Early Summer Bass and Mackerel: Irish Coastal Lure Fishing Guide episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 4, 2026 · 2 MIN

Early Summer Bass and Mackerel: Irish Coastal Lure Fishing Guide

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

Good evening from **Artificial Lure** with your coastal fishing report for Ireland. Along the Irish coast, the timing is lining up nicely around the **early summer tide windows**. For an exact local tide table, check your nearest harbour or port authority before you head out, but in general the best bet is fishing the **last of the ebb** and the **first push of the flood**, especially around headlands, river mouths, and rocky points where baitfish get forced tight to cover. For **weather**, expect changeable Atlantic conditions typical of early June: a mix of breeze, passing cloud, and short clear spells is common along the coast, with calmer windows often producing the best lure fishing. A light to moderate onshore wind can stir things up for bass and mackerel, while a hard blow will push fish into more sheltered bays and lee shores. **Sunrise and sunset** in Ireland are giving long fishing days now, with long light mornings and late-evening sessions paying off best for predators. The low-light periods around dawn and dusk are prime time for bass, pollack, and mackerel, especially if the sea has a bit of color to it. Recent coastal action has been strongest for **bass, pollack, mackerel, coalfish, and the odd wrasse** in mixed ground. When the bait is there, the sport can come quickly and in flurries, with mackerel often showing in packs and pollack holding tight to kelp edges, gullies, and rough ground. Bass are the pick of the bunch for many anglers right now, often showing best where surf, sand, and broken ground meet. If you’re choosing **lures**, keep it simple and match the hatch. The top picks are **slim silver or blue metal lures** for mackerel, **paddle-tail soft plastics** in pearl, olive, or sandeel shades for bass and pollack, and **small hard minnows** worked steadily across current lines. A bit of splash and a pause in the retrieve can make all the difference. For rougher water, go a touch bigger and heavier so you stay in touch with the lure. For **bait**, the most reliable choices are **ragworm, lugworm, sandeel, mackerel strip, and crab**. If you’re after bass, fresh **mackerel strip** and **lugworm** can be deadly. For wrasse and general reef fishing, **crab** is hard to beat. If you’re on sandy ground with a bit of surf, **sandeel** or worm bait should put fish on the beach. A couple of **hot spots** worth checking are **headlands with deep water close in**, especially where tide races and boils form, and **sheltered bays with rocky outcrops** that hold bait on a moving tide. River mouths and estuary edges are also worth a cast when the water is carrying a little color and the tide is moving. If you’re out tonight, fish the moving water, keep your eyes on bird activity, and work the margins where bait gets pushed tight. That’s where the bites have been coming. Thanks for tuning in, and remember 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

Good evening from **Artificial Lure** with your coastal fishing report for Ireland. Along the Irish coast, the timing is lining up nicely around the **early summer tide windows**. For an exact local tide table, check your nearest harbour or port authority before you head out, but in general the best bet is fishing the **last of the ebb** and the **first push of the flood**, especially around headlands, river mouths, and rocky points where baitfish get forced tight to cover. For **weather**, expect changeable Atlantic conditions typical of early June: a mix of breeze, passing cloud, and short clear spells is common along the coast, with calmer windows often producing the best lure fishing. A light to moderate onshore wind can stir things up for bass and mackerel, while a hard blow will push fish into more sheltered bays and lee shores. **Sunrise and sunset** in Ireland are giving long fishing days now, with long light mornings and late-evening sessions paying off best for predators. The low-light periods around dawn and dusk are prime time for bass, pollack, and mackerel, especially if the sea has a bit of color to it. Recent coastal action has been strongest for **bass, pollack, mackerel, coalfish, and the odd wrasse** in mixed ground. When the bait is there, the sport can come quickly and in flurries, with mackerel often showing in packs and pollack holding tight to kelp edges, gullies, and rough ground. Bass are the pick of the bunch for many anglers right now, often showing best where surf, sand, and broken ground meet. If you’re choosing **lures**, keep it simple and match the hatch. The top picks are **slim silver or blue metal lures** for mackerel, **paddle-tail soft plastics** in pearl, olive, or sandeel shades for bass and pollack, and **small hard minnows** worked steadily across current lines. A bit of splash and a pause in the retrieve can make all the difference. For rougher water, go a touch bigger and heavier so you stay in touch with the lure. For **bait**, the most reliable choices are **ragworm, lugworm, sandeel, mackerel strip, and crab**. If you’re after bass, fresh **mackerel strip** and **lugworm** can be deadly. For wrasse and general reef fishing, **crab** is hard to beat. If you’re on sandy ground with a bit of surf, **sandeel** or worm bait should put fish on the beach. A couple of **hot spots** worth checking are **headlands with deep water close in**, especially where tide races and boils form, and **sheltered bays with rocky outcrops** that hold bait on a moving tide. River mouths and estuary edges are also worth a cast when the water is carrying a little color and the tide is moving. If you’re out tonight, fish the moving water, keep your eyes on bird activity, and work the margins where bait gets pushed tight. That’s where the bites have been coming. Thanks for tuning in, and remember 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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Early Summer Bass and Mackerel: Irish Coastal Lure Fishing Guide

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

This episode is 2 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 4, 2026.

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Good evening from **Artificial Lure** with your coastal fishing report for Ireland. Along the Irish coast, the timing is lining up nicely around the **early summer tide windows**. For an exact local tide table, check your nearest harbour or port...

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