Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Mozambique fishing report. Along most of the coast today we’ve had light to moderate trade winds, mainly southeast, easing in the morning and freshening again mid‑afternoon. Skies have been partly cloudy with good barometric stability – the kind of weather that keeps the sea manageable but gives just enough chop to wake up the predators. Coastal forecasts from local maritime bulletins have been calling 0.8–1.5 m swell on the open coast, a bit flatter inside the bays. Sun came up just after 5 a.m. and slipped away just before 5:30 p.m. across the central coast, giving a tight winter day with long low‑light periods – prime time for gamefish. Tide charts from regional port authorities showed an early morning high, dropping to a mid‑day low, then a solid late‑afternoon push. That flood tide into the estuaries and reef points fired things up nicely. Inshore, the surf anglers around Maputo Bay, Catembe, and up toward Macaneta reported a decent mixed bag. Several locals picked up pompano, bonefish, and smaller kingfish on fresh sardine and prawn baits fished in the gutters at first light. A couple of better kingies were hooked and lost in the shore break – typical story when you go light on the trace. Best producers were circle hooks with small fillet baits and pink‑white silicone skirts over the hooks for a bit of flash. Estuary and mangrove channels near Maputo and Inhaca held good numbers of grunter and smaller snapper. Anglers drifting live prawns and small mullet along drop‑offs did well over the last of the outgoing and first push of the incoming. Soft plastics in natural baitfish colours – 3 to 4 inch paddletails on 1/4 to 3/8 oz jig heads – also accounted for some solid fish, especially when worked slow along the bottom. Offshore, boats running out from Inhaca and up the coast toward Xai‑Xai reported fair to good action. The blue water’s still close enough that a short run puts you in mahi‑mahi, bonito, and the odd yellowfin. Trolling feather jigs and small skirted lures in blue‑white, pink, and lumo green did most of the damage. A few boats picked up wahoo and school‑size king mackerel on deep‑diving hardbaits and rigged ballyhoo pulled a bit faster on the clean side of the current lines. For the artificials crew, metal spoons and casting jigs in the 30–60 g range worked well around reef edges and current lines, especially on the afternoon tide. Fast burns just under the surface drew violent strikes from kingies and bonito. Inshore, lighter 15–25 g spoons in silver or chrome, matched to 20–30 lb leader, were the ticket for spinning from the rocks. If you’re heading out tomorrow on a similar pattern, here’s what I’d pack: - Best **bait**: fresh sardine fillets, whole sardines for slide‑baiting, live mullet and prawns, and squid strips for grunter and snapper. - Best **lures**: small to medium spoons, 3–5 inch paddletails in natural and pearl, blue‑white and pink skirted lures, and diving plugs in mackerel or sardine patterns. Couple of **hot spots** to keep on your radar: - **Macaneta surf zone** north of Maputo: working the deeper gutters on the pushing tide for kingfish, pompano, and the odd kob, especially early morning and just before dark. - **Inhaca Island points and nearby reefs**: drift or slow‑troll along the drop‑offs for king mackerel, tuna, and wahoo, then move shallower on the last of the flood for snapper and reef species on bait and jigs. That’s your Mozambique coast fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. 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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