Kansikuva näyttelystä Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

Podcast by Inception Point AI

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Tune in to the "Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from this tropical paradise renowned for world-class big game and reef fishing. 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 Mauritius's pristine coral reefs, offshore banks, and legendary blue marlin grounds, 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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jakson Mauritius Late Autumn Fishing: Reef Action and Blue Water Bites at Dawn kansikuva

Mauritius Late Autumn Fishing: Reef Action and Blue Water Bites at Dawn

Good day, anglers — Artificial Lure here with your Mauritius fishing rundown. Around the island, the sea has been sitting in that nice late-autumn rhythm: generally settled, with the best windows coming close to the tide changes and the first light of morning. For Mauritius today, the moon phase is in a waning cycle, so the stronger bites are most likely to line up around moving water, especially dawn and the last hour before dark. Local tide tables for the Port Louis and Mahebourg side have been showing a moderate swing, and that usually means the reef edges, passes, and drop-offs come alive when the current starts to push. Weather-wise, the island has been warm and humid, with passing cloud and the usual trade-wind feel on the east and southeast coasts. Sea conditions have been more comfortable on the lee side, while the windward side has seen a bit more chop. Sunrise has been around just after 6:30 a.m., and sunset near 5:45 p.m., which keeps that prime bite window nice and tight for both shore and boat anglers. Fish activity has been strong on the reef and blue-water fringe. Recent catches reported by local skippers and shore crews have included small to medium tuna, dorado, kingfish, barracuda, and the odd good trevally working the drop-offs. In the lagoon and around the rocky points, bonefish, snappers, and jacks have been showing if you fish quietly and keep your presentation natural. Offshore, trolling has still been finding action on the outer marks where birds and surface push reveal bait. For lures, the hot ticket has been slim metal jigs for fast work on the edges, with stickbaits and small poppers when fish are feeding up top. If you’re trolling, run small cedar plugs, diving minnows, or skirted trolling lures in blue, silver, and green. Around the reefs, a weighted soft plastic paddled slow can tempt trevally and snapper when the water’s got a little colour. If the fish are shy, downsize — Mauritius water can look clear and tricky, and that stealth pays off. Best bait? Fresh is best, simple as that. Live sardine, small bonito strips, squid, and fresh cut bait are all doing the job. For the lagoon and reef mouths, prawn and small baitfish chunks can be deadly, especially on a light trace. If you can get live mullet or sprat, keep them lively and fish them near structure. Hot spots to keep in mind: the south and southeast reef edges around Blue Bay and Mahebourg for baitfish, trevally, and reef predators; and the west coast around Flic en Flac to Le Morne for calmer water, trolling lanes, and early morning surface action. For boat anglers, the drop-offs outside the passes are worth a serious look once the tide starts to run. That’s the local picture: fish moving, bait around, and the best chances sitting on tide change and first light. Tight lines, and thanks for tuning in — be sure 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

20. touko 2026 - 3 min
jakson Early Winter Bites Heat Up in Mauritius as Tides Turn kansikuva

Early Winter Bites Heat Up in Mauritius as Tides Turn

This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report for this evening. We’ve had a classic early‑winter pattern settling over the island today: light to moderate southeasterly trade winds 10–15 knots, a slight chill in the breeze, and mostly fair skies with passing low cloud. Daytime air temps hovered around 25–27°C, sea surface temps sitting near 25°C offshore. Mauritius Meteorological Services reported calm seas in the lagoons, moderate chop outside the reef, and a long, gentle swell from the south. Tides around Port Louis and much of the west coast ran on a mid‑range cycle: a higher morning tide easing into a lower afternoon water, then pushing back in this evening. That rising dusk tide has really switched on the bite the last couple of days. Sunrise came just after 6:30 a.m., sunset just before 6:00 p.m., giving us a nice low‑light window on both ends of the day. Inshore, the lagoon fishing has been lively. On the west side, around Flic‑en‑Flac and down toward Le Morne, boats and kayaks have been into decent numbers of bluefin trevally, small GTs, and jobfish on the outer drop‑offs. Soft‑plastic paddletails in natural baitfish colors, 3–5 inches, have been working well, along with small stickbaits walked fast over the coral heads. Local skippers have been reporting a steady pick of snapper and emperors on the bait: fresh squid strips, half pilchards, and bits of octopus doing the damage on a simple running‑sinker rig. On the east coast, from Trou d’Eau Douce down to Belle Mare, the trade wind made things a bit choppy, but the fish didn’t mind. Inside the lagoon, anglers casting from shore picked up goatfish, small groupers, and the odd emperor using prawn and squid. Around the passes, live bait has been king—small fusiliers or scads slow‑trolled have pulled some solid GTs in the 8–15 kg class, with a couple bigger brutes lost to the reef, as usual. Offshore, the bluewater scene has been decent for this shoulder season. Charter operators out of Grand Baie and Black River reported scattered yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kg range, plus the odd bigger fish, on the western drop‑off. The bite has been best mid‑morning and late afternoon, especially where birds are working and the current hits the structure. Skirted trolling lures in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink‑silver have been consistent producers. A few dorado are still hanging around the current lines, taking smaller trolling feathers and rigged ballyhoo. The marlin action has eased compared to high season, but one or two blues have still been raised by crews pulling larger lures along the deeper contours. For those targeting reef species, jigging over the outer banks has produced good amberjack, jobfish, and a mix of groupers. 60–120 g slow‑pitch and flutter jigs in blue, sardine, and orange‑gold have outfished traditional metal slices, especially when worked close to the bottom with long, slow lifts. Bait fishers dropping fresh cut bonito or squid on heavier paternoster rigs are also finding steady fish, particularly during the stronger parts of the tide. If you’re planning a session tomorrow, aim for that early‑morning or late‑afternoon push as the tide starts to move. In the lagoons, keep your leaders a bit heavier than you think—those coral heads are unforgiving. A 30–40 lb fluorocarbon leader will save you some heartbreak on the trevally. Offshore, stay flexible: if the tuna are shy on the troll, have a stickbait or popper rod ready to cast into bust‑ups around the birds. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: first, the outer reef edge off Le Morne, especially near the passes—great for GTs, bluefin trevally, and the occasional dogtooth tuna on big stickbaits and live bait. Second, the drop‑off west of Black River, where the bottom falls away quickly; that line has been holding yellowfin, dorado, and some nice jigging opportunities when the current runs right. That’s your Mauritius fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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

19. touko 2026 - 5 min
jakson Mauritius Early Winter: Trade Winds, Tides, and Trophy Tuna kansikuva

Mauritius Early Winter: Trade Winds, Tides, and Trophy Tuna

This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report. We’ve had a classic early‑winter pattern settling in around the island. A light to moderate southeast trade wind held through the afternoon, around 12–16 knots, with air temps in the mid‑20s Celsius and a gentle one‑to‑one‑and‑a‑half‑meter swell on the exposed coasts. Skies were partly cloudy, and that broken cover helped keep the sun from driving fish too deep. High tide came through mid‑afternoon on the east and south coasts, easing into a falling tide by early evening. On the west and north, the high was slightly later, with a nice bit of movement during the sunset window. Water temps are sitting around 25–26°C offshore and a touch cooler in the shallow lagoons—just right for mixed action. Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., with sunset just before 6 p.m., giving those golden low‑light periods that Mauritian anglers love. The bite lined up nicely with that evening drop in light, especially where tide was still moving. Offshore, the charter skippers out of Grand Baie and Black River have been reporting steady action. Yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kg class have been popping up along the deeper drop‑offs west and northwest of the island, with the odd bigger fish mixed in. A few dorado (mahi‑mahi) are still around the current lines, though numbers are tapering compared to peak summer. Wahoo remain scattered but sharp on the deeper ledges when the current picks up. Best producers offshore have been small to medium skirted lures in dark‑over‑purple and pink‑over‑white, run close in the spread for yellowfin, and brighter green‑yellow skirts along the rips for dorado. Halco‑style deep‑diving minnows in blue sardine patterns also did damage when trolled a little slower along temperature breaks. For bait anglers chumming, cube‑cut bonito and live bait bridled just outside the chum line turned lookers into takers. On the inshore side, the lagoon flats and fringing reefs have been lively around first light and again just before dark. Spinning from shore in the west—around Flic‑en‑Flac and Tamarin—produced GTs and bluefin trevally, mostly school‑size but with a couple of solid brutes that straightened light hooks. Small needlefish and queenfish have been harassing bait in the channels, adding some surface chaos. Best lures inshore today were 20–40 g metal jigs in silver or blue, worked fast across current seams, and medium‑sized stickbaits and poppers in natural baitfish colors. When the water cleared on the inside of the reefs, lightly weighted soft plastics in white or pearl did well on snapper and smaller trevally. Local bait anglers using fresh squid strips and prawn around the lagoon channels saw a steady pick of emperor, small groupers, and goatfish—nothing giant, but enough for a good local curry. Down south, around Mahebourg and the outer reef passes, the stronger current on the dropping tide fired up the predators. Boats drifting the edges of the passes with live mullet or small fusiliers reported dogtooth tuna and serious GTs—hook‑up‑to‑land ratios were low, but the ones that came boat‑side were memorable. Heavy fluorocarbon leaders and solid rings are a must there; anything light gets chewed off on the coral or crushed on the first run. If you’re planning to fish the next similar tide cycle, two hot spots to consider: First, the drop‑offs and pinnacles west of Le Morne. When the trade wind has a bit of east in it, the lee side there stays manageable, and the deep blue water pushes in close. Work skirted lures and diving plugs along the contour and keep a pitch bait ready for any tuna or dorado that show up behind the boat. Second, the lagoon mouths and channels between Trou aux Biches and Grand Baie. On a falling evening tide, predators push in tight to ambush bait washing out of the lagoon. Cast surface lures across the flow, keep your drag reasonably tight, and be ready for explosive follows right at your feet. Overall activity level around Mauritius today has been good rather than red‑hot—classic shoulder‑season fishing. Those willing to match their timing to the moving tide and low‑light windows, and to scale lures and leaders to the water clarity, have been rewarded with a mixed bag and a few trophy stories to tell at the beachside snack. Thanks for tuning in to this report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next update. Thi Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

18. touko 2026 - 5 min
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