offshore, seas sat in the 1–1.5 m range with a long-period swell rolling in from the south, making launches manageable on most surf launches but a bit lumpy on the bar at mid‑tide. Tides along the coast gave us an early morning high just after sunrise and a late‑afternoon low, so the best inshore window was the last two hours of the incoming push at first light, and then again the first of the flood just after dark. Water temps inshore hovered in the low‑20s Celsius, cooler on the open beaches, a touch warmer in the estuaries and sheltered bays. Sunrise came in early, with first light giving a soft orange line over the Indian Ocean, and sunset dropped fast behind the dunes, leaving a short but juicy dusk bite. That dawn changeover was where most of the action happened. In the surf around Ponta do Ouro, anglers working the deeper gutters reported slow but steady pickings of shad and smaller kingfish. The chaps throwing metal spoons in the 30–40 g range and slim stickbaits in sardine and mackerel colours did best. Bait anglers using fresh chokka strips and sardine combos picked up a mix of shad, blacktail, and the odd stumpnose when the sea settled between sets. Up around Inhambane and Barra, the estuary edges held some good action on light tackle. Dropping small paddle‑tail plastics and prawn imitations along the mangrove edges turned up spotted grunter, juvenile springer, and a few decent rock salmon for those patient enough to work the structure slowly. Natural baits like mud prawn, cracker prawn, and small cut sardine on light fluorocarbon traces outfished everything once the sun got higher. Offshore, boats running from Vilankulo and north toward the Bazaruto area found cleaner blue water a bit deeper. Trolling small skirted lures, Halco‑style deep divers, and kona heads in purple/black, pink, and lumo green raised a mix of yellowfin tuna, skipjack, and a few decent dorado still hanging around. Live bait slow‑trolled on light wire also produced some wahoo and the odd couta for crews willing to work the colour lines and temperature breaks. Best artificial lures today: - Medium metal spoons and slim stickbaits in natural baitfish colours for the surf. - 3–5 inch paddle‑tail soft plastics in pearl, olive, and bloodworm for estuaries. - Small to medium skirted trolling lures and diving plugs in dark‑back and lumo patterns offshore. Best baits: - Fresh sardine and chokka combos on the beaches. - Mud prawn, cracker prawn, and small crab in the estuaries. - Live maasbanker, mozzie and small bonito for offshore gamefish. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - The Ponta do Ouro surf gutters and rocky points for shad and kingfish on the pushing tide. - The Barra and Inhambane estuary channels on the dropping to early pushing tide for grunter and rock salmon. - The reefs off Vilankulo and the Bazaruto drop‑off edges for tuna, dorado and couta, especially where the current pushes bait onto structure. That’s your Mozambique coast fishing 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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