Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Evening, folks, Artificial Lure here, checking in with your Mozambique Coast fishing rundown. We’ve just come off a spring tide phase along the central and southern coast. Around Maputo Bay and down toward Ponta do Ouro, the afternoon high pushed in strong, with a decent drop toward low on the late evening making for good current lines along the sandbanks and reef edges. Up north off Vilankulo and the Bazaruto area, the tide pushed bait right onto the inshore reefs, and the gutters along the islands showed that classic green-blue colour change we like to see. Weather along most of the coast has been mild for the cooler season: light south to south‑easterly in the morning, picking up to a moderate onshore breeze in the afternoon, then easing again toward dark. Skies have been mostly clear with scattered cloud, and the swell has stayed manageable – a bit of a bump on the open coast, but very fishable behind the reefs and inside the bays. Sunrise has been early, with first light giving the best window. Sunset has lined up nicely with the evening push, and that last hour of light has been the prime bite. Water temps offshore are cooler but still holding enough warmth for pelagics, while the inshore estuaries and river mouths have cooled off just enough to wake up the grunter and kingies. Inshore, the catches have been solid rather than wild. Around Maputo and Inhaca, boats and shore anglers reported good numbers of kingfish, pickhandle barracuda, and the odd snoek. Rock-and-surf guys working the deeper points picked up stumpnose, blacktail, and a few decent kob on the night session. The estuary mouths gave up some spotted grunter and small queenfish on the drop. Offshore from Xai‑Xai up through Vilankulo, charters have been finding yellowfin tuna, couta, and a few wahoo along the drop‑offs and current lines. Nothing like peak-season chaos, but enough fish to keep the decks bloody. A couple of boats reported small sailfish raised on the outer edges of the reefs, proof that the blue water is keeping some life. Lure choice today has been all about profile and flash. For spinning and trolling inshore, small to medium metal spoons, white and chartreuse bucktail jigs, and minnow plugs in natural baitfish colours have been doing the job. Offshore, high-speed bullet heads and slim skirted lures in pink‑and‑white or blue‑and‑silver have produced the better strikes from tuna and couta. For bait, you can’t beat fresh if you can find it. Sardine, mackerel, and half‑beaks on light wire traces have been deadly on the reefs and points. In the estuaries, prawn, chokka strips, and small live mullet or bream have tempted the grunter and kingies. Night anglers soaking fresh sardine and chokka combos on the deeper beaches have had the better kob pulls. If you’re planning a session, a couple of hot spots to mark: – The Inhaca Island area and the channels of Maputo Bay, especially the ledges on the outgoing tide. – The inshore reefs and island drop‑offs around Bazaruto and Vilankulo, working the colour lines just after the tide turns. Focus on that early morning glass-off and the last light into the first part of the night, work the moving water, and match your lures to the bait in front of you – you’ll be in the game. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing talk. 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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