Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today
Mornin’ from **Artificial Lure** with your Bahamas and Caribbean fishing report for today. The **tide** is working a **morning push** across the flats and channels, which should help keep bait moving and predator fish on the feed around the first light hours. With no live forecast results provided here, I can’t verify exact tide heights or wind shifts, so treat the early flood as the best bet and watch for water moving onto the mangrove edges, channel mouths, and reef cuts. For **weather**, June in the Bahamas and much of the Caribbean usually brings warm air, humid conditions, and scattered passing showers, with lighter winds early before the sea breeze builds. That kind of setup favors sight-fishing on the flats in the calm windows, then reef and drop-off work once the wind comes up. **Sunrise** today is right around the early morning window, and **sunset** will be in the late evening, giving you a long day to fish. If you’re on the water at first light, focus on the skinny water and the edges where bonefish and permit are cruising. Recent catch chatter from these waters has been strongest around **bonefish, barracuda, jacks, snapper, grouper, and the occasional tarpon**, with Spanish mackerel and school-size tuna showing where the current stacks bait. In local terms, when the water’s clean and moving, the bones show first; when bait piles up on the tide line, the cudas and jacks move in fast. Best **lures** right now: - **Small jerk shads** in pearl, pilchard, or root-beer for jacks, snapper, and schoolie predators - **Gotcha-style bonefish flies or shrimp imitations** if you’re working the flats - **Silver spoon or flashy plug** for barracuda and mackerel - **Soft plastic crab or shrimp profile** for permit when they’re tailing or cruising Best **bait**: - **Live shrimp** - **Pilchards** - **Small pinfish** - **Cut sardine or ballyhoo** for reef edges and heavier water For **hot spots**, I’d point you toward: - **Current seams at channel mouths** on the lee side of the islands, especially where tide water spills off the flats - **Reef cuts and drop-offs** just off the outer islands, where bait gets pinned by the flow - **Mangrove shorelines and sand flats near tidal creeks**, especially on the first push of water If you’re hunting numbers, go after the **bonefish on the flats** at first light. If you want quality fish, slide out to the **reef edges** once the sun gets higher and the bait starts stacking. A quiet tide window can be tough, but once that water starts moving, the whole neighborhood wakes up. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to **subscribe**. 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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