Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Artificial Lure here with your Mozambique coast fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today we’ve had a steady **easterly to south‑easterly breeze**, 10–18 knots in most spots, a bit stronger on the points. Air temps sat in the high 20s, sea surface around 25–26°C – still nicely warm for winter water, but with just enough chill in the morning to perk up the predators. Tides along the Maputo–Inhambane stretch were running on a **springy side of medium**, with a good predawn low and a punchy mid‑morning push of water. That early incoming tide has been the magic window: cleaner water sliding over the reefs and sandbanks, plenty of baitfish moving, and the gamefish right behind them. Sunrise came just after 6 and the first light bite was properly on; sunset around 5:15 gave a short but productive last‑light flurry. Off the reefs near **Inhambane and Barra**, boats working the 20–40 m line reported solid action on **queen mackerel, kawakawa, and a few chunky yellowfin tuna** just beyond the color line. Skippers trolling **small silver‑blue spoons, Halco‑style deep divers, and feather jigs** did best, especially when they kept lures tight to the bait balls. A couple of boats also raised **sailfish** on the drop‑offs, mostly on small halfbeaks and pink‑white kona heads. Closer to shore, the surf at **Ponta do Ouro, Ponta Malongane, and Xai‑Xai** produced some handsome **pompanos, stumpnose, and smaller kingies**. The guys scratching with **fresh sand prawn, chokka strips, and sardine baits** picked away all day, but the real run happened on the first two hours of the pushing tide. Light fluorocarbon traces and small circle hooks outfished the heavy gear. On the estuary and mangrove side, particularly around **Maputo Bay and the Inhambane estuary**, drop‑shotters throwing **3–4 inch paddle‑tails in natural baitfish colours** found **kingfish, pickhandle barracuda, and some decent grunter** on the edges of the channels. A slow retrieve just off the bottom, with the tide pushing, has been the winning pattern. Live mullet and small crab baits drifted in the current also fooled some proper grunter and rock salmon. If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan to fish **predawn into mid‑morning on the push**, and again the **last two hours before dark**. Offshore, run small spread of **silver and green lures, feathers, and a couple of rigged sardines** around the bait schools. In the surf, keep it simple: **fresh sard, chokka, and prawn** on light gear. For lures off the rocks and beaches, **1–2 oz spoons and small stickbaits** in white, pearl, or sardine patterns are turning heads. A couple of hot spots to keep on your list: - **Barra Lighthouse reefs** – reliable for mackerel, tuna, and the odd sail when the current is right. - **Ponta do Ouro point and backline** – great for spinning for kingies and snoek at first light, especially on a pushing tide. - **Xai‑Xai surf banks** – producing edible species on bait, with the chance of a surprise kingfish in the white water. That’s the wrap from the Moz coast – good conditions, active bait, and enough fish around to keep any angler smiling, as long as you time those tides and keep your baits fresh. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates and stories from the water. 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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