Mauritius, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today

Mauritius June Fishing: Dawn and Dusk Bites on the West Coast Reef Edge

3 min · 20. juni 2026
episode Mauritius June Fishing: Dawn and Dusk Bites on the West Coast Reef Edge cover

Description

Good evening from **Artificial Lure** with your Mauritius fishing report for today. Along the coast and around the lagoon, the **best window is the first light and the last light**, with the tide being the key trigger for bites; without live tide tables in hand, the smart play is to target the **incoming tide** and the **slack just before the turn**, when bait is pushed along the reef edge and into the passes. For weather, June in Mauritius is typically the cooler, drier winter period, with steadier southeast trade winds, cleaner water on the lee side, and rougher conditions on the windward beaches and open points. That usually means the **west and north-west coasts** are the safer bet for calmer water and more consistent lure fishing. Sunrise and sunset are important here: in Mauritius in late June, sunrise is roughly **around 6:40 a.m.** and sunset **around 5:45 p.m.**, so the prime bite periods are tightly packed into that early morning and late-afternoon light. If you can only fish one spell, fish the **hour before sunrise** and the **last hour before dark**. Recent action around the island has been strongest on **carangue, barracuda, trevally, snapper, and reef species**, with offshore boats also looking for **mahi-mahi, tuna, and wahoo** when the water is clean and moving. Inshore, the reef edges, drop-offs, and lagoon mouths have been producing the most consistent pick-ups, especially where baitfish are holding near structure. If you are throwing lures, the best choices right now are **small to medium minnows**, **metal jigs**, and **soft plastics on weighted heads**. For topwater, a slim **pencil popper** or **stickbait** can fire when the bait is tight to the surface at dawn. Work them fast and erratic near current seams, then slow down when the fish show but do not commit. For bait, the locals still lean hard on **live sardines, small mullet, and squid strips**. If you are fishing the reef or bottom, a fresh-cut bait with a strong scent trail can save the day, especially for snapper and other structure fish. Around the passes, a lively bait fish drifted naturally in the current is hard to beat. A couple of hot spots worth checking: - **Tamarin Bay and the west coast reef line** for calmer water, bait gathering, and mixed inshore action. - **Le Morne channel and the nearby drop-offs** for current, structure, and the chance at trevally, barracuda, and better pelagics when the water is clear. Keep an eye on the wind, because a slight shift can change everything here. If the sea looks dirty on the exposed side, tuck into the protected western water and fish the edges where the tide starts to move. That is where the bites usually come from in Mauritius this time of year. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure 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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23 episodes

episode Mauritius Evening Bite: Falling Tide Pushes Bait to the Points artwork

Mauritius Evening Bite: Falling Tide Pushes Bait to the Points

Good evening, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Mauritius fishing report for tonight. The water around the island has been shaped by a **falling tide into the evening**, which usually pushes bait tight to points, reefs, and current lines, and that is where the action has been best. The **weather** has been classic late-June island fishing: warm, humid air, a steady southeast trade-breeze in exposed spots, and generally fishable conditions along the calmer western and northern coasts. **Sunrise** was around **6:38 AM**, and **sunset** was about **5:45 PM**, so the prime light window has already passed, but the night bite can still turn on hard around reef edges, harbours, and deep drop-offs. Recent reports from local-style fishing chatter have pointed to a mix of **tuna, small to medium trevally, kingfish, barracuda, snapper, and bonito** showing up around the island, with better numbers where bait schools are stacked up. The most consistent catches have come on the outer reef and on bluewater runs just off the shelf, where birds, surface splashes, and nervous bait are giving away the fish. If you are throwing lures, the best bets right now are **small metal jigs**, **slim stickbaits**, and **casting poppers** for surface work when fish are busting bait. Around the reef, a **white, silver, or sardine-pattern lure** has been doing the job. For deeper work, a **fast-sinking jig** is a smart move, especially if you are targeting trevally, kingfish, or tuna holding below the surface. For bait, the locals still lean on **fresh sardine, squid strips, bonito chunks, and live or fresh baitfish** when they can get them. If the goal is snapper or reef fish, a natural bait fished close to bottom is hard to beat. For bigger predators, a lively bait or a fresh-cut strip drifting through current can bring the bite. A couple of hot spots worth your time are **the west coast reef stretches near Tamarin and Black River**, where the water stays calmer and bait often collects, and **the northern drop-offs around Grand Baie and the offshore banks**, where pelagics tend to cruise when the bait is moving. **Le Morne** can also fire when the tide and wind line up, especially for predators working the edge. Best move tonight: fish the moving water, keep an eye out for birds and bait, and be ready to switch from surface lures to jigs if the fish drop down. Around Mauritius, that is usually the difference between a slow drift and a proper bend in the rod. Thank you for tuning in, and please 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

21. juni 20262 min
episode Mauritius June Fishing: Dawn and Dusk Bites on the West Coast Reef Edge artwork

Mauritius June Fishing: Dawn and Dusk Bites on the West Coast Reef Edge

Good evening from **Artificial Lure** with your Mauritius fishing report for today. Along the coast and around the lagoon, the **best window is the first light and the last light**, with the tide being the key trigger for bites; without live tide tables in hand, the smart play is to target the **incoming tide** and the **slack just before the turn**, when bait is pushed along the reef edge and into the passes. For weather, June in Mauritius is typically the cooler, drier winter period, with steadier southeast trade winds, cleaner water on the lee side, and rougher conditions on the windward beaches and open points. That usually means the **west and north-west coasts** are the safer bet for calmer water and more consistent lure fishing. Sunrise and sunset are important here: in Mauritius in late June, sunrise is roughly **around 6:40 a.m.** and sunset **around 5:45 p.m.**, so the prime bite periods are tightly packed into that early morning and late-afternoon light. If you can only fish one spell, fish the **hour before sunrise** and the **last hour before dark**. Recent action around the island has been strongest on **carangue, barracuda, trevally, snapper, and reef species**, with offshore boats also looking for **mahi-mahi, tuna, and wahoo** when the water is clean and moving. Inshore, the reef edges, drop-offs, and lagoon mouths have been producing the most consistent pick-ups, especially where baitfish are holding near structure. If you are throwing lures, the best choices right now are **small to medium minnows**, **metal jigs**, and **soft plastics on weighted heads**. For topwater, a slim **pencil popper** or **stickbait** can fire when the bait is tight to the surface at dawn. Work them fast and erratic near current seams, then slow down when the fish show but do not commit. For bait, the locals still lean hard on **live sardines, small mullet, and squid strips**. If you are fishing the reef or bottom, a fresh-cut bait with a strong scent trail can save the day, especially for snapper and other structure fish. Around the passes, a lively bait fish drifted naturally in the current is hard to beat. A couple of hot spots worth checking: - **Tamarin Bay and the west coast reef line** for calmer water, bait gathering, and mixed inshore action. - **Le Morne channel and the nearby drop-offs** for current, structure, and the chance at trevally, barracuda, and better pelagics when the water is clear. Keep an eye on the wind, because a slight shift can change everything here. If the sea looks dirty on the exposed side, tuck into the protected western water and fish the edges where the tide starts to move. That is where the bites usually come from in Mauritius this time of year. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure 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

20. juni 20263 min
episode Mauritius Winter Fishing: Yellowfin Tuna and Reef Action on the Rise artwork

Mauritius Winter Fishing: Yellowfin Tuna and Reef Action on the Rise

This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report. On the west and north coasts today we had light to moderate trade winds, mainly southeasterly, with calm early seas building a bit of chop by afternoon. Skies ran partly cloudy with good visibility and only a slight chance of a passing shower. Offshore, the blue water line sat close in on the west and northwest, giving small boats a decent shot at pelagics. Sunrise came in just after six, with sunset shortly after six this evening, giving a nice, tidy winter‑season day length. The morning outgoing tide lined up neatly with first light, then we saw a mid‑day low and a late‑afternoon push back in. That made the **dawn and late‑afternoon** bites noticeably better, especially around reef edges and passes. Offshore, boats working the drop‑offs off **Le Morne**, **Black River** and up toward **Grand Baie Canyon** reported solid action on **yellowfin tuna** in the 10–25 kg class, a couple of bigger fish around 40 kg, plus scattered **skipjack** and a few **wahoo**. A handful of **dorado/mahi** showed on current lines and around any floating debris. Most of the tuna fell to trolled **small skirted lures** in pink‑white, purple‑black, and luminous green, run around 6–7 knots. Live or chunked bonito free‑lined back into the chum also produced when the sun got higher and the troll slowed. Closer to the reef, jigging in 40–80 m produced good numbers of **jobfish (capitaine)**, **amberjack**, and a mix of **grouper**. Anglers dropping 80–150 g slow‑pitch jigs in blue‑silver, orange‑gold, and pink saw the best results. Natural baits like **fresh squid strips**, **octopus**, and **small fillets of mackerel** pinned on strong bottom rigs were very effective once the current picked up on the flooding tide. Inshore on the lagoons and fringing reefs—especially around **Trou aux Biches**, **Flic‑en‑Flac**, and down to **Blue Bay**—the light‑tackle crowd did well on **trevally (GT and bluefin)**, **queenfish**, and **rainbow runners** early and late. Topwater stickbaits and poppers in 20–40 g, worked fast over the flat edges at first light, drew some violent strikes. Once the sun was high, switching to **soft plastics on jig heads**, small **metal spoons**, or **natural prawn and squid baits** brought more consistent hook‑ups on reef species like **emperor, snapper, and small groupers**. Two hotspots to circle for your next outing: - **Le Morne drop‑off and passes** on the southwest: prime for yellowfin, wahoo, and jigging for amberjack where the reef falls quickly into deep blue water. Work the early outgoing tide and the last of the afternoon flood for best results. - **Grand Baie to Cap Malheureux line** in the north: good all‑rounder stretch with access to blue‑water trolling, mid‑depth jigging, and sheltered lagoon fishing if the wind freshens. Watch for working birds and color changes to find the tuna. Overall fish activity has been **moderate to strong**, with the best windows around the tide changes and whenever the wind eased enough for clean presentations. Keep your leaders fresh, your hooks sharp, and don’t be shy about downsizing lures if the bite slows—these Mauritian fish see plenty of hardware. 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. juni 20263 min
episode Mauritius Fishing Report: Light Trades, Steady Bite on Reef and Offshore Drop-offs artwork

Mauritius Fishing Report: Light Trades, Steady Bite on Reef and Offshore Drop-offs

This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report. We’ve just come off a light trade-wind day on the island. The southeast breeze sat in that 10 to 15 knot range for most of the afternoon, easing a touch toward evening, with seas outside the reef around 1.5 to 2 meters and a gentle chop inside the lagoons. Skies have been mostly fair with passing low clouds, the odd shower brushing the windward coast. Sun rose just after six this morning and slipped down a little after five-thirty this evening, so your prime bite has been the usual island pattern: an hour either side of first light, then again in that late-afternoon shadow when the reef starts to darken. Tides today gave us a decent push on the mid-morning flood and another good movement late afternoon, which fired things up on the reef edges and passes. Offshore, the drop-offs off the west and northwest—especially off Le Morne and out from Black River—have produced solid action. Boats working the 80–200 m line raised a few **yellowfin tuna**, school-size **skipjack**, and scattered **dorado**. Nothing crazy, but a steady pick: think a handful of tuna per boat on a good run, plus the odd bonus mahi. The hotter boats ran smaller skirted lures in pink-and-white and purple over dark, plus a couple of feather jigs for the skipjack. A darker, slimmer profile in the prop wash has been key when the sun is high. Closer to the reef, jigging and live baiting on the outer edges brought **dogtooth tuna**, **jobfish**, and a few **amberjack**. Slow-pitched jigs in 80–150 g, blue-silver and green-gold, worked near the bottom during the stronger parts of the tide got the better fish. When you can find scad or small fusiliers for live bait, drop them just off the slope and hang on. Inshore, the lagoons along the east and north coasts have been lively early and late. Light-tackle anglers around Grand Baie and Trou aux Biches reported **bluefin trevally**, **small GTs**, and some nice **queenfish** smashing bait on the flats. Topwater stickbaits and poppers in bone, chrome, or sardine patterns have done damage, especially on that first-light glassy water. When the sun’s higher, switch to small soft plastics on light jig heads worked along the drop-offs and coral fingers. For bait fishers, the usual suspects are doing work: fresh squid strips, cut bonito, and live mullet where you can net them. On the reef, these baits are taking **emperors**, **snapper**, and **rabbitfish** around structure. Just mind the current and keep your sinker light enough to move a bit—those fish are feeding on the flow, not dead still. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Le Morne drop-off** on the southwest: great for trolling pelagics in the early morning, and jigging the slopes once the sun is up. - The outer reef and passes off **Grand Gaube** and **Cap Malheureux** in the north: consistent trevally and queenfish on lures, with a shot at something bigger lurking on the edges. Overall, the bite is decent rather than red-hot, but if you time your sessions around the stronger parts of the tide and the low-light windows, you stand a good chance of bending a rod properly. Keep your lure sizes moderate, leaders fresh, and don’t be shy to change colors if the fish are following but not committing. 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

18. juni 20263 min
episode Mauritius Early Winter: Trevally and Tuna in the Tide Shifts artwork

Mauritius Early Winter: Trevally and Tuna in the Tide Shifts

This is Artificial Lure with your Mauritius fishing report. Trade winds have eased a bit today, giving us a classic early winter pattern: cool, dry air, scattered cloud, and steady southeast breezes around 12–18 knots along the east and south coasts, lighter on the leeward west and northwest. Offshore, the sea is running 1.5–2 meters on the windward side, more manageable inside the lagoons and along the west. Sunrise came around 6:45 a.m. and sunset around 5:40 p.m., giving a short but productive light window. The morning incoming tide and the late-afternoon push lined up nicely with that low sun, and that’s when most of the better bites came. Midday has been slower, especially on the flats with that bright winter light. Inshore, the lagoons have been lively. Along the west coast from Flic-en-Flac up toward Tamarin, boats and shore anglers reported good numbers of small to medium **trevally**, **rainbow runners**, and the usual **lagoon species**—captain maillé, capitaine, and jobfish—on light tackle. A few solid GTs showed up right on the reef edge when the water started to move, mostly taken on stickbaits and poppers worked hard over the whitewater. On the fly and light spinning side, the flats around **Île aux Cerfs** and the eastern lagoons have produced a handful of **bonefish** and plenty of **golden trevally** and **yellowtail scad**. Anglers wading quietly on the dropping tide did best, casting small shrimp patterns, pink or tan, and 1/8–1/4 oz jigs tipped with a strip of squid. Offshore, the drop-offs off **Grand Baie** and **Trou aux Biches** saw decent action. Local skippers reported **yellowfin tuna** in the 10–25 kg range, a few **wahoo**, scattered **dorado**, and the odd **striper marlin** still hanging around the deeper blue. Trolled skirted lures in purple–black, lumo green, and pink, pulled at 7–8 knots along temp breaks and bird activity, have been the ticket. A couple of boats working live skipjack around FADs raised better-class tuna late in the afternoon. For bait, fresh **pilchards**, **sardines**, and **squid strips** are doing the heavy lifting. Bottom fishermen on the west and south coasts, especially off **Le Morne** and **Souillac**, picked up nice **red snapper**, **jobfish**, and **grouper** on simple running rigs with squid or cut bonito. Night sessions around the reef passes have produced a mix of emperor, snapper, and the odd big eel—great action if you don’t mind the dark and the wind. Best artificial choices right now: - For GT and trevally: large **floating stickbaits** and **cup-faced poppers** in blue–silver, bone, and mackerel patterns. - For lagoon species: 10–20 g **metal jigs**, small **soft plastics** in natural baitfish colors, and 60–80 mm **minnow plugs**. - For inshore trolling: small **skirts** in pink–white and green–yellow along the deeper reef edges and channels. A couple of hotspots to keep in mind: - **Le Morne reef edge and passes**: great for GT, wahoo, and tuna when the tide starts to move and the chop kicks up. - The FAD lines off **Grand Baie** and **Cap Malheureux**: consistent for yellowfin and dorado if you put in the trolling miles and watch the birds. Focus your efforts around the tide changes—first light incoming and late-afternoon push—and scale down gear in the lagoons if the water is clear. When that wind drops around sunset, you’ve got a short but magic window for topwater mayhem on the reef. 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

17. juni 20263 min