Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Mozambique coast fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today we’ve got light to moderate south‑easterlies early, freshening through the afternoon, with a small to moderate swell running clean on the morning push. Skies are partly cloudy with warm, humid air and just a chance of a light shower inland later on. Sunrise is around twenty‑to‑six local, with sunset just after five‑thirty, so your prime bite windows are the classic dawn and last‑light change. Tides are on the neap side after the recent springs, so the range isn’t huge but there’s still enough movement to fire things up on the push and the first of the drop. Work the last two hours of the incoming and the first hour of the outgoing around reef edges, river mouths and gutters; that’s when the bait is funnelled and the predators are most switched on. Offshore, the bluewater boys out of Maputo, Inhaca and further north off Vilanculos have been finding scattered yellowfin tuna and the odd dorado on the colour line where cleaner water pushes in. A few sailfish have shown deeper off the ledges, mostly for crews slow‑trolling live bait or small skirts in pink‑and‑white or blue‑and‑silver. Downsizing lures has helped; 4–6 inch feathers and small Kona‑style heads are getting more love than the big hardware. Inshore, the reefs and sand edges around Inhaca, Ponta do Ouro and up past Tofo have produced good mixed bags the last few days. Expect king mackerel (cuda), queenfish, pickhandle barracuda and the odd GT pacing the drop‑offs. Metal spoons in the 30–60 g range, fast‑wound, are still the go‑to on light braid, with natural chrome, green‑back and pink doing damage. Stickbaits and medium diving plugs in sardine or mullet patterns are also getting bit when the fish push bait to the surface. On the beaches, the surf guys working the deeper holes and side‑wash have been into stumpnose, pompano and smaller kingies, with the occasional bigger kob coming out after dark. Fresh sardine, chokka (squid) and prawn baits, neatly presented on a sliding trace, remain your best bet. If you’re scratching for bites in clear water, scale down hooks and use lighter fluorocarbon — the fish are a bit fussy on these neap tides. Estuaries and river mouths like the channels near Xai‑Xai and the mouths north of Vilanculos are holding some tasty grunter and small snapper. Live mullet, crab and prawn are hard to beat here, but soft plastics in paddle‑tail styles, worked slowly along the bottom, have been doing well on the cleaner morning water. For hot spots, keep an eye on: - The reef edges and drop‑offs off **Inhaca Island**, especially on the pushing tide at first light for cuda, queenies and tuna. - The **Tofo / Barra area**, where the inshore reefs meet the sand — spin metals early for gamefish, then send baits down for reef dwellers once the sun lifts. If you’re heading out today, travel safe, keep an eye on that afternoon breeze, and only take what you need — the Moz coast gives plenty if we look after her. 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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