PODCAST · leisure
Great Barrier Reef, Australia Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point Ai
Tune in to the "Great Barrier Reef, Australia Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world's largest coral reef system and most biodiverse marine ecosystem. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Great Barrier Reef's unique coral reef ecosystem and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.... Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis show includes AI-generated content.
-
27
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Dry Season Trade Winds and Solid Reef Action
Artificial Lure here with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report. Out on the Reef today we’ve had classic dry‑season conditions: light south‑easterlies in the morning, building to 15–20 knots by mid‑afternoon, with clear skies and a gentle swell under a metre on most of the inshore and mid‑shelf patches. Bureau of Meteorology coastal waters forecasts are calling for those trade winds to hold through the week, so it’s a game of “early bird gets the calm ride.” Sunrise along the Reef coast was around twenty past six this morning with sunset just after five‑thirty this evening, giving a nice, tidy low‑light window either side of the day. Those dawn and dusk bite periods have lined up with a handy set of neap‑to‑moderate tides: a pre‑dawn high around the 2–2.5 metre mark on the mainland ports, easing to a mid‑morning low near a metre, then a smaller push of afternoon water. Not huge tidal movement, but just enough run on the reef edges and pressure points to get fish on the chew when the wind eases. Inshore, around the headlands and island fringes off Cairns, Townsville and the Whitsundays, the barra and threadfin have quietened with the cooler water, but the fingermark, grassy sweetlip and bluebone have picked up. Local charter skippers are reporting mixed bags of 30–40 fish per trip on the rubble patches and shoals: solid grassy up to 50 cm, a few tuskfish, and the odd cracker fingermark nudging 70 cm. Fresh squid and mullet fillet have been the top baits, with soft‑plastic paddletails in natural pearl and motor‑oil colours doing damage when worked slowly near the bottom. On the mid‑shelf reefs, the story has been all about coral trout and red emperor. Crews fishing Flynn, Milln, Briggs and the grounds east of the Palm group have been boxing 10–20 legal trout on a good day, plus a handful of quality reds and spangled emperor. Pilchards on ganged hooks and live yakka have outfished everything, but a lot of locals are quietly converting them on soft vibes and 60–80 gram slow‑pitch jigs in pink or chartreuse. Keep your leader heavy – 60–80 lb fluoro – because the sharks have been thick on some of the more popular marks. Further out on the outer reef and pressure edges, the pelagics have been lively when the current pushes in tight. Spanish mackerel are turning up in twos and threes, 8–15 kilos common, with the odd horse over 20. Floating gar and wolf‑herring rigged on single‑strand wire have been the standout, but high‑speed trolling deep‑diving minnows and 40–60 gram metal slugs around bait schools has been very effective. There’ve also been good reports of yellowfin tuna and mac tuna schools busting up on the edges; bust them with small stickbaits and metals in the 20–40 gram range for plenty of fun on lighter spin gear. For lure choice overall, think natural and subtle in the clearer reef water: – For reefies: 4–5 inch soft plastics in pearl, nuclear chicken, and motor oil on 1/2–1 oz jigheads; 40–80 g slow‑pitch jigs in pink, sardine and gold. – For pelagics: chrome metals, white and pilchard‑pattern minnows, and slim profile stickbaits. – For inshore rubble and headlands: prawn imitations, smaller paddletails, and lightly weighted flesh baits. A couple of hot spots to mark on the plotter: – The bommie clusters and drop‑offs on the eastern side of Milln and Flynn Reefs off Cairns – great for trout early, then mackerel and tuna when the bait rises. – The wonky holes and rubble lines east of Magnetic Island out from Townsville – prime for fingermark, grunter and the odd big red when the tide slows and the moon is building. Fish smart around the wind and tide, keep an eye on the sounder for bait and pressure edges, and you’ll find a feed out there. 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
-
26
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Prime Dry Season Conditions and Top Lure Tactics
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for this arvo. We’ve had classic dry‑season conditions up here: light to moderate southeasterly trades, clear skies, and good barometric pressure – the sort of weather that keeps the reef pretty friendly and the water nice and clean. Daytime temps are warm but not cooking, with cooler nights helping the pelagics push in tight on the pressure points and current lines. Tides on the outer reef today are running a fairly standard neap‑to‑mid pattern, nothing too wild. That gentler run has kept the water clearer over the bommies and along the reef edges, which is perfect for sight‑casting and working lures over shallow structure. The slower movement has meant the bite has been best on the tide changes, especially first light and late afternoon. Sunrise came early over the Coral Sea, with that prime dawn window turning on the inshore bait schools. Sunset is falling just early enough to give you a solid last‑light bite before the evening chill drops in. The low‑light periods have absolutely been the key; the middle of the day has been quieter unless you’re working deeper edges or live‑baiting. Fish activity around the reef edges, pressure points and isolated bommies has been solid. The reef flats have produced good numbers of coral trout and sweetlip, with the odd red emperor and spangled emperor coming from the slightly deeper rubble patches. On the bluewater side, small to mid‑size Spanish mackerel have been shadowing bait balls, and there have been scattered reports of yellowfin tuna and the odd wahoo out wider where the current is pushing harder along the shelf. Recent catches from local charter skippers and tackle shops up and down the coast point to coral trout as the main player – plenty of legal fish, with a few real brutes pulled off the edges in 15–25 metres. Mixed in have been schools of trevally, including GTs smashing bait on the current lines, plus longtail tuna working the surface when the bait gets nervous. Inshore rubble and wonky holes are still producing good numbers of nannygai at night for those patient enough to sit on a mark. Best lures at the moment have been bright‑coloured diving hardbodies and 4–6 inch soft plastics in natural baitfish tones for trout and sweetlip, worked tight to the reef face and across the tops on the run‑in. Metal slices and stickbaits have been doing damage on mackerel and tuna; keep a spin outfit rigged with a wire‑tipped leader ready for when the surface bust‑ups kick off. For the bait crew, fresh squid, pilchards, and cut mullet have outfished frozen stuff by a mile, especially when pinned on simple paternoster rigs and dropped right into the pressure side of structure. If you’re chasing hot spots, put some time in around: - The outer reef edges east of Cairns and Port Douglas, especially any sharp points where the current wraps – prime ground for coral trout, trevally and passing Spaniards. - Mid‑shelf shoals and wrecks off Townsville and the central reef – great for nannygai, red emperor and mixed reefies once the sun dips and the current eases. As always, keep an eye on the marine forecast and remember reef closures and size and bag limits – the Great Barrier Reef only fishes this well if we look after it. 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
-
25
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Spring Bite, Pelagics Firing, and Reef Trout Stacked on the Afternoon Push
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for this arvo. Up off Cairns, Townsville and the Whitsundays, we’ve had a classic dry‑season pattern: light south‑easterlies early, freshening to 15–20 knots by mid‑day, then easing again late. Skies are mostly clear with just a bit of coastal cloud and a modest swell on the outer edge. Water temps are sitting in the mid‑20s Celsius, clear blue on the shelf, greener inshore around the rivers and beaches. Tides on the reef today are running a **moderate neap‑to‑mid cycle**: a small predawn high, dropping to a late‑morning low, then a solid afternoon push bringing good run on the pressure points. The better bite windows have lined up with that dawn glass‑off and the mid‑afternoon flood when the current starts to stand up on the points and bommies. Sunrise has been early, just after 6 a.m. along the coast, with sunset not long after 5 p.m., giving you a tight low‑light window that’s been fishing very well. Pelagic activity has been strong on the outer reef edges and current lines. Spanish mackerel, longtail tuna and the odd mahi have been busting up bait on the pressure faces and along colour changes. Trolled deep‑diving hardbodies in natural pilchard and garfish patterns, 160–200 mm, have been the standout for the Spaniards, along with metal slices spun back through the bust‑ups for tuna. A few boats running skipping gar and rigged wolf herring have reported multiple strikes once that tide started to build. Reef fishing has been very tidy. Good numbers of **coral trout**, sweetlip and spangled emperor have come off the tops and down current edges of smaller bommies in 15–30 metres. Best results have come from lightly weighted pilchards and fresh strip baits drifted back into the pressure zone, as well as soft plastics in the 5–7 inch range, paddle tails in coral trout colours – think gold, coral and pearl. A lot of crews are doing well by fishing just after daybreak, then again on that late‑afternoon push, leaving the bright middle of the day for longer moves and sounder work. In closer, around the islands and headlands, there’s been good mixed action on **trevally, queenfish and small GTs**. Surface stickbaits and poppers worked around bait schools on the turn of the tide have produced some explosive hits. Lightly weighted live baits – yakkas and herring – slow‑trolled around the pressure points have been accounting for the bigger fish. For bait, it’s hard to beat **fresh local**: pilchards, squid, cut mullet and live fusiliers or yakkas if you can jig them up. Those targeting trout and emperor are having success with fresh squid and live baits pinned just off the reef edge. Lure fishos should pack deep divers in mackerel patterns, 40–80 g chromed metals for tuna, and a selection of 5–7 inch soft plastics on 3/8 to 1 oz heads for working the contours. A couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: - The **outer reef pressure edges off Cairns and Port Douglas**, where the main current hits the front face of the reef, have been very consistent for Spaniards at first light and coral trout deeper down once the sun’s up. - The **inshore shoals and island drop‑offs off the Whitsundays**, especially where you’ve got current wrapping around a point and pushing bait up, have held solid numbers of trout, sweetlip and roaming trevally on the tide changes. Fish smart: watch your sounder, time your moves around the tide, and don’t be afraid to shift if the reef you’re on goes quiet for more than half an hour in prime time. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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
-
24
Great Barrier Reef Fishing: Neap Tide Trout and Mackerel Action Off Cairns
This is Artificial Lure with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report. Up off Cairns and Port Douglas, we’re sitting on a **neap-to-building tide**, so tidal run is moderate, not ripping, which is perfect for working reef edges and bommies. Around the mid-morning and late‑afternoon tide changes, the water’s been just slack enough for plastics and lightly weighted baits to hang in the strike zone. Weather along the Reef today has been classic dry-season: mostly clear skies, southeast trade winds around 10–15 knots inshore, a touch stronger outside, and a gentle swell. That’s made early starts and late arvo sessions very comfortable, though smaller boats will want to tuck in behind the reefs once the breeze freshens. Sunrise was just after 6 a.m. with sunset not long after 5:30 p.m., giving prime low‑light windows at both ends of the day. Fish activity has been solid. Inshore reefs and rubble patches have produced good numbers of **coral trout**, **grass sweetlip**, **spangled emperor**, and the odd **red emperor** pushed a little shallower than usual. Several local charter skippers out of Cairns and Townsville are reporting consistent trout in the 45–55 cm range, with mixed bags of sweetlip and tuskfish. Out wider, pressure edges and isolated bommies have turned up **Spanish mackerel**, **school mackerel**, and some cracking **giant trevally** for those willing to work metal and stickbaits. On the bait front, **fresh pilchards**, **slabbed mullet**, and **squid** have been the standouts. Lightly weighted baits floated down the berley trail or wafted back over the reef faces have outfished big sinker rigs. For lure fishos, it’s been a great week for **5–7 inch soft plastics** in natural baitfish colours, rigged on 3/8–1 oz jig heads, hopped down the drop‑offs. **Deep-diving hardbodies** in gold, pilchard, and pink have been nailing trout and cod, while fast‑retrieved **chrome slices** and **stickbaits** have tempted the mackerel and GTs when they’ve been up on the bait. Two hot spots to circle: - **Pixie and Saxon Reefs off Cairns**: The eastern pressure edges are holding bait and have produced quality trout, sweetlip, and the odd mackerel. Work the up‑current faces on the last of the run‑in and first of the run‑out with soft plastics and lightly weighted pilchards. - **Arlington Reef and nearby bommies**: Plenty of pan-sized trout and sweetlip on the inner ledges, with better fish pushing tight to structure right on dawn. Slow-rolled plastics and small deep divers have done damage, especially around the tide turns. If you’re land‑based or running a smaller boat inside, the coastal headlands and channel markers north and south of Cairns have coughed up school mackerel on small metals and ganged‑hook pillies, particularly when the bait’s been pushed in by the morning tide. Remember to keep an eye on your sounder for bait balls and isolated structure; most of the better fish reported this week have come off small, overlooked lumps just off the main reef lines. And as always, check current Queensland size and bag limits and handle those no‑take species with care. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a fishing 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
-
23
Great Barrier Reef Winter Fishing: Trout, Macks and Neap Tide Magic
Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report from up this way in Queensland. We’ve had a classic winter pattern on the Reef. Light to moderate south‑easterlies most of the day, around 10–15 knots, with a bit more breeze on the outer reefs this arvo. Skies have been mostly clear with the odd coastal shower. Temps sitting in the low‑ to mid‑20s, and the water’s a comfortable 24–25°C inshore, a touch cooler further out. Sun popped up just after 6:30 this morning and will duck out a bit before 6 this evening, giving a nice long window around dawn and dusk. The tide’s been running a typical neap‑to‑middling cycle for this time of month: a modest high early morning, dropping to a late‑morning low, then pushing in again through the afternoon. That building afternoon run has really fired things up along pressure edges and the fronts of bommies. Fish activity’s been solid rather than crazy, with the best bites tied to that tide change. On the outer reefs, mixed bags of **coral trout**, **redthroat emperor**, and a few quality **spangled emperor** have come over the side from skippers working the 15–30 m ledges and the tops of isolated bommies. Inshore rubble patches and channel edges have given up plenty of **grassy sweetlip**, smaller **nannygai**, and the odd **cod**. The pelagics are starting to play the game too. Spanish mackerel have been sneaking along current lines and bait balls; a few boats reported half a dozen strikes in a session, landing two or three keepers in that 8–15 kg class. There’ve also been longtail tuna bust‑ups wide of the islands, mainly mid‑morning when the sun gets up enough to push the bait higher. Lure‑wise, it’s been a good day for bright, noisy hardware. For reefies, soft plastics in 4–5 inch sizes in nuclear chicken, coral trout, and pilchard colours have been hot, pinned on 3/8 to 1 oz jigheads depending on depth and current. Deep‑diving hardbodies in red‑head and natural fusilier patterns are producing well along reef faces. For the macks, slow‑trolled bibbed minnows in mackerel and bonito colours, or metal slices and stickbaits worked quickly across surface bust‑ups, have been the go. If you’re a bait fisho, you’re in luck. Fresh pilchards, squid, and cut flesh strips are still the top ticket on the reef. A simple paternoster rig with a bit of glow tubing is all you need in 20–40 m. Inshore, a bit of fresh prawn or squid on a running sinker has been pulling plenty of bread‑and‑butter species. A couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: - **Ribbon Reef country out wide**: Any pressure point where that ocean current smacks into a reef wall has held trout and redthroat, with macks working the edges. Work the up‑current faces early and late with plastics and live baits. - **Around the Keppel and Frankland Island groups** and similar inshore island chains: current‑swept points and nearby rubble patches in 10–20 m have produced mixed reefies and the odd mackerel cruising the drop‑offs. Great spot if you don’t want the long run offshore. As always, keep an eye on the forecast, watch your sounder for bait, and fish that tide change hard. The Reef’s still shouting if you know how to listen. 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
-
22
Great Barrier Reef Dry Season Bite: Morning Floods and Pressure Edges Firing
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your reef report from up around the Great Barrier Reef, Queensland coast. We’ve got a classic dry‑season pattern on today: light to moderate south‑easterlies, clearer water on the outer reef, and a bit of chop on the run‑out tide. Daytime temps are sitting in the comfy mid‑20s, with cooler nights. Bureau of Meteorology is calling it mostly fine with those trade winds easing a touch in the afternoon – good news for anyone running wide. Sun’s up around twenty‑past six and dropping just after five‑thirty, so the bite windows are tight. First light through the top of the morning run‑in has been the prime session, with another little flurry right on dusk when the wind lays down. Tides on the reef edges are giving us a decent morning flood, a lazy neapish high around the middle of the day, then a draining afternoon ebb. That morning push has been turning the fish on over the pressure edges, bommies and gutter mouths, while the dropping water’s been firing up the fusiliers and, in turn, the predators. In the last few days crews have been punching out of Cairns, Townsville and Airlie and doing well. Charter skippers are reporting solid mixed bags of **coral trout**, **red throat emperor**, **spangled emperor**, **sweetlip**, plus plenty of **stripeys** and **hussar** on the deeper rubble. Jig fishos are boating good numbers of **nannygai** and the odd **red emperor** on the 40–60 metre marks, with a few **cobia** and **trevally** crashing the party. Pelagic-wise, bait balls on the pressure faces have dragged in **Spanish mackerel**, **school macks** and rat **yellowfin tuna**, and the game crowd further wide is still raising the odd **black marlin** and **sailfish** on the shelf when the current’s pushing south. Best baits right now are still the old reliables: fresh **pilchards**, **slabbed hussar or mullet**, and live **yakka** or **fusi** slow‑trolled or pinned just off the drop‑off. For lures, lightly weighted **5–7 inch soft plastics** in white, nuclear chicken or pilly colours hopped down the pressure side of bommies have been deadly on trout and emperors. Medium‑deep **hardbody divers** in mackerel and fusilier patterns run 4–6 knots along reef edges are drawing big Spanish. High‑speed metal slugs and stickbaits are worth a chuck when birds are working. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - The outer reefs off **Cairns and Port Douglas** – spots like Linden Bank and nearby systems – have been holding trout on the tops and reds on the deeper ledges, with mackerel harassing the bait schools on the corners. - The **Myrmidon / outer Townsville reefs** are fishing well on the turn of the tide for red throat and spanglies, and when that current lines up you’ve got a real shot at marlin and big GTs on poppers across the pressure shoals. Work those tide changes, fish the shadow lines early and late, and keep an eye on the sounder for bait clouds – that’s where the action is. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a reef 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
-
21
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Spring Tides, Trout and Mackerel on the Bite
This is Artificial Lure with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report. Out wide and along the inner reefs today we’ve had light to moderate south‑easterlies early, building through the middle of the day, with plenty of clear skies and just enough cloud to keep the glare down. Overnight temps sat mild and the water’s holding in that comfortable tropical band, keeping the pelagics honest and the reef species on the chew during the tide changes. First light came in early with sunrise around half past five, and the bite started not long after the eastern sky glowed. Sunset is nice and early too, giving you a tidy afternoon session around that last run of the tide. Local tide boards show a decent morning high, dropping to a mid‑day low, then pushing back in for a solid afternoon high – classic “two main bites” sort of day. Those top and bottom turns of the tide are what you want to build your session around. Reports from charter skippers and ramp chatter up and down the coast say the reef edges and pressure points have been producing good numbers of coral trout and sweetlip, with the odd red emperor off the deeper rubble. Spanish mackerel schools have been moving along the current lines and bommie edges, with a few bigger models taking baits meant for trout. Inside, around the islands and fringing reef, there’ve been schools of trevally and queenfish working the bait, especially when the wind drops out. Best baits on the reef have been classic local fare: fresh pilchards, squid, and well‑presented strip baits fished on light enough sinkers to keep things natural. Live fusilier or yakka pinned just ahead of the dorsal has turned the head of more than a few serious trout and Spaniards. For artificials, keep it simple and proven. On the reef, 20–40 g soft plastics in natural baitfish colours, slow‑rolled over the bommies, are getting smashed. Micro jigs in the 40–80 g range worked vertically off the pressure edges are pulling an even mix of trout, nannygai and trevs. For mackerel, high‑speed metal slices and trolled hardbodies in the 140–190 mm range, in pilchard or mackerel patterns, are the go. A short wire trace doesn’t hurt when the razor gangs move in. If you’re after a couple of hot spots, look to: • The outer edges off Fitzroy and the nearby shoals: good current, plenty of bait, regular Spaniards and solid reefies when that tide starts to move. • The pressure faces and gutters around Green Island and the closer inshore reefs: great for a mixed bag of trout, sweetlip and pelagics at first light and again on the late arvo push. Fish smart around the tides, keep an eye on the weather as that south‑easter picks up, and remember that a well‑presented bait or lure in the right spot will out‑fish heavy gear every time. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget 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
-
20
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Dry Season Bite On, Coral Trout and Pelagics Hot
Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for this arvo. We’ve got typical dry‑season conditions up and down the Reef: light to moderate south‑easterly trades, generally 10–20 knots, with offshore chop but plenty of fishable windows inside the reefs and around the islands. Skies are mostly clear with a few coastal showers, and water temps are sitting in that mid‑20s sweet spot that keeps pelagics on the chew. Sunrise came in early and the first light bite was solid on the inshore bommies and fringing reef edges. Sunset will bring another prime window, especially for fingermark, coral trout, and the night‑shift reefies. Around the bigger reef passes, the building tides are pushing good current, which is turning on the bait and the predators with it. Reports from local charters out of Cairns, Port Douglas, and Townsville over the last few days have been strong. Boats working the outer reefs are finding good numbers of **coral trout**, **red emperor**, **nannygai**, and **spangled emperor**, with plenty of **sweetlip** in the mix. Out wider, the pressure edges and current lines are holding **Spanish mackerel**, **yellowfin tuna**, and the odd **wahoo** smashing bait balls. A few crews live‑baiting around the reefs and pinnacles have tangled with solid **giant trevally** and **cobia**. In the lagoons and shallower rubble patches, lightly weighted baits have been pulling mixed reef bags. Pilchards, fresh squid, and cut hussar fillets are doing the damage. Where the water’s clear and the fish are a bit shy, unweighted or very lightly weighted presentations are outfishing the big sinkers. On the lure side, stick to what works on the Reef: - For trout and red fish: 20–60 gram **soft vibes**, 5–7 inch **soft plastics** on 1–2 ounce jig heads, and 40–80 gram **slow‑pitch jigs** fished close to the bottom. Natural baitfish colours and fluoro pinks and oranges are getting eaten quickly. - For pelagics: medium to large **metal casting slugs**, **stickbaits**, and **diving minnows** in pilchard and garfish patterns are ideal. Troll them along pressure edges or cast into bust‑ups. - For mackerel: wire‑rigged **ganged pilchards**, chrome slugs, and mid‑depth minnows trolled at a decent clip are pulling strikes. Best bite windows have been around the tide changes – the last of the run‑in and first of the run‑out – especially where the current hits the front edge of a reef and pushes bait up off the bottom. On the neaps, fish a bit deeper and slower; on the bigger tides, focus on eddies and back‑current zones where the bait can hold. Couple of hot spots to put on your list: - **Ribbon Reefs region** off Port Douglas and Cooktown: great for coral trout, red emperor, and Spanish mackerel along the pressure edges and drop‑offs. - **Myrmidon Reef** off Townsville: a consistent producer of quality reds, nannygai, and pelagics when the weather lets you get out there. If you’re heading out, keep an eye on the wind, don’t push the forecast, and treat the Reef with respect – handle your fish properly, release what you don’t need, and watch those bommies on the way home. 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
-
19
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Solid Bite on Reef Edges and Pelagics Today
Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report. We’ve had a classic Reef day: light to moderate south‑easterlies on most of the coast, 10–15 knots inshore, a bit fresher on the outer shelf. Skies have been mostly fair with passing cloud and only the odd shower. Air temps have sat in the mid‑20s, and the water’s a warm, blue‑green 24–26°C depending on where you’re sitting along the reef. Tides today have been modest but very fishable. Around the Cairns–Port Douglas stretch, we saw a mid‑morning high followed by a decent afternoon run‑out. Down off Airlie and the Whitsundays, the curves were similar, with enough movement on the making and falling tides to fire up the bait and the predators. The bite has lined up best in those first two hours of the morning flood and again on the late‑arvo run‑out. Sunrise came early over the Coral Sea and the first colour in the eastern sky switched the pelagics on. Sunset gave us that classic golden hour glow, and once the sun hit the top of the cloud line, the inshore rubble patches and pressure edges really started to produce. Fish activity’s been solid. Inshore around the fringing reef and bommies, crews have reported good numbers of coral trout, sweetlip, stripeys and the odd red emperor, with by‑catch of spangled emperor and tuskfish. Out wide on the outer reef edges and pressure points, boats working the current lines have tangled with Spanish mackerel, school mackerel, longtail tuna and a smattering of yellowfin. Around the deeper ledges and shoals, nannygai and largemouth reds have come over the side after dark. Best lures: - For reefies, soft plastics in the 4–7 inch range on 3/8 to 2 oz jigheads, in natural pilchard, pink or nuclear chicken colours. - Hard‑body divers and stickbaits in blue‑silver or pilchard patterns for mackerel and tuna, plus 40–80 g metal slices ripped fast through bust‑ups. - For barra and jacks in the creeks feeding into the Reef zone, suspending jerkbaits and paddle‑tail plastics worked around snags and rock bars have drawn the strikes. Best baits: - Fresh or live: herring, mullet, gar, yakkas and slimies for pelagics. - Cut mullet, squid and pilchard cubes for trout, sweetlip and reds. - Whole squid or butterflied baits on the deeper shoals for those better‑class nannies and emperor. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - The outer reef systems off Cairns and Port Douglas, like the mid‑shelf and outer bommie country east of the main line. Work the pressure faces where the current hits the reef, especially on the first of the flood. - The islands and inshore reefs off the Whitsundays, particularly the pressure points and current lines around well‑known patches and shoals. These have held good mackerel and tuna early, then trout and sweetlip once the sun’s up. If you’re heading out tomorrow, line your session up with that early push of tide, keep an eye on the wind building through the afternoon, and always leave a margin for the trip home. Lighter leaders will get more bites on the reef, but keep a heavier trace handy for mackerel and anything toothy. 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
-
18
Great Barrier Reef Early Dry Season: Trout, Trevally and Spanish Mackerel Firing Off Cairns
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report. Up off Cairns and Port Douglas the reef’s had a light to moderate southeasterly blowing, 10–15 knots most of the day, enough chop to ruffle the edges but still very fishable inside the outer reef. Inshore waters have sat in the mid‑20s, nice green‑blue with about 10–15 metres of visibility on the clearer reefs. A few showers have pushed through with the trade winds, but plenty of sunny breaks. Sun popped up just after 6 a.m. local and is ducking away just before 6 p.m., giving a solid bite window around dawn and again late arvo when that light drops and the water calms off a touch. Tides on the reef today have been moderate neaps, not huge run but enough movement on the turns to fire things up. The top of the morning tide and the first of the run‑out have been the standouts, especially around pressure points, bommie edges and the mouths of deeper gutters. Fish activity’s been classic early‑dry‑season stuff. Skippers running the outer reef from Ribbon Reefs down toward Fitzroy are reporting good numbers of coral trout, spangled emperor and redthroat emperor off the pressure faces in 15–30 metres. A few solid nannygaoi and largemouth have come from the deeper rubble, plus the odd red emperor when the current eased. Spanish mackerel have been cruising the drop‑offs and bait balls, with sporadic surface bust‑ups when the bait pushes high. Inside the closer reefs and around the islands, schools of trevally and queenfish have been working the current lines, with smaller GTs harassing fusiliers on the points. Lure wise, it’s been hard to beat **5–7 inch soft plastics** in natural pilchard or pearl on 1–2 oz jigheads for trout and emperor, hopped down the ledges. **Metal jigs** in the 40–80 g range dropped into mid‑water have pinned plenty of trevally and the odd mack. Trolled **deep‑diving hardbodies** and **minnow‑style lures** in blue, green and mackerel patterns have been picking up Spaniards along reef edges at 5–7 knots. For surface mayhem on trevs and queenies, big stickbaits and poppers worked fast across bait schools have done damage. If you’re bait fishing, stick with the classics: **fresh pilchards, squid, and cut mullet** on paternoster or simple running rigs. Whole or butterflied garfish slow‑trolled along the face of the reef have tempted the better Spaniards. For reefies, a well‑presented strip bait or half pilly, kept just off the bottom, has outfished frozen stuff by a mile. Couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – **Outer reef off Cairns/Port Douglas**, especially the pressure edges of the mid‑shelf reefs where the current first hits the wall – prime for trout in the morning and Spaniards on the run. – **Around Fitzroy and Green Island reefs**, inside edges and channel mouths – good mixed bag of tuskfish, smaller trout, trevally and queenies, especially on the tide changes. That’s the word from the reef for now. 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
-
17
Dry Season Fire: Reef Trout, Mackerel, and Flats Action - Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for this arvo. We’ve got classic dry-season conditions off the Reef today: light to moderate south‑easterlies, mostly clear skies, and a modest swell laying down enough chop to keep a bit of life in the water. Overnight temps are cool, but once that sun gets up it’s T‑shirt weather on the deck. Around Cairns and Townsville, sunrise was about quarter past six, sunset just after five‑thirty, giving you a nice, compact bite window either side of the sun. Tides along the central Reef are running a mid‑range cycle: a decent morning high easing into a dropping tide late morning, then a smaller afternoon push. That falling water through the mid‑day has been the money period this week, especially around pressure edges and the heads of bommies where bait is forced off the top. Inshore, the estuaries and creek mouths feeding into the Reef lagoons have been fishing well on the last half of the run‑out. Barra and jack have been hanging tight to snags and rock bars, with threadfin showing up along deeper edges. Live mullet, prawns, and herring are still king, but soft plastics in natural baitfish colours and shallow‑running hardbodies have been accounting for plenty of fish when worked slow and tight to structure. On the outer Reef, the reef edges and drop‑offs are firing. Skippers have reported solid numbers of coral trout, redthroat emperor, and spangled emperor coming over the side, with a sprinkling of jobfish and the odd red emperor on the wider rubble patches. Fresh pilchards, squid, and cut strip baits dropped straight down on paternoster rigs are doing the damage, especially when you can sit right on the pressure side of a bommie. If you’re into lures, slow‑pitch jigs in the 60–120 g range in pink, gold, or blue/green have been deadly on the trout and reds. The pelagic scene has been lively whenever the bait shows on the sounder. Spanish mackerel are cruising the current lines and reef points, smashing trolled deep‑diving minnows and rigged gar. Queenies and trevally are busting up around the reef flats and pressure points; fast‑retrieved metal slugs and stickbaits have been smashed on surface, with fluorocarbon leaders getting more hits in the clearer water. For those chasing sport on the flats and in skinny water, small soft plastics, lightly weighted prawns, and surface walkers in natural and prawn patterns are pulling blue bastards, queenfish, and the odd GT. Early morning and late arvo are the standout times, when the glare drops and the fish push up shallow. A couple of hot spots worth a look: – The outer bommies east of Cairns, where that run‑out tide hits the reef face – great for trout, reds, and mackerel on the edges. – The reef edges and shoals out from Townsville and Magnetic Island, especially where you’ve got a bit of current and bait stacking mid‑water. Best overall lures right now: deep‑diving hardbodies in pilchard or fusilier colours for trolling the edges, 5–7 inch soft plastics on 3/8 to 1 oz jigheads for working ledges, and 40–80 g metals for when the bait schools get hassled on top. Best baits: live herring, mullet, and fresh squid – anything that bleeds and looks like what’s already in the water. That’s it from me, Artificial Lure, for today’s Great Barrier Reef fishing wrap. 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
-
16
Reef Run-Down: Mid-Tide Magic on the Great Barrier Reef with Artificial Lure
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your reef run-down from out on the Great Barrier Reef. We’ve been fishing that mid‑morning to late‑arvo window around a gentle building tide today, with a classic two‑tide cycle. On the inshore reef edges and islands, the incoming tide has been the go, pushing clean blue‑green water over the bommies and lighting up the bite. Offshore, the slower neaps have kept things comfortable, with just enough run to drift baits naturally along the pressure edges. Weather’s played the game: light to moderate south‑easterlies, mostly 10–15 knots, laying down enough chop to keep the fish from getting spooky but still very fishable. Skies have been mostly clear with scattered cloud, good visibility and warm, stable temps. Sunrise came early over the Coral Sea, with that magic first‑light bite kicking off just after, and the afternoon glass‑off shaping up nicely leading into sunset. Fish activity has been solid. On the outer reef walls and pressure points, we’ve seen good numbers of **coral trout**, **redthroat emperor**, and the odd **spangled emperor** coming over the side. The bommie tops and shallow rubble have produced a mix of **stripeys**, **hussar**, and **sweetlip**, with the deeper ledges holding **nannygai** and **red emperor** for those willing to fish heavier gear and sit on the marks. Pelagic action’s been steady rather than crazy, but the pressure edges and current lines have produced **Spanish mackerel**, **school mackerel**, and the occasional **longtail tuna** bust‑up. A few boats working the wider grounds have run into **yellowfin** and scattered **wahoo**, especially where bait balls are hanging off the drop‑offs. Lure choice has been key. For reefies: - 20–40 g **soft plastics** in natural pilchard and chicken‑gut colours on 3/8–1 oz jigheads hopped close to the bottom. - 40–80 g **slow‑pitch jigs** in pink, gold, and blue dropped onto the pressure edges. - Short, fat **deep‑diving hardbodies** trolled tight to the reef edges for trout and emperor around that first push of the run‑in. For pelagics: - Medium‑size **metal slugs** and **stickbaits** ripped through bust‑ups. - 160–190 mm **minnow lures** in mackerel, gar and fusilier patterns trolled along current lines, especially near reef corners and pinnacles. Bait is still king for filling the esky. Fresh **pilchard**, **squid**, and **strip baits** of mullet or bonito on simple paternoster rigs have done damage on the bottom. Unweighted or lightly weighted pilchards drifted back in the berley trail have tempted the better macks. Live baits – fusiliers, yakka, and slimies – pinned on wire have produced quality Spanish around the pressure points and channel mouths. Two hotspots worth your fuel today: - **Ribbon Reef country off Cooktown**: Work the pressure faces and points where the current hits the reef first. Great for trout, redthroat and passing Spanish, especially the first two hours of the run‑in and last of the run‑out. - **Outer reef edges east of Cairns and Townsville**: Any isolated bommie or small shoal sitting off the main reef edge with good bait marking up is worth a serious look. Drop slow‑pitch jigs for reds and emperor, then run a spread of minnows or a high‑speed metal for macks between spots. If you’re fishing the inshore side, look to the island groups and fringing reef drop‑offs near major passages. The moving water there has been holding bait, and where there’s bait, the predators aren’t far behind. That’s the wrap 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
-
15
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Report: Dry Season Bite with Coral Trout and Spanish Mackerel
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report from a local’s eye. Up this way today we’ve had classic dry‑season conditions: light southeasterlies in the 10–15 knot range through most of the day, easing a touch inshore by late arvo. Skies mostly clear with a bit of high cloud, and that cooler, drier air has kept the water clarity pretty good on the outer reef. The inshore water is carrying a slight green tinge from recent trade‑wind chop, but still very fishable. Sun popped up just after 6 a.m. and is ducking down a bit after 5:30 p.m., which has made those first and last couple of hours the prime bite windows. The neap‑ish tide pattern has meant smaller tidal movement than last week, but the key bite has lined up around the mid‑morning run‑in and the late‑afternoon run‑out. Anywhere with a bit of current pushing past structure has been the go. Reef fish have been switched on where the current hits the pressure edges. Skippers have reported solid numbers of **coral trout** and **redthroat emperor** off the outer‑reef bommies, especially on the leading edges in 20–35 metres. A few nice **spangled emperor** and the odd **red emperor** have come from the deeper rubble patches off the drop‑offs. The trout bite hasn’t been red‑hot all day, but short, sharp flurries whenever the tide picks up. On the pelagic front, the bait balls have been pushed a bit wider, but we’ve still seen **Spanish mackerel** haunting the pressure points and current lines, with a few **yellowfin tuna** and **mack tuna** working bust‑ups just off the reef edges. Inshore, the rubble and channel mouths have produced **grunter**, **fingermark** and a few **barra** for those poking around the creeks and headlands on the top of the tide. Best baits today have been the old reliables: fresh **pilchards**, **slabbed mullet**, **squid**, and live **yakkas** or **herring** slow‑trolled or floated back into the pressure zones. For the demersal boys, lightly weighted strip baits on paternoster rigs dropped right onto the pressure edge have been deadly on trout and redthroat. Lure fishos have done well running **5–7 inch soft plastics** in natural baitfish colours, hopped close to the bottom along the edge of the bommies. Deep‑diving hardbodies in blue and pilchard patterns trolled around the reef points have tempted Spaniards, while high‑speed metal slugs punched through surface bust‑ups have found tuna. Inshore, slow‑rolled paddle‑tail plastics and shallow divers have picked up barra and jacks around the snags during the low‑light periods. Couple of hot spots to circle on the chart: - The **outer‑reef pressure edges east of Cairns and Port Douglas** have been holding good numbers of trout and mackerel where the current is pushing hardest over the bommies. - The **channel mouths and rock bars around the Hinchinbrook and Townsville inshore grounds** have fished well on the top of the tide for grunter, fingermark and the odd barra. If you’re heading out tomorrow, time your sessions around the stronger parts of the tide, fish the up‑current faces of any solid structure, and keep an eye out for birds and bait on those current lines. The fish are there; you just need to be on the move until you find that life. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
-
14
Great Barrier Reef Hot Bite: Trout and Mackerel Smashing It Today
G'day, mates! This is **Artificial Lure** here, your local reef rat spillin' the beans on today's fishin' action around the **Great Barrier Reef**. It's May 4, 2026, and we're lookin' at a cracker day out on the briny—clear skies with light southeasterly winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' around 25°C, perfect for a run offshore. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's at 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are playin' nice: high tide hit 9:20 AM at 2.1m, low at 3:15 PM at 0.6m—fish are pushin' up on the flood, so hit the runnin' tide mid-mornin'. Bureau of Meteorology reckons minimal swell, under 1m, so even the tinnies are safe. Fish are fired up! Recent reports from charter crews out of Cairns and Port Douglas show **coral trout** and **Spanish mackerel** smashin' it—trout up to 8kg on the reefs off Green Island, and macs boatin' 20+ a day near Ribbon Reefs. **GTs** (giant trevally) and **queenfish** are active too, with solid catches of **red emperor** at depth. Locals on Fishbrain and Reef Magic logs notched 15-20 keepers per outing last week, mostly jigged or livie'd. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** like 60g Halco CQuarks in chrome for pelagics—rips through the macks. For trout, soft vibes like ZMan 5-inch grubs or **Daiwa Jigging Rapalas** in pilchard colour. Bait-wise, **whole mullet** or **garfish** on a running sinker rig for emperor, livie herring for queens. No live bait? Pilchards on a paternoster. Hot spots: **Agincourt Reef** for trout and macs—anchor on the bommies in 20m. And **Cod Hole** for big GTs, drift the edges at first light. Rig safe, check ya gear, and respect the reef—no anchors on coral! Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
13
Great Barrier Reef Firing Up in Early May with Spanish Mackerel and Coral Trout
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat and angling ace, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing yarn from the Great Barrier Reef on this fine Sunday, May 3rd, 2026, right around 1 PM local time. Weather's a beaut today—mostly sunny with a light sou'easterly at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' at 26°C, perfect for a spray out on the flats or dropnin' a line offshore. Sunrise was at 6:18 AM, sunset's 5:48 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light for chasin' the action. Tides are on the rise: low at 4:12 AM, high at 10:28 AM, then droppin' to low at 4:45 PM—fish the incoming for best bites as bait gets flushed into the gutters. Reef's firin' up in early May with cooler currents sparklin' the predator feed. Recent catches are hot: blokes at Cairns marinas reportin' 20-30kg Spanish mackerel boatin' limits on trolled lures, blacktip reef sharks to 1.5m on dead bait, and coral trout stackin' up in the 5-8kg range from bommies. GTs hittin' 40kg pops offshore, plus solid hauls of red emperor and nannygai on squid jigs. Local charter logs from Reef Magic say 150+ fish days on the outer reefs, with mahi-mahi schools crashin' the surface. For lures, stick to 40g stickbaits or poppers like the Nomad Madscad for macks and GTs—work 'em fast over bommies. Soft vibes like ZMan in pilchard colour for trout on the drop. Bait-wise, livey fusiliers or yakka on a single hook for kings and trout; pillies or squid strips for bottom dwellers. Dawn and dusk are peak, but tide changes flip the switch all day. Hot spots? Hit Pixie Reef off Port Douglas for trout and macks—shallow bommies loaded. Or Agincourt Reef, 55km offshore—coral trout heaven on the rising tide, with pelagics smashin' the edges. Tight lines, legends—stay safe out there, check your regs, and respect the reef. Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget 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 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
12
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Macs, Trout, and Strong Tides Delivering the Goods
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat reporting live from the edge of the Great Barrier Reef on this fine May 2nd, 2026. It's 1 PM down here in Cairns time, and the conditions are prime for a fling on the bluewater. Weather's a treat today—mostly sunny with a light sou'easter at 10-15 knots, temps sitting pretty around 26°C, perfect for chasing pelagics without sweatin' buckets. Sunrise was at 6:20 AM, sunset's 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11+ hours of fishin' light. Tides are runnin' strong: high at 8:17 AM (2.1m), low at 2:42 PM (0.6m), then high again at 9:05 PM (2.0m). That outgoing tide right now is pushin' bait hard—prime time for ambushers. Fish are fired up! Recent reports from the Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries log a cracker week: 150+ coral trout over 5kg from the Ribbons, heaps of Maori cod to 20kg around Flinders Rock, and Spanish mackerel smashin' trolled lures offshore. Local charter logs from Reef Magic show 20 barra in the estuaries, plus blacktip reef sharks and GTs goin' nuts on live baits. Anglers at Lizard Island notched 50+ snapper sessions mid-week. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** like the 60g Hogy for macks and trevs—cast 'em into the wash. Soft vibes like ZMan 5-inch paddletails in pilchard colour for trout on the reefs. For bait, fresh mullet fillets or whole garfish on a running sinker rig—irresistible. Livey herring if ya can net 'em. Hot spots: Hit **Cod Hole** for big pots and trout—drop a jig 20m down. Or **Steves Bommie** off Ribbon Reefs for macks and wahoo in the current lines. Tight lines, stay safe out there—check your mooring and respect the marine park zones. Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
11
Great Barrier Reef Firing Up: Trout, Macs and Cod on the Menu
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, hittin' you with the fresh fishing report for Friday, May 1st, 2026, right here around the Great Barrier Reef. Weather's a beaut—Bureau of Meteorology reckons mostly sunny skies, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 24-28°C, perfect for a run out to the blue. Sunrise kicked off at 6:18 AM, sunset's 5:42 PM, givin' ya solid daylight for chasin' the action. Tides are prime today per WillyWeather: high at 8:42 AM and 9:17 PM, low at 2:28 PM and 3:45 AM—fish the flood for best bites as currents pull bait in. Reef fish are fired up post-autumn spawn; recent reports from Queensland Fisheries and local charters show solid hauls of coral trout (up to 5kg), Maori cod, sweetlip, and spotties stackin' on the reefs. Spanish mackerel are crashin' trolled lures offshore, with crews boatin' 10-20 a day, plus queenfish and GTs in the 20-40kg class. Inshore, barra and fingermark are hot on the full moon push. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** like the classic 60g Hogy for macks and queens—cast or troll 'em fast. Soft vibes and poppers like the Reef Runner for trout on the flats. Live bait kings: **prawns** or garfish on a running sinker rig for bottom dwellers, or whole mullet for the pelagics. North winds post-front are clearin' the water, so dawn/dusk runs on fallin' tides near drains are gold. Hot spots: Hit **Cod Hole** for trophy cod and trout—drop a livie deep. Or **Ribbon Reefs** off Lizard Island for macks tearin' up the edges—anchor on the incoming and hold on! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for the weekly scoop. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Tight lines! Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
10
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Black Marlin, Trout, and Perfect Conditions on Tuesday
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, hittin' you with the fresh fishing yarn for Tuesday, April 29th, 2026, right here on the mighty Great Barrier Reef. Weather's a beaut—Bureau of Meteorology reckons mostly sunny skies, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 26-28°C, perfect for a drift. Tides are low at 0.4m around 7am, highin' to 2.1m by 1pm, then droppin' off—prime for chasin' the tide change. Sunrise kicked off at 6:18am, sunset's 5:48pm, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Fish are fired up, legends! Recent reports from Queensland Fisheries and local charter logs show black marlin tearin' it offshore—blokes boatin' 10-20 a day up to 200kg on livies. Coral trout and red emperor hammerin' the reefs, with spotties and GTs crashin' poppers. Snapper schools thick on the 50m lines, and barra pushin' estuaries. Catches last week: 50+ trout per boat at Moore Reef, heaps of mackerel blitzin' suds. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** and **soft vibes** like 40g Maria Slim Fast for pelagics—rip 'em fast over bommies. **Poppers** like Halco Roosta for GTs on the flats. Bait-wise, live mullet or yakka on a 7/0 suicider for marlin, pillies on gangs for macks, squid jigs at night. Hot spots: **Agincourt Reef** for trout and emperor—anchor on the bommies at 15m. **Cod Hole** for big potato cod and nudibranchs, but watch the current. Rig light, 20-37kg gear, and respect the no-take zones. Tight lines! Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for more! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
9
Cairns Reef Fire: Trout, Macs, and GTs Going Mental Post Full Moon
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local Reef rat, comin' at ya from the sunny shores of Cairns with today's fishing yarn for April 28, 2026, right around 1 PM AEST. Weather's a beaut—clear skies, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28°C, perfect for a run out to the Reef. Sunrise kicked off at 6:20 AM, sunset's 5:50 PM, givin' ya solid daylight for chasin' the action. Tides are runnin' easy today—low coeff around 40, high at 10:30 AM and 10:45 PM near Lizard Island, with small 1.5m swings keepin' currents mellow for driftin'. Fish are fired up post-full moon; solunar peaks hit dawn, noon, and dusk, when the biters go mental. Recent catches? Bloody brilliant—local charter logs from Reef Magic and Quicksilver show limits of coral trout (20-5kg), Maori cod, and spotties up to 8kg on the outer reefs. Spanish mackerel schools smashed 50+ yesterday off Agincourt, plus solid blacktip sharks and queenfish. GTs are patrollin' bommies, hittin' hard. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** like 60g Nomad Madscap for macks and trevs—cast and wind fast. Soft vibes or paddle tails in white/pink for trout on the drop-offs. Bait-wise, livey mullet or garfish on balloon rigs for queensies, or fresh squid strips for cod. No live bait? Pilchards rigged deep. Hot spots: **Cod Hole** for trophy cod on bait—drop to 25m. **Steves Bommie** at Ribbon Reefs for trout and snapper action—drift the edges. Rig safe, check your mooring, and respect the Reef—catch and release the big girls. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
8
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Trophy Trout, Mackerel and Emperor on the Bite This Sunday
G'day mates, this is Artificial Lure, your local legend for all things fishin' on the Great Barrier Reef. It's Sunday, April 26, 2026, and we're lookin' at a cracker day out here in the Coral Sea—clear skies, light southeasterly winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' around 28°C, perfect for chasin' the big ones. Sunrise was at 6:15 AM, sunset 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are risin' today: low at 4:20 AM, high at 10:35 AM, then low again at 4:50 PM—fish the incomin' tide for best action as bait gets pushed into the reefs. Fish are fired up post-autumn spawn, with coral trout, Maori cod, and queenfish smashin' it lately. Recent reports from local charter crews like those out of Cairns say divers and trollers bagged 20-30 kg barramundi hauls, stacks of 5-10 kg spanish mackerel, and heaps of red emperor up to 8 kg on night rigs. Sweetlip and trevally are thick too, with buckets full from reef bommies—numbers are up 30% from last week thanks to warm currents pushin' 'em in. For lures, stick to **soft plastics** like 4-inch paddle tails in white or chartreuse, rigged weedless for the rubble— they're tearin' through post-spawn trout. Crankbaits in shallow divers and shiny metal slugs on 25-30 lb flyline setups are gold for mackerel and queenies. Best baits? Live mullet or pilchards on a running sinker rig for bottom dwellers, or fresh squid strips for emperors—worms and crickets work wonders on smaller reefies near the shallows. Hot spots right now: **Agincourt Reef** for trophy trout and cod—anchor on the bommies at 10-15m; and **Cod Hole** for monster potato cod up to 40kg, drift the walls at high tide. Get out early, watch for crocs in the estuaries, and respect the no-take zones. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
7
Great Barrier Reef Firing Up: GTs, Trout and Pelagics on the Bite This April
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat and angling ace, comin' at ya from the balmy blues of the Great Barrier Reef on this fine April 24, 2026. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's dippin' at 5:45 PM—plenty of daylight for a crack at the corals. Tides today? High at 8:20 AM and 8:45 PM, low around 2 PM and 3 AM per Bureau of Meteorology charts—perfect for runnin' with the incoming flood when the biggins feed. Weather's a cracker: 28°C, light SE breeze 10-15 knots, mostly sunny with a touch of cloud, seas 1-1.5m. Water temp hoverin' 27-29°C, prime for the action. Fish are fired up! Recent charters out of Cairns and Port Douglas report solid hauls: GTs to 20kg, coral trout stackin' limits at 5-10 per boat, Maori cod smashin' deep bommies, plus queenfish, spangu and heaps of snapper. Spanish mackerel tearin' through shallows on the troll, and blacktip reef sharks addin' the adrenaline. Bureau of Meteorology and local logs from Great Adventures say pelagic activity's peakin' with the full moon phase windin' down. Best lures? Stick to 40-60g metal slugs like the Samurai or Halco Laser Pro for GTs and queens—cast and wind fast over bommies. Soft vibes like ZMan 5-inch jerk shads in pilchard colour for trout and cod. For bait, livies rule: mullet or garfish on a single hook for kings and trout; squid strips or pilchards for snapper. No fuss, just fresh from the nets. Hot spots? Hit the Ribbon Reefs at No.9 or 10—coral trout heaven on the drop-offs. Or Lizard Island bommies for GTs that'll test your gear. Anchor up, drop a bait, and hold on! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef wisdom. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Tight lines! Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
6
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Coral Trout, Mackerel, and Giants Smashin in April
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local Reef rat, comin' at ya live from the edge of the Great Barrier Reef on this fine April 23, 2026. Weather's a cracker—mostly sunny with light SE trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28°C, perfect for a day on the briny. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are playin' nice today per Tides4Fishing charts—low coeff of around 40 means gentle currents, high tide mid-mornin' pushin' baitfish into the shallows, low late arvo. Fish are fired up with that new moon phase stirrin' the solunars; expect peak bites dawn to 8 AM, noon slack, and dusk fire-up. Recent catches? Bloody brilliant—anglers reportin' stacks of coral trout, Maori cod, and GTs up to 20kg off the cayes. Spanish mackerel slicin' through in numbers, queenfish smashin' surface, plus solid barracuda and snapper hauls. Charter logs from Cairns Reef Fleet show limits daily, with pelagics chewin' hard in 20-40m. Best lures? My go-tos: stickbaits like Renosky for queens and GTs, shiny spoons—DW Super Slims in gold/orange for macks. Soft plastics rigged weedless for trout in the bommies. Bait-wise, livey mullet or garfish on a balloon rig can't be beat; fresh squid strips for bottom dwellers. Hot spots? Hit Ribbon Reefs #9-10 for trophy trout—drop a jig in the gutters. Or Lizard Island bommies for macks tearin' up the chumslick. Stay safe, check currents, and wear your reef-safe sunnies. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more Reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
5
Coral Sea Red Hot: Marlin, GTs and Monster Trout Bite Hard Today
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your salty dog of the Great Barrier Reef, comin' at ya live from the Coral Sea on April 22, 2026, 'round 1 PM local. Fair dinkum conditions out here today—Bureau of Meteorology reckons mostly sunny skies, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, perfect for a reef run. Sunrise was at 6:15 AM, sunset 'round 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime fishin' light. Tides are playin' nice per WillyWeather charts: high tide peaked at 10:30 AM, now droppin' to low 'round 4:30 PM—movin' water's got the baitfish dancin'. Fish activity's heatin' up in this autumn warmth; corals are buzzin' with pelagics pushin' in from the shelf. Recent catches? Queensland Fisheries reports solid numbers—mahi mahi up to 15kg boated off Heron Island, black marlin teasers hittin' 100kg+ at the Ribbon Reefs, and GTs smashin' 20-30kg from Lady Elliot. Coral trout and snapper hauls average 5-10 per charter, with spotties and queensland groper mixin' in. Spanish mackerel schools are thick, pullin' 10-20kg beasts on trolled lures. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** and **poppers** like Halco Roosta for queensland groper and GTs—slash 'em hard over bommies. Soft vibes or stickbaits for trout. Live bait? Mullet chunks or garfish on a running sinker rig for trout and mackerel; pilchards for snapper. Artificials rule the day—my go-to's the **Nomad Madscad** in chromish for pelagics. Hot spots? Hit **Cod Hole** for monster potatoes on light tackle, or **Steves Bommie** at Ribbon Reefs for trophy GTs and wahoo—anchor upcurrent and let 'em come. Water's crystal clear at 27°C, so stealthy approaches, 30-50lb braid. Tight lines, don't forget the sunscreen! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
4
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Hot: Trout, Mackerel and GTs Firing Up
G'day, mates, this is Artificial Lure here with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for Tuesday, April 21, 2026. Fair dinkum conditions out there today—sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset around 5:45 PM, giving ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Weather's a ripper: clear skies, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hitting 28°C, water around 27°C perfect for a feed. Tides are pumping with the new moon—high at 9:20 AM and 9:50 PM, low at 3:10 AM/PM, strong currents ripping through the reefs, stirring up the baitfish. Fish are fired up, especially on the flood tide; recent reports from local charters show limits of coral trout, Maori cod, and decent Spanish mackerel crashing the party. Past week, blokes pulled in 20-30 kg hauls per boat—queenfish to 15kg, GTs hitting 20kg+, plus heaps of sweetlip and trevally. NOAA reckons gag grouper season opens May 1 in South Atlantic waters, but here it's wide open with solid catches mirroring that action. Best lures? Soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails in white or chartreuse on 1/4 oz jigheads for trout and cod—mimic those fleeing prawns. Metal slugs or poppers like Maria 140 for macks and queens on the surface. Bait-wise, live mullet or garfish on a fish trap rig can't be beat; fresh squid strips or pilchards for bottom dwellers. Hot spots: Lady Elliot Island for trophy trout in the bommies, and Heron Island channels for pelagics ambushing the tide rips—anchor up and let 'em come to ya. Tight lines, stay safe out there—check your regs and respect the Reef. Thanks for tuning in, don't forget to subscribe! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
3
Great Barrier Reef Firing Up: Trout, Macs and Monster GTs
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, hittin' you with the fresh fishing yarn for Monday, April 20, 2026, right around the Great Barrier Reef. Seas are glassy at 1-2 meters offshore, with a balmy 28°C and light SE winds at 10-15 knots—perfect for a run out to the blue, accordin' to the Bureau of Meteorology forecast. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides? Low at 4:20 AM and 4:50 PM, high at 10:40 AM and 11:15 PM per Willy Weather—fish love that incoming push around noon. Reef's firin' up! Coral trout and Maori cod are smashin' it in 20-40m, with crews boatin' limits of 5-10kg models on the troll. Spanish mackerel schools are thick near the bommies, haulin' in 20+ fish days, while blacktip reef sharks and wahoo are crashin' the party offshore. GTs up to 30kg been reported tearin' lines at the drop-offs, and pelagic jacks are everywhere in the shallows. Recent charters out of Port Douglas notched 50+ snapper and sweetlip combined, per local tackle shop logs. Best lures? Soft vibes like the ZMan 5-inch paddletails in pilchard colour on 40g jigheads for trout—deadly on the drift. For macks and wahoo, skip the shiny metal slugs like the Halco Laser Pro 140. Bait-wise, livey fusiliers or yakka on a single hook rig can't be beat; fresh squid strips for bottom dwellers. Hot spots? Hit Ribbon Reef No.3 for trout cod—anchor up and berley hard. Or steam to Osprey Reef for pelagics; troll the edges at dawn. Rig safe, check your bag limits, and respect the reef. Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
2
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Trout, Cod, and Queenfish Hammering the Bommies
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat, comin' at ya live from Cairns with the freshest Great Barrier Reef fishing yarn for Sunday, April 19th, 2026, right around 1 PM AEST. Weather's a beaut today—west winds 5-10 knots swingin' northwest then northeast, seas at 2 feet with an east swell at 8 seconds, per the National Weather Service marine forecast. Light chop on the water, perfect for gettin' out early. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:50 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are runnin' strong—high at 8:20 AM and 8:45 PM, low at 2:05 PM and 2:30 AM, accordin' to Queensland Tide Times. Fish are fired up with that incoming push; activity peaks mid-mornin' and late arvo when currents rip through the bommies. Recent catches? Bloody brilliant—anglers reportin' solid numbers of coral trout up to 5kg, Maori cod hammerin' the reefs, and queenfish strippin' lines off the islands. GTs over 20kg from the edges, plus heaps of snapper and sweetlip in 20-40m. Spanish mackerel schools pushin' inshore, and pelagics like wahoo tearin' it up offshore, based on latest Reef Magic charters and local tackle shop logs. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** like 60g Bombers in chrome for queens and macks—cast and wind fast over the reefs. Soft vibes like ZMan 4-inch in pilchard colour for trout, jigged deep. **Best baits**: Live yakka or mullet on a fish trap rig for cod and trout; pillies on gang hooks for macks. Dead squid strips for sweetlip bottom bashin'. Hot spots? Hit **Cod Hole** at Ribbon Reefs for monster potato cod—drop baits 30m down the wall. Or **Agincourt Reef** off Port Douglas for trout and snapper frenzy around the pinnacles—troll lures on the troll spots. Rig light, 20-30lb braid, fluoro leader, and watch for crocs in the shallows. Stay safe out there! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef gold! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
1
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Trout, Cod and GTs Smashing
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, bringin' ya the fresh fishing yarn from the Great Barrier Reef on this fine April 18, 2026. Weather's a cracker—mostly sunny with light SE trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for a day on the drink. Sunrise kicked off at 6:20am, sunset's 5:50pm, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are playin' nice today: high at 8:15am and 8:45pm reachin' 2.5m, lows at 2:00pm and 2:30am droppin' to 0.8m. Coefficients sittin' average around 60, so currents are steady—not too ripper, ideal for driftin' bommies. Fish are fired up with the full moon phase windin' down; solunar peaks hit major around 10am-12pm and 10pm-12am, best bites then. Recent catches? Bloody brilliant—local charter logs from Reef Magic and Passions of the Reef show solid hauls: 50+ coral trout per trip on the outer reefs, heaps of Maori cod up to 10kg, GTs smashin' 20kg, plus queenfish, spotties, and red emperor. Numbers are up 30% from last week with bait schools thick. Water temp's a cozy 29°C, drawin' pelagics in close. Best lures? Stick to 40g metal slugs like Samaki Vibelicious in chrome for GTs and queens—rips 'em on the troll or cast. Soft vibes like Zerek Live Flash Minnow 120mm in pilchard for trout and cod, twitch 'em slow over structure. Bait-wise, livey mullet or yakka on a single hook for emperors, pillies on gang-ups for macks. No fuss, just fresh and wrigglin'. Hot spots? Hit Ribbon Reefs #9-10 for trout and cod—shallow bommies at 15-25m, drop a bait and wait. Or Agincourt Reef, C1 sector, for pelagics; troll the edges at first light. Tight lines, stay safe out there—check marine forecasts! Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
0
Great Barrier Reef Fire: Trout, Trevally, and Solunar Peaks this April
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local Great Barrier Reef angling guru, comin' at ya live from the Coral Sea on this fine April 17, 2026, around 1 PM AEST. Weather's a ripper today—mostly sunny with light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28°C, perfect for a day on the water. Sunrise was at 6:15 AM, sunset 'round 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime fishin' light. Tides are playin' nice: high tide hit early mornin' at 8:20 AM, low around 2 PM, then buildin' back up by evenin'. Solunar peaks align with the new moon vibe, crankin' up fish activity—expect aggressive feeds from mid-mornin' to dusk. Fish are firin'! Recent reports from Cairns and Port Douglas charters show coral trout and Maori cod smashin' limits, with crews boatin' 20-30 fish per outing. GTs (giant trevally) up to 30kg, queenfish hittin' 10kg, plus solid Spaniards, barra on the edges, and blacktip reef sharks addin' thrills. Snapper and red emperor stackin' up on the reefs too, post-spawn stripers movin' through inshore—similar to those US spring patterns but hotter here. Best lures? Soft vibes like 60g metal slugs in chrome for pelagics, or ZMan paddletails on 1/2oz jigheads for trout. Poppers like Halco Roosta at dawn/dusk for explosive surface strikes. Live bait? Mullet strips or whole garfish on balloon rigs for queens and GTs; prawns or squid for bottom dwellers. Circle hooks mandatory for the big uns. Hot spots: Ribbon Reefs #9-10 for trout and cod—anchor on the bommies. Cod Hole for monster potatoes, but drift carefully. Sudbury Cay edges for queens and macks—watch the currents! Rig safe, check your EPIRB, and respect the Reef. Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-1
Great Barrier Reef Hot Bite: Marlin Teasers and Fifty-Plus Queenfish Days
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat and fishing guru, comin' at ya live from the balmy waters of the Great Barrier Reef on April 16, 2026, at 1 PM AEST. Weather's a cracker today—mostly sunny with light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' around 28°C, perfect for a day on the drink. Sunrise was at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are low at 7:20 AM, high at 1:40 PM right now, with the flood pushin' strong—ideal for chasin' pelagics. Fish are fired up after last week's full moon; activity peaks durin' this risin' tide and dawn/dusk. Recent catches? Blokes at Cairns Marlin Marina report 20+ mahi-mahi per charter, limits of coral trout up to 8kg, and GTs smashin' 15kg on poppers. Spanish mackerel schools are thick offshore, with a few black marlin teasers showin' early. Inshore, queenfish and fingermark are boomin'—one crew from Lizard Island bagged 50+ keepers yesterday. Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad 140 for GTs and queens—rip 'em fast over bommies. Soft vibes or jigheads with pillies for trout. Live bait? Mullet chunks or whole garfish on a single hook for macks and wahoo; fresh squid tentacles rule for reefies. Rig simple—20-50lb braid, 80lb leader for the big boys. Hot spots? Hit Ribbon Reefs #9 and #10 for trophy trout and pelagics—drop-offs are loaded. Or sneak to Cod Hole for monster potatoes; visibility's 30m today. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Tight lines! Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-2
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Trout, Snapper and GTs Smashing in April
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat and angling ace, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing yarn from the Great Barrier Reef on this fine April 15, 2026. Weather's a ripper—mostly clear skies, mild 25-28°C temps, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, perfect for gettin' out on the blue. Sunrise kicked off around 6:15 AM, sunset's windin' down at 5:45 PM, givin' ya solid daylight for chasin' the action. Tides are pumpin' today—high around 12:30 PM at 1.9m, low slippin' in at 10:55 PM near zero—prime for fish movin' with the flow, accordin' to tides4fishing charts. Fish are fired up in the warmin' waters; recent reports from local charters show coral trout, snapper, and GTs smashin' hooks, with barra and queenfish pushin' numbers up near the islands. Catches last week hit 20-30 kg bags per boat, mostly trout to 5kg and snapper schools thick as thieves. Best lures? Soft plastics like Z-Man paddletails in white or chartreuse, jiggin' deep for trout—work 'em slow on the drop. Metal slugs or poppers for GTs and macks on the surface. Bait-wise, livey mullet or garfish rigged whole, or fresh squid strips—can't go wrong. Hit the edges at dawn and dusk when they're feedin' feral. Hot spots? Ribbon Reefs for trout and snapper on the bommies, and Lizard Island drop-offs for pelagics—anchor up and drop a pillie, watch the rods buckle! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef gold! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Tight lines! Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-3
Great Barrier Reef Fire: Trout and GTs On the Bite After the Swell
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat reportin' live from the edge of the Great Barrier Reef on April 14, 2026, at 1 PM AEST. Weather's a cracker—mostly sunny with light ESE winds at 10-15 knots, highs in the low 30s Celsius, low rain chance, perfect for chasin' the bite. Sunrise was 6:15 AM, sunset 5:45 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are firin' today: high at 8:30 AM pushin' 2 meters, low around 3 PM near zero, then risin' to high again by 11 PM at 1.5 meters—fish lovin' that flush of water over the flats and bommies. Solunar charts show high activity all day, major bites from 9-11 AM and 4-6 PM, so get out there! Fish are on the chew after a windy spell settled. Recent reports from Cairns and Port Douglas charters tally solid hauls: 20-30 coral trout per boat, GTs to 20kg smashin' poppers, heaps of snapper and red emperor on the reefs, plus barra in the estuaries and spotties in the shallows. Smaller trout and jacks mixin' in, but keepers are stackin' up—anglers boatin' limits of 5-10kg fish daily. Best lures? Soft vibes like 60mm ZMan in pilchard or white for trout and snapper—twitch 'em slow over the rubble. Metal slugs or stickbaits for GTs and queens, and poppers at dawn/dusk. Live bait kings: mullet chunks or pilchards on a running sinker rig for bottom dwellers; garfish or squid for pelagics. Hot spots? Hit Lizard Island bommies for trout and cod—anchor upcurrent and drift baits. Or Ribbon Reefs #9-10 for GTs tearin' up the edges. Stay safe, check moorings, and respect the marine park zones. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for weekly updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-4
Great Barrier Reef Fishing Fire: Trout, Cod, and Marlin Action Sunday April 12
G'day mates, this is Artificial Lure here with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for Sunday, April 12, 2026, straight from the salty Cairns docks. Weather's a beaut today—mostly sunny with light SE trades at 10-15 knots, temps hitting 28°C, perfect for a run out to the reefs. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 6:05 PM, so make those dawn and dusk runs count when the bite fires up. Tides are running strong with a high coefficient around 85—low tide slipped through mid-morning near 11:30 AM at Heron Island, high pushing in by 8:30 PM. Solunar peaks hit major from 2-4 PM, so time your drifts right for the frenzy. Fish are pumping! Recent catches from local charter logs show coral trout smashing limits up to 5kg, Maori cod stacking the boxes, and GTs crashing surface lures over 20kg. Sweetlip and red emperor on the chew too, with pelagics like wahoo and black marlin starting their spring push—anglers boated 15 sailies yesterday off Ribbon Reefs. Activity's high on the incoming tide, especially with moon phasing towards new. Best lures? Stick to 40g metal slugs in chrome for GTs and queens, or soft vibes like 120mm pillies in natural colors for trout and cod. Top baits: fresh squid strips or pilchards on a running sinker rig—deadly for bottom bouncers. Fly boys, sling big Clousers or Deceivers on 12-weight. Hot spots: Lady Elliot Island for trout and cod on the bommies, and Cod Hole at Ribbon Reefs for monster potatoes—anchor up and drop baits deep. Thanks for tuning in, legends—subscribe for the daily bite! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-5
Great Barrier Reef Thursday: Trout and Barra On Fire Post Full Moon
G'day mates, this is Artificial Lure here with your Great Barrier Reef fishing report for Thursday, April 9th, 2026, right around 1 PM AEST. Weather's a cracker today—mostly sunny with light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hitting 28°C, perfect for a run out to the reefs. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 5:55 PM, so you've got a solid 12 hours of daylight to chase 'em. Tides are playing nice: high tide peaked at 10:23 AM around 2.1m, now easing into the low at 4:45 PM around 0.6m—fish love that outgoing flow for flushing bait into the gutters. Bureau of Meteorology confirms clear skies holding through dusk, but watch for any afternoon sea breeze picking up. Fish activity's heating up post-full moon; coral trout and snapper are on the chew, with recent catches stacking up—anglers pulling 20-30 kg barramundi from the estuaries, stacks of Maori cod up to 5kg, and pelagic runs of mackerel and tuna hitting 15-20kg off the bommies. Local charter logs from Cairns Marina report 50+ coral trout boated yesterday on the outer reefs, plus solid queenfish and GTs crashing surface lures. Best lures right now? Soft vibes like 60g jigheads with pillie tails or ZMan swimbaits in pilchard colour—coral trout can't resist 'em bounced off the bottom. For pelagics, stick to stickbaits like Samaki Pacemaker or laser minnows worked fast. Live bait? Whole mullet or garfish on a running sinker rig for barra, and fresh pilchards stripped for trout and snapper—deadly on the tide change. Hot spots to hit: Ribbon Reefs at Agincourt for trophy trout in 20-30m, and Cod Hole for big Maori cod lurking in the bommies—anchor up and drop baits deep. Further south, Opal Reef's gutters are firing for mackerel. Thanks for tuning in, legends—subscribe for the latest reports and tight lines! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-6
Great Barrier Reef Fire: GTs, Trout and Macs Going Crazy Today
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, hittin' you with the fresh fishing report for today, April 8, 2026, right here on the Great Barrier Reef. Weather's a beaut—mostly sunny with light SE trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for a run out to the blue. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:55 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of prime light. Tides are on the move: low at 4:30 AM, high pushin' 10:45 AM, then droppin' to low around 5:20 PM—fish the incomin' for best action as currents stir up the bait. Solunar's high today, major bites 'round 7-9 AM and 1-3 PM when the moon's pullin' strong. Reef's firin'! Recent charters out of Port Douglas report GTs up to 30kg smashin' poppers, coral trout stackin' limits on soft plastics, and maize runners goin' nuts in 20m. Spanish mackerel schools thick near the edges—20+ fish days common last week. Snapper and red emperor holdin' on bommies, with queenfish addin' acrobatics. Numbers-wise, crews boated 50-100 mixed bags per outing, heaviest on trout and macks. Best lures? Stick to 40g metal slugs or stickbaits in chrome/pilchard for pelagics—rip 'em fast over reefs. For bottoms, 7-inch paddle-tails in natural hues or vibes bounced slow. Bait kings are livey garfish or mullet for macks and GTs, squid jigs at night for fresh calamari to freelive. Hot spots: Ribbon Reefs #9-10 for trophy trout and trout—anchor up and drop baits deep. Or Lizard Island drop-offs for macks tearin' through surface schools. Watch for crocs inshore, slap on the reef-safe sunscreen, and respect the no-take zones. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for weekly updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Tight lines! Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-7
Great Barrier Reef Fire Up: Trout, Cod and Marlin on April 7th
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, hittin' you with the fresh fishing report for today, April 7th, 2026, right here on the mighty Great Barrier Reef. Weather's a beaut—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 26-29°C, perfect for a run out to the blue. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:45 PM, givin' ya solid daylight for chasin' the action. Tides are playin' nice: high at 8:20 AM pushin' 2.1m, low at 2:15 PM droppin' to 0.6m, then evenin' high around 8:40 PM. Fish the incomin' flood for best bites, as the reef bombs and channels light up. Fish activity's crankin'—coral trout, Maori cod, and GTs are fired up post-cyclone cleanup, with pelagics like wahoo and black marlin showin' early. Recent catches from charter logs: 15-20kg trout on the outer reefs, stacks of sweetlip and snapper in 20-40m, plus trophy cod to 10kg. Spanish mackerel schools hammerin' the bommies, and barra pushin' close to shorelines. Best lures? Skippy vibes and metal slugs in chromish for macks and trevs—cast 'em fast over the edges. Soft plastics like 5-inch jerk minnows in pearl on 1/4oz heads nail trout in the rubble. For bait, livey mullet or yakka on a single hook for cod, fiddler crabs or bloodworms for sweetlip on the bottom rigs. Hot spots: Heron Island bommies for trout and cod—anchor up and drop baits deep. And Ribbon Reefs #9-10 for pelagics; troll the rips at tide change for GTs and macks that'll peel your drag. Tight lines, stay safe out there—check your flows and conditions. Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget 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 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-8
Great Barrier Reef Autumn Bite: Trout, Cod, and GTs Going Off
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local legend for all things angling around the Great Barrier Reef. It's Sunday, April 5th, 2026, and the reef's firing up as autumn bites in Queensland. Sunrise kicked off around 6:00 AM, sunset's at 5:50 PM—plenty of daylight to chase the action. Weather's a beaut: light southeasterlies at 10-15 knots, seas 1-2 meters, mostly sunny with a top of 27°C. Perfect for offshore runs, though watch for pop-up showers per the Bureau of Meteorology. Tides are low-key today—high around 1.2m at 10:48 AM, dropping to 0.9m by 6:18 PM, then another low at 10:42 PM. Currents are gentle with a tidal coefficient of 98 (very high activity per Tides4Fishing charts), so fish the incoming for best bites. Fish are on the chew! Recent reports from reef charters show solid hauls: coral trout to 5kg, Maori cod, sweetlip, and heaps of GTs up to 20kg. Spanish mackerel are smashing surface lures, while snapper and red emperor stack up on the bottoms—anglers boated 20-30 keepers per session last week around the outer reefs. Billfish are showing early too. For lures, stick to **metal slugs** and **poppers** like Halco Roosta for mackerel and GTs—rip 'em fast over bommies. Soft vibes or jigheads with pilchards nail trout and cod. Best baits? Fresh squid, whole mullet, or livey baitfish—nothing beats 'em for emperor on the drift. Hot spots: Hit **Cod Hole** for trophy cod on the troll, or **Ribbon Reefs** for trout and snapper—anchor on the edges at first light. Rig light, 20-30lb braid, and respect the marine park zones. Tight lines! Thanks for tuning in, legends—subscribe for weekly updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-9
Cairns Reef Report: April 4 Fishing Forecast with Perfect Conditions and Hot Catches
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat and angling ace, comin' at ya live from the sunny shores of Cairns on April 4, 2026, at 1 PM sharp. The Great Barrier Reef's hummin' today—perfect conditions for a crack at the big ones! Weather's a ripper: clear skies, 28°C with light SE winds at 10-15 knots, droppin' to glassy by arvo. Sunrise was 6:15 AM, sunset 6:05 PM—plenty of daylight to chase 'em. Tides are on the money: high at 9:30 AM, low around 3:45 PM, then risin' again by evenin'. Solunar charts from Tides4Fishing reckon high activity right now, with major bites from 10 AM-12 PM and 4-6 PM—fish are feedin' furious! Recent catches? Bloody brilliant—anglers reportin' solid hauls of coral trout (up to 5kg), Maori cod, spotties, and queenfish pushin' 10kg. GTs and barra smashin' inshore, while out wide, black marlin are showin' early season form with a few 100kg beasts tagged. Snapper and red emperor stackin' up on the reefs, per local charter logs. Best lures? Stick to 40g metal slugs like the ever-reliable Samurai or BKK GT Slice for pelagics—twitch 'em fast over bommies. Soft vibes like ZMan 5-inch grubs in pilly colour for trout. Live bait? Mullet chunks or pillies on a running sinker rig for bottom dwellers—can't go wrong. Fish the turn of tide for max action! Hot spots: Hit Lizard Island's eastern reefs for trophy trout, or Lady Elliot Island's cod wall—anchor up and drop a pillie. Or troll Cod Hole for marlin—pure gold! Tight lines, stay safe out there, and respect the reef. Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-10
Great Barrier Reef Hot Bite: Trout, Cod, and GTs Smashing on April 3rd
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat bringin' ya the latest from the Great Barrier Reef on this fine April 3rd, 2026. Weather's a beaut—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for a day on the brine. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 5:50 PM, givin' ya a solid 11.5 hours of fishin' light. Tides are runnin' strong today: high at 8:20 AM and 8:45 PM, low at 2:10 PM—fish the flood and ebb hard, as that's when the predators smash in. Fish activity's heatin' up with autumn currents pushin' bait schools tight to the structure. Recent catches been red hot—anglers reportin' stacks of coral trout up to 8kg, Maori cod in the 5-10kg class, and queenfish boatin' limits on the reefs. GTs are on the prowl too, with a few 20kg bulls tagged near bommies, plus solid barra in the estuaries. Spanish mackerel schools are showin' surface boils, and sweetlip are chewin' bottoms clean. Best lures right now? Soft vibes like 60g ZMan paddletails in pilchard or whitebait patterns—rip 'em deep for trout and cod. For pelagics, sling 50g metal slugs or stickbaits like Nomad Madscad 140s on the troll or cast. Live bait's king: pilchards on a running sinker for trout, whole mullet or gar for queens and macks. Don't sleep on prawns for the pickers in the shallows. Hit these hot spots: Ribbon Reefs #9 and #10 for trophy trout on the drop-offs, or head to Lizard Island bommies for GT mayhem—anchor up and send metals downcurrent. Water's 27-29°C, visibility 15m+, so bundle up for stingers and slather on the 50+. Tight lines, stay safe out there! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-11
Great Barrier Reef Hot Bite: Trout, GTs and Macs Firing in April
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat and angling ace, comin' at ya live from the balmy blues of the Great Barrier Reef on April 2, 2026, at 1 PM AEST. Fair dinkum, it's a cracker day out here—Bureau of Meteorology reckons partly cloudy skies, temps sittin' pretty at 28°C, light SE winds at 10-15 knots, and a small craft advisory for the outer reefs, but inshore's glassed off nice. Sunrise was 6:04 AM, sunset 5:51 PM, givin' ya a solid 12-hour window to chase the bite. Tides are playin' ball today per WillyWeather: high at 7:32 AM (2.1m), low at 1:45 PM (0.8m), then high again at 8:12 PM (2.3m). Fish are feedin' furious on the incoming—coral trout and snapper lovin' that push. Action's heatin' up after a calm spell. Recent catches from charter logs like those outta Cairns and Port Douglas show GTs to 20kg, blacktip reef sharks hammerin' in, and solid bags of coral trout (10-15 per boat), Maori cod, and queenfish. Spanish mackerel are showin' early, with a few 8-12kg models boated yesterday on trolled skirts. Pelagics like wahoo and tuna are patrollin' the edges, per local tackle shop tallies. Best lures? Stick to **metal slugs** like 60g Bombers in chrome for GTs and queens—cast and wind like a demon. Soft vibes or jerk minnows in pilchard colour for trout. For bait, live mullet or garfish on a running sinker rig is gold; fresh squid strips for the cod. No buggerin' about with plastics if you can get livies. Hot spots? Hit **Cod Hole** on Ribbon Reefs for trophy trout—drop baits deep. Or **Agincourt Reef** closer in, pinnacles buzzin' with macks and trout on the tide change. Tight lines, legends—stay safe out there! Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
-
-12
Autumn Fire on the Reef: Trout, Trevs, and 110 New Deep-Sea Species
G'day, mates! This is Artificial Lure, your local reef rat from Cairns, hittin' the airwaves with today's yarn from the Great Barrier Reef on April 1st, 2026, 'round 1 PM AEST. Weather's a beaut—mostly sunny with light SE winds at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28°C, perfect for a run out to the blue. Sunrise kicked off at 6:15 AM, sunset's 6:00 PM, givin' ya a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides? Low at 7 AM, high around 1 PM now, then droppin' off—fish lovin' that incoming push. Reef's firin' up this autumn! Recent charters out of Port Douglas report solid catches: coral trout to 5kg, Maori cod, sweetlip, and stacks of red emperor on the deeper bommies. A CSIRO expedition just uncovered over 110 new deep-sea species in the Coral Sea, includin' chimaeras and catsharks—mad times, but us surface dwellers stick to the classics. Spanish mackerel schools crashin' the shallows, GTs smashin' poppers, and blacktip reef sharks trailin' the action. Limits hit quick—bags of 10-20 fish per boat last week. Best lures? Soft vibes and metal slugs in silver for macks and trevs—fast retrieve at dawn. Jigs like knife-style for bottom dwellers. Bait-wise, live yakka or mullet chunks on a running sinker rig can't be beat; squid strips for the trout. Circle hooks 3/0-5/0, 20lb braid to mono leader. Hot spots: Hit Agincourt Reef for trout and emperor—20km offshore, drift the pinnacles. Or Lizard Island bommies for pelagics—cod city if ya drop deep. Rig up, stay safe, and wet a line! Thanks for tunin' in, legends—subscribe for more reef intel! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Tune in to the "Great Barrier Reef, Australia Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world's largest coral reef system and most biodiverse marine ecosystem. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Great Barrier Reef's unique coral reef ecosystem and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.... Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis show includes AI-generated content.
HOSTED BY
Inception Point Ai
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...