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Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today

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Tune in to the "Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the pristine tropical waters surrounding Fiji's 300+ islands. 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 Fiji's legendary big-game fishery, vibrant reef ecosystems, and nutrient-rich pelagic zones, 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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36 episodios

Portada del episodio Fiji Fishing Report: Trade Winds, Tides, and Bluewater Action

Fiji Fishing Report: Trade Winds, Tides, and Bluewater Action

This is Artificial Lure with your Fiji fishing report, coming to you from the middle of the South Pacific blue. Around Viti Levu and the Mamanuca–Yasawa line, we’re sitting under classic trade-wind conditions: light morning breezes, building to a 12–18 knot easterly by afternoon, with a slight chop on the outer reefs and calm tucked-in lagoons. Skies are partly cloudy, and humidity is up, so it feels hotter than it looks on the thermometer. Sunrise came in early over the Koro Sea and sunset will drop quick over the Yasawas, giving a solid low-light window at first light and again in the last hour of the day. Those two brackets are your prime bite times right now, especially on the edges of the reefs. Tides today are running a fairly standard mid-range. We had an early-morning high, falling through the morning and into a late-morning/early-arvo low, then a push back in for the evening high. That incoming afternoon–evening tide is the ticket; water floods the reef edges, bait schools tighten up, and the predators move right in behind them. Offshore, the bluewater has been alive. Skippers out of Denarau and Pacific Harbour have been reporting steady action on yellowfin tuna, mahi-mahi, wahoo, and the odd blue marlin working the current lines and FADs. Boats trolling between Navula Passage and out toward Kadavu have raised a few good marlin this week, with yellowfin in the 10–30 kg range and some bigger models mixed in. Mahi have been running in loose packs, smashing lures on the temperature breaks. The best producers offshore have been medium-size skirted lures in lumo, black-and-purple, and blue–silver patterns, trolled around 7–8 knots on the pressure edges and FADs. Diving minnows in natural saury and flying-fish colors are also getting chewed by wahoo when run a touch deeper. If you’re chunking or live-baiting, small yellowfin or bonito bridled and slow-trolled along drop-offs are still the top dog for marlin. Inshore on the reefs and fringing lagoons around Coral Coast, Rakiraki, and the Yasawas, the reef gang has been busy. Anglers have been picking up GTs, bluefin trevally, coral trout, red bass, and sweetlip. Early-morning topwater is firing on the pressure sides of the reefs: stickbaits and cup-faced poppers in white, mackerel, and pink-sardine tones are drawing explosive hits from GTs in the wash. When the sun gets higher and the water clears, downsizing to sub-surface minnows and lightly weighted soft plastics in natural baitfish colors has been converting a lot more bites, especially on wary trout and trevally. For bait fishos, fresh is best: strips of bonito, small live fusiliers, and pilchards pinned lightly on the edge of bommies are pulling mixed bags of trout, emperor, and snapper. If you’re fishing from shore, a simple running sinker rig with fresh cut bait cast along the channel edges at high tide is a good bet for trevally and queenfish. Couple of hot spots to put on your list: First, the Navula Passage area off the southwest corner of Viti Levu. Work the outer reef edges and nearby bluewater for tuna, mahi, and wahoo on the morning run-out and the evening push. Keep an eye out for birds and surface bust-ups; when they show, swing those skirted lures right through the chaos. Second, the reef points and passes around the Yasawa group, especially near Nanuya and Tavewa. Fish the early incoming tide with topwater for GTs on the reef corners, then switch to jigs and soft plastics in the deeper holes once the sun gets high. Those passes hold serious fish when the current is moving. If you’re out there today, play the tides, fish the low light, and match your offerings to the bait you see in the water. The Fijian sea is in a generous mood when you time it right. 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

6 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Portada del episodio Fiji Saltwater Report: Light Winds, Strong Bites on the Reef and Beyond

Fiji Saltwater Report: Light Winds, Strong Bites on the Reef and Beyond

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fiji saltwater report from right here in the heart of the South Pacific. Light trade wind pattern today over most of Viti Levu and the outer groups: gentle easterlies around 10–15 knots inshore, backing off at dawn and dusk. Seas are slight to moderate outside the reefs, calm inside the lagoons. Skies have been mostly fine with patchy cloud and the odd brief shower brushing the windward coasts. Humidity’s up, but that’s Fiji fishing for you. Sun slipped over the horizon not long after 6 this morning and will drop away just before 6 this evening, giving a nice, compact day with strong low‑light bite windows at both ends. Tides are running on the smaller side of the cycle, but still plenty of flow on the reef edges and passes. Mid‑morning push and late‑afternoon drain have been the key—fish are turning on right as that current starts to move. Inshore around the main islands, the reef flats and drop‑offs have been lively. Anglers working the fringing reefs off Coral Coast, Pacific Harbour, and the Mamanucas have reported good numbers of bluefin trevally, jobfish, and the odd reef GT. Most boats are raising a handful of fish each session, with a couple of solid hookups when the current really kicks. Light spinning with 40–60 g metal slices, 4–6 inch soft plastics in pilchard and fusilier colours, and small stickbaits has been doing the damage. For bait soakers, fresh-cut skipjack strips and squid have outfished frozen stuff by a mile. Offshore, the bluewater has still got some life. Local skippers out wide of Kadavu, Beqa, and the Yasawa trough have brought in a mixed bag this week: a few yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kg range, scattered mahi‑mahi riding the current lines, and the occasional wahoo along the contour edges. Boats trolling a standard spread of medium skirts in lumo, pink, and purple, plus a diving minnow or two, are reporting two to five solid strikes on a decent run, with at least a couple of fish chilling in the ice box by lines-in. Live skipjack bridled on the rigger, when you can find them, is still the premium bait for bigger tuna and the odd marlin that wanders through. Best bite windows have lined up neatly with that first light period and the late‑afternoon swing. Inshore, the reef fish have been getting fussy once the sun’s high, but they switch back on as the light fades. Offshore, the tuna and mahi have been hitting harder mid‑morning on the building tide and again as the day cools off. If you’re looking for hot spots, put these on the list: - Beqa Channel and the outer reef points: classic Fijian structure, clean blue water pushing in, and a long history of tuna, wahoo, and billfish. Work those drop‑offs with skirts and deep divers, and don’t be shy to run a big lure in the shotgun for that one special bite. - The barrier reef and passes off the Coral Coast: perfect for casting lures from small boats. Aim plastics and small stickbaits along the pressure edges and wash zones on a moving tide and hang on—you never know if it’s a bluefin, coral trout, or a cranky GT on the other end. Around the islands, simple still works. If the artificials go quiet, drop a lightly weighted cube of fresh bait down the burley trail, keep it natural, and let the current do the work. Just remember the Fijian way: take what you need, release the breeders, and look after the reef that looks after all of us. That’s it from Artificial Lure for today—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 Fiji Saltwater Rundown: Prime Tides, Big Lures, and Hot Reef Action Today

Fiji Saltwater Rundown: Prime Tides, Big Lures, and Hot Reef Action Today

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fiji saltwater rundown from a local’s angle. We’ve got a classic trade‑wind pattern across most of the islands today: easterly to southeasterly winds around 10–18 knots, a bit fresher on the outer reefs, with seas sitting in the 1–2 metre range outside and much calmer in the lee of the main islands. Skies are partly cloudy with passing showers, especially on the windward coasts, but plenty of blue‑sky windows for a good bite. Sunrise came in just after 6 this morning and sunset will be a little after 5:30 this evening, giving us prime low‑light windows right now: first light to about 9 a.m., then again from 4 p.m. to dark. Those bookend periods are when the reef wakes up and the pelagics push closer. Tides around Viti Levu and the Mamanucas are running a typical semi‑diurnal pattern with an early‑morning high, dropping out through mid‑day, then building again late afternoon. That last two hours of the incoming onto reef edges and passes is the go‑time for GTs and dogtooth, while the first of the run‑out fires up the reefies and lagoon bait. Recent boats out of Denarau, Pacific Harbour, and Savusavu have reported decent numbers of school‑size yellowfin tuna, a few 20–40 kg fish mixed in, plus mahimahi and wahoo along the current lines and FADs. Inshore, anglers are still finding feisty giant trevally, bluefin trevally, coral trout, and red bass working the pressure points and bommies; hand‑liners and small skiffs are bringing in plenty of emperors, snapper, and sweetlip for the table. For lures, this is prime time to fish big, loud offerings. Around the reefs, throw large cup‑faced poppers and stickbaits in natural baitfish colours—sardine, fusilier, flying fish—or classic white with a splash of blue. Heavy‑duty metal jigs, 80–200 g, dropped along the drop‑offs and jigged aggressively are turning up GTs, dogtooth, and even the odd amberjack. Offshore, small to medium skirted lures in lumo, blue‑silver, and pink‑white are still the staples for tuna, mahimahi, and wahoo. If you’re trolling closer to shore, diving minnows in mackerel and bonito patterns will keep rods bending. For bait, you can’t beat fresh: small bonito, flying fish, or garfish rigged as skip or swim baits for the bluewater work a treat. On the bottom, use strips of fresh fish, squid, or pilchards for snapper, emperor, and reef cod. Live baits—small trevally, fusiliers, or hardy baitfish—slow‑trolled along reef edges are deadly on GTs and Spanish mackerel when the lure bite is shy. If you’re chasing hot spots, put these on your list: - Off Nadi/Denarau, the outer reef edges and FADs west of the Mamanuca Islands are holding yellowfin, mahimahi, and wahoo along the current lines, especially on that afternoon tide push. - Down south, the Beqa and Yanuca passages near Pacific Harbour continue to fish well for GTs, coral trout, and reefies on topwater and jigs when the tide starts to move. Fish the shade lines, the bait balls, and anywhere current hits structure, and you’ll be in the game. Make sure your leaders are heavy and knots are solid—Fiji fish pull like they mean it. 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

4 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Portada del episodio Fiji Midday Report: Falling Tides, Reef Edges, and Bluewater Tuna

Fiji Midday Report: Falling Tides, Reef Edges, and Bluewater Tuna

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fiji fishing report for around midday local time. Out here the trade wind is settled in from the east‑southeast, blowing about 10 to 15 knots across most of Viti Levu and the main island groups. Skies are partly cloudy, with a mix of sun and passing showers as the day heats up. The lagoon edges are fairly calm in the lee of the reefs, but the outer reef tops are choppy, and beyond the reef the bluewater has a short wind chop – still very fishable in a decent boat. Tides today are running a **morning high** followed by a **midday falling tide**. That dropping water around late morning into early afternoon is the key bite window, especially along reef edges and channel mouths. Sunrise came in just after 6 am, with sunset due just after 5:30 pm, giving a nice low‑light push at both ends of the day – perfect for topwater and live‑bait work. Inshore, the reef flats and channel drop‑offs have been lively. Local skippers are reporting solid numbers of **coral trout**, **jobfish**, and plenty of **bluefin trevally** on the pressure points where the current hits the reef. A few chunky **GTs** have been smashing baits along the deeper bommies. Most boats working the morning high picked up half a dozen to a dozen mixed reef fish in a few hours, keeping only the better eating sizes. Best producers inshore have been: - **Lures**: medium stickbaits and poppers in blue‑white or sardine patterns, 40–80 g metal jigs worked fast off the reef edges, and 4–5 inch soft plastics in natural baitfish colors on 1/2–1 oz heads. - **Bait**: fresh **pilchard**, **squid**, or small **garfish** on running sinker rigs. A live fusilier or scad slow‑trolled along the drop‑off is still the number‑one ticket for big GT. Offshore, the bluewater between outer reef and 400–800 m line has been turning up **yellowfin tuna**, **mahi‑mahi**, and the odd **wahoo**. Boats running standard spreads have been seeing tuna in the 10–30 kg class, with a few bigger models mixed in, plus a couple of small to mid‑size **black marlin** raised over the past few days. A decent day offshore has meant 3–6 tuna, a mahi or two, and the chance at a billfish if you stay on the bait schools. Top offshore offerings: - **Lures**: 6–8 inch skirted lures in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink, run short and close to the prop wash for tuna and marlin; high‑speed minnows or narrow‑profile skirts for wahoo along current lines. - **Bait**: rigged **skipjack** or **small bonito** for marlin, cube‑chummed skipjack with cut baits for tuna when they’re marking deeper. If you’re looking for hot spots, two to put high on the list: - **Pacific Harbour / Beqa Channel** on the Coral Coast: strong tidal flow, plenty of reef points, good for GT, coral trout, and passing tuna along the drop. - **Great Astrolabe Reef off Kadavu**: world‑class edges and passes, reliable yellowfin and mahi on the blue side, serious GT and dogtooth potential where the current pushes hardest. Plan your main effort around that late‑morning dropping tide in the channels and reef corners, then switch to surface and live‑bait action again in the last hour of light. Keep one heavy outfit ready at all times – Fiji has a habit of turning a quiet pick into a hang‑on‑for‑dear‑life in one bite. 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 quietplease dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

3 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Portada del episodio Fiji Fishing Report: Tuna, Marlin, and GTs On the Bite Today

Fiji Fishing Report: Tuna, Marlin, and GTs On the Bite Today

Artificial Lure here with your Fiji fishing report, coming to you like a mate on the deck, not a weatherman on TV. Around the main islands today we’ve got a light to moderate east‑southeast trade blowing, mostly 10–15 knots, easing inshore behind the reefs. Seas a bit ruffled on the windward sides, but nicely fishable on the leeward coasts and inside the lagoon systems. Skies are partly cloudy with a few passing showers, keeping things cooler and the surface a little dim – good for the bite. Sun popped up just after six this morning and will slide behind the horizon a touch after six this evening, so your real sweet windows are early dawn and that last hour of light. Tide’s running a typical South Pacific mixed semi‑diurnal pattern: a decent morning high pushing water up onto the reef edges, draining out late morning, then another build toward late‑arvo. Fish have been turning on right on those pushes; plenty of local skippers out of Port Denarau and Pacific Harbour have been timing their runs to hit the high on the outer edges. Offshore, the bluewater has been alive. Recent charters off the Kadavu trench and south of Viti Levu have been raising good numbers of yellowfin tuna in the 15–30 kg range, with the odd bigger model mixed in. A few marlin still about – mostly blues, with the occasional stripe – though not peak season numbers. Wahoo have been slashing lures along current lines and drop‑offs, especially where the bait is stacked up. Best producers offshore have been a spread of medium‑sized skirted lures in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink‑white, trolled around 7–9 knots. Adding a small feather or cedar plug way back for the tuna has been deadly. If you’re live‑baiting, a bridled scad or small skipjack slow‑trolled near the pressure edges has been the ticket for marlin and big GTs lurking near the reef walls. Inshore and around the reefs, the action’s been solid. Coral trout, redthroat emperor, and spangled emperor have been coming over the side in good numbers on the morning and evening tides. Fresh cut bait – especially squid, mullet, or a strip of tuna belly – fished on simple paternoster rigs has outfished frozen baits. Soft plastics in natural baitfish colours, slow‑worked near bommies, have also accounted for some chunky trout. For the sportsfishers, the GTs have been hammering topwater along the outer reef edges and pressure points when the current is pushing. Big stickbaits in mackerel or fusilier patterns, and cup‑faced poppers in blue‑silver or black‑purple, have been smashed. Just be ready – the boys here have been losing a few lures to unstoppable brutes, so bring heavy gear and solid hooks. Two hotspots to put on your list: 1. The outer reefs off Kadavu, along the Astrolabe Reef line. Good current, clean blue water tight to the reef, and a mix of GTs, wahoo, yellowfin, and the odd marlin cruising the edges. Work the corners on the tide changes. 2. Beqa Lagoon and the outer drop‑offs off Pacific Harbour. Inside the lagoon has been great for reef species on bait and jigs, while the outside wall has been holding tuna schools and the occasional sailfish. Drift the edges with livebait or run a light trolling spread along the color change. Overall, fish activity’s been best when the trade wind drops a touch and the tide is moving – if it’s slack, have a cuppa and wait for that water to start pushing again. Keep the leaders a bit heavier around the reef, don’t be shy on drag, and let those lures work deep in the whitewater. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Fiji fishing report, 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

21 de may de 2026 - 4 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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