Norway Fjords: Spring Cod and Coalfish in Light Winds and Long Daylight
This is Artificial Lure with your Norway fjord fishing report.
Along the western fjords from Hardanger up past Sognefjord, a weak low is sliding east, leaving **light winds**, scattered clouds, and good visibility. Coastal forecasts from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute call for **3–7 m/s winds**, mostly south to southwest, and only a slight chop in the inner fjords. Air temps are sitting around **10–14°C** in the early hours, nudging toward the high teens this afternoon, with just a few light showers pushing through the more open stretches.
Tides inside the fjords are modest but still matter. Inner Sognefjord and Hardangerfjord see **small ranges**, roughly half a meter or so between low and high on this cycle, but the important bit is **moving water**: the bite has been best an hour either side of the turn, especially on the **flood** when bait pushes tighter to the rock walls and points.
Sunrise is early and sunset late now, giving you a **long gray dawn and dusk window**. Think of it like this: first light is creeping in well before most folks have the kettle on, and you’ve still got usable light late into the evening. That long low‑angle light has been the prime time for better fish.
Reports from local skippers and pier regulars around the fjords say **cod and coalfish (sei)** have been steady, with a mix of **pollack, haddock, and a few ling** from deeper drops. In the inner arms, smaller **codling and whiting** are keeping light tackle busy, while the mouths of the fjords are still giving up the occasional **halibut** for those working slowly along sandy channels.
Catch rates aren’t spectacular but **consistent**: boat crews jigging vertically over ledges in 40–100 meters are seeing **dozens of pan‑sized cod and coalfish** on a decent tide, with the odd better fish mixed in. From shore, guys working rock marks near drop‑offs are picking a **handful of decent pollack** per session when they commit to moving and covering water.
Lure choice has been simple and effective:
- For cod, coalfish, and haddock: **20–80 g metal jigs**, sand eel imitations, and slim shads in **silver, blue, and green**. Let them hit bottom, then work slow lifts with pauses.
- For pollack along steep walls and kelp: **soft plastics on 20–40 g jig heads**, natural baitfish colors or dark brown/black in the low light. Count them down, then retrieve with long pulls and drops.
- For halibut and bigger cod on the banks: **large paddle‑tail shads** in white or chartreuse fished close to the bottom, slow and steady.
If you’re bait fishing, the locals are still doing well with **strips of mackerel or herring**, plus **shrimp and squid** on simple running ledger rigs. Fresh is king, but even frozen mackerel is putting fish on the deck when fished near structure during the tide run.
A couple of hotspots to keep in mind:
- **Outer Sognefjord, near the mouth around Rugsund and the channels toward Bremanger**: broken ground, strong but manageable tide, and a good mix of cod, coalfish, and the chance of a halibut if you stay patient with big shads or bait.
- **Hardangerfjord around Odda and the steeper rock faces near Tyssedal**: great for shore and small‑boat fishing, with pollack hugging the walls and cod on the pockets of rough ground just off the drop.
In general, focus on **points, underwater ledges, and channel edges** where the tide squeezes. Fish the **start and end of the run**, especially at dawn and dusk, and don’t be afraid to change lure weight until you’re ticking bottom now and then.
That’s your fjord report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next session.
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