Thailand, Gulf Coast Fishing Report Today
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf of Thailand fishing report. Along the upper Gulf today—from Chonburi down through Rayong and over toward Hua Hin—the weather’s been classic wet‑season stuff: hot, humid, and unstable. Afternoon temps pushed low 30s Celsius with feels-like closer to 36, light to moderate southwest wind, and those on‑off squalls rolling through. Thai Met Department is calling scattered thunderstorms into the evening, which has kept cloud cover high and the bite better in the low‑light windows. Sun slipped up just after six this morning and will drop a bit after six this evening, giving a nice, long crepuscular period. Those first two hours after sunrise and last two before sunset have been the money times, especially when the tide’s moving. Tides in the central Gulf are running a moderate rise in the early morning, slack-ish by late morning, then a decent fall this afternoon into evening. That moving water has turned on the predators along river mouths and near inshore structure. Channel edges and any current seams off piers and rock walls have held the most life. Inshore around Bang Saen, Sattahip, and down past Rayong, boats and shore anglers have been picking up good numbers of **torpedo scad**, **bigeye trevally**, small **queenfish**, and mixed **reef species** like **snapper** and **grouper** tight to rocks and artificial reefs. Night sessions near lit piers have seen steady schools of **squid** and smaller baitfish, with the odd **barracuda** and **Spanish mackerel** cruising the edges. Farther out, where folks are working the nearshore reefs and patties, **cobia**, **golden trevally**, and better‑grade **grouper** have been coming over the rails, not in huge numbers but solid enough to keep everyone honest. Around estuaries on the western side of the Gulf, **barramundi** and **sea bass** have been feeding around the turn of the tide, especially when the water colors up just a bit. Artificial-wise, the standout producers have been: - Small **metal jigs** in the 10–40 gram range in sardine and anchovy patterns, worked fast for mackerel and trevally. - 3–4 inch **soft plastics** on 1/4–1/2 oz jig heads, natural baitfish and shrimp colors, hopped along the bottom for snapper and grouper. - Shallow **minnow plugs** and low‑profile **topwaters** for barramundi and sea bass at dawn and dusk, especially along mangroves and rock walls. For bait, you can’t beat **live shrimp**, **small live baitfish** (like pla sai), and **fresh squid strips**. Cut fish baits are getting the grouper and cobia interested when the tide slows, particularly near wrecks and reef edges. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Sattahip area reefs and headlands**: Work the rocky points and nearshore reef patches with metal jigs and soft plastics on the falling tide. Good mixed bag of trevally, queenfish, snapper, plus the chance at a surprise cobia. - **Rayong nearshore and piers**: Night fishing around the lights with small jigs and sabiki rigs for baitfish and squid, then sending a livey out for mackerel and barracuda. Early-morning session with minnows along the rock walls can turn up some really nice fish. If you’re heading out, watch the storms, keep an eye on the wind shifts, and time your trip around that moving water at dawn or dusk. That’s when the Gulf wakes up. 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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