Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today
This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report. Trade winds have eased a bit today, giving us a classic early winter pattern: cool, dry air, scattered cloud, and steady southeast breezes around 12–18 knots along the east and south coasts, lighter on the leeward west and northwest. Offshore, the sea is running 1.5–2 meters on the windward side, more manageable inside the lagoons and along the west. Sunrise came around 6:45 a.m. and sunset around 5:40 p.m., giving a short but productive light window. The morning incoming tide and the late-afternoon push lined up nicely with that low sun, and that’s when most of the better bites came. Midday has been slower, especially on the flats with that bright winter light. Inshore, the lagoons have been lively. Along the west coast from Flic-en-Flac up toward Tamarin, boats and shore anglers reported good numbers of small to medium **trevally**, **rainbow runners**, and the usual **lagoon species**—captain maillé, capitaine, and jobfish—on light tackle. A few solid GTs showed up right on the reef edge when the water started to move, mostly taken on stickbaits and poppers worked hard over the whitewater. On the fly and light spinning side, the flats around **Île aux Cerfs** and the eastern lagoons have produced a handful of **bonefish** and plenty of **golden trevally** and **yellowtail scad**. Anglers wading quietly on the dropping tide did best, casting small shrimp patterns, pink or tan, and 1/8–1/4 oz jigs tipped with a strip of squid. Offshore, the drop-offs off **Grand Baie** and **Trou aux Biches** saw decent action. Local skippers reported **yellowfin tuna** in the 10–25 kg range, a few **wahoo**, scattered **dorado**, and the odd **striper marlin** still hanging around the deeper blue. Trolled skirted lures in purple–black, lumo green, and pink, pulled at 7–8 knots along temp breaks and bird activity, have been the ticket. A couple of boats working live skipjack around FADs raised better-class tuna late in the afternoon. For bait, fresh **pilchards**, **sardines**, and **squid strips** are doing the heavy lifting. Bottom fishermen on the west and south coasts, especially off **Le Morne** and **Souillac**, picked up nice **red snapper**, **jobfish**, and **grouper** on simple running rigs with squid or cut bonito. Night sessions around the reef passes have produced a mix of emperor, snapper, and the odd big eel—great action if you don’t mind the dark and the wind. Best artificial choices right now: - For GT and trevally: large **floating stickbaits** and **cup-faced poppers** in blue–silver, bone, and mackerel patterns. - For lagoon species: 10–20 g **metal jigs**, small **soft plastics** in natural baitfish colors, and 60–80 mm **minnow plugs**. - For inshore trolling: small **skirts** in pink–white and green–yellow along the deeper reef edges and channels. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: - **Le Morne reef edge and passes**: great for GT, wahoo, and tuna when the tide starts to move and the chop kicks up. - The FAD lines off **Grand Baie** and **Cap Malheureux**: consistent for yellowfin and dorado if you put in the trolling miles and watch the birds. Focus your efforts around the tide changes—first light incoming and late-afternoon push—and scale down gear in the lagoons if the water is clear. When that wind drops around sunset, you’ve got a short but magic window for topwater mayhem on the reef. 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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