Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report. We’ve just come off a light trade-wind day on the island. The southeast breeze sat in that 10 to 15 knot range for most of the afternoon, easing a touch toward evening, with seas outside the reef around 1.5 to 2 meters and a gentle chop inside the lagoons. Skies have been mostly fair with passing low clouds, the odd shower brushing the windward coast. Sun rose just after six this morning and slipped down a little after five-thirty this evening, so your prime bite has been the usual island pattern: an hour either side of first light, then again in that late-afternoon shadow when the reef starts to darken. Tides today gave us a decent push on the mid-morning flood and another good movement late afternoon, which fired things up on the reef edges and passes. Offshore, the drop-offs off the west and northwest—especially off Le Morne and out from Black River—have produced solid action. Boats working the 80–200 m line raised a few **yellowfin tuna**, school-size **skipjack**, and scattered **dorado**. Nothing crazy, but a steady pick: think a handful of tuna per boat on a good run, plus the odd bonus mahi. The hotter boats ran smaller skirted lures in pink-and-white and purple over dark, plus a couple of feather jigs for the skipjack. A darker, slimmer profile in the prop wash has been key when the sun is high. Closer to the reef, jigging and live baiting on the outer edges brought **dogtooth tuna**, **jobfish**, and a few **amberjack**. Slow-pitched jigs in 80–150 g, blue-silver and green-gold, worked near the bottom during the stronger parts of the tide got the better fish. When you can find scad or small fusiliers for live bait, drop them just off the slope and hang on. Inshore, the lagoons along the east and north coasts have been lively early and late. Light-tackle anglers around Grand Baie and Trou aux Biches reported **bluefin trevally**, **small GTs**, and some nice **queenfish** smashing bait on the flats. Topwater stickbaits and poppers in bone, chrome, or sardine patterns have done damage, especially on that first-light glassy water. When the sun’s higher, switch to small soft plastics on light jig heads worked along the drop-offs and coral fingers. For bait fishers, the usual suspects are doing work: fresh squid strips, cut bonito, and live mullet where you can net them. On the reef, these baits are taking **emperors**, **snapper**, and **rabbitfish** around structure. Just mind the current and keep your sinker light enough to move a bit—those fish are feeding on the flow, not dead still. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Le Morne drop-off** on the southwest: great for trolling pelagics in the early morning, and jigging the slopes once the sun is up. - The outer reef and passes off **Grand Gaube** and **Cap Malheureux** in the north: consistent trevally and queenfish on lures, with a shot at something bigger lurking on the edges. Overall, the bite is decent rather than red-hot, but if you time your sessions around the stronger parts of the tide and the low-light windows, you stand a good chance of bending a rod properly. Keep your lure sizes moderate, leaders fresh, and don’t be shy to change colors if the fish are following but not committing. 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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