Bahamas, Caribbean Fishing Report Today

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

2 min · 5. Mai 2026
Episode Bahamas Fishing Fire: Bones, Permit, and Offshore Pelagics This Morning Cover

Beschreibung

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.

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Episode Bahamas Fishing Report: Nassau to Eleuthera - Prime Tide Bite and Offshore Action Cover

Bahamas Fishing Report: Nassau to Eleuthera - Prime Tide Bite and Offshore Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report, island‑style. Out here around Nassau, Abaco, and Eleuthera, we’ve got light trade winds this morning, easterly around 10–15 knots, seas 2–4 feet on the banks and 3–5 in the deep blue. Skies are mostly fair with passing clouds and a quick shower here and there. Air temps sliding from the upper 70s at first light into the mid‑80s this afternoon, with that humid Bahamian feel and a gentle breeze keeping it comfortable. Tides today run a typical Caribbean pattern: morning incoming through mid‑day, then falling through the afternoon into evening. That rising water at daybreak and the first of the outgoing in late afternoon are your prime chew windows. Aim to be on your spot when that current first starts to move. Sunrise comes just after six local time, with sunset a little after eight. That gives you a sweet low‑light bite at dawn and again in the last hour of light – perfect for working topwater and watching those explosions on the surface. Offshore, the bite’s been solid. Crews working the drop‑off off Andros, the Tongue of the Ocean edge, and the northeast side of Eleuthera have been raising good numbers of mahi‑mahi, a few wahoo, blackfin tuna, and the odd blue marlin cruising through the lines. Boats dragging small to medium skirted lures in pink‑white and blue‑silver, plus cedar plugs and rigged ballyhoo, have been coming back with coolers respectably full. Blackfin and skipjack have been stacking around the birds and floating debris, and when you find that color change where the blue water pushes in tight, that’s where the magic’s happening. On the reefs and patch coral inside the banks, the snapper bite remains hot. Yellowtail, mutton, and a few mangroves have been steady over 40–80 feet of water, especially around the channel edges and reef corners when the current starts pushing. Light chum, small pieces of ballyhoo or squid on a light leader, and you’re in business. Grouper are still showing on the deeper ledges – think 100–200 feet – with live pinfish, small grunts, or a chunky strip of bonito doing the trick. Inshore across the flats around Andros, Abaco, and the Exumas, bonefish have been tailing nicely on the morning flood tide. Clean water, light wind, and a cautious push pole are the keys. Small tan or olive shrimp patterns, or light‑colored soft plastics, are getting plenty of follows and eats from fish in the 3–6‑pound range, with a few bigger ghosts cruising the edges. Around the mangroves and channels, expect barracuda and the occasional jacks smashing bait; a flashy tube lure or a silver spoon will get you that sudden, screaming‑drag surprise. For lures, here’s what’s working best right now: - Offshore: medium skirted trolling lures in pink‑white, blue‑silver, and green‑yellow; cedar plugs; rigged ballyhoo with chin weights; diving plugs in mackerel or flying‑fish patterns. - Reef: 1–3 oz bucktail jigs tipped with squid or cut bait; vertical jigs in natural baitfish colors; small metal jigs for the blackfin when they push in shallower. - Inshore: bonefish shrimp and small crab flies in tan, olive, and pearl; 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads with white or new penny soft plastics; silver spoons and long tube lures for ’cuda. If you’re looking for hot spots, set your sights on: - The southwest edge of the Tongue of the Ocean off Andros – work that 600–1,200 foot contour for mahi, tuna, and a shot at marlin. - The reefs off southwest Eleuthera and Rose Island – great mixing zone for yellowtail, muttons, and the odd pelagic cruising in close. Best strategy: hit the flats or reef at first light on the rising tide, slide offshore mid‑morning once the sun’s up to spot weedlines and birds, then wrap your day back on the reef for the evening outgoing, picking off snapper as the light fades. That’s the word from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next 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

14. Juni 20264 min
Episode Bahamas Flats to Reefs: Morning Tide Push, Bonefish and Cudas On the Feed Cover

Bahamas Flats to Reefs: Morning Tide Push, Bonefish and Cudas On the Feed

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

Gestern2 min
Episode Bahamas June Fishing: Bonefish Flats to Offshore Bluewater Action Cover

Bahamas June Fishing: Bonefish Flats to Offshore Bluewater Action

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report, island style. We’re sitting on a classic June pattern. Across the central and northern Bahamas, sun is cracking the horizon right around 6:15 a.m. local, with sunset near 8:00 p.m. That gives you a fat window for early topwater and late-afternoon live-bait action. Trade winds are running a steady 10–15 knots out of the east to southeast, seas 2–4 feet on most banks, a little choppier once you push off into the deep blue. Tides around Nassau, the Exumas, and Abaco are running a typical mixed semidiurnal cycle: morning high sliding through the mid-morning hours with a solid push, and an afternoon low that exposes plenty of flats edge. Work that last hour of the incoming on the ocean side for bonefish, then the first part of the outgoing along creek mouths and mangrove cuts. Bonefish have been feeding strong on the clear-water flats from Andros to Long Island. Guides out of Andros Town have been putting anglers on pods of 3–5 pound fish, with a few 7–8 pound bruisers scooped this week. Best offerings: small tan or olive shrimp patterns, size 4–6, lightly weighted; for spin gear, 1/8 oz jigheads tipped with fresh conch, shrimp, or small crab. Keep it subtle—long leader, soft landings, and lead the school. Offshore, the bluewater bite is still lively. Crews running out from Nassau and the Berry Islands have reported decent numbers of schoolie mahi-mahi, 6–12 pounds, with a few larger bulls mixed in. Slow but steady yellowfin tuna north of Eleuthera and around the Tongue of the Ocean edges; most fish in the 20–40 pound class. Pull small to medium skirts in blue/white, green/yellow, and pink over ballyhoo. Dark days or first light, swap to darker skirts like purple/black for tuna. Keep a couple of poppers rigged—if tuna blitz the surface, a fast-chugging topwater can light them up. On the reef, mutton snapper and yellowtail have been chewing along drop-offs at 40–80 feet from New Providence down through Exuma Sound. Fresh ballyhoo chunks, squid strips, and cut grunt are doing the damage. Use enough lead to hold bottom, 30–40 lb leader, and don’t be shy about a small glow bead above the hook when the current’s running. Grouper are tight to structure—live pinfish or small jacks on a knocker rig will get their attention. For plugs and hardware, locals have been leaning on: - Silver and blue diving plugs for wahoo and mahi when they’re around. - 1–2 oz bucktail jigs in white or chartreuse for snapper and reef fish. - Bone-colored and mullet-pattern walk-the-dog topwaters for early-morning action around marinas and dock lights—great for barracuda and the odd jack. Couple of hot spots to mark in your mind: - The flats off South Andros and the west side creeks: world-class bonefish water, best on a clean incoming tide with a light breeze. Watch for tailers and nervous water rather than big schools on bright, calm days. - The drop-off along the Exuma Sound edge east of Highbourne Cay: solid for mahi, occasional tuna, and billfish shots when you work the color change and weedlines. Troll that 300–800 foot contour and keep your spread tight when the chop kicks up. Closer to Nassau, the reef line off the southwest side has been giving up mixed bags: yellowtail, mutton, and the occasional blackfin tuna roaming the edges late in the afternoon. Anchor up, chum lightly, and send down small baits on fluorocarbon leaders—let them drift back natural. That’s the word from your buddy Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next 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

12. Juni 20263 min
Episode Early Summer Bahamas: Weedlines, Tides, and Bonefish on the Flats Cover

Early Summer Bahamas: Weedlines, Tides, and Bonefish on the Flats

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report, island style. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions across the banks and the deep: warm, clear water, light to moderate trades, and a steady tide cycle that’s been keeping bait on the move. Around most of the islands, high tide is falling mid‑morning with a solid afternoon drop, so expect the best inshore bite on the last of the incoming and the first push of the outgoing. Offshore, that moving water edge is stacking weedlines and color changes along the drop‑off. Weather’s been mostly fair: passing clouds, scattered showers in spots, but plenty of sunshine and visibility. Light to moderate east–southeast breeze has the flats just rippled and the offshore side with a decent chop, but still very fishable. Sunrise is coming early over the Exuma Sound and Abaco side, with enough low light to work topwater for that first hour; sunset is giving you a nice golden window for tailing fish on the flats and last‑light reef action. Offshore, the blue‑water bite has been solid. Crews running out of Nassau, Bimini, and Abaco have been putting mahi, blackfin tuna, a few sailfish, and scattered wahoo in the box. The mahi numbers aren’t spring-thick anymore, but schoolies and mediums are still cruising the edges, especially around well‑formed weedlines and any floating debris. Tuna action has been best early and late, with birds and busting bait giving away the bite. A few boats have reported marlin shots around the ledges and drop‑offs when pulling larger lures and pitch baits. Best offshore offerings right now: - Bright‑colored skirted ballyhoo, especially blue‑and‑white, pink‑and‑white, and green‑yellow combos. - Medium chuggers and jet heads pulled around 7–8 knots. - Chunked or live pilchards and small jacks for tuna when you mark them mid‑column. Inshore and on the flats, the bonefish have been behaving just like we like ’em: cruising the mangrove edges and open sand on the incoming, then sliding off as the water dumps. Schools of smaller fish have been plentiful, with some bigger singles and pairs haunting the edges and deeper potholes. Light wind and clear water means they’re spooky, so think long leaders and soft landings. Top flats choices: - For fly folks: small, tan or olive shrimp patterns, size 4–8, and sparse gotcha‑style flies with just a hint of flash. - For spin: 1/8 oz jigheads with shrimp‑imitation soft plastics in natural colors, or small bucktail jigs tipped with a little piece of shrimp when regulations and ethics allow. On the patch reefs and nearshore structure, yellowtail, mutton snapper, grouper, and barracuda have all been chewing. Chumming a bit off the stern over 40–80 feet of water has been drawing in flag yellowtail and the odd mutton sneaking along the bottom. Grouper are tight to the rock and ledges; work your baits right down in the nasty stuff and hang on. Best reef and bottom bait: - Fresh cut ballyhoo, squid, or chunked bonito in the chum line for yellowtail. - Live pinfish, small grunts, or pilchards dropped to the bottom for grouper and mutton. - Wire‑rigged tube lures or flashy spoons for the ’cuda prowling the edges. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - Off Bimini along the edge of the Gulf Stream, where the drop‑off meets well‑formed weedlines – prime for mahi and blackfin, especially when that tide is pushing good blue water in tight. - The flats around Andros and the Joulter Cays, where clean, knee‑deep water and firm sand have been holding good numbers of bonefish with some real Bahamian trophies mixed in. Work the tides, keep your presentations natural, and don’t be afraid to move if the water feels dead. Out here, life follows the current. 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

11. Juni 20264 min
Episode Bahamas Early Summer Fishing: Bonefish on the Flats, Mahi Offshore Cover

Bahamas Early Summer Fishing: Bonefish on the Flats, Mahi Offshore

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Bahamas fishing report for the Caribbean waters. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions: light trade winds out of the east 10 to 15 knots, seas mostly 2 to 4 feet on the banks and 3 to 5 outside the reef. Skies are partly cloudy with those usual passing showers, but nothing that’s scaring off the fish. Air temps riding mid‑80s in the afternoon, water temps hovering around 82 to 84 degrees, perfect for everything from bonefish to mahi. Sunrise came in right around quarter past five local time, with sunset lining up close to 7:50 this evening, so you’ve got a long fishing window to play the tides. On most islands you’re seeing a morning incoming tide through mid‑day and a late‑afternoon fall. That flooding water over the flats is bringing bonefish right up tight to shore, and the first push of the falling tide is turning on the reef species and pelagics along the edges. On the flats around Andros, Abaco, and the Exumas, guides are reporting steady bonefish action, with small pods tailing in knee‑deep water when the sun gets high. A lot of fish in the 3‑ to 5‑pound class, with a few bigger cruisers mixed in. Shrimp‑pattern flies in tan and olive, size 4–6, are doing damage, especially lightly weighted Gotcha and Crazy Charlie styles. For spin anglers, 1/8‑ounce jigs tipped with small shrimp or soft‑plastic shrimp in natural colors are producing. Keep your presentations soft and short, and lead those fish by a rod length. Just off the reef lines around New Providence, Bimini, and Grand Bahama, the bite has been lively. Boats are reporting mixed‑bag catches: yellowtail snapper, mutton snapper, and a few decent black grouper and Nassau grouper early, then jacks and barracuda when the sun gets higher. Best bet has been anchoring in 60 to 90 feet over structure, chumming with cut ballyhoo or pilchards, and dropping small pieces of cut bait on light leaders. Yellowtail are stacking up when the current picks up, with plenty of keepers and some 3‑ to 4‑pound fish in the mix. Farther offshore, along the drop from 600 to 1,500 feet, anglers trolling are picking up mahi, blackfin tuna, and a few wahoo still hanging around deeper rips. Mahi reports include schoolies with some gaffers mixed in, running 8 to 15 pounds, especially along weedlines with flying fish and small bait marking. Best lures have been small skirted ballyhoo in blue‑and‑white and pink‑and‑white, plus bright green and yellow jet heads. Blackfin are responding to feathers and small cedar plugs, especially early and late in the day, while wahoo are coming on deeper‑running plugs or heavy skirts in purple‑black and dark blue, pulled a little faster. For live bait, pilchards, goggle‑eyes, and rigged ballyhoo remain king. On the reef and nearshore edges, live pilchard or small blue runner slow‑trolled around color changes and bait schools is your best bet for kingfish, big barracuda, and the odd sailfish still cruising through. Couple of hot spots to put on your list: • The Tongue of the Ocean edge off Andros: that deep blue drop holding mahi and tuna along weedlines and current edges, especially on the morning incoming tide. • The southwest reef off New Providence: good yellowtail and mutton snapper bite on chum, with grouper hanging just off the main structure if you drop a bigger bait down. Inshore around the islands, don’t sleep on the mangrove shorelines and creek mouths at high tide. Small jigs, DOA shrimp, and live shrimp under a popping cork are pulling in mangrove snapper, small jacks, and the occasional juvenile tarpon laid up in the shade. If you’re heading out today, focus on that first couple hours of daylight and the late‑afternoon tide swing, keep your tackle light on the flats and your leaders fresh offshore, and match your bait to what you see in the water. 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

10. Juni 20264 min