Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Mozambique coast fishing report. Along most of the coast today, we’ve got a light to moderate southeast trade wind pushing 8 to 14 knots through the day, easing a bit toward evening. Seas are sitting around 1 to 1.5 meters offshore, calmer and nicely fishable inside the reefs and in the estuaries. Humidity is up, but the air is comfortable once that breeze gets going. Sunrise along the coast is just after 6 in the morning, with sunset shortly after 5 in the evening. The prime bite windows have been the dawn change of light and then again in the last hour before dark. Around the middle of the day, things have been slower and more scratchy, especially on the shallower reefs. Tides are running on a moderate cycle: a decent morning push and a solid evening fill. That incoming tide into the bays and river mouths has been the sweet spot, with cleaner water pushing in and bait stacking on the edges of channels and sandbars. The bottom of the tide has been weedy and quiet in many of the estuaries. Offshore, the last few days off Ponta do Ouro and further north toward Inhaca have produced good numbers of yellowfin tuna and the odd dorado on the current lines. Most boats trolling small skirted lures in pink, green, and blue–silver, plus Halco‑style deep divers in purple and mackerel patterns, have found fish. A few wahoo have also come up on fast‑trolled lipped plugs and longer metal bullets. On the reefs off Maputo and Xai‑Xai, bottom fishing has been solid: mixed bags of kingfish, snapper, rockcod, and rubberlip grunter. Fresh cutbait and squid strips on simple bottom rigs are doing the damage. Slow‑pitch jigs between 60 and 120 grams in natural sardine and orange–gold are also working when there’s a bit of current. Inshore, the surf along the beaches near Tofo, Barra, and Vilanculos has seen good action on kingfish, shad, and smaller reef species. Spinning with 1–2 ounce spoons in chrome or green, plus soft plastics on half‑ounce jigheads, is producing when you find working birds or bait schools. Early morning push has been best; once the sun climbs, fish pull slightly deeper and you’ll need longer casts and heavier metal. For bait fishers in the surf, chokka, sardine baits, and small crab or prawn baits around rocky points and gutters are turning up stumpnose, pompano, and the odd kingie. Keep traces light and neat; the water’s been fairly clear on the incoming. Estuaries and river mouths like the channels around Inhaca and the San Sebastian area near Vilanculos have been alive with smaller trevally, queenfish, and grunter. Live mullet and small live baits fished on running traces are taking the better fish. For artificials, small surface walkers and 3–4 inch paddletails in pearl, olive, and gold glitter have been deadly on the early‑morning glass‑off. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: Ponta do Ouro: Work the color lines and temperature breaks a few miles out for tuna and dorado on small skirts and deep divers. Then slide back onto the shallower reefs with jigs and bait for reef fish on the slower tide. Inhaca and Santa Maria area: Drift the channels on the incoming tide for kingfish, queenfish, and grunter, mixing live baits with soft plastics. When the light gets low, walk the sandbanks and drop‑offs with surface lures for some explosive hits. Overall, fish activity is best at first light and late afternoon, tied to that pushing tide and any sign of bait or bird life. Keep your eyes open, move until you find life, and match the hatch with small, natural‑colored lures or fresh bait. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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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