EPISODE · Jun 8, 2026 · 3 MIN
Vietnam Central Coast: Light Winds, Prime Dawn and Dusk Bite with Barramundi and Trevally Running Strong
from Vietnam, Coast Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI
Xin chào, this is Artificial Lure with your Vietnam coast fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today the sea’s been fairly kind: light to moderate onshore breeze, around 10–15 knots in the afternoon, laying down toward evening. Skies have been partly cloudy with broken sun and just enough chop to put some life on the lures. Humidity is high as always, but the heat backs off nicely toward sunset. Sun came up just after 5:15 in the morning and will slide under the horizon around 6:20 in the evening, which puts the prime bite in the first two hours after dawn and the last two before dark. Around the river mouths and harbor channels you’ve got a mid‑range tide today, neither extreme spring nor super slack, with a good push on the flood mid‑morning and again on the evening incoming. That moving water has been the key. Inshore along the central coast near Da Nang and Hoi An, anglers working the surf gutters and rock points have been finding decent numbers of **barramundi**, **queenfish**, and small **trevally** on the morning run‑in. A few **mangrove jack** have also come from the concrete pilings and bridge shadows where the current pinches. Down south off Vung Tau and into the Mekong estuaries, the brackish creeks are giving up **barramundi**, **snappers**, and the odd **catfish** and **tilapia** for those soaking bait. Boats making short nearshore runs just outside the river plumes have picked up mixed schools of small to mid‑size **trevally**, **mackerel**, and scattered **bonito** when the birds start working. Where the water cleans up and you find that green‑blue edge, the activity has been best. Plenty of baitfish on the sounder, so when you find them, stay put and work the area hard. On artificials, natural‑looking is outfishing bright today. In the surf and around river mouths, 10–20 gram **metal jigs** in silver or sardine pattern, 9–12 cm **minnow plugs** in white, bone, or green back, and 3–4 inch **soft plastics** on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads have been doing most of the damage. Slow roll them just above the bottom on the incoming tide, add a few twitches, and hang on. For bait, fresh is king. Strips of **fresh squid**, small **live prawns**, and thin fillets of **baitfish** like sardine or scad are getting eaten quickly where there’s current. Around structure, a lightly weighted live prawn drifted back with the tide has been deadly on barra and jack. Where the water’s dirtier, a small berley trail of crushed bait has helped pull fish onto the line. Two spots to keep an eye on: • The **rocky points and river mouth south of Da Nang**, especially where the sandbar forms a deeper gutter along the shore. Work that first light window with metals and minnows as the tide pushes in. • The **shipping channel edges off Vung Tau**, targeting the drop‑offs and current lines late afternoon on the flooding tide. Slow‑trolled deep minnows and vertical jigs have been turning up trevally and mackerel. Overall, action isn’t crazy but it’s been steady for those watching the tides, fishing the low light, and matching the hatch with smaller, subtle lures. 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
What this episode covers
Xin chào, this is Artificial Lure with your Vietnam coast fishing report. Along the central and southern coast today the sea’s been fairly kind: light to moderate onshore breeze, around 10–15 knots in the afternoon, laying down toward evening. Skies have been partly cloudy with broken sun and just enough chop to put some life on the lures. Humidity is high as always, but the heat backs off nicely toward sunset. Sun came up just after 5:15 in the morning and will slide under the horizon around 6:20 in the evening, which puts the prime bite in the first two hours after dawn and the last two before dark. Around the river mouths and harbor channels you’ve got a mid‑range tide today, neither extreme spring nor super slack, with a good push on the flood mid‑morning and again on the evening incoming. That moving water has been the key. Inshore along the central coast near Da Nang and Hoi An, anglers working the surf gutters and rock points have been finding decent numbers of **barramundi**, **queenfish**, and small **trevally** on the morning run‑in. A few **mangrove jack** have also come from the concrete pilings and bridge shadows where the current pinches. Down south off Vung Tau and into the Mekong estuaries, the brackish creeks are giving up **barramundi**, **snappers**, and the odd **catfish** and **tilapia** for those soaking bait. Boats making short nearshore runs just outside the river plumes have picked up mixed schools of small to mid‑size **trevally**, **mackerel**, and scattered **bonito** when the birds start working. Where the water cleans up and you find that green‑blue edge, the activity has been best. Plenty of baitfish on the sounder, so when you find them, stay put and work the area hard. On artificials, natural‑looking is outfishing bright today. In the surf and around river mouths, 10–20 gram **metal jigs** in silver or sardine pattern, 9–12 cm **minnow plugs** in white, bone, or green back, and 3–4 inch **soft plastics** on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads have been doing most of the damage. Slow roll them just above the bottom on the incoming tide, add a few twitches, and hang on. For bait, fresh is king. Strips of **fresh squid**, small **live prawns**, and thin fillets of **baitfish** like sardine or scad are getting eaten quickly where there’s current. Around structure, a lightly weighted live prawn drifted back with the tide has been deadly on barra and jack. Where the water’s dirtier, a small berley trail of crushed bait has helped pull fish onto the line. Two spots to keep an eye on: • The **rocky points and river mouth south of Da Nang**, especially where the sandbar forms a deeper gutter along the shore. Work that first light window with metals and minnows as the tide pushes in. • The **shipping channel edges off Vung Tau**, targeting the drop‑offs and current lines late afternoon on the flooding tide. Slow‑trolled deep minnows and vertical jigs have been turning up trevally and mackerel. Overall, action isn’t crazy but it’s been steady for those watching the tides, fishing the low light, and matching the hatch with smaller, subtle lures. 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
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Vietnam Central Coast: Light Winds, Prime Dawn and Dusk Bite with Barramundi and Trevally Running Strong
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