Coastal Malaysia Evening Bite: West Coast Breakwaters and East Coast Reefs Heat Up episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 9, 2026 · 3 MIN

Coastal Malaysia Evening Bite: West Coast Breakwaters and East Coast Reefs Heat Up

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

Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your coastal Malaysia fishing report. Along the west coast, from Port Klang down to Port Dickson, the afternoon brought hot, humid weather with light onshore breeze, scattered clouds, and seas running mostly calm to slight. Air temps sat in the low 30s, sea around 29–30 degrees. Sunrise was roughly around 7 this morning with sunset near 7:30 this evening, giving a solid daylight window for both inshore and nearshore work. Tides along the Straits were on a moderate cycle today: a decent morning flood, slack around midday, then an evening ebb that really switched on the bite along mangroves, river mouths, and rock walls. On the east coast, from Kuantan up through Terengganu and into the islands like Redang and Perhentian, seas were a bit livelier offshore but still fishable, with similar heat and a light to moderate breeze. The evening falling tide there set up nicely around reef edges and current breaks. Action-wise, the inshore scene has been lively. Around Klang, Carey Island, and Sungai Besar, local boys reported steady **siakap** and **jenahak** on the morning flood around structure and drop‑offs, with a mix of **gelama** and **sembilang** keeping rods bent for those soaking bait on the bottom. Over at Port Dickson’s stone breakwaters and the PD marina area, **cencaru**, **kembung**, and the odd **tenggiri kecil** showed up chasing bait schools just before sunset. On the east coast, near Kuala Terengganu and out toward artificial reefs, boats picking their weather windows have hit good numbers of **kerapu**, **jenahak**, and **ebek**, plus some **tenggiri** and **cupak** on jigs and live bait. Around the island reefs, small to mid‑size **GT** and **cudas** have been smashing surface lures during the low‑light hours. For lures, stick to natural baitfish profiles. Inshore, 3–4 inch soft plastics in white, anchovy, or green‑back on 7–14 gram jigheads are doing damage on siakap and mangrove jack. Shallow‑running minnows and small metal spoons are working well for pelagics like cencaru and kembung along current lines. Offshore, 40–80 gram slow jigs in pink, blue, and silver have been hot on jenahak, kerapu, and ebek when worked near the bottom with a slow lift‑and‑fall rhythm. Poppers and stickbaits in the 80–120 mm range shine for GT and tenggiri in the early morning and late evening chop. If you’re a bait angler, keep it simple and fresh: **live tamban**, **selar**, and **bilis** are gold for tenggiri, ebek, and big siakap. Fresh squid strips and small prawns score consistent bites from gelama, sembilang, and plate‑size snapper. Around structure at night, live or cut prawns fished just off the bottom can tempt better‑grade siakap and MJ. A couple of hot spots to mark down: First, the **Port Dickson stone breakwaters and nearby reef patches** – good mixed bag of cencaru, kembung, and the odd tenggiri on metals and small jigs during the evening run‑out, with bottom rigs picking up snapper and grouper. Second, the **Kuala Terengganu artificial reefs and nearby wrecks** – prime territory for jenahak, kerapu, ebek, and tenggiri on slow jigs and live tamban when the current is moving but not ripping. Time your trip around that changing tide and you’re in the game. That’s the coastal Malaysia fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t 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

Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your coastal Malaysia fishing report. Along the west coast, from Port Klang down to Port Dickson, the afternoon brought hot, humid weather with light onshore breeze, scattered clouds, and seas running mostly calm to slight. Air temps sat in the low 30s, sea around 29–30 degrees. Sunrise was roughly around 7 this morning with sunset near 7:30 this evening, giving a solid daylight window for both inshore and nearshore work. Tides along the Straits were on a moderate cycle today: a decent morning flood, slack around midday, then an evening ebb that really switched on the bite along mangroves, river mouths, and rock walls. On the east coast, from Kuantan up through Terengganu and into the islands like Redang and Perhentian, seas were a bit livelier offshore but still fishable, with similar heat and a light to moderate breeze. The evening falling tide there set up nicely around reef edges and current breaks. Action-wise, the inshore scene has been lively. Around Klang, Carey Island, and Sungai Besar, local boys reported steady **siakap** and **jenahak** on the morning flood around structure and drop‑offs, with a mix of **gelama** and **sembilang** keeping rods bent for those soaking bait on the bottom. Over at Port Dickson’s stone breakwaters and the PD marina area, **cencaru**, **kembung**, and the odd **tenggiri kecil** showed up chasing bait schools just before sunset. On the east coast, near Kuala Terengganu and out toward artificial reefs, boats picking their weather windows have hit good numbers of **kerapu**, **jenahak**, and **ebek**, plus some **tenggiri** and **cupak** on jigs and live bait. Around the island reefs, small to mid‑size **GT** and **cudas** have been smashing surface lures during the low‑light hours. For lures, stick to natural baitfish profiles. Inshore, 3–4 inch soft plastics in white, anchovy, or green‑back on 7–14 gram jigheads are doing damage on siakap and mangrove jack. Shallow‑running minnows and small metal spoons are working well for pelagics like cencaru and kembung along current lines. Offshore, 40–80 gram slow jigs in pink, blue, and silver have been hot on jenahak, kerapu, and ebek when worked near the bottom with a slow lift‑and‑fall rhythm. Poppers and stickbaits in the 80–120 mm range shine for GT and tenggiri in the early morning and late evening chop. If you’re a bait angler, keep it simple and fresh: **live tamban**, **selar**, and **bilis** are gold for tenggiri, ebek, and big siakap. Fresh squid strips and small prawns score consistent bites from gelama, sembilang, and plate‑size snapper. Around structure at night, live or cut prawns fished just off the bottom can tempt better‑grade siakap and MJ. A couple of hot spots to mark down: First, the **Port Dickson stone breakwaters and nearby reef patches** – good mixed bag of cencaru, kembung, and the odd tenggiri on metals and small jigs during the evening run‑out, with bottom rigs picking up snapper and grouper. Second, the **Kuala Terengganu artificial reefs and nearby wrecks** – prime territory for jenahak, kerapu, ebek, and tenggiri on slow jigs and live tamban when the current is moving but not ripping. Time your trip around that changing tide and you’re in the game. That’s the coastal Malaysia fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t 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

NOW PLAYING

Coastal Malaysia Evening Bite: West Coast Breakwaters and East Coast Reefs Heat Up

0:00 3:52

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Chewing the Fat with WorkForge WorkForge Bite-Sized Conversations for Building a Stronger Workforce Welcome to Chewing the Fat, a podcast delving deep into the world of food manufacturing. Dive into real conversations around critical topics like staffing, retention, onboarding, and career development in this essential industry. Subscribe now to gain insights from your peers, subject matter experts and more on the biggest issues facing food manufacturers today: -Hiring and retaining employees -Addressing the challenges of the Silver Tsunami -Improving time to productivity of new employees -Engaging employees from hire to retire And more... Tune in to Chewing the Fat, a WorkForge podcast, and join the conversation on how to build and sustain a resilient, high-performing workforce in food manufacturing. She’s a Hazard to Herself She’s a Hazard Hi there, I’m Mallory, and I’d like to invite you into our world with “She’s a Hazard to Herself!” Join us as we navigate life with Multiple Sclerosis from the seat of my power wheelchair. Discover stories of resilience, family, and the community we’ve built around chronic illness. Whether you’re impacted by MS or want to learn from our journey, there’s something here for you. So why wait? Subscribe to “She’s a Hazard to Herself” on your favorite podcast app and be part of our journey today. Let’s lift each other up, one episode at a time! MySwimPro Swimming Technique & Training Podcast MySwimPro MySwimPro is the number one fitness application for the fastest growing sport in the world. Since 2014, we have been on a mission to help swimmers of all levels live happier and healthier lives through swimming. Today, swimmers in more than 150 countries use MySwimPro’s award-winning mobile and wearable apps to access personalized swim workout plans, training plans, educational drills and videos, advanced analytics, and to log and track their progress. MySwimPro is accessible on iOS and Android smartphones and wearables, and is free to get started. My Take On It with Your Angelic Karma® Your Angelic Karma Here we take a look at how the United States measures alongside other First World Nations. + taking a deep dive into the science -The Report

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today?

This episode is 3 minutes long.

When was this Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today episode published?

This episode was published on June 9, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your coastal Malaysia fishing report. Along the west coast, from Port Klang down to Port Dickson, the afternoon brought hot, humid weather with light onshore breeze, scattered clouds, and seas running...

Can I download this Malaysia, Coast Fishing Report Today episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!