Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report, island style. We’re sitting on a classic June pattern. Across the central and northern Bahamas, sun is cracking the horizon right around 6:15 a.m. local, with sunset near 8:00 p.m. That gives you a fat window for early topwater and late-afternoon live-bait action. Trade winds are running a steady 10–15 knots out of the east to southeast, seas 2–4 feet on most banks, a little choppier once you push off into the deep blue. Tides around Nassau, the Exumas, and Abaco are running a typical mixed semidiurnal cycle: morning high sliding through the mid-morning hours with a solid push, and an afternoon low that exposes plenty of flats edge. Work that last hour of the incoming on the ocean side for bonefish, then the first part of the outgoing along creek mouths and mangrove cuts. Bonefish have been feeding strong on the clear-water flats from Andros to Long Island. Guides out of Andros Town have been putting anglers on pods of 3–5 pound fish, with a few 7–8 pound bruisers scooped this week. Best offerings: small tan or olive shrimp patterns, size 4–6, lightly weighted; for spin gear, 1/8 oz jigheads tipped with fresh conch, shrimp, or small crab. Keep it subtle—long leader, soft landings, and lead the school. Offshore, the bluewater bite is still lively. Crews running out from Nassau and the Berry Islands have reported decent numbers of schoolie mahi-mahi, 6–12 pounds, with a few larger bulls mixed in. Slow but steady yellowfin tuna north of Eleuthera and around the Tongue of the Ocean edges; most fish in the 20–40 pound class. Pull small to medium skirts in blue/white, green/yellow, and pink over ballyhoo. Dark days or first light, swap to darker skirts like purple/black for tuna. Keep a couple of poppers rigged—if tuna blitz the surface, a fast-chugging topwater can light them up. On the reef, mutton snapper and yellowtail have been chewing along drop-offs at 40–80 feet from New Providence down through Exuma Sound. Fresh ballyhoo chunks, squid strips, and cut grunt are doing the damage. Use enough lead to hold bottom, 30–40 lb leader, and don’t be shy about a small glow bead above the hook when the current’s running. Grouper are tight to structure—live pinfish or small jacks on a knocker rig will get their attention. For plugs and hardware, locals have been leaning on: - Silver and blue diving plugs for wahoo and mahi when they’re around. - 1–2 oz bucktail jigs in white or chartreuse for snapper and reef fish. - Bone-colored and mullet-pattern walk-the-dog topwaters for early-morning action around marinas and dock lights—great for barracuda and the odd jack. Couple of hot spots to mark in your mind: - The flats off South Andros and the west side creeks: world-class bonefish water, best on a clean incoming tide with a light breeze. Watch for tailers and nervous water rather than big schools on bright, calm days. - The drop-off along the Exuma Sound edge east of Highbourne Cay: solid for mahi, occasional tuna, and billfish shots when you work the color change and weedlines. Troll that 300–800 foot contour and keep your spread tight when the chop kicks up. Closer to Nassau, the reef line off the southwest side has been giving up mixed bags: yellowtail, mutton, and the occasional blackfin tuna roaming the edges late in the afternoon. Anchor up, chum lightly, and send down small baits on fluorocarbon leaders—let them drift back natural. That’s the word from your buddy 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
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