EPISODE · Jun 18, 2026 · 3 MIN
Gold Coast Winter Light: Seaway Tailor, Bream, and Mulloway on the Neap Tide Run
from Gold Coast, Australia Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gold Coast fishing report. Light winter pattern on the Coast today: Bureau of Meteorology has us under a cool, mostly clear westerly, around 10–15 knots inshore, easing later, with a slight to moderate sea. Overnight minimums are crisp, but the daytime’s comfortable. Sunrise was around 6:40 this morning, sunset about 5:00 this arvo, so that first light and last light bite windows are short but punchy. Tides through the Seaway are running fairly typical neap–to–mid range: a low not long after dawn and a solid push of run‑in through late morning into early arvo. That run‑in tide has been the key for most crews this week, especially around the Seaway walls, pipeline, and Nerang River mouth. Inshore, the Seaway has been giving up **tailor**, **bream**, and a few late‑season **school mulloway** at night. Local charter skippers and tackle shops report tailor to 50 cm on metal slugs and 4–5 inch white and pilchard‑pattern soft plastics, fished on the pressure edges of the north wall. Mulloway have been taking live pike, mullet, and butter bream, plus larger soft vibes worked deep on the tide changes. The rock walls, bridges, and pontoons up the Nerang and Coomera have produced good numbers of solid **bream** and a scatter of **trevally**. Best baits have been mullet strips, prawns, and fished‑down chicken thigh with plenty of scent. Light fluorocarbon leaders and unweighted baits drifting back with the current have outfished the heavier rigs. Out wider, when the weather windows open, crews hitting the 18–36 fathom lines have been finding **snapper**, **pearl perch**, and mixed reefies. Fresh squid, pillies, and strip baits on simple paternoster rigs have done the job. Soft plastics in 5–7 inch jerk shad styles in nuclear chicken, pink, and natural baitfish colours have accounted for some better snapper on the dawn bite. A few **dolphinfish** are still hanging around the fads, taking small skirted lures and live baits slow‑trolled past the buoys. Lure‑wise inshore, think small and subtle: - For bream and flathead in the creeks: 2.5–3 inch paddle‑tails in motor oil, bloodworm, and olive, plus 50–70 mm hardbody minnows twitched over sand flats. - For Seaway predators: 20–40 g metal slugs for tailor, 4–6 inch pearl or white soft plastics, and 20–30 g soft vibes in natural baitfish tones for mulloway and larger trevs. If you’re a bait fisho, prawn, mullet gut, and small hardy pilchards are the go for bread‑and‑butter species, while live yakka, slimy mackerel, or mullet are prime for mulloway and big reefies. A couple of hot spots to circle for the next few sessions: - **Gold Coast Seaway north wall and pipeline** on the last of the run‑in and first of the run‑out for tailor, trevally, and mulloway. - **Nerang River bridges and rock bars** around Chevron Island and Sundale, fishing the tide changes for bream, flathead, and the odd jack hanging on structure. Fish that low‑light period, line up your tides, keep your presentations natural, and you’re in with a very good shot. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Gold Coast fishing report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
What this episode covers
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gold Coast fishing report. Light winter pattern on the Coast today: Bureau of Meteorology has us under a cool, mostly clear westerly, around 10–15 knots inshore, easing later, with a slight to moderate sea. Overnight minimums are crisp, but the daytime’s comfortable. Sunrise was around 6:40 this morning, sunset about 5:00 this arvo, so that first light and last light bite windows are short but punchy. Tides through the Seaway are running fairly typical neap–to–mid range: a low not long after dawn and a solid push of run‑in through late morning into early arvo. That run‑in tide has been the key for most crews this week, especially around the Seaway walls, pipeline, and Nerang River mouth. Inshore, the Seaway has been giving up **tailor**, **bream**, and a few late‑season **school mulloway** at night. Local charter skippers and tackle shops report tailor to 50 cm on metal slugs and 4–5 inch white and pilchard‑pattern soft plastics, fished on the pressure edges of the north wall. Mulloway have been taking live pike, mullet, and butter bream, plus larger soft vibes worked deep on the tide changes. The rock walls, bridges, and pontoons up the Nerang and Coomera have produced good numbers of solid **bream** and a scatter of **trevally**. Best baits have been mullet strips, prawns, and fished‑down chicken thigh with plenty of scent. Light fluorocarbon leaders and unweighted baits drifting back with the current have outfished the heavier rigs. Out wider, when the weather windows open, crews hitting the 18–36 fathom lines have been finding **snapper**, **pearl perch**, and mixed reefies. Fresh squid, pillies, and strip baits on simple paternoster rigs have done the job. Soft plastics in 5–7 inch jerk shad styles in nuclear chicken, pink, and natural baitfish colours have accounted for some better snapper on the dawn bite. A few **dolphinfish** are still hanging around the fads, taking small skirted lures and live baits slow‑trolled past the buoys. Lure‑wise inshore, think small and subtle: - For bream and flathead in the creeks: 2.5–3 inch paddle‑tails in motor oil, bloodworm, and olive, plus 50–70 mm hardbody minnows twitched over sand flats. - For Seaway predators: 20–40 g metal slugs for tailor, 4–6 inch pearl or white soft plastics, and 20–30 g soft vibes in natural baitfish tones for mulloway and larger trevs. If you’re a bait fisho, prawn, mullet gut, and small hardy pilchards are the go for bread‑and‑butter species, while live yakka, slimy mackerel, or mullet are prime for mulloway and big reefies. A couple of hot spots to circle for the next few sessions: - **Gold Coast Seaway north wall and pipeline** on the last of the run‑in and first of the run‑out for tailor, trevally, and mulloway. - **Nerang River bridges and rock bars** around Chevron Island and Sundale, fishing the tide changes for bream, flathead, and the odd jack hanging on structure. Fish that low‑light period, line up your tides, keep your presentations natural, and you’re in with a very good shot. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Gold Coast fishing report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update. 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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Gold Coast Winter Light: Seaway Tailor, Bream, and Mulloway on the Neap Tide Run
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