Norway, Fjords Fishing Report Today

Norwegian Fjords: Cod, Pollock, and Midnight Light - Your Late Summer Bite Guide

3 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Norwegian Fjords: Cod, Pollock, and Midnight Light - Your Late Summer Bite Guide

Descripción

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your late‑evening fjord report from the Norwegian coast. We’re rolling out of a cool, settled spell: light north to northwest breeze, 3–7 m/s in most western fjords, overcast to broken cloud with scattered showers, air temps mostly 8–13°C along the coast. Coastal bulletins from Yr and the Norwegian Meteorological Institute are calling calm to slight seas inshore, so it’s comfortable small‑boat weather if you watch the squalls and keep an eye on visibility. Sunrise along the west coast is a non‑event now – it barely gets dark. Around Bergen, first real light is just after 03:30 and it never goes fully black; up toward Nordfjord and Sunnmøre it’s even brighter. Sunset’s around 23:00–23:20, but that northern twilight runs straight into dawn, giving you a long crepuscular bite window. Tides from Kartverket’s coastal tables show a modest range tonight and into tomorrow: evening high around 19:30–20:30 in the big western fjords, then ebbing into a post‑midnight low. That last couple of hours of the flood and the first of the ebb have been the most productive, especially on points where the current squeezes. Fishing activity has picked up nicely this week. Local charter skippers around Sognefjorden and Hardangerfjorden report steady numbers of **cod**, **pollock (sei)** and **coalfish**, with better‑than‑average size on cod in 40–80 m. Several boats out of Ålesund and Geiranger have sent in photos of mixed boxes: cod, haddock, a few ling, plus mackerel starting to show in the upper layers on the warmer, clearer days. In the inner arms you’re also seeing decent **sea trout** along brackish pockets near river mouths. For lures, keep it simple and local: - For cod and coalfish: 60–150 g Norwegian jigs or pilkers in silver, blue‑silver, or green‑black. Add a small Gulp teaser or fly above the jig when the fish are scattered mid‑water. - For pollock on structure: 20–40 g slim jigs or sand‑eel style soft plastics in natural baitfish colours, worked fast along drop‑offs. - For mackerel: small flashy sabiki rigs tipped with a sliver of mackerel or herring skin; a 20–30 g chrome spoon works when they’re busting on top. - For sea trout tight to shore: 15–25 g long‑cast spoons in copper, olive or blue, or slim wobblers fished with pauses. Best natural baits right now are **fresh herring**, **mackerel strips**, and **shrimp**. Salted mackerel holds up well in the current and is deadly on cod and ling when fished just off the bottom over rough ground. Two hotspots to keep on your radar: - The outer Sognefjord skerries, especially around exposed points near Fedje and into the deeper channels: good tidal flow, mixed ground, solid cod and pollock when the current’s running. - The mid‑Hardangerfjord ledges between Norheimsund and Utne: classic drop‑offs from 20–60 m, producing cod on baited rigs and lively coalfish on jigs, with sea trout cruising the shoreline in the low light. Work those tide changes, fish the moving water, and don’t be afraid to move if you’re not marking bait – the fjords are deep, and life stacks where the current pushes food. 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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episode Norway Fjord Report: Cod and Coalfish in Long Light Conditions artwork

Norway Fjord Report: Cod and Coalfish in Long Light Conditions

Artificial Lure here with your Norway fjord fishing report. Along the western fjords from Hardanger up past Sognefjorden, we’ve been under a mixed sky – light showers rolling through with long, bright breaks. Daytime air’s been sitting around the low teens Celsius, dropping toward 8–10°C at night. A gentle to moderate breeze from the southwest has been the norm, with the more open fjord mouths picking up a bit of chop while the inner arms stay fairly calm. Up this way we’re still enjoying the long light. Around Bergen and Sognefjorden, sunrise is a little before 4 in the morning and sunset around 11 at night, with usable twilight pretty much all “night.” Farther north toward Ålesund and Trondheim, it’s even brighter – more or less continuous gloaming that keeps the fish active in the low-light windows. The tide today has been running a standard semi‑diurnal pattern: a decent morning high followed by a strong outgoing, then another push late afternoon into evening. The best action has lined up with the last half of the flood and the first of the ebb, especially where side arms meet the main fjord and around points that pinch the current. Cod and coalfish have been the main story. Local boats in outer Sognefjorden and the inlets around Ålesund have reported steady catches of plate‑sized cod, plenty in the 1–3 kilo range with the odd better fish mixed in. Coalfish are schooling mid‑water, smashing small baitfish over 20–40 meters, and a few better pollock have come from steeper rock walls where the current hits. Closer to shore, folks fishing light gear have picked up mackerel and smaller saithe, with bonus wrasse and the odd flounder on bait. Fish activity has peaked in the early morning and again late evening when the light softens and the wind drops. Midday has been slower in the clear water unless you’re fishing deeper edges or strong current seams. On calm stretches, you can often see shoals pushing bait up, especially near headlands and narrows. Lure choice has been pretty classic fjord fare. Slim metal jigs in the 40–80 gram range, silver or blue‑silver, have been deadly for cod and coalfish when jigged just off the bottom or burned up through the water column. Small to medium shads in natural baitfish colors – sand eel green, pearl, and motor‑oil – rigged on 30–60 gram jig heads are producing well on drifted reefs and ledges. For shore anglers, 18–30 gram coastal wobblers and long‑casting spoons in silver, copper, or mackerel pattern are hard to beat. On the bait side, strips of mackerel, herring, or saury on simple paternoster rigs are still king for cod and mixed groundfish. A bit of scent seems to help in the deeper water; just keep the leads heavy enough to hold bottom in the tide, but not so heavy that you lose the feel of the bites. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: First, the outer arms of **Sognefjorden** near Balestrand and out toward the mouth. Drift the 40–80 meter contours along reef edges where the tide pushes hard; that’s been producing solid cod and coalfish, especially on the evening flood. Second, the **Hjørundfjorden** area south of Ålesund. Steep rock walls with ledges around 20–50 meters have given up nice pollock and coalfish when you work shads tight to the structure, letting them swing naturally in the current. If you’re heading out, time your session around the tide turns, fish the moving water, and don’t be afraid to change depth often until you find where the fish are hanging today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports from Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

22 de jun de 20263 min
episode Norway's Early Summer Fjord Bite: Timing the Tide for Cod and Coalfish artwork

Norway's Early Summer Fjord Bite: Timing the Tide for Cod and Coalfish

This is Artificial Lure with your Norway fjord fishing report. Along the Western Fjords from Hardanger up past Sognefjorden, we’ve had a classic early‑summer pattern: light to moderate southwest breeze, patchy low cloud, and stable high pressure keeping things relatively calm on the water. Coastal forecasts from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute mention 3–8 m/s winds in most inner fjords, with only a slight chop. Air temps have been sitting in the low to mid teens Celsius, with sea temps in the inner fjords around 10–13°C. Sunrise is coming very early and sunset very late now – you’re essentially fishing in long, drawn‑out daylight. That extended low‑angle light around “evening” is still prime time. The key tide windows have been the two to three hours around the high tide. Inner fjords are seeing a decent tidal push, and when that current wraps around points and narrows, the bait stacks up and the predators switch on. Fish activity has been solid. Coastal reports and local tackle shops around Bergen and Ålesund say good numbers of **cod**, **coalfish (saithe)**, and **pollock** taken this past week, with some nice **ling** and the odd **halibut** deeper on the drops. In the mid‑fjords, anglers jigging vertically in 40–120 meters have been boating mixed bags of cod and coalfish, often 10–20 fish per boat session when the tide is right. Closer to shore, folks casting from rocks are seeing steady coalfish and smaller pollock, plus the occasional mackerel starting to show. Best lures right now are classic Norwegian metal: 60–150 g pilkers in silver, blue‑silver, and green‑silver, worked close to bottom for cod and ling. For coalfish and pollock, slim jigs and heavy soft‑plastic shads in natural sandeel colors are producing well when fished fast through mid‑water. A lot of locals are also doing damage with small to medium spoons and 20–40 g jigs for shore fishing, especially in the evenings when baitfish push tight to the rocks. If you prefer bait, salted or fresh **mackerel strips** and **herring** on simple paternoster rigs are hard to beat. Use enough lead to hold bottom in the current and leave it to soak – cod and ling have been quick to find a scent trail. For halibut hunters, big whole or half mackerel or herring, fished on a sliding rig over sand and shell in 20–60 meters, remain the go‑to. A couple of hotspots to consider: • Inner **Sognefjord narrows**: Areas where the fjord pinches and the current accelerates have been excellent for cod and coalfish. Look for steep drop‑offs from 30 down to 100 meters and jig right along that edge. • Outer **Hjørundfjord and approaches to Ålesund**: Points and reefy humps in 40–80 meters have produced coalfish, pollock, and some quality cod. Drift across structure with pilkers and soft plastics, then mark any bait balls you see and work them hard. Fish the current, fish the structure, and keep an eye on those short, intense feeding windows around tide turns. The bite may be quiet for an hour, then go crazy for 20 minutes – be ready when it does. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more fjord fishing reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21 de jun de 20263 min
episode Norwegian Fjords Report: Early Summer Cod, Ling and Pollack Tactics artwork

Norwegian Fjords Report: Early Summer Cod, Ling and Pollack Tactics

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your late‑evening fjord report from the Norwegian coast. Along the western fjords from Hardanger up past Sognefjorden, we’ve had a classic early‑summer pattern: light to moderate southwesterly breeze, patchy low cloud, and calm to slight seas inside the fjords. Coastal forecasts from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute call for air temps in the low to mid‑teens Celsius, with only scattered showers and decent visibility overnight. That means comfortable conditions, especially in the more sheltered arms. Sun rose around half past three this morning and will duck back under the horizon close to eleven tonight, so you’ve basically got usable light almost around the clock. Those long twilight windows have been productive: early morning and late evening have clearly outfished midday, when the sun is high and the water goes a bit lifeless in the upper layers. Tides are running on the modest side, with a rising tide through the morning and early afternoon on much of the west coast, then ebbing into the night. Inside the fjords the range is smaller but still enough to push bait along points and narrows. The hour either side of the turn, especially on the flood, has been the sweet spot for bites. Over the last couple of days, local skippers out of Bergen and Ålesund report good mixed bags: plenty of cod in the 2–5 kilo range on broken bottom around 40–80 meters, steady coalfish in midwater over deeper basins, and a nice sprinkle of pollack tight to rock walls and underwater pinnacles. There’ve also been some respectable ling from the deeper ledges, and the usual plagues of small whiting and mackerel crashing bait near the surface when the tide starts running. Best producers have been simple but well‑presented rigs. For cod and ling, a standard paternoster with 150–200 g lead and 4/0–6/0 hooks baited with strips of fresh mackerel or herring has outfished frozen baits. Squid strips have taken fish too, but the fresher and oilier the better. A lot of boats are also doing well with 100–200 g metal jigs in silver‑blue or green‑yellow patterns, worked fairly close to the bottom with slow lifts and short pauses. For pollack and coalfish along the steep walls, soft plastic shads in the 12–18 cm range, in natural sandeel or dark brown/black, have been deadly when fished on 40–80 g jig heads. Count them down, keep them near structure, and retrieve with a slow, steady crank and the odd pause. A few locals are quietly raving about small, slim flutter jigs for coalfish in the upper 20 meters when they’re smashing bait at first light. If you’re after mackerel for bait or the grill, tiny silver or green feathered sabiki rigs have been filling buckets quickly on the surface boils, especially near current lines on the flood. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: • Inner Sognefjord drop‑offs near rocky points, where the depth plunges from 40 down to 150 meters in no time. Those edges have been stacked with cod on the lower ledges and coalfish midwater when the tide is moving. • The narrows and reefy points around the mouth of Hardangerfjord, particularly where side fjords meet the main channel. Pollack have been tight to the rocks here, and ling are coming off the deeper ledges just outside. Stick to those tide changes, keep an eye on bait on the sounder, and don’t be afraid to move if you’re not seeing life in 20–30 minutes. The fish are there; it’s about landing on the right patch. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more on‑the‑water updates and local tactics. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

20 de jun de 20263 min
episode Fjord Gold: Early Summer Coalfish and Pollock in Norway's Best Light artwork

Fjord Gold: Early Summer Coalfish and Pollock in Norway's Best Light

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your fjord fishing report from the west coast of Norway. We’ve got a classic early‑summer setup in the big fjords around Bergen, Sognefjorden, and Hardanger. A stable high has been sitting over southern Norway, so most fjords saw light to moderate winds today, generally 3–7 m/s from the northwest in the outer parts and lighter, more variable breezes deep inside the fjords. Skies ran partly cloudy with decent sunny breaks. Air temps hovered around 13–17°C waterside, with sea temps mostly 9–12°C in the outer fjords and a touch warmer in sheltered arms. Sunrise along the west coast came just before 4 a.m. and sunset a bit after 11 p.m., giving that long, soft light we love. True darkness never really settled, so the best bite windows were the classic crepuscular periods: roughly 03:00–06:00 and again 21:30–23:30, when the light dimmed enough for predators to push bait into the edges. Tidewise, we had a mid‑range swing, not spring‑tide big, but enough movement to matter. The stronger flows were in the outer fjord mouths and narrows around mid‑morning and late evening. Slack water in the middle of the day made the fishing slower, especially for pollock and coalfish that wanted current. Reports from local boats and pier anglers the last day or two have been solid. Good numbers of **coalfish (sei)** and **pollock (lyr)** in the 1–3 kg range have been coming from current edges and drop‑offs, with a few 5+ kg fish taken deeper on jigs. **Cod (torsk)** catches are steadier now in 20–60 m, mostly eater‑size 1–4 kg, with the odd bigger fish coming from the ledges. **Mackerel (makrell)** are building in, shoals moving in and out of the outer fjords, with some fast action on light gear. Closer to the bottom, a mix of **ling**, **tusk**, and the odd **wolffish** have come to those fishing natural baits on steep walls. Fish activity has been best when tide and low light overlap. Midday, under bright sky and slack current, the bite slowed and fish pushed deeper. This evening’s outgoing tide lining up with dim light turned on a strong pollock bite along rocky points and underwater pinnacles near the fjord mouths. On lures, slim metal jigs in the 40–80 g range in blue‑silver or green‑silver have outfished most offerings, especially when worked fast through midwater for coalfish. Soft plastics—shads in 10–15 cm on 30–60 g jig heads—have been deadly for cod and pollock when bounced close to the bottom. Locals are also doing well with small silver‑finish spoons and 20–30 g casting jigs for mackerel. For the more traditional crowd, natural bait rigs with strips of mackerel or herring on paternoster rigs are producing steady cod, ling, and tusk. Best bait right now: fresh mackerel strip if you can get it; otherwise frozen herring works fine. For shore anglers, a simple sliding float with a piece of shrimp or worm near harbor mouths will pick up smaller cod, saithe, and the occasional flatfish. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – Outer Hardangerfjord, around the points near Rosendal and the narrows towards Kvinnherad: strong evening tide there has been stacking coalfish and pollock over the 20–50 m drops, with cod on the deeper ledges. – Sognefjord side fjords near Balestrand and into the deeper arms: cod and ling on steep rock walls in 60–120 m, especially where a side fjord funnels into the main basin. Work your jigs or bait rigs tight to the structure and watch your sounder for midwater coalfish schools. Inside the Bergen area, the islands and skerries west of the city have given good mackerel and smaller coalfish on light spinning gear during the last couple of evenings, particularly where the current wraps around points or through narrow sounds. That’s the fjord roundup from Artificial Lure. 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

19 de jun de 20264 min
episode Norway Fjord Summer Bite: Cod, Saithe, and Midnight Light Glory artwork

Norway Fjord Summer Bite: Cod, Saithe, and Midnight Light Glory

This is Artificial Lure with your Norway fjord fishing report. Along the west coast fjords from Hardanger and Sogne up toward Nordfjord, we’ve had a typical early-summer pattern: light to moderate southwesterly breeze, scattered low clouds, and stable barometer. Coastal forecasts from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute call for 3–7 m/s winds, a slight chop in the outer fjords, and calmer, glassier water once you tuck inside the arms. Sunrise is coming early and sunset late now, with only a few hours of grey. That long, low light at “almost-night” has been the prime window. Local tide tables show decent mid-range tides this week, with a stronger flood pushing in during the late evening and a gentler ebb through the small hours. The best bite has lined up with the first two hours of the flood, especially where current squeezes around points and narrows. Fish activity has picked up nicely. In the mid-fjords, small-boat anglers report steady **cod**, **pollock/saithe**, and **coalfish**, with a scattering of **ling** on the drop-offs and **plaice/dab** on softer bottoms. Many boats are bringing in mixed bags of 1–3 kg cod and pollock, with the odd 5–7 kg fish for those working deeper ledges. Shore anglers have had decent numbers of smaller coalfish and mackerel from piers and rocks where the baitfish are funnelled by current. For lures, metal and movement are paying off. Slim **pilkers** in silver, blue, or green, 60–150 g depending on depth, are still the workhorses for cod and saithe. Soft shads on 40–80 g jig heads in natural sand-eel colours—olive, pearl, and motor oil—have outfished traditional gear when fished close to the bottom with slow lifts. On calmer evenings, smaller 20–30 g casting jigs and spoons worked fast in the upper 10 metres have triggered furious mackerel and coalfish flurries under bird activity. Bait anglers are doing well with **strip baits** of mackerel or herring on simple paternoster rigs. A bit of scent has made a clear difference on slower tides; salted mackerel strips stay on the hook and withstand the pickers. For flatfish in the inner fjord sand flats, small hooks baited with ragworm, lugworm, or tiny mackerel strips, fished slowly along the bottom, have produced plaice and dabs in modest but consistent numbers. Two hotspots to consider: First, the **outer Sognefjord shoulders** near the mouths of side-fjords and skerries. Where the tide speeds up around the islands, cod and saithe are holding mid-water over 40–80 m, and there have been some chunky coalfish smashing jigs on the drop. Second, the **narrows and points of Hardangerfjord**, particularly where steep rock walls fall straight into 50+ metres. Boats drifting across these edges with pilkers and large shads have reported mixed bags, including a few better ling and the occasional halibut for those patient enough to bump big baits along the bottom. If you’re heading out tonight into the almost-midnight light, focus on those current lines, watch for birds picking over bait, and keep your lures moving but close to structure. The fjords are alive, and the next good fish is probably a cast or two away. 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

18 de jun de 20263 min