Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Mozambique coast fishing report. Along the channel today we had a gentle **southerly to south‑easterly** pattern, light in the early morning, building to a moderate breeze by mid‑afternoon. Skies ran partly cloudy with good visibility and only a slight chop outside the reef lines. Air temps sat in the mid‑20s Celsius, dropping off nicely after sunset – comfortable on the water and kind to the bite. Tides along the central and southern coast brought a decent **morning high pushing through first light**, easing into a falling tide late morning, then a smaller afternoon push before an evening drop. Those first two hours either side of the dawn high and the start of the evening run‑out fished best, especially on the reef edges and river mouths where that moving water stacked bait. Sunrise came in early, just after five, with sunset mid‑evening, giving a long low‑light window. That grey light period, with a bit of colour in the water, switched the predators on. The inshore water held a mild green‑blue tint, a touch of swell from the south, but nothing that shut down the surf line. Offshore reports from local skippers out of **Maputo, Inhaca and Xai‑Xai** had **yellowfin tuna**, **bonito**, and the odd **dorado** still around the 40–80 m marks. A couple of boats worked the drop‑offs with diving plugs and small feathers and went home with half a dozen tuna per crew, plus some nice by‑catch kawa‑kawa. Closer to the reefs, slow‑trollers picked up **king mackerel (couta)** and **queen mackerel**, with a few solid fish topping the 10 kg mark. Inshore, the **surf and estuaries** produced **pickhandle barracuda, kingfish (GT and big‑eye), snapper, grunter and stumpnose**. Estuary guys reported steady numbers of smaller snapper and river bream on the slower parts of the tide, with the bigger fish moving on the first of the push. Best producers today: - Offshore lures: **small skirted lures in pink/white and blue/silver**, deep‑diving minnows in **sardine** and **mackerel** patterns, and metal spoons dropped on the sounder marks for tuna. - Natural baits offshore: **rigged sardine, half‑beak and small bonito strips** for couta and dorado. - Inshore lures: **white and pearl paddletails**, 1–1.5 oz jigheads, and medium topwaters in **bone** or **natural mullet** did the damage on kingfish and barracuda along the points. - Natural baits in the surf: **chokka (squid) combos**, **sardine fillets**, and **prawn baits** for grunter and stumpnose, fished on a light trace just behind the first shorebreak. If you’re looking for spots to hit on the next window: - **Inhaca Island – Santa Maria and the Bar mouth:** Work the channel edges on the last of the drop and first of the push with paddletails and live bait for kingfish and couta. When the current eases, drop down for snapper. - **Ponta do Ouro northward points:** Great structure in close. Cast spoons and plugs at first light for kingfish and bonito, then switch to baits for stumpnose and smaller reefies once the sun gets up. Overall fish activity has been **above average** for early winter – not a full‑on frenzy, but solid, consistent action if you time the tides and work the moving water. Downsizing leaders in the clear patches and keeping presentations natural made a big difference for the wary fish today. That’s your Mozambique coast report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next session. 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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