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Norway, Fjords Fishing Report Today

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About Norway, Fjords Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Norway, Fjords Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the dramatic glacial fjords of coastal Norway. 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 Norway's unique coastal ecosystem—from winter skrei runs to summer salmon—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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39 episodes

episode Norway Fjords: Spring Cod and Coalfish in Light Winds and Long Daylight artwork

Norway Fjords: Spring Cod and Coalfish in Light Winds and Long Daylight

This is Artificial Lure with your Norway fjord fishing report. Along the western fjords from Hardanger up past Sognefjord, a weak low is sliding east, leaving **light winds**, scattered clouds, and good visibility. Coastal forecasts from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute call for **3–7 m/s winds**, mostly south to southwest, and only a slight chop in the inner fjords. Air temps are sitting around **10–14°C** in the early hours, nudging toward the high teens this afternoon, with just a few light showers pushing through the more open stretches. Tides inside the fjords are modest but still matter. Inner Sognefjord and Hardangerfjord see **small ranges**, roughly half a meter or so between low and high on this cycle, but the important bit is **moving water**: the bite has been best an hour either side of the turn, especially on the **flood** when bait pushes tighter to the rock walls and points. Sunrise is early and sunset late now, giving you a **long gray dawn and dusk window**. Think of it like this: first light is creeping in well before most folks have the kettle on, and you’ve still got usable light late into the evening. That long low‑angle light has been the prime time for better fish. Reports from local skippers and pier regulars around the fjords say **cod and coalfish (sei)** have been steady, with a mix of **pollack, haddock, and a few ling** from deeper drops. In the inner arms, smaller **codling and whiting** are keeping light tackle busy, while the mouths of the fjords are still giving up the occasional **halibut** for those working slowly along sandy channels. Catch rates aren’t spectacular but **consistent**: boat crews jigging vertically over ledges in 40–100 meters are seeing **dozens of pan‑sized cod and coalfish** on a decent tide, with the odd better fish mixed in. From shore, guys working rock marks near drop‑offs are picking a **handful of decent pollack** per session when they commit to moving and covering water. Lure choice has been simple and effective: - For cod, coalfish, and haddock: **20–80 g metal jigs**, sand eel imitations, and slim shads in **silver, blue, and green**. Let them hit bottom, then work slow lifts with pauses. - For pollack along steep walls and kelp: **soft plastics on 20–40 g jig heads**, natural baitfish colors or dark brown/black in the low light. Count them down, then retrieve with long pulls and drops. - For halibut and bigger cod on the banks: **large paddle‑tail shads** in white or chartreuse fished close to the bottom, slow and steady. If you’re bait fishing, the locals are still doing well with **strips of mackerel or herring**, plus **shrimp and squid** on simple running ledger rigs. Fresh is king, but even frozen mackerel is putting fish on the deck when fished near structure during the tide run. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: - **Outer Sognefjord, near the mouth around Rugsund and the channels toward Bremanger**: broken ground, strong but manageable tide, and a good mix of cod, coalfish, and the chance of a halibut if you stay patient with big shads or bait. - **Hardangerfjord around Odda and the steeper rock faces near Tyssedal**: great for shore and small‑boat fishing, with pollack hugging the walls and cod on the pockets of rough ground just off the drop. In general, focus on **points, underwater ledges, and channel edges** where the tide squeezes. Fish the **start and end of the run**, especially at dawn and dusk, and don’t be afraid to change lure weight until you’re ticking bottom now and then. That’s your fjord report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next 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

Yesterday - 3 min
episode Norwegian Fjords: Cod, Pollock, and Midnight Light - Your Late Summer Bite Guide artwork

Norwegian Fjords: Cod, Pollock, and Midnight Light - Your Late Summer Bite Guide

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your late‑evening fjord report from the Norwegian coast. We’re rolling out of a cool, settled spell: light north to northwest breeze, 3–7 m/s in most western fjords, overcast to broken cloud with scattered showers, air temps mostly 8–13°C along the coast. Coastal bulletins from Yr and the Norwegian Meteorological Institute are calling calm to slight seas inshore, so it’s comfortable small‑boat weather if you watch the squalls and keep an eye on visibility. Sunrise along the west coast is a non‑event now – it barely gets dark. Around Bergen, first real light is just after 03:30 and it never goes fully black; up toward Nordfjord and Sunnmøre it’s even brighter. Sunset’s around 23:00–23:20, but that northern twilight runs straight into dawn, giving you a long crepuscular bite window. Tides from Kartverket’s coastal tables show a modest range tonight and into tomorrow: evening high around 19:30–20:30 in the big western fjords, then ebbing into a post‑midnight low. That last couple of hours of the flood and the first of the ebb have been the most productive, especially on points where the current squeezes. Fishing activity has picked up nicely this week. Local charter skippers around Sognefjorden and Hardangerfjorden report steady numbers of **cod**, **pollock (sei)** and **coalfish**, with better‑than‑average size on cod in 40–80 m. Several boats out of Ålesund and Geiranger have sent in photos of mixed boxes: cod, haddock, a few ling, plus mackerel starting to show in the upper layers on the warmer, clearer days. In the inner arms you’re also seeing decent **sea trout** along brackish pockets near river mouths. For lures, keep it simple and local: - For cod and coalfish: 60–150 g Norwegian jigs or pilkers in silver, blue‑silver, or green‑black. Add a small Gulp teaser or fly above the jig when the fish are scattered mid‑water. - For pollock on structure: 20–40 g slim jigs or sand‑eel style soft plastics in natural baitfish colours, worked fast along drop‑offs. - For mackerel: small flashy sabiki rigs tipped with a sliver of mackerel or herring skin; a 20–30 g chrome spoon works when they’re busting on top. - For sea trout tight to shore: 15–25 g long‑cast spoons in copper, olive or blue, or slim wobblers fished with pauses. Best natural baits right now are **fresh herring**, **mackerel strips**, and **shrimp**. Salted mackerel holds up well in the current and is deadly on cod and ling when fished just off the bottom over rough ground. Two hotspots to keep on your radar: - The outer Sognefjord skerries, especially around exposed points near Fedje and into the deeper channels: good tidal flow, mixed ground, solid cod and pollock when the current’s running. - The mid‑Hardangerfjord ledges between Norheimsund and Utne: classic drop‑offs from 20–60 m, producing cod on baited rigs and lively coalfish on jigs, with sea trout cruising the shoreline in the low light. Work those tide changes, fish the moving water, and don’t be afraid to move if you’re not marking bait – the fjords are deep, and life stacks where the current pushes food. 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

5 Jun 2026 - 3 min
episode Norwegian Fjords Heat Up: Evening Tides, Coalfish Aggression, and Long Summer Light artwork

Norwegian Fjords Heat Up: Evening Tides, Coalfish Aggression, and Long Summer Light

Artificial Lure here with your fjord fishing report from the west coast of Norway. We’ve just come off a small neap cycle, so tides have been gentle but still useful. Along the outer fjords around Stavanger, Hardanger and Sognefjorden, the evening high has been lining up with the last light, giving a nice push of bait in the top few meters. Inside the narrow arms, there’s been a noticeable current only on the turns of the tide, so the bite has been best in those one‑to‑two‑hour windows around high and low. Weather along the fjords has been classic early‑summer mix: light to moderate southwest breeze, scattered low cloud, and water temps generally 9–12 degrees in the upper layer, a touch warmer in the very inner basins. The calm mornings have been glassy, with just a slight cat’s paw – perfect for spotting surface activity. Evenings have had a bit more chop, but nothing a small boat or kayak can’t handle with some common sense. The sun has been hanging around forever lately – long dawn and dusk periods, with a slow, drawn‑out twilight that keeps a bit of light on the water almost the whole night in the north. That extended low‑light has really helped the predators push bait tight to the banks and over the shallower ledges. Fish activity has been solid. Coastal cod have been holding from 15 to 40 meters on broken ground and kelp edges; a lot of fish in the 1–4 kilo class, with the odd better one mixed in. Pollack have been aggressive along the drop‑offs, especially where there’s hard structure and running water. Coalfish have been smashing small baitballs in the upper 5 meters on the flooding tide, and there have been decent reports of mackerel packs pushing into the outer fjords. A few ling and tusk have come from the deeper ledges at 80–120 meters for those willing to drop big baits. Best lures the last couple of days have been slim metal jigs in the 40–80 gram range, worked fast for pollack and coalfish and slower, near the bottom, for cod. Natural baitfish patterns – blue‑silver, green‑silver, and sandeel colors – are outfishing the rest. Soft plastics on 20–40 gram jig heads, 4–6 inch, in pearl or motor‑oil shades, have been deadly when fished just off the kelp. On bait, strips of fresh mackerel or herring, and whole or half sand eel, are still king, especially for cod and ling on simple running ledger rigs. If you’re fishing the evening high, start by working the mid‑water column for pollack and coalfish, then slow things down and drag the lures closer to the bottom as the tide eases and the cod start picking. Morning slack has been good for poking around small points and rocky tongues where the bait stacks up in the eddies. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: First, the outer mouths and side arms of Hardangerfjord, especially points where deep water swings tight to sheer rock walls – classic pollack territory with cod sitting just a bit deeper. Second, the reefs and ledges off the islands west of Bergen, where the ocean swell meets the fjord water; that mixing line has held good numbers of coalfish and early‑season mackerel, with cod lurking under the chaos. Keep the leaders stout, keep an eye on the wind funnelling down the fjords, and don’t ignore that last hour of dim light – it’s been the difference between a slow session and a full fish box. 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

4 Jun 2026 - 3 min
episode Norway's Early Summer Fjord Bite: Coalfish, Cod, and the Grey Light Window artwork

Norway's Early Summer Fjord Bite: Coalfish, Cod, and the Grey Light Window

This is Artificial Lure with your Norway fjord fishing report. Along the western coast from Hardanger to the deeper arms of Sognefjord, we’ve been sitting under a classic early-summer mix: light to moderate southwest breeze, patches of low cloud and drizzle, and clearer spells in the afternoon. Daytime highs have been running in the low to mid-teens Celsius, with water temps mostly 8–11 degrees in the outer fjords and a touch cooler inside. Sunrise comes early, around half past four in the morning, and sunset slides close to ten-thirty at night, giving a long, soft fishing window. Tides in most of the big fjords are on a modest cycle just now, with roughly two meters of range on the outer coast and a bit less once you’re tucked deep inside. The better bites have lined up with the last of the flood and the first of the ebb around the mouths of side arms and narrows – any place the current pinches and bait gets pushed up. Cod and coalfish have been the main story. Several local skippers out of Bergen and Ålesund report steady catches of plate-sized cod in 20–60 meters over broken shell and gravel, with bigger fish holding closer to drop-offs and wrecks. Coalfish are cruising higher in the water column, smashing small baitfish in tide lines; more than one boat has hit quick doubles jigging just under the surface when the birds give them away. Pollack are mixed in around rock walls and kelp edges, especially on overcast afternoons. Deeper drifts, 80–150 meters, are still producing ling and occasional tusk on the sharper ledges. Inside the quieter arms, folks fishing from the rocks and small dinghies have picked up haddock, whiting, and the odd flounder or plaice on bait. Artificial-wise, this has been a week for classic metal and shads. Slim jigging pilkers in the 60–150 gram range, silver or blue back, have outfished most anything when worked fast for coalfish or with a slower lift-and-fall for cod. Four- to six-inch soft shads in pearl, motor oil, or dark green on 30–80 gram jig heads are deadly along steep rock faces for pollack. For those trolling, small diving wobblers and narrow spoons in natural baitfish patterns, run just outside visible bait schools, have brought fish to the boat when vertical jigging goes quiet. If you’re soaking bait, go simple and fresh: strips of mackerel or herring, or pieces of squid if you can get it. A two-hook paternoster with luminous beads, dropped to the bottom and lifted just off, is pulling cod, ling, and haddock. In the shallows for flatfish, lighter rigs with small hooks tipped with worm or fine mackerel strips are turning quiet bays into dinner. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: – The outer reaches of Sognefjord near the exposed skerries, where the deep trench rises onto 40–70 meter banks. Work the edges of these banks on the turn of the tide with jigs and shads. – The narrows leading into side arms of Hardangerfjord. Anywhere the current squeezes and you see bait on the sounder, drop metal mid-water for coalfish and pollack, and then spend some time on the bottom for cod once the frenzy eases. Fish activity has been best in the grey light: the first few hours after sunrise and the last two before sunset, especially when that lines up with moving water. Midday can slow when the sun breaks through, but switching to lighter leaders, downsizing lures, and targeting structure has kept rods bending. That’s your fjord fishing update 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

3 Jun 2026 - 3 min
episode Norway Fjord Evening Report: Cod and Pollock Fire on the Spring Ebb artwork

Norway Fjord Evening Report: Cod and Pollock Fire on the Spring Ebb

This is Artificial Lure with your Norway fjord fishing report for this evening. We’re sitting on a cool, stable late‑May pattern along the western fjords. Around Bergen and north toward Sognefjorden, the barometer has been steady with light to moderate southwesterlies, 5–10 knots inside the fjords, a bit more open to sea. Skies have been a broken mix of cloud and clear spells, with passing showers but good visibility. Tides along the west coast today brought a mid‑afternoon high and a strong evening ebb pushing out of the fjords. That falling water from late afternoon into night really lit things up in the narrow sounds and at the mouths of smaller side fjords, where the current pinched and bait stacked. Sunrise came early, just after 4:30 in the morning, with sunset not far before 10:30 at night, so you’ve got long, drawn‑out transitions. Both dawn and the last two hours before dark produced the best activity, especially that magic window when the current was really marching. Cod and pollock have been the main story. Inside Hardangerfjorden, boats working 20–60 meters along drop‑offs reported steady cod in the 2–6 kilo class, with a few bigger fish mixed in. Pollock have been fierce along steep rock faces, especially where there’s visible bait flickering on the surface. Around Sognefjorden’s outer islands, anglers running light jigs over mid‑water marks saw flurries of pollock smashing as soon as the lure started moving. Coalfish and the odd haddock have come from softer bottoms near the deeper basins, while a few halibut have quietly made the day for patient drifters on sandy tongues near the fjord mouths. Those halibut are still scattered but very much there if you put in the time. Best lures have been classic Norwegian metal and shads. Slim 60–150 gram jigs in silver, blue, or green, worked with sharp lifts and controlled drops, have been deadly on pollock. For cod and mixed groundfish, 4–6 inch soft shads in natural sand‑eel or pearl patterns, pinned to 80–150 gram jig heads, have outfished heavier hardware when the water went a bit clearer between showers. When fish got fussy, downsizing to 30–60 gram jigs and lighter leaders picked up extra bites. Natural bait is still hard to beat. Strips of fresh mackerel or herring on simple sliding rigs produced the bigger cod and the handful of halibut. A whole small coalfish or mackerel, fished just off the bottom on the edge of sand and rock in 20–50 meters, remains the go‑to for a trophy flatfish. Just remember to keep the drift slow and steady. Two hotspots to keep in mind: First, the narrow sounds just outside the inner Hardangerfjorden basin. Anywhere you see the tide boiling against rocky points in 15–40 meters has held thick shoals of pollock, with cod lurking under them. Work the up‑current side of the structure and let your jig swing naturally through the seam. Second, the outer Sognefjorden islands and skerries, especially those with deep water tight to the cliffs. Run your sounder along the drop‑offs and you’ll mark mid‑water fish stacked from 10–30 meters over much deeper water. That’s prime territory for fast‑paced jigging sessions when the tide turns and starts to run. All in all, conditions have been kind: manageable wind, good current, plenty of light, and fish willing to eat if you match the size of the local bait and stay close to structure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on‑the‑water updates and local tricks. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21 May 2026 - 4 min
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