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Tahiti, French Polynesia Fishing Report Today

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Les mer Tahiti, French Polynesia Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Tahiti, French Polynesia Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the pristine lagoons, vibrant barrier reefs, and prolific passes of French Polynesia's crown jewel. 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 Tahiti's legendary coral ecosystems, world-class pelagic action, and diverse reef species—making 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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39 Episoder

episode Tahiti Dry Season Fishing: Tuna, Trevally, and Perfect Light Windows cover

Tahiti Dry Season Fishing: Tuna, Trevally, and Perfect Light Windows

This is Artificial Lure with your Tahiti fishing report. Out here around Tahiti and Moorea, we’re sitting in the dry season: cooler nights, warm days, trade winds mostly from the east-southeast. Expect light to moderate trades, 10–15 knots, a bit fresher on the outer reef and channels. Skies are partly cloudy with the usual passing showers on the windward side, clearer on the leeward coasts. Sunrise was around twenty after five this morning, with sunset around ten to six this evening. That gives us long, useable light at both ends of the day. Tides today are running a typical mixed semidiurnal pattern: a higher high in the early morning, dropping through mid-morning, then building again through late afternoon. The best bite windows will line up with that pre-dawn high and the late-afternoon push, especially where the current squeezes through reef passes. Pelagic activity offshore has been good. Local charter skippers out of Papeete Marina and Marina Taina have been reporting steady yellowfin tuna and skipjack on the FADs west and northwest of Tahiti, plus the odd bigeye mixed in. A few decent mahi-mahi and wahoo are still showing around current lines and drop-offs, and there’s always a shot at blue marlin if you’re working the deeper edges. For lures offshore, keep it simple: - Medium to large skirted trolling lures in purple–black, blue–silver, and green–yellow are producing tuna and marlin. - Smaller feather jigs and Christmas-tree rigs in pink or blue are doing the work on skipjack and smaller yellowfin. - If you’re chunking or live-baiting, small bonito, frigate mackerel, or live opelu-style baits bridled behind the boat are deadly when you mark fish midwater. Inshore, along the outer reef and lagoon edges, reef species are active on the moving tide. Expect bluefin trevally, giant trevally, and jobfish around passes and points where the current runs hard over structure. Inside the lagoon, look for emperors, goatfish, and assorted snapper over sand patches and coral heads. Best artificial offerings inshore: - Topwater stickbaits and poppers in 40–80 g for GT and bluefin trevally; white, bone, or sardine patterns are reliable. Work them early and late when the light is low. - 20–40 g metal jigs and soft plastics in natural baitfish colors bounced along drop-offs for jobfish and smaller trevally. - For bait, fresh squid strips, small cut mackerel, or chunks of bonito on light wire or strong fluorocarbon leaders will keep you busy on reef species. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: - The reef passes off the west side of Tahiti and the northern passes of Moorea. Anywhere the ocean pushes through a narrow cut, you’ll find trevally stacking up on the pressure edges during the incoming tide, with dogtooth and jobfish deeper down. Cast poppers upcurrent and sweep them back across the whitewater, or jig vertically just inside the drop. - The FADs and deep drop-offs west of Moorea and northwest of Tahiti. Trollers are finding yellowfin and mahi along weed lines and temperature breaks, especially where birds are working. Run a spread of skirted lures staggered at different distances, and keep one rod ready with a pitch bait or big stickbait for fish that suddenly show behind the boat. Night fishing inside the lagoon can be surprisingly good right now, especially around wharves and lighted structures: small jigs and baited sabiki rigs will pull in scad, small jacks, and an occasional surprise. Good option when the trades kick up outside. That’s your Tahiti 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

I går - 4 min
episode Tahiti Fishing Report: Trades Settled, Pelagics Hot, Reef Action Peak at Dawn and Dusk cover

Tahiti Fishing Report: Trades Settled, Pelagics Hot, Reef Action Peak at Dawn and Dusk

This is Artificial Lure with your Tahiti fishing report. Out here around Tahiti and Moorea the trades are settled in: light to moderate east–southeast wind, seas a gentle chop on the reef tops, a bit more roll outside the passes. Skies are partly cloudy with the usual squalls riding the breeze. Air is warm and sticky, water hovering around the low 80s, perfect for keeping the fish active most of the day. Sun came up not long after six and it’ll slip behind Moorea late in the afternoon, so your real bite windows are the first couple hours after dawn and the last two before dark. The lagoon is clear on the leeward side, a little milky on the windward reefs where the swell is wrapping around. Tides are running a modest range today, with a decent incoming through the morning and a softer outgoing this afternoon. Around the passes that incoming pushes clean ocean water over the reef edge and fires up the predators; the outgoing concentrates bait outside the drop-off. Pelagic action has been solid the last few days. Local skippers working the FADs off the northwest of Tahiti and between Tahiti and Moorea have been picking up good numbers of mahi-mahi, smaller yellowfin, skipjack, and the odd wahoo. A few nice billfish have shown but not wide open. Best producers have been small to mid‑size skirted lures in blue–silver, green–yellow, and pink, trolled a bit faster when the wind picks up. If you’re live‑baiting, small bonito or frigate mackerel slow‑trolled along the current lines are still king for big tuna and marlin. On the reef and lagoon side, the dogtooth and GTs have been chewing when the current hits the points. Poppers in white or bone, and stickbaits in natural flying‑fish or mullet patterns, are drawing violent strikes early and late. Mid‑day, tone it down with subsurface stickbaits or jigs worked along the drop-offs and bommies. Fresh squid or cut bonito pinned to a strong circle hook and dropped in the wash will tempt big jobfish, snapper, and the occasional reef‑side tuna. Inside the lagoon, the goatfish, smaller trevally, and reef snapper are keeping the light‑tackle crowd happy around coral heads and channel edges. Soft plastics in shrimp or small baitfish colors, and little metal jigs hopped near the bottom, have outfished hardbaits when the sun gets high. For bait, you can’t beat fresh shrimp, bits of squid, or small hermit crabs gathered on the flats. A couple of hot spots to mark on your chart: • The passes and outer reef edges off Papeete and Faa’a, especially where the incoming tide pours over the drop. Work poppers and stickbaits along the foam lines, or troll skirted lures just outside the color change for tuna and wahoo. • The north and northwest reef corners of Moorea, around the Tiahura and Opunohu areas, where the trade wind piles bait against the reef. Early morning you’ll find GTs, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth on the breaks, and mahi cruising just beyond the edge when the sun climbs. Keep an eye on the birds, the color changes, and the bait showers; that’s your real report out here. Match the size of your lure or bait to the size of the flying fish and saury you see, and you’ll do fine. That’s it from Artificial Lure in Tahiti. 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

8. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Tahiti Fishing Report: Light Winds, Neap Tides, and Hot Offshore Yellowfin Action cover

Tahiti Fishing Report: Light Winds, Neap Tides, and Hot Offshore Yellowfin Action

This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Tahiti fishing report. Out here around Tahiti and Moorea we woke up to light trade winds this morning, easterly around 10–15 knots, seas modest with a gentle swell, and the lagoon glassing off between gusts. Air temps are sitting in the upper 20s Celsius, humid but comfortable, with a mix of sun and passing clouds. Sunrise came in just after half past five, and you can expect sunset just before six in the evening, so we’ve got a tight, bright window on both ends of the day. Tides today are on the small side, more of a neap feel than a big spring swing. You’ll see a modest high in the morning, easing to a low mid‑day, then a slow push back in late afternoon. That softer movement means the bite is tied closely to the start of each flow: first hour of incoming on the reef passes, and the last of the outgoing where the lagoon drains. Offshore, the blue water has been alive. Local charter captains out of Papeete and Marina Taina have been hanging along the drop‑off west and northwest of Tahiti. In the last few days they’ve brought in solid yellowfin tuna in the 15–40 kilo class, a few bigger models mixed in, plus skipjack, mahi‑mahi, and the odd wahoo. The marlin bite has been spotty but real—one or two blues raised most days when boats are putting in the time. Best offshore offerings right now are bright skirted trolling lures in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink‑silver, run just behind the prop wash and one farther back. Jet heads and cup‑faced lures are both working. If you can get small bonito or skipjack, slow‑trolled live bait along current lines has been deadly on big yellowfin and the occasional marlin. Don’t forget fluorocarbon leaders around 80–100 lb for tuna, and proper wire or heavy mono for wahoo. Inshore and in the lagoon, the action has been steady on the reef edges and bommies. Local guys have been picking off bluefin trevally, smaller GTs, jobfish, and a mix of reef snapper. Light popping rods with 40–60 lb braid and medium stickbaits in sardine or flying‑fish colors are doing the trick on the trevally, especially right at dawn and again in the late‑day shade. Soft plastics on jig heads, 3–5 inch in natural baitfish tones, hopped along the drop‑offs are finding snapper and emperors. For bait, you can’t beat fresh dead sardines, small squid, or strips of bonito. Fish them on simple running sinker rigs or small jig heads around the current lines inside the passes. A little berley—just crushed bait in the water—helps keep the smaller reef fish around, which in turn draws the bigger predators. Couple of hot spots to keep in mind: • Taapuna Pass, on the west side of Tahiti: great mix of lagoon and blue‑water access. Work the outside drop‑off at first light for tuna and mahi, then slide inside the pass on the turning tide for trevally and snapper along the coral edges. • The reefs and outer drop‑off between Temae and Afareaitu on Moorea’s northeast coast: on a calm morning you can cast stickbaits and poppers over the shallow reef for GT and bluefin trevally, then jig or live‑bait along the deeper ledge for dogtooth tuna and jobfish when the current picks up. With the lighter tides, focus on those short, defined feeding windows: first light, last light, and the moment the current starts to move. Keep your presentations natural, stay quiet on the approach, and let the water tell you where to be. 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

7. juni 2026 - 3 min
episode Tahiti Sunrise Bite: Lagoon Jacks, Offshore Tuna, and Where the Bait Stacks Up cover

Tahiti Sunrise Bite: Lagoon Jacks, Offshore Tuna, and Where the Bait Stacks Up

This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Tahiti fishing report, coming to you like a local on the dock. Out around Tahiti and Moorea this morning, the lagoon was calm at first light with a light easterly breeze and small chop on the reef front. The trades are picking up through the day, so expect 10–15 knots east‑southeast and a bit more bump offshore. Skies are partly cloudy with passing showers over the mountains, but plenty of blue holes over the lagoon. Air temps are hanging in the upper 20s Celsius, water around 27–28 degrees. Sunrise slid in just after 5 a.m., with sunset coming a little after 5:30 p.m. That gives you a classic short tropical window: best bite around first light until mid‑morning, and again in the last 90 minutes before dark. Tides around Tahiti today are on the smaller side, with a low just before dawn and a moderate incoming through the morning, then dropping again late afternoon. The incoming tide is pushing clean ocean water over the reef edge, so pay attention to passes and channel mouths; that’s where the life stacks up. Inshore in the lagoon, the pa’ati and lagoon jacks have been active along current lines and around bommies. Local skiffs this week picked up good numbers of bluefin trevally and smaller GTs on light tackle, along with a mix of goatfish and emperors on bait. A few bonefish‑like kio kio showed in the shallow sand flats near the motus, mostly for the patient fly anglers stalking the tails. Just outside the reef, the offshore crews have found consistent mahi‑mahi, skipjack and small yellowfin on the current edges. Several panga crews reported double‑digit counts of skipjack with a handful of yellowfin in the 10–20 kilo range over the last few days, plus the odd wahoo slashing through the spread when the light is lower. A couple of heavier boats working the drop‑off also raised marlin, though hook‑ups have been hit or miss. For lures, keep it simple and bright. On the reef for GTs and jacks, big stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in blue‑white, green‑mackerel, or classic sardine patterns are producing. Work them hard along the whitewater edges where the swell spills over the reef. In the lagoon, small metal jigs, soft plastics in shrimp or baitfish colors, and 10–20 gram spoons are taking trevally and jobfish around channel markers and coral heads. Offshore, run a spread of small to medium skirted lures, 6–9 inches, in lumo green, purple‑black, and blue‑silver. Feather lures and cedar‑plug‑style wood lures are deadly for skipjack and school yellowfin around bird piles and floating debris. If you’re soaking bait, fresh skipjack chunks, bonito strips, or small dead flying fish are your best bet. For reef drifting, squid, cut bonito and live baitfish from the lagoon will tempt everything from snapper to dogtooth tuna. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: • The passes and outer reef edges on the north and west sides of Tahiti, where the incoming tide funnels bait right against the drop‑off. Work poppers tight to the foam line and slow‑trolled skirts just outside the color change. • The channels and reef points between Tahiti and Moorea, especially where you see birds working and current lines forming slicks. These are prime lanes for mahi and tuna cruising the edge. If you’re shore‑bound, try the rocky points near the reef passes at first light with small metals and topwater; plenty of jacks and the occasional surprise will come in to feed when the light is low and the current is pushing. That’s your Tahiti fishing report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

6. juni 2026 - 4 min
episode Tahiti Lagoon Fire: Trevally, Tuna, and Perfect Tide Conditions Today cover

Tahiti Lagoon Fire: Trevally, Tuna, and Perfect Tide Conditions Today

This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Tahiti fishing report, straight from the heart of the lagoon and the drop-offs. We woke up to light easterly trades around 10–15 knots, with a gentle chop on the reef edge and calmer water inside the lagoon. Skies are partly cloudy, with short sun bursts heating the flats between passing showers. Air temps are sitting in the mid‑20s Celsius, water temp feeling plenty warm for active fish. The tide is running a steady mid‑cycle today: a morning incoming pushing clean, blue water over the outer reef and a falling tide through late morning into early afternoon. That push of cool ocean water along the passes has turned on the predators; you can see bait dimpling on the surface where current lines form streaks of darker blue. Sunrise slid over Moorea’s shoulder early, giving us low, soft light on the lagoon flats—perfect conditions for cruising bonefish and bluefin trevally prowling the sand edges. Sunset will come with just enough light left to squeeze in a last cast along the pass walls for dogtooth and big GTs. Fish activity has been solid. Inshore, the lagoon produced good numbers of **bluefin trevally**, small **giant trevally**, and reef **snapper** off coral heads and bommies. Several boats worked the outer reef and reported **mahi‑mahi**, **wahoo**, and a couple of **yellowfin tuna** taken along current breaks off the drop‑off, with a few misses that cut lines clean—classic wahoo behavior. Closer to the passes, jigging deep brought up **dogtooth tuna** and hefty **amberjack**, fewer in number but quality fish. For lures, the hot tickets have been: - On the reef edges: medium stickbaits in blue‑silver and green‑mackerel patterns, plus 40–60 g metal jigs dropped on bait balls. - For GTs and marauding trevally: big cup‑faced poppers in white or parrot colors, worked hard over the reef edge during the last of the incoming. - Offshore: skirted trolling lures in purple‑black and pink‑silver for tuna and marlin, with long, slim diving plugs tempting the wahoo. Best baits right now are fresh local offerings—small bonito strips, flying fish, and chunked skipjack. On the lagoon, a simple rig with fresh shrimp or crab pieces tossed near coral heads is producing steady snapper and goatfish for the table. Live bait slow‑trolled near the pass mouths is deadly for big GTs and dogtooth when the current is moving. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: - **Papeete Pass (Taapuna side)**: Work the edges of the pass on the last of the incoming tide. Cast poppers and stickbaits tight to the whitewater for trevally and throw jigs into the deeper holes for dogtooth. - **Faaa to Punaauia outer reef drop‑off**: Troll along the blue‑water edge where the color shifts from turquoise to deep cobalt. That line has been holding mahi and wahoo when the trade wind current presses bait against the reef. Inside the lagoon, the sand flats near **Point Venus** have shown life on the early high: small trevally and the occasional bonefish cruising in knee‑deep water. Go light tackle, small spoons and shrimp‑pattern flies, and move quietly. That’s the word from the water: manageable wind, moving tide, and enough life out there to keep your arms sore if you put in the time. 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

5. juni 2026 - 3 min
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