Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report. We’ve got a light east to east‑southeast breeze this morning, laying down around 8–12 knots over much of the archipelago, with a gentle chop on the banks and calmer conditions on the lee sides of the islands. Offshore, seas are running 3–5 feet in the channels, a little higher where the current stacks against the wind. Skies are mostly fair with some passing clouds and only spotty showers. Tides around Nassau and much of the central Bahamas are running a morning high right around sunrise, then easing to a mid‑day low, with another push coming late afternoon into early evening. Out on the flats, that means classic conditions: moving water over turtle grass and sand bars at first light, then skinny, clear water through late morning, and another good window toward sunset when that second tide starts to creep back in. Sunrise comes early here, and the first hour after the sun peeks over the horizon is prime time. Bonefish are sliding up on the warming flats with that incoming tide, tails and nervous water giving them away. As the sun climbs and the water gets higher, they spread out and get a bit tougher, then reposition along edges and channels as the tide drops. Reports from local captains out of Nassau, Andros, and Exuma over the past few days have been solid. Bonefish action has been steady, with most boats seeing half a dozen to a dozen fish brought to hand on a half‑day when conditions line up, with the usual mix of 2–5‑pounders and the occasional bigger ghost pushing 7–8 pounds on the deeper flats. A few permit have been spotted on the oceanside flats, though still picky as ever. In the blue water, boats running the ledge off New Providence, Abaco, and Eleuthera have been picking at mahi and blackfin tuna, with some sailfish still hanging around and the odd wahoo showing when the current edge is sharp. For gear, on the flats you want to go natural and subtle. Small shrimp patterns and tan‑to‑olive jigs are doing the work—think Crazy Charlie‑style flies, Gotcha variants, and light bucktail jigs in 1/8 to 1/4 ounce. For bait anglers, live shrimp and small crabs are money, and a piece of conch or fresh cut bait will tempt snapper and jacks around channel edges and mangrove cuts. Keep your presentations quiet; long casts and soft landings will out‑fish anything flashy when the sun gets high and the water clears. Offshore, crews are scoring with small‑ to medium‑size skirted ballyhoo, brighter colors like pink, green, and blue‑white doing well along weedlines and color changes. Diving plugs and feathers pulled a bit faster are turning up tuna and the odd wahoo along the drop. Chunked bonito and squid are bringing blackfin and the occasional grouper up in the deeper holes. Two hot spots to circle for today: First, the flats around the north side of Andros—those big, ankle‑ to knee‑deep sand and turtle‑grass stretches with plenty of channels. Work the incoming tide at first light and again late afternoon; scan for nervous water and tailing bonefish, and keep the sun at your back whenever you can. Second, the drop‑off off southwest New Providence—run that 600‑ to 1,200‑foot contour where the dark blue meets lighter water. Follow any weedlines and birds, set a spread of skirted ballyhoo, and be ready for mahi cruising the edges and blackfin stacking near the current breaks. Overall fish activity today should track the tides: best early and late with that moving water, a little slower and more technical mid‑day when the light is bright and the water is high. Stay stealthy on the flats, and follow the life offshore—birds, bait showers, weed patches, and temperature breaks. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more daily fishing intel. 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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