Central Vietnam Coast: Tide-Driven Trevally and Reef Fish Bite Strong in Morning and Evening episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 17, 2026 · 3 MIN

Central Vietnam Coast: Tide-Driven Trevally and Reef Fish Bite Strong in Morning and Evening

from Vietnam, Coast Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Vietnam fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today, light southwest monsoon breeze has been pushing in steady, warm air, with onshore winds around 8–14 knots and small chop on most open beaches. Skies have been a mix of sun and cloud, with a few brief showers drifting through in the afternoon. Humidity has been high, as usual, but water clarity has stayed decent outside of river mouths. Sunrise came in early, just after five, and sunset slipped down a little after six-thirty, giving a long, workable low‑light window. The morning incoming tide lined up nicely with first light on much of the coast, and the evening outgoing tide has been picking up current along points, jetties, and harbor mouths. That moving water has been the key: when it runs, the bite wakes up; when it slows, the fish turn picky. Inshore, anglers working near Da Nang, Hoi An, and down toward Quy Nhon have been finding good numbers of small to mid‑size trevally, queenfish, and the usual mixed reef fish around rocky points and nearshore reefs. Boats just outside the surf line reported modest catches of Spanish mackerel and bonito, with a few better fish pushing the drag in the early morning flurries. Farther south around Nha Trang, Phan Rang, and Vung Tau, nearshore reefs and small islands have given up mixed bags of snapper, grouper, and emperors. Night sessions around structure produced steady action on squid and cuttlefish, which turned into perfect fresh bait for the dawn snapper bite. Offshore charters have picked up the odd sailfish and decent tuna, but overall pelagic numbers have been scattered and short‑lived around current edges. Best lures today have been small metal jigs in the 20–40 g range, silver or blue, hopped quickly through mid‑water for trevally and mackerel. Slim minnow‑style hardbaits in natural baitfish colors, worked with a stop‑and‑go retrieve, have fooled queenfish and bonito around surface bust‑ups. For reef fish, soft plastics on 1/2–1 oz jig heads, in white, pink, and chartreuse, have been reliable when bounced close to the bottom. On the bait side, nothing beats fresh: strips of squid and cut fish have outfished frozen by a mile. For snapper and grouper, a simple running sinker rig with a thumb‑sized squid strip or chunk of fresh bait lowered straight down a reef edge has been the ticket. In the surf, small live baitfish pinned on a light wire hook have tempted roaming mackerel and bigger trevally when the tide starts pushing. Fish activity has followed the tide: quiet during slack, sharp but short feeding windows when current first begins to move. The morning push brought the higher numbers, but the late‑afternoon outgoing has produced the better‑quality fish, especially around deeper points and channel mouths where cooler water rolls in. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: first, the rocky headlands and small islands just off Nha Trang, where mixed reef structure and current lines have stacked snapper, grouper, and trevally when the tide moves. Second, the harbor and river mouth zone around Vung Tau, where the outgoing tide funnels bait along the edges of shipping channels, drawing in mackerel, queenfish, and the odd cobia for those drifting live bait or slow‑pitching jigs near the bottom. If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan around that first push of tide at dawn and the evening drop, keep your jig weights matched to the current, and always carry a bit of fresh squid in the cooler—just in case the lures stop talking. 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

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Vietnam fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today, light southwest monsoon breeze has been pushing in steady, warm air, with onshore winds around 8–14 knots and small chop on most open beaches. Skies have been a mix of sun and cloud, with a few brief showers drifting through in the afternoon. Humidity has been high, as usual, but water clarity has stayed decent outside of river mouths. Sunrise came in early, just after five, and sunset slipped down a little after six-thirty, giving a long, workable low‑light window. The morning incoming tide lined up nicely with first light on much of the coast, and the evening outgoing tide has been picking up current along points, jetties, and harbor mouths. That moving water has been the key: when it runs, the bite wakes up; when it slows, the fish turn picky. Inshore, anglers working near Da Nang, Hoi An, and down toward Quy Nhon have been finding good numbers of small to mid‑size trevally, queenfish, and the usual mixed reef fish around rocky points and nearshore reefs. Boats just outside the surf line reported modest catches of Spanish mackerel and bonito, with a few better fish pushing the drag in the early morning flurries. Farther south around Nha Trang, Phan Rang, and Vung Tau, nearshore reefs and small islands have given up mixed bags of snapper, grouper, and emperors. Night sessions around structure produced steady action on squid and cuttlefish, which turned into perfect fresh bait for the dawn snapper bite. Offshore charters have picked up the odd sailfish and decent tuna, but overall pelagic numbers have been scattered and short‑lived around current edges. Best lures today have been small metal jigs in the 20–40 g range, silver or blue, hopped quickly through mid‑water for trevally and mackerel. Slim minnow‑style hardbaits in natural baitfish colors, worked with a stop‑and‑go retrieve, have fooled queenfish and bonito around surface bust‑ups. For reef fish, soft plastics on 1/2–1 oz jig heads, in white, pink, and chartreuse, have been reliable when bounced close to the bottom. On the bait side, nothing beats fresh: strips of squid and cut fish have outfished frozen by a mile. For snapper and grouper, a simple running sinker rig with a thumb‑sized squid strip or chunk of fresh bait lowered straight down a reef edge has been the ticket. In the surf, small live baitfish pinned on a light wire hook have tempted roaming mackerel and bigger trevally when the tide starts pushing. Fish activity has followed the tide: quiet during slack, sharp but short feeding windows when current first begins to move. The morning push brought the higher numbers, but the late‑afternoon outgoing has produced the better‑quality fish, especially around deeper points and channel mouths where cooler water rolls in. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: first, the rocky headlands and small islands just off Nha Trang, where mixed reef structure and current lines have stacked snapper, grouper, and trevally when the tide moves. Second, the harbor and river mouth zone around Vung Tau, where the outgoing tide funnels bait along the edges of shipping channels, drawing in mackerel, queenfish, and the odd cobia for those drifting live bait or slow‑pitching jigs near the bottom. If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan around that first push of tide at dawn and the evening drop, keep your jig weights matched to the current, and always carry a bit of fresh squid in the cooler—just in case the lures stop talking. 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

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Central Vietnam Coast: Tide-Driven Trevally and Reef Fish Bite Strong in Morning and Evening

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This episode was published on June 17, 2026.

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your coastal Vietnam fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today, light southwest monsoon breeze has been pushing in steady, warm air, with onshore winds around 8–14 knots and small chop on...

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