Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today
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
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