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Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today

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Les mer Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the crystal-clear tropical waters of the Atlantic and Caribbean. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Bahamas' world-class offshore billfish runs, vibrant coral reefs, and legendary flats, and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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episode Bahamas Fishing Report: Light Winds, Steady Offshore Action, Bones Biting cover

Bahamas Fishing Report: Light Winds, Steady Offshore Action, Bones Biting

This is Artificial Lure with your Bahamas fishing report. Trade winds eased a bit overnight, and we’re waking up to classic Caribbean conditions. Expect east to east‑southeast breeze around 10 to 15 knots across most of the islands, lighter in the lee of the larger cays. Skies are partly sunny with a few passing showers, and seas running 3 to 5 feet outside the reefs, 1 to 2 feet inside. According to the Bahamas Department of Meteorology, air temps are sitting in the low 80s, climbing into the upper 80s by afternoon, with that typical sticky humidity. Tides are running moderate. Around Nassau and the central Bahamas, we’ve got a predawn low followed by a mid‑morning flood that tops out late morning, then an afternoon drop. Down through Exuma and Long Island the curve is similar but shifted roughly an hour later. That first push of incoming water after sunrise is your best bet for bonefish and reef edge action, while the start of the outgoing this afternoon should fire up the channels and creek mouths. Sunrise came just after 6, with sunset due near 7:45 this evening depending on your island. That gives you a long, bright day and a nice golden hour both ends—perfect for sight‑casting on the flats and running the drop‑offs at dusk. Offshore, charter captains out of Nassau, Bimini, and Abaco report steady action. The bluewater edge in 1,000 to 2,000 feet has been giving up mahi‑mahi in small packs with a few gaffers mixed in, plus scattered wahoo and the odd yellowfin tuna. Boats pulling small to medium skirted ballyhoo in blue‑and‑white, pink‑and‑white, and lime colors have done best. A couple of crews working the tongue off New Providence mentioned double‑digit mahi days earlier this week, with most fish in the 8‑ to 15‑pound class and a few bigger slammers. Keep an eye out for weedlines and frigate birds; the cleaner, greener lines have been holding fish. Reef and bottom action remains solid. Guides around Andros and Eleuthera are putting folks on mutton snapper, yellowtail, and a mix of grouper on the drop‑offs in 60 to 120 feet. Fresh ballyhoo chunks, squid strips, and live pilchards or small jacks are the ticket. Lighter fluorocarbon leaders are getting more bites in the clear water, so don’t be afraid to scale down, just keep an eye on the rocks. On the flats, bonefish are behaving like they own the place. That mid‑morning flood is bringing good schools onto the sand and marl. Local guides from Abaco to Long Island have been seeing plenty of 2‑ to 4‑pound bones with the occasional 7‑plus‑pound bruiser in the mix. Tan and olive shrimp patterns, small crab imitations, and for spin anglers, 1/8‑ounce pink or bone‑colored jigs are doing the damage. Move slow, keep the sun at your back, and lead those fish—if they see it first, you’re in the game. For inshore mixed‑bag fun, the mangrove edges and channel mouths are holding barracuda, jacks, and the odd small tarpon. Silver spoons, tube lures for ’cuda, and live pilchards or small mullet will all get bit. Late afternoon, when the water cools a touch and the tide begins to move out, expect a little flurry of activity. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots: First, the reef edge and bluewater drop just off the southwest side of New Providence has been very consistent. Work the color change with trolled ballyhoo early, then slide in shallower to 80–120 feet to pick off snapper and grouper once the sun gets high. Second, the flats and creek mouths on the east side of Andros have been prime for bones and the occasional permit. Time your arrival with that incoming tide, pole quietly along the lighter bottoms, and be ready for quick shots in the 30–40‑foot range. Best lures and baits right now: skirted ballyhoo for offshore, flashy diving plugs around weedlines, jigs tipped with squid or conch for bottom fish, and small, natural‑colored shrimp or crab patterns for the flats. Keep your leaders clean, your hooks sharp, and don’t rush the hookset on those bonefish—feel the weight, then lift. That’s the word from the islands today. 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 Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21. mai 2026 - 5 min
episode Bahamas Fishing Report: Prime Bonefish Action on the Morning Tide cover

Bahamas Fishing Report: Prime Bonefish Action on the Morning Tide

This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report. We’ve got a light east to east‑southeast breeze this morning, laying down around 8–12 knots over much of the archipelago, with a gentle chop on the banks and calmer conditions on the lee sides of the islands. Offshore, seas are running 3–5 feet in the channels, a little higher where the current stacks against the wind. Skies are mostly fair with some passing clouds and only spotty showers. Tides around Nassau and much of the central Bahamas are running a morning high right around sunrise, then easing to a mid‑day low, with another push coming late afternoon into early evening. Out on the flats, that means classic conditions: moving water over turtle grass and sand bars at first light, then skinny, clear water through late morning, and another good window toward sunset when that second tide starts to creep back in. Sunrise comes early here, and the first hour after the sun peeks over the horizon is prime time. Bonefish are sliding up on the warming flats with that incoming tide, tails and nervous water giving them away. As the sun climbs and the water gets higher, they spread out and get a bit tougher, then reposition along edges and channels as the tide drops. Reports from local captains out of Nassau, Andros, and Exuma over the past few days have been solid. Bonefish action has been steady, with most boats seeing half a dozen to a dozen fish brought to hand on a half‑day when conditions line up, with the usual mix of 2–5‑pounders and the occasional bigger ghost pushing 7–8 pounds on the deeper flats. A few permit have been spotted on the oceanside flats, though still picky as ever. In the blue water, boats running the ledge off New Providence, Abaco, and Eleuthera have been picking at mahi and blackfin tuna, with some sailfish still hanging around and the odd wahoo showing when the current edge is sharp. For gear, on the flats you want to go natural and subtle. Small shrimp patterns and tan‑to‑olive jigs are doing the work—think Crazy Charlie‑style flies, Gotcha variants, and light bucktail jigs in 1/8 to 1/4 ounce. For bait anglers, live shrimp and small crabs are money, and a piece of conch or fresh cut bait will tempt snapper and jacks around channel edges and mangrove cuts. Keep your presentations quiet; long casts and soft landings will out‑fish anything flashy when the sun gets high and the water clears. Offshore, crews are scoring with small‑ to medium‑size skirted ballyhoo, brighter colors like pink, green, and blue‑white doing well along weedlines and color changes. Diving plugs and feathers pulled a bit faster are turning up tuna and the odd wahoo along the drop. Chunked bonito and squid are bringing blackfin and the occasional grouper up in the deeper holes. Two hot spots to circle for today: First, the flats around the north side of Andros—those big, ankle‑ to knee‑deep sand and turtle‑grass stretches with plenty of channels. Work the incoming tide at first light and again late afternoon; scan for nervous water and tailing bonefish, and keep the sun at your back whenever you can. Second, the drop‑off off southwest New Providence—run that 600‑ to 1,200‑foot contour where the dark blue meets lighter water. Follow any weedlines and birds, set a spread of skirted ballyhoo, and be ready for mahi cruising the edges and blackfin stacking near the current breaks. Overall fish activity today should track the tides: best early and late with that moving water, a little slower and more technical mid‑day when the light is bright and the water is high. Stay stealthy on the flats, and follow the life offshore—birds, bait showers, weed patches, and temperature breaks. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more daily fishing intel. 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. mai 2026 - 5 min
episode May in the Bahamas: Classic Conditions, Solid Bonefish, and Offshore Mixed Bag cover

May in the Bahamas: Classic Conditions, Solid Bonefish, and Offshore Mixed Bag

This is Artificial Lure with your Bahamas and Caribbean fishing report. We’ve got classic May conditions across the islands right now. Trade winds are running 10–15 knots out of the east to east‑southeast, a little fresher in the afternoon. Skies are mostly fair with passing showers in the typical windward spots. Air temps are sitting in the low to mid‑80s, water temps on the flats and nearshore reefs are around 79–81°F, just right to keep the bait and predators active. Sunrise is around 6:15 a.m., sunset about 7:45 p.m., give or take a few minutes depending where you’re fishing in the chain. The early low is falling before first light with a good incoming tide through the mid‑morning, then another drop late afternoon. Those tide swings are lining up nicely with peak feeding windows, especially on the flats and along reef edges. Bonefish action has been solid from Grand Bahama down through Andros, the Berries, Exuma and Long Island. Guides out of Andros Town and Mangrove Cay are reporting schools of 3–5 lb bones with bigger singles cruising the edges. Best bite has been the first two hours of the incoming tide on firm sand and marl flats. Go light and subtle: size 4–6 Gotcha patterns, Crazy Charlies in tan or pink, and small spawning shrimp imitations. For spinning gear, 1/8 oz jigheads tipped with live shrimp or Gulp! shrimp in “new penny” are putting plenty of fish in hand. Offshore, charter captains out of Nassau, Bimini and Abaco are still into a mixed bag. The main dolphin (mahi) run has thinned a little, but there are good gaffers and schoolies along the 600–1000 ft contours where the blue water pushes in. Trolled ballyhoo behind small chuggers in blue/white or green/yellow are consistent. Add a pink feather or two on the shotgun for the schoolies. Blackfin tuna are showing at first light over the humps and drop‑offs; small dark feather jigs and cedar plugs pulled 5–7 knots are doing the work. On the banks and near the reefs, snapper and grouper have been steady. Outfits fishing out of Eleuthera and Exuma Sound are reporting decent muttons and yellowtail on the deeper edges, 60–120 ft. Best bait right now: fresh ballyhoo chunks, squid, and cut pilchard on 3/0–5/0 circles with enough lead to stay pinned to the bottom. Early morning and the first part of the evening outgoing tide have been the prime times. Mix in a couple of glow or pink bucktail jigs tipped with squid for an extra thump bite. Inshore around Nassau Harbour, western New Providence, and Freeport canals, there’s been good action on barracuda, jacks and scattered tarpon. Cuda are smashing chrome spoons, tube lures and big flashy stickbaits worked fast over grass and channel edges. For tarpon and bigger jacks at dawn and dusk, try soft‑plastic paddletails in pearl or silver on 3/8 oz heads or free‑lined live pilchards where you see rolling fish or nervous bait. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – The southwest side of Andros, along the edge of the bights, is on fire for bonefish and the odd permit when the sun’s up and the wind lays a bit. Work the darker guts on the incoming, then slide up onto the lighter flats as the water tops out. – The Tongue of the Ocean edge off Nassau and the southwest reefs are holding dolphin, blackfin and some solid bottom fish. Start trolling the edge at daybreak, then drop baits or jigs once the sun gets up and the pelagics slide deeper. Overall fish activity is healthy: plenty of bait showers offshore, good tailing and cruising bones on the clearer flats, and steady reef life. Focus on low‑light periods, moving water, and natural‑colored presentations. Keep leaders long and light on the flats, a bit heavier with fluoro around the reefs and blue water. That’s your Bahamas and Caribbean fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. 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

19. mai 2026 - 5 min
episode **Bahamas Hot Bite: Bonefish, Tarpon, and Mahi-Mahi Going Off** cover

**Bahamas Hot Bite: Bonefish, Tarpon, and Mahi-Mahi Going Off**

Hey, dis ya boy Artificial Lure, ya favorite Bahamas angling guide, comin' atcha live from de heart of de Caribbean on dis fine April 10, 2026 mornin' at 8:35 AM Eastern. Waters 'round de Bahamas and Caribbean islands stayin' prime, mon! Sunrise hit 'bout 6:45 AM, sunset 'round 7:30 PM—plenty light for a full day chase. Tides runnin' strong today, high coefficient 'round 85-90 like Tides4fishing charts showin' for nearby spots—first high tide early mornin', low comin' mid-afternoon. Fish bitin' best on de flood and ebb, so time ya trips right. Weather clearin' up nice, light winds 5-10 knots from de east, temps in de low 80s, perfect for flats and reefs—no big swells messin' ya lines. Fish activity hot right now, solunar periods average but pickin' up wid waxin' gibbous moon pushin' 'em shallow. Recent catches pourin' in: bonefish schooled up on de flats, 5-8 pounders common; tarpon rollin' 40-80 lbs in de cuts; snook and jack crevalle hammerin' from de mangroves; mahi-mahi and wahoo off de deep drop-offs, limits daily from de tourney boys. Grouper and snapper stackin' on wrecks, wid reports of 20-pounders boxed yesterday alone. Best lures? Go wid mirrored spoons like Kastmasters or Little Cleos for jacks and snook—cast 'em heavy and let 'em flutter. Soft plastics on jigheads for bones, chartreuse or white. Live bait kings: pilchards or ballyhoo for mahi and kings, shrimp or pinfish on circle hooks for reef dwellers. Fresh worms globbed up work wonders if ya bottom fishin'. Hit dese hot spots: Andros Bonefish Flats for tailin' bones at low tide, or Bimini's Honeymoon Harbour for tarpon ambushes. Rig up and go get 'em! Thanks for tunin' in, fam—subscribe for more tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

12. mai 2026 - 2 min
episode Bahamas Fishing Fire: Bones, Permit, and Offshore Pelagics This Morning cover

Bahamas Fishing Fire: Bones, Permit, and Offshore Pelagics This Morning

Hey folks, dis ya boy **Artificial Lure**, ya top fishing guide right here in da heart of da Bahamas, bringin' ya da freshest report for dis mornin', May 5, 2026, straight from dese turquoise waters. Weather's lookin' prime out dere—NOAA says mostly sunny skies wit' winds at 10-15 knots from da east, temps hoverin' 'round 82°F daytime, droppin' to 78°F at night. Perfect for chasin' dem pelagics! Sunrise was at 6:15 AM, sunset 'round 7:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 13+ hours of prime light for sight fishin'. Tides accordin' to NOAA Tides & Currents: Low tide hit at 2:30 AM, high comin' at 8:45 AM—dat risin' tide gonna push da bite hard mid-mornin'. Fish active as ever; bonefish pushin' flats on da incoming, permit cruisin' channels, and mahi-mahi dancin' offshore. Recent catches been fire—local charter logs from Andros and Bimini report 20-30 lb bonefish haulin' on da flats last week, plus a run of 10-15 lb snapper and grouper from da reefs. Tourney reports outta Nassau tally 50+ mahi and wahoo per boat over 20 lbs, wit' some yellowfin tunas mixin' in up to 40 lbs. Tarpon show's on too, big 80-pounders rollin' in da cuts. Best lures? Gotcha lures and crazy charlies in natural crabs for bones and permits—work 'em slow on 8-lb fluorocarbon. For offshore, stick wit' Iland lures or cedar plugs in pink and green for mahi, troll at 6-8 knots. Live bait kings: pilchards or ballyhoo for billfish and snapper, shrimp for reefs. Fresh crab chunks seal da deal on flats. Hit dese **hot spots**: Chub Cay marina cuts for bones at first light, or da Tongue of da Ocean drop-offs for deepwater pelagics—20-100 fathoms, marks fulla life. Tight lines, stay safe out dere, and respect da ocean. Thanks for tunin' in, an' don't forget to subscribe! Dis has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

5. mai 2026 - 2 min
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