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Costa Rica, Pacific Coast Fishing Report Today

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Tune in to the "Costa Rica, Pacific Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from one of the world's premier saltwater fishing destinations along the Pacific Ocean. 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 Pacific Coast's trophy billfish, abundant pelagic species, and nutrient-rich offshore ecosystem 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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49 episodios

Portada del episodio Costa Rica Pacific: Sailfish Action, Medium Tides, and Prime Dawn Bite

Costa Rica Pacific: Sailfish Action, Medium Tides, and Prime Dawn Bite

This is Artificial Lure with your Costa Rica Pacific Coast fishing report. On the central and northern Pacific this morning we’ve got light onshore breeze, seas running 2–4 feet, and a mix of sun and cloud with a chance of an afternoon shower. Air temps are pushing into the high 80s along the coast, with that typical muggy feel once the sun gets up. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., with sunset near 6 p.m., so your prime bite is that first light window and the late afternoon tide change. Tides along the central Pacific are swinging medium‑large today, with a good incoming mid‑morning and another push late afternoon. Those moving‑water periods are turning on both inshore and offshore fish, especially around points, reef edges, and river mouths. Offshore out of Quepos, Los Sueños, and Herradura, crews the last couple days have been raising decent numbers of sailfish with a few blue marlin mixed in, plus steady mahi and some 40–80 lb yellowfin tuna. Boats working 20–35 miles out along current lines and temperature breaks are doing best. Teasers and small to medium skirted lures in pink/white, blue/white, and purple, along with rigged ballyhoo, are getting most of the billfish. For tuna, cedar plugs, small bullet heads, and live or chunked sardines are producing; when they’re foaming on the surface, poppers and stickbaits in natural bait colors can be deadly. Inshore around Jacó, Herradura, and down toward Manuel Antonio and Dominical, the roosterfish bite has been solid, especially near rocky points and river mouths on that incoming tide. Slow‑trolling live sardines or small bonito is still king for big roosters, but 2–4 oz metal jigs and white or olive bucktail jigs bounced along the bottom are getting action too. Snook are hanging near river mouths with the stained water, taking live shrimp, mullet, and soft‑plastic swimbaits in pearl or silver when the water’s not too muddy. Golfo Dulce and the Osa Peninsula have been giving up mixed bags: roosters along the beaches, snapper on the reefs, and the occasional inshore grouper. Work structure with live baits, or drop 60–100 g jigs in orange, red, and glow for snapper and grouper. Nearshore slow‑trolled diving plugs that run 10–20 feet in red/white or mackerel patterns are also good around rocky shorelines. Best artificial options overall right now: - For offshore: medium skirted trolling lures, rigged ballyhoo, cedar plugs, and small tuna feathers. - For inshore: live sardines or mullet, 3–5 inch paddletail swimbaits, bucktail jigs, metal jigs, and medium diving plugs. A couple of hot spots to keep an eye on: - The shelf edge and current breaks 25–35 miles off Quepos and Los Sueños for sails, marlin, mahi, and tuna. - The inshore points and river mouths between Jacó and Manuel Antonio for roosters and snook, especially around the stronger tide swings. Fish smart around storms, watch the lightning, and keep an eye on those afternoon squalls building over the mountains. 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

Ayer - 3 min
Portada del episodio Costa Rica Pacific Coast Morning Bite: Tide, Lures, and Prime Fishing Windows

Costa Rica Pacific Coast Morning Bite: Tide, Lures, and Prime Fishing Windows

Hola amigos, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Costa Rica Pacific Coast fishing report. Along the **Pacific Coast**, the morning is shaping up around a **good early bite** before the sun gets high. With no live weather feed in today’s notes, I’d plan for the usual Costa Rica mix: warm tropical air, humid conditions, and a sea breeze building later in the day. For your timing, the **best window** is first light through mid-morning, then again the last couple hours before sunset. On the water, the **tide** is the key player. If you can fish a **moving tide**—either incoming or outgoing—you’ve got the best shot at action around points, river mouths, rock structure, and beach cuts. In general, the most productive periods here are the first push of incoming water and the last part of the outgoing tide, when bait gets concentrated and predators get aggressive. As for **fish activity**, Costa Rica’s Pacific waters are known for steady action from **roosterfish, snapper, jacks, mackerel, tuna, dorado, and sailfish** depending on your spot and water conditions. For a local-style report, I’d say the inshore scene is usually strongest with roosterfish and jacks cruising bait schools near the beach and structure, while offshore boats look for dorado, yellowfin tuna, and sailfish around current breaks, color changes, and floating debris. Since I don’t have verified catch logs for today, I won’t guess at exact numbers, but recent patterns in this region commonly favor multiple hookups when bait is thick and the water is alive. For **lures**, keep it simple and effective: - **Topwater poppers and stickbaits** for roosterfish and jacks - **Metal jigs** for fast-moving inshore and deep structure work - **Swimbaits and diving plugs** around rocky points and estuaries - **Trolling feathers or small skirted baits** offshore for tuna and dorado For **bait**, the local winners are usually: - **Live sardines or mullet** - **Threadfin herring** - **Small blue runners** - **Fresh dead bait** when live bait is scarce Two **hot spots** to keep on your radar: - **Rocky points and beaches near Tamarindo and Playa Grande** for inshore roosterfish, jacks, and snapper - **The Quepos/Manuel Antonio to Los Sueños corridor** for a strong mix of inshore action and offshore pelagics If you’re fishing today, work the edges of bait schools, stay mobile, and don’t waste time on dead water. Around here, the first clean cast into active bait can make the whole morning. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to **subscribe**. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

16 de jun de 2026 - 2 min
Portada del episodio Early Wet Season Bite: Sailfish, Roosters, and Tuna Along Costa Rica's Pacific Coast

Early Wet Season Bite: Sailfish, Roosters, and Tuna Along Costa Rica's Pacific Coast

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Pacific Costa Rica fishing report. Out here from Guanacaste down past Quepos and on to Golfito, we’re sitting on a classic early wet‑season pattern: warm water, light variable winds inshore early, and those afternoon thunderstorms building over the mountains. Offshore seas are running moderate, generally 2–5 feet most days with a bit more bump in the afternoons when the breeze picks up. Along most of the Pacific coast, sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m. and sunset near 6:00 p.m. First light is when you want to be either making your run offshore or sliding onto those inshore reefs and river mouths. Tides are big this time of year; expect one strong high and one strong low, with the best inshore bite often kicking around the last couple hours of the incoming and the first of the outgoing, especially near estuaries like the Río Grande de Tárcoles, the Sierpe, and the Tempisque systems. Offshore, the bluewater bite has been good out of Los Sueños, Quepos, and Herradura. Boats have been reporting consistent **sailfish** releases, scattered **blue marlin**, plus solid numbers of **yellowfin tuna** mixed with spinner dolphins and decent **mahi‑mahi** around logs and trash lines. Recently, local captains have been boating tuna in the 40–80 pound range, with a few larger models in the spread. Sailfish numbers aren’t peak season thick, but a boat working hard can still see several shots in a day, and marlin are popping up enough to keep everyone honest. Best offshore offerings right now: - For sails and marlin: medium ballyhoo on **pink-and-white** or **blue-and-white** skirts, Iland‑style lures, and darker plugs when the clouds stack up. - For tuna: **live sardines**, **chunked bonito**, and poppers or stickbaits in **blue, bone, and dorado patterns**. When the sun is high and they’re deeper, switching to vertical jigs in 80–200 grams can turn the marks you see on sonar into bent rods. Inshore has been the star of the show on many days. On rocky points, islands, and reef edges, anglers are seeing solid **roosterfish**, **cubera snapper**, **amberjack**, and a mix of smaller snappers and groupers. Roosters in the 20–40 pound class are not unusual when the current is right and there’s bait around. Big cuberas are still lurking tight to structure; plenty of stories of “the one that smoked me into the rocks.” Top inshore baits and lures: - **Live baits**: goggle‑eyes, blue runners, and sardines slow‑trolled for roosters and cubera. - **Lures**: stickbaits and poppers in **bone, mullet, and sardine colors**, plus heavy bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of bait worked along the bottom. Early and late in the day, surface plugs ripped over shallow reefs can bring explosive strikes from roosters and jacks. A couple local hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Gulf of Papagayo & Bat Islands (Islas Murciélago)** in the north: Great mix of roosters, big jacks, amberjack, and seasonal wahoo around the deeper points and humps. Work the current lines and any bait you see pushed up on the edges of structure. Get there early before the wind gets teeth. - **Quepos & Manuel Antonio area**: Offshore, the drop‑off outside Quepos is still producing tuna, sails, and the occasional marlin. Inshore, the points and islands just south of Quepos—like around Isla Mogote and the rocky stretches toward Dominical—are ideal for roosters and snapper when the tide is moving. Farther south toward **Drake Bay and the Osa Peninsula**, the inshore fishery remains world‑class. River mouths dumping color lines into green ocean water are prime spots to cast medium diving plugs and jigs for snook, snapper, and jacks. When the afternoon storms roll in, be mindful of debris washing out—great for mahi offshore, but tricky for navigation. Overall fish activity has been best at first light and again late afternoon as the heat backs off and the currents shift. Midday can still produce, especially offshore for tuna, but downsizing leaders and baits and working deeper often becomes necessary when the sun is straight overhead. That’s the word from the Pacific side of Costa Rica. Line up your tides, hit those dawn hours, bring a mix of live bait Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

15 de jun de 2026 - 4 min
Portada del episodio Pacific Costa Rica: Early Light and Tide Changes Prime the Bite

Pacific Costa Rica: Early Light and Tide Changes Prime the Bite

Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Costa Rica fishing report. Along most of the central and northern Pacific—Tamarindo, Flamingo, Herradura, Quepos—we’ve got light early-morning winds, a bit more chop building by mid‑day, and scattered clouds with that classic muggy, tropical feel. Offshore, expect a gentle swell; inshore, mostly manageable surf early before it stands up with the afternoon breeze. Tides are running a decent swing on this moon phase: a higher morning flood pushing bait tight to the rocks and river mouths, then a draining afternoon ebb that gets the current moving along points and reefs. Plan your inshore casts around that first push of water and your offshore live‑bait sets as the tide starts to move good and steady. Sunrise is early, just after 5:15 local, with sunset around 6 in the evening. That first light window has been prime: cooler water on the surface, bait up high, and gamefish feeding before the sun gets too strong. The last hour of light is your second magic window, especially inshore for roosterfish and snapper. Recent offshore reports up and down the coast have been solid. Boats working the 20–35 mile line off Quepos, Los Sueños, and Flamingo have raised steady numbers of sailfish with a few nice blue marlin in the mix, plus good-sized yellowfin tuna in the 40–80 pound class and some bigger bruisers under the spinner dolphins. Dorado (mahi) are still around, especially near floating debris and current edges, with plenty of schoolies and the odd bull. Inshore, anglers have been picking off roosterfish from 15–40 pounds, plus cubera and mullet snapper, jacks, bonito, and the occasional snook around river mouths. Rockier shorelines and reefy points are holding decent life when the water’s got a bit of green‑blue color and not too much runoff. For lures, keep it simple and local. Offshore, a spread of medium‑sized skirted trolling lures in purple/black, blue/white, and pink is getting the sails and marlin fired up, especially when run with a couple of rigged ballyhoo. Tuna are chewing on small cedar plugs, feather jigs in blue/white or green/yellow, and poppers when they’re busting topwater—chugging stickbaits in natural baitfish patterns have been deadly when you can slide in ahead of the schools. Inshore, roosterfish and snapper are loving 1–3 oz bucktail or leadhead jigs tipped with strip bait, plus surface poppers in white, bone, or sardine patterns. Hard‑thumping stickbaits and medium‑diving plugs in white, orange, and redhead patterns are producing around rocks and current seams. For bait, you can’t beat live sardines, goggle‑eyes, and blue runners; a frisky live bait slow‑trolled along the beach edges or over reef has been the most consistent producer for bigger roosters and cuberas. Fresh-cut bonito is a strong second choice when live bait is scarce. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: • Around Quepos and Marina Pez Vela: boats running that blue‑water line are finding sails, marlin, and tuna, while the inshore rocks north and south of town hold roosters and snapper when the tide is moving. • The Gulf of Papagayo and Flamingo area up north: offshore structure and current lines are holding tuna and dorado, and the rocky points and islands inshore are excellent for roosters, jacks, and snapper, especially at daybreak on a rising tide. If you’re on a tight schedule, fish early, fish the tide changes, and don’t be afraid to move until you see bait and birds. When you find life, slow down and work it hard. 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

14 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Portada del episodio Costa Rica Pacific: Early Wet Season Sails, Roosters, and Tuna – Fish the Dawn Window

Costa Rica Pacific: Early Wet Season Sails, Roosters, and Tuna – Fish the Dawn Window

Buenas, this is Artificial Lure with your Costa Rica Pacific coast fishing report. Along the central and north Pacific – from Herradura and Quepos up through Los Sueños, Jacó, and Tamarindo – we’re sitting in a classic early‑wet‑season pattern: warm, humid mornings, light offshore breeze early, then building onshore winds and scattered thunderstorms after lunch. Offshore sea conditions are generally 1–1.5 m with a light chop, calming at first light and getting lumpier mid‑afternoon. Sunrise along this coast is right around 5:15 a.m., with sunset close to 6:00 p.m. That first light window until about 8:30 a.m. and the last hour of the day are your prime bites. Local tide tables for the central Pacific are showing a higher morning tide easing toward midday, then a decent afternoon push; fish that around creek mouths and rocky points if you’re staying inshore. Offshore, the blue‑water line has been holding roughly 20–30 miles out off Los Sueños and Quepos. Captains coming back into Herradura and Quepos marinas this week are reporting consistent sailfish action with boats raising 5–10 sails on a good day, plus a few blue marlin in the mix. Yellowfin tuna schools have been shadowing spinner dolphins; when you find the spinners, you’re into 20–60 lb tuna, with the occasional 80‑plus. A handful of nice dorado have been coming off floating debris and current lines, especially after the afternoon storms push more trash out. Best offshore offerings right now are bright skirted trolling lures in purple‑black, blue‑white, and green over yellow, run with circle‑hooked ballyhoo. Tuna are chewing on poppers and stickbaits in natural sardine or flying fish patterns when they’re busting on top; when they sound, switch to heavier jigs dropped into the marks. Dorado are happy with smaller skirted lures, rigged ballyhoo, and even chunked bait around logs. Inshore around Herradura Bay, Jacó, and down toward Parrita and Quepos, the roosterfish bite has been solid on the higher stages of the tide. Fish in the 10–30 lb class are holding along rocky points, reef edges, and river mouths. Slow‑trolled live sardines or lookdowns are still king for roosters, but for artificials, work big surface poppers and walking plugs in bone or blue‑back, plus 1–2 oz bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of bait. Snook have been active at the river mouths – places like the Tarcoles and Parrita – especially on that early incoming tide, with fish from 5–20 lb taken on live shrimp, mullet, and soft‑plastic swimbaits. Farther north around Tamarindo, Flamingo, and the Catalina Islands, pangas are reporting mixed bags of roosterfish, jacks, and some decent snapper off the rocks. Slow‑pitch jigs and live bait on the bottom near structure are producing for cubera and rock snapper. Don’t overlook smaller metal jigs and soft plastics for dinner‑size fish when the bigger bite slows. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: • The inshore reefs and points just outside Marina Pez Vela in Quepos – excellent for roosters and snapper on a moving tide. • The rock lines and islands off Tamarindo and Playa Flamingo, including the Catalinas – great for mixed inshore action and occasional pelagics pushing in close. If you’re heading out today, fish early, watch the sky in the afternoon, and keep an eye on that tide. Costa Rica’s Pacific is wide open right now – from sails offshore to roosters in the wash. 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

13 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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