Mozambique, Coast Fishing Report Today
Artificial Lure here with your Mozambique Coast fishing report for this evening, the 20th of May. Along most of the central and southern coast – from Inhaca down past Ponta do Ouro and up through Inhambane and Vilankulo – we’ve had a fairly calm autumn pattern. Local marine forecasts along the Maputo and Inhambane coasts are calling for light to moderate south‑easterlies, 8–14 knots through the night, easing towards dawn, with seas in the 1–1.5 m range offshore and a gentle chop inshore. Air temps are sitting in the low‑20s °C overnight, water temps around 24–25 °C, clean green to light blue outside the reefs. Tides along the Mozambique Channel tonight are running on a medium cycle. Around Maputo Bay and Inhambane, the late‑evening tide has just come off the peak and is pushing into a slow ebb. First light will line up with the last of the outgoing, and we’ll see the turn to flood mid‑morning – a good window for inshore action when that new water starts pushing over the sandbanks and reefs. Sunrise tomorrow along the coast will be just after 5:50 am, with sunset around 5:10 pm, giving a short but punchy light window. With the cooling nights and stable barometer, fish activity has picked up nicely at dawn and again in the last hour of light. Inshore, local skippers out of Maputo and Costa do Sol report decent catches of king mackerel (couta) and queen mackerel on the reefs just outside the bay. Small shoals of chisel‑tooth snapper, rock cod, and some solid green and yellow‑spot kingfish have been coming off the inshore pinnacles. Inhambane and Barra charters are talking about good numbers of smaller couta, bonito, and the odd yellowfin tuna riding the color lines, with shoaling baitfish tight to the reefs. Offshore from Vilankulo and the Bazaruto area, boats running the ledges have found wahoo and sailfish in the deeper blue, though the sails are still spotty. A few bull and prodigal son kob have also been taken on the deeper inshore reefs north of town. Night‑time bottom guys are seeing steady action on emperor, jobfish, and big snapper when the current is not screaming. Best lures right now: for trolling couta and wahoo, stick with 4–6 inch Halco‑style hardbodies, small diving plugs, and bullet heads rigged with strip bait. Pink, purple, and blue/white skirts have been doing damage. Spinning from the surf and rocks, medium spoons in chrome or green/blue, 40–60 g, and slim stickbaits are drawing strikes from kingfish and queenfish, especially worked fast over structure as the tide turns. For bait, pilchard and sardine remain king in Mozambique. Rig them on wire for couta and wahoo. Chokka (squid) and cut bonito are producing on the reefs for snapper and kob. In the estuaries and mangrove creeks near Maputo and Inhambane, live mullet and small prawns are the ticket for grunter and smaller kingfish on the push. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots: – Maputo area: The reefs just outside the bay mouth – particularly around Portuguese Island and the deep edges off Inhaca – are holding couta and queenies on the early‑morning run‑out and the first push of the flood. – Inhambane / Barra: The Barra Lighthouse reef and surrounding pinnacles are firing when the wind drops and the current lines up. Work the drop‑offs for couta and bonito, and drop baits down the edges for snapper and jobfish. – Vilankulo / Bazaruto: The ledges east of Bazaruto and the reef systems closer to Margaruque are producing mixed gamefish, with the best bites on the early‑morning troll and late‑afternoon jig. Plan your session around the tide turns, fish the low light hard, and be ready to move if the current or water color looks dead. The fish are there if you put in the time and keep your baits swimming right. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates. 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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