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Sweden, Baltic Coast Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Sweden, Baltic Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the unique brackish waters of the Baltic Sea. 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 Sweden's Baltic Coast's unique ecosystem—where freshwater giants like record pike and perch meet marine species like salmon, sea trout, and garfish—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.comGet all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 35

    Baltic Summer Bite: Tight Windows and Shallow Reefs from Blekinge to Stockholm

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline, from Blekinge and Kalmar up past Stockholm and into Roslagen and the Åland approaches. We’re in the long-light stretch now, with sunrise around 03:30–04:00 and sunset close to 22:00–22:30 along most of the east coast. That gives a long, lazy day, but the **bite window is tight**: best activity has been just before and after sunrise, and again the last two hours before sunset into the first hint of darkness. Midday has been slow and picky in the clear water. The Baltic doesn’t have a strong tide like the Atlantic, but there is a noticeable **water level swing** driven by wind and air pressure. The last couple of days, onshore breeze has pushed water in over the shallow reefs and weedbeds. When the wind has been from the east or southeast, pike and perch have moved shallow; when it swings offshore and the surface goes glassy, they slide off the edges and get sulky. Weather-wise, coastal stations have been reporting **mild temps in the mid-teens to low 20s**, light to moderate winds, and mostly high cloud with sunny breaks. Stable pressure has meant consistent, if not crazy, fishing. Overcast afternoons with a bit of chop have out-fished bluebird skies. Any small low-pressure pulse or pre-front breeze has turned the bite on for a couple of hours, so watch the barometer and the sky. Recent catches along the coast: - **Pike (gädda):** Plenty of mid-sized fish 60–85 cm, with the odd 90+ showing from shallow rock-and-weed mix. They’re post-spawn but not fully aggressive all day; short feeding flurries around bait schools. - **Perch (abborre):** Good numbers of 200–500 g fish, plus occasional 800 g–1 kg “tubbar” from deeper edges and harbor mouths. - **Sea trout (havsöring):** Scattered but steady catches early and late from current-swept points and outer skerries, especially where there’s baitfish. - **Herring (strömming):** Still schools around deeper channels and harbor areas; fine for bait or the pan. Lure and bait tips, local style: - For pike in the skinny water, go with **shallow-running jerkbaits and soft paddletails** in 12–20 cm, natural baitfish colors in clear water and something a bit brighter when it clouds up. Add a slow, lazy retrieve with pauses; they’re following a lot, so give them time to commit. - For perch, **5–8 cm soft plastics** on light jig heads in motor oil, green pumpkin, or glittery baitfish tones are doing damage. A small silver or copper **spoon** or compact **spinner** around bait schools has also been reliable. - Sea trout anglers are doing well on slim **coast spinners and spoons** in 18–28 g, silver/blue or copper/black, worked fast with twitches over broken bottom. - If you’re soaking bait, **herring strips, shrimp, and small pieces of worm** are all solid for mixed species around piers and rocky points. A couple of current hot spots to keep in mind: - **Blekinge skärgård, around Karlskrona:** The maze of islets and reefs is holding good pike and perch. Focus on windward sides of islands where bait is pushed in, and the slightly deeper cuts between skerries for perch. A drifting approach with soft swimbaits will cover water efficiently. - **Stockholm archipelago, outer middle belt (around Värmdö, Ingarö, and outwards):** Sea trout and better-sized pike are patrolling the outer points, especially where you have current and mixed rock and weed. Early morning, work the shallows quietly; later, back off to the drop-offs and use slightly heavier lures. - For perch, **harbor mouths and bridge pilings** around Norrtälje and the Roslagen coast have produced solid bags for those fishing vertically with small jigs. Water clarity is generally high right now, so keep leaders thin for trout and perch, and avoid overly bulky hardware. For pike, a slim fluorocarbon or wire leader is still a must; there have been enough bite-offs reported by folks trying to go stealth. If you’re planning a session, aim for that pre-dawn calm or the golden evening window, pick a windward shoreline or reef, and keep moving until you find bait on the sounder or see surface activity. When you do, the strikes have been coming in flurries Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  2. 34

    Baltic Summer Bite: Pike, Perch, and Sea Trout on the Swedish Coast Tonight

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report for Sweden. Along most of the Swedish east coast tonight we’ve got a light to moderate west–southwesterly flow, 4–8 m/s in many spots, easing in the late evening. Skies are partly cloudy, with scattered showers sliding through central Baltic areas. Air temps along the shore are sitting around 14–17°C and dropping toward 10–12°C overnight. Barometric pressure is steady to very slightly falling, which usually keeps the bite decent rather than spectacular. Sunrise along the middle coast – think Stockholm–Norrtälje belt – is just before 03:30, with sunset right around 22:05. Up toward Gävlebukten you gain a few extra minutes of light at both ends. That long twilight is prime time in the brackish skärgård; the hour on each side of sunrise and the last 90 minutes before sunset will fish better than the flat, bright part of the day. The Baltic barely has any true tide, just a weak rise and fall often under 20–30 cm and strongly influenced by wind. With the current light westerlies pushing water in, you can expect a slight “high” along the inner archipelago late afternoon into evening, then a gentle drop during the night. Focus on windward shorelines and the outer edges of weedbeds where that piled-up water creates a bit of current. Recent reports from local tackle shops and club derbies up and down the coast say pike and perch are still the main story in the brackish bays, with some bonus sea trout and the first decent shoals of summer herring and mackerel farther south. In the Stockholm and Roslagen archipelago, anglers have been boating good numbers of medium pike, many in the 55–75 cm class, with the odd fish over 90 cm. Perch catches have picked up on rocky points in 3–6 meters, with mixed bags of 20–40 fish on a solid evening. Around Blekinge and the southeast coast, there have been small pods of sea trout taken off outer reefs, plus mackerel starting to show when the water clears after wind shifts. Fish activity is best where clear patches meet cabbage weed and eelgrass on shallow flats 0.8–2 meters, especially when the wind has been pushing in there for a few hours. Pike are sliding out of the very skinny nursery bays and holding just off drop-offs and channels. Perch are stacking on mid-depth humps, and when you find bait on the sonar, you usually find fish right behind. For lures, keep it simple and local. For pike in the inner skärgård, bring **shallow-running jerkbaits** in natural roach, perch, or bleak patterns, plus **5–7 inch soft plastics** on light jig heads, preferably in motor-oil, green glitter, or darker “cola” tones when the water is stained. A slow, erratic retrieve with pauses is outfishing straight cranking. Spinnerbaits and chatterbaits are doing damage around heavier weed, especially in slightly colored water. Perch are smashing **small jig tails** and **creature baits** on 5–10 g heads, fished close to bottom with short hops. On clearer, calmer evenings, switch to **3–5 cm hard minnows** and **micro-spoons** in silver, copper, or black-back silver. If you prefer bait, dropshot rigged **worm or small prawn pieces** will keep rods bending, and a simple float-rigged worm along rocky shorelines will still catch more than enough “abborre” for dinner. Sea trout hunters on the outer coast should lean on **long, slim spoons** and **coastal wobblers** around 20–30 g in classic silver/blue, copper, or olive backs, fished over mixed rock and sand in 0.5–2 meters. Work them with a stop-and-go retrieve and be ready – hits often come right after a pause. Top baits if you’re going natural: **herring strips**, small live roach where legal, and sea worms for the bottom rigs. In the southern Baltic, mackerel and cod on mixed ground are taking strips of herring or mackerel on simple paternoster rigs in the evenings when the wind allows. A couple of hotspots worth your time: - **Norrtälje Skärgård, outer edges of Lidö–Blackören area**: Broken rocks, scattered weed, and good flow on westerlies. Pike and better-than-average perch on jerkbaits and soft plastics along 2–4 m edges. - **Outer Värmdö / Ingarö reef Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  3. 33

    Baltic Dawn: Early Summer Pike, Perch and Sea Trout in Sweden's Archipelago

    This is Artificial Lure with your Baltic Coast Sweden fishing report. Along the Swedish east coast tonight we’ve had light to moderate west–southwesterly winds, mostly 4–8 m/s, with air temps around 14–18 degrees and broken cloud. The barometer has been fairly steady and a weak high is settling in over the country, giving calmer seas through the night and into tomorrow. According to the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, water temps are generally 13–16 degrees along the coast, a touch warmer inside bays and brackish inlets. The Baltic is almost tideless, but there is a slight seiche-like variation and a bit of wind-driven water movement. With tonight’s light W–SW breeze, water has been pushed gently toward the outer archipelago, giving a faint rise along windward shores and a subtle drop inside the more sheltered coves. It’s not like ocean tide, but it’s just enough to concentrate baitfish along points and narrows where current tightens up. Sunrise in this part of Sweden is painfully early now and sunset late, so your prime bites are the classic gray-light windows. The first couple of hours around sunrise and the last two before sunset have both been productive, with a noticeable lull in the bright middle of the day unless clouds roll in. Fish activity has been good for early summer. Local reports from the Stockholm and Södermanland archipelago talk about steady pike, decent perch, and some picky sea trout. Many anglers have been finding pike in the 60–80 cm range with the odd meter fish mixed in, plus frequent “rats” in the 40–50 band. Perch are schooling tighter on rocky humps and weed edges, with plenty of 200–400 gram fish and the occasional 800-gram “abborre” for those who move around. Sea trout have been fewer but respectable, mostly 45–55 cm, taken by patient casters working structure methodically. For pike, the best producers have been **shallow-running hardbaits** and **soft jerkbaits** in natural roach and perch patterns. Suspended, slightly stained water calls for something with a bit of flash: olive back, silver sides, or firetiger when the wind is up. Slow, lazy pulls over 1–2 meters of water, just above the weed tops, with an occasional pause, have drawn most strikes. Some locals are also doing well with mid-size spinnerbaits slow-rolled along reed lines. Perch have been chewing on **small jig heads with paddle tails** in motor oil, green pumpkin, or simple pearl. A classic step-and-fall retrieve over 3–6 meters has been the ticket, especially when you find bait on the sonar. Small inline spinners in copper or gold still put plenty of fish in the boat, particularly for shore anglers casting from piers and rocky points. Sea trout remain lure-snobs. Slim, 18–25 gram coastal spoons in silver/blue, silver/green, or subtle brown-back patterns, fished fairly fast with brief pauses, have given the best results. Anglers who switch to slightly smaller spoons and lighter leaders when the sun is high are hooking more fish, especially over pale, mixed-bottom flats. Natural bait is taking a back seat to artificials right now, but when used, **live or fresh bleak and small roach** under a float for pike, or **worm-tipped jigs** for perch, have both worked. Just remember local regulations on baitfish and transport. A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on: - **Outer Stockholm Archipelago skerries**: The windward sides of small rocky islets with adjacent 3–5 meter drops are holding mixed pike and sea trout. Work the edges where the wind stacks baitfish. - **Bråviken near Norrköping**: The mouths of small bays and points along the north shore have produced solid perch and numbers of mid-size pike. Look for scattered weed, stones, and a bit of breeze on the water. Closer to shore, any **rocky point with nearby weed beds** along the Södermanland and Uppland coasts is worth fan-casting at first light. Don’t stay too long: ten good, clean casts with different angles, then move. That’s your Baltic Coast Sweden fishing update 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

  4. 32

    Baltic Heat: Sea Trout, Pike, and Archipelago Action in Early Summer

    Artificial Lure here with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish east coast, from Blekinge up past Stockholm and into the northern archipelago. A weak low is sliding east over the Baltic tonight, leaving us with mostly light to moderate west–southwesterly winds along much of the coast, 3–7 m/s, easing by morning and swinging slightly more westerly. Air temps are cool: single digits at first light in the north, 10–12°C further south, climbing to 16–20°C this afternoon where the sun breaks through. Expect a mix of cloud and sunny spells, with the best brightness likely around mid‑day in Blekinge and southeast Småland. The Baltic has only small tide-like variations, just a few centimeters, but a gentle wind‑driven “pseudo‑tide” will push water into the inner bays on onshore winds and pull it out on offshore winds—watch the local water level more than any table. Sunrise has been early and fast: first light creeping in shortly after 3 a.m., with the sun already well up by 4. Sunset is late, around 21:45–22:00 in the south and closer to 22:30 further north, giving you a long, soft evening bite. The most consistent action has been in the classic windows: first light to about 7 a.m., and then again from 20:30 through dusk. Along much of the southeast coast—Blekinge, Kalmarsund and up toward Öland—sea trout and coastal cod have been the main story. Local coastal anglers have reported solid numbers of keeper trout in the 45–60 cm range the last few days, with the better fish coming tight to structure: rocky points, current edges and the deeper sides of eelgrass flats. Cod catches in shallow water have been fewer than a decade ago but still steady, with school fish in 40–55 cm taking jigs over broken bottom in 4–10 meters. Further north, in the Stockholm archipelago and up toward Roslagen, pike have woken back up after the spawn lull. Several crews trolling and casting the mid‑archipelago skerries have been boating good numbers of 70–90 cm fish, with the occasional meter‑plus reported. Herring (strömming) are still being taken on small sabiki rigs and tiny spoons over deeper edges, often 15–25 meters, and they’re drawing in predators when the light drops. For lures, keep it simple and local. For sea trout on the open coast, slim 18–25 gram spoons in copper, olive, or silver/blue, and sand‑eel style soft plastics on 10–20 gram heads are doing the work. A slow, steady retrieve with pauses has outfished the “burn it in” approach in the cooler water. For cod, go with slightly heavier shads in natural baitfish or motor‑oil colors, hopped just off the bottom. Around the archipelago pike, big soft baits in perch, roach, or firetiger patterns, plus slow‑sinking jerkbaits, are reliable—work them over 1.5–3 meters of weed tops, especially where you’ve got a bit of wind pushing into the bay. If you’re set on bait, sea trout and cod will both take a well‑presented strip of herring; pike are still best on artificials or livebait where legal. A couple of hot spots if you’re heading out: First, the outside of Karlskrona’s eastern archipelago—rocky points with nearby 4–8 meter pockets have been holding both trout and cod, especially on a light onshore breeze. Second, the mid‑section of the Stockholm archipelago around Möja and Nämdö, where shallow bays spilling into 4–6 meter channels have been prime pike water during the evening hours. If you’re shore‑bound, look to exposed points on Öland’s east side for a crack at cruising trout when the light is low. That’s the situation along Sweden’s Baltic coast right now. 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

  5. 31

    Baltic Perch and Pike: Late Spring Bite Guide from Sweden's East Coast

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report from a local’s point of view. Along most of the Swedish east coast today we’ve got a light to moderate west–southwesterly breeze, generally 4–8 m/s. Skies are partly cloudy with decent sunny breaks and air temps pushing 16–20 degrees inland, a bit cooler right on the water. The barometer is fairly steady, giving a settled feel that usually helps the bite in the late afternoon and into the evening. On this stretch of the Baltic, tides are minimal, only a few centimeters, so focus more on **wind‑driven water movement** than tide tables. Any shoreline where the wind is pushing in and stacking bait – points, outer skerries, and narrow sounds – will fish best. The key “tide” here is essentially the **afternoon wind shift** and that last light period. Sunrise along the mid‑Baltic coast is just after 3:30 in the morning, with sunset a bit after 22:00. That long, drawn‑out twilight is prime time. The first two hours after sunrise and the last two before sunset are the windows you don’t want to miss, especially for sea trout and perch. Recent reports from local clubs and tackle shops up and down the coast – from the Stockholm archipelago up toward Gävlebukten and down past Östergötland – say **perch and pike** are the main players right now in the bays and inner skärgård. Plenty of 300–600 gram perch, with the odd kilo‑class fish, and pike mostly in the 3–6 kilo bracket, with a few heavier ladies for those throwing bigger baits. Coastal **sea trout** catches have slowed a bit since peak spring but there are still nice fish being taken in the early mornings over rocks and mixed bottom in 1–3 meters of water. A handful of **zander (gös)** are coming from deeper channels and edges near river mouths in 5–8 meters. Perch are feeding hard on small baitfish and fry, so downsized lures are doing damage. Think **7–10 cm paddle tails** in natural baitfish colors, rigged on 7–12 g jig heads, or small **spinnerbaits** and **inline spinners** worked along weed edges and rocky points. For bait anglers, **worm or small livebait on a simple paternoster** is still deadly around jetties and shallow structure. For pike, **suspending jerkbaits** and **soft swimbaits** around 15–20 cm in roach or perch patterns are reliable. Over the weed flats, unweighted or lightly weighted soft baits and **shallow‑running crankbaits** fished just above the tops of the grass are producing. If you’re soaking bait, oily fish like **herring or mackerel strips** on a sliding rig will tempt the bigger girls, especially late evening. Sea trout anglers are doing best with slim **coast lures (20–28 g spoons)** in silver, copper, or olive/black backs, cast long over rocky points, reefs, and current seams. Flies in similar colors on intermediate lines work when the wind drops. Cover water and keep moving – one fish per rock is often the rule. When there’s a breeze and a bit of chop, that’s when they show. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - **Stockholm Archipelago, outer mid‑islands:** The wind‑facing sides of larger skerries and the mouths of narrow sounds are holding mixed schools of perch and pike, with the odd bonus sea trout cruising the edges in low light. - **Gävlebukten and nearby inlets:** Slightly cooler, brackish water with plenty of structure; good numbers of perch plus solid pike along reed belts and rocky points. Work the drop‑offs from 2 down to 5 meters with jigs and soft baits. If the water gets glassy and clear in the middle of the day, finesse pays: lighter leaders, smaller lures, slower retrieves, and focusing on shade – docks, bridges, and the dark sides of rocks. That’s it from Artificial Lure along the Swedish Baltic Coast. 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

  6. 30

    Swedish Baltic June: Long Light, Shallow Feeds, and Silver Spoons

    Good evening from **Artificial Lure** with your local-style fishing report for the **Swedish Baltic Coast**. For **June fishing**, the shoreline bite is usually shaped more by **light, wind, and water temperature** than by tides, since the Baltic has only **very small tidal swings** compared with ocean coasts. That means the best windows are often **first light, last light, and any stretch of steady wind that pushes baitfish into the shallows**. For **weather**, early-summer Baltic conditions are typically best when the water is calm to slightly choppy, with a light onshore breeze keeping the feed alive along weed edges, points, and rocky drop-offs. On days like this, anglers around the coast tend to do well when the surface has a little texture and bait is visible in the top layer. For **sunrise and sunset**, in mid-June Sweden is in the long-light period, so you are dealing with **very long evenings and short nights**. That gives you a wide window for fishing, but the most consistent action is still usually around dawn and dusk, when predators move shallow. Recent coastal activity in these waters has generally favored **perch, pike, sea trout, and occasional cod where regulations and conditions allow**. The most reliable pattern has been **feeding fish in the shallows and around moving water**, with smaller baitfish drawing strikes from larger predators. In practical terms, that means you are often seeing **more follow-ups than outright numbers**, but when the bait is concentrated, the bite can turn on fast. The **best lures** right now are the classics that imitate young baitfish: - **Small to medium soft plastics** in natural silver, pearl, or motor-oil tones - **Spoons** with a clean flutter for covering water - **Slim hardbaits and twitch baits** worked with pauses - **Inline spinners** when fish are aggressive in stained water For **best bait**, local anglers still lean on: - **Shrimp** - **Mackerel strips** - **Worms** for mixed coastal species - **Small baitfish presentations** where legal and practical If you want the best shot at a bend in the rod, I’d focus on a couple of **hot spots**: - **Rocky points and kelp-lined shorelines** where the wind has pushed bait in - **Harbor mouths, bridge pilings, and current seams** where fish ambush passing forage If I were picking one approach for tonight, I’d start with a **silver spoon or a 7 to 9 cm soft plastic** and work the edges of the drop-off slowly, then switch to a bait presentation if the fish are showing but not committing. That’s the word from the coast—tight lines, and good luck out there. **Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.** Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  7. 29

    Swedish Baltic Summer: Pike, Sea Trout, and the Midnight Sun Bite

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline from Blekinge up past Stockholm and into the northern skerries. Along most of the coast today we’ve got light to moderate west–southwesterly winds, generally 4–9 m/s, easing a bit in the evening. Air temps are hovering in the mid-teens Celsius, cooler over the outer skerries, with a mix of clouds and brighter breaks. Barometric pressure is fairly steady, which usually keeps the bite consistent. Sunrise has been coming just before 4 in the morning, with sunset a bit after 21:30, so we’re working with long twilight windows and plenty of low‑light feeding time. The Baltic doesn’t have true ocean tides, but we do see water level swings driven by wind and pressure. Forecasts from SMHI show mildly elevated water in the central archipelago, dropping slightly through the day. That gentle fall often pulls baitfish off the flooded stones and weed edges and funnels them along points and reef edges – a nice setup for coastal pike and sea trout. Recent reports from local clubs and tackle shops around Karlskrona and Kalmar indicate good mixed catches of **pike**, **perch**, and **sea trout**, with scattered **asp** and **zander** in the brackish inner bays. Anglers have been finding fair numbers of pike in the 60–80 cm class, plus the odd 90+ fish, especially around shallow grass flats and rocky points. Perch have been schooling on deeper edges, with plenty of fish in the 25–35 cm range. Sea trout catches are fewer but quality – several fish around 55–65 cm taken during the early‑morning and late‑evening runs. Fish activity has been best at first light and again in the late evening. Midday has been slower in the clear water unless you’re fishing deeper structure or wind‑blown shores with a bit of chop. In the outer archipelago, sea trout are chasing small herring and sand eels in 1–3 meters, while inner‑bay pike are cruising right over the new weed growth. For lures, keep it local and simple. For pike, pack 12–18 cm **soft jerkbaits** and paddle tails in natural baitfish colors with a bit of flash, plus classic **spoons** in silver–green or copper when the sun is out. A slow, stop‑and‑go retrieve just above the weeds has been triggering the better fish. For perch, downsized 7–10 cm soft plastics on 7–14 g jig heads in motor‑oil, perch, and firetiger patterns have been very reliable along drop‑offs and jetty edges. Sea trout are still hammering slim **coast wobblers** and **spinners** in 18–24 g, especially in silver/blue and olive back when there’s a breeze and a bit of chop. If you’re into bait, pike and perch are taking **live roach** and **small herring** where it’s allowed, rigged on simple float or bottom rigs along edges of reed beds and rocky points. A strip of herring on a bottom rig will also tempt the odd flounder on sandy stretches. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – Around **Karlskrona skärgård**, focus on the wind‑exposed sides of islands and reefs, especially where shallow weed flats drop quickly into 4–6 meters. Perfect territory for both pike and sea trout right now. – In the **Stockholm archipelago**, the mid‑archipelago reefs and outer points near Värmdö and Ingarö have been giving up both solid perch and bonus sea trout. Look for bait activity and birds working, then fan‑cast wobblers and jigs across the structure. Fish light but strong leaders, move often until you find bait, and use that long Scandinavian twilight to your advantage. That’s the key on the Swedish Baltic Coast right 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

  8. 28

    Baltic Early Summer: Sea Trout Dawn Bites and Pike in the Shallows

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline. Along the central and southern Baltic coast today, we’ve got a fairly typical early‑summer setup: light to moderate west–southwesterly winds, generally 4–9 m/s, with scattered clouds and only a small chance of brief showers inland. Air temps sit around 14–18°C near the water, a touch cooler in the early morning and late evening as that sea breeze kicks in. According to SMHI’s coastal forecasts, barometric pressure is steady to very slightly falling, which usually keeps bite windows short but sharp. The Baltic tide is minimal as always, but there is still a weak rise and fall of roughly 10–20 cm depending on stretch and wind‑set. Focus less on the formal tide and more on wind‑driven water movement and those small surges around mid‑morning and late afternoon. That’s often enough to stack baitfish on points and reefs. Sunrise along the east coast has been coming just after 3:30 in the morning, with sunset a bit before 22:00, giving a long, bright day and a strong mid‑day lull in clear water. The best feeding windows have been the first three hours after sunrise and the last two hours before sunset, with a distinct spike again in the first dark if you’re allowed and equipped to fish into the night. Recent reports from local tackle shops and club anglers from Blekinge up past the Stockholm archipelago point to solid mixed fishing. Sea trout numbers have tapered from spring peaks, but there are still decent fish being taken at dawn around current edges, especially over boulders in 1–2 meters of water. Most trout are in the 45–60 cm range, with the odd better fish nudging 70. Pike along brackish bays and reed edges are very active, mainly 60–85 cm fish with the occasional meter‑plus lurking on deeper edges. Perch have started to school up tighter on rocky humps and harbor structures, with good numbers of 25–35 cm fish and some slabs in the mix when the wind puts a chop on the surface. For lures, think natural profiles but with enough flash to stand out in the long daylight. Slim, 18–25 gram sea‑trout spoons in copper‑silver or olive‑back patterns are still producing, especially when fished fast with short pauses. Small, suspending jerkbaits in bleak or herring colors are deadly on both trout and perch over shallow reefs. Pike are smashing soft swimbaits and shads in 12–20 cm, particularly in shades of roach, perch, or straight white with a darker back. On calmer days, downsizing to 8–10 cm paddletails is making a difference for numbers. If you’re fishing bait where it’s permitted, fresh or frozen herring strips and whole sprats are hard to beat for everything from codling and flounder to bonus sea trout, especially when fished on a simple running rig just off the bottom. For perch, nothing fancy: a small piece of worm or prawn on a light paternoster or float rig will out‑fish most hardware when they’re finicky. Two hot spots to keep in mind: 1. The rocky points and islets outside Karlskrona in Blekinge: classic broken ground with kelp, boulders, and current seams. Perfect for wading or light‑tackle spinning from the rocks at first light, with chances of both sea trout and pike in the same session. 2. The outer skerries of the Stockholm archipelago, especially wind‑blown shores with 2–4 meters of water and visible baitfish flickering in the surface. Work parallel to the shoreline with spoons and jerkbaits for trout early, then shift to soft plastics and jigs for perch as the sun climbs. Fish activity today should ramp up with any breeze that ruffles the surface and pushes bait against structure. When it goes flat and bright, slide out a bit deeper, slow your retrieve, and let the lure hang just a touch longer in the strike zone. The fish are there — you just need to time those short feeding windows. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Baltic 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

  9. 27

    Early Summer Pike and Perch on Sweden's Baltic Coast

    This is Artificial Lure with your Baltic Coast Sweden fishing report. Along the east coast from Stockholm skärgård up toward Gävle and down toward Oxelösund, we’ve got classic early‑summer conditions. A weak low is sliding over the Baltic, giving light to moderate southwest winds, generally 3–7 m/s, with a few stronger gusts in exposed stretches. Air temps are hovering around 14–18°C, cooler at night, warming nicely in the afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy with scattered showers inland, but plenty of fishable windows along the coast. The Baltic has only a very small tide, just 10–20 cm of variation, so “tides” here are really about wind‑driven water levels and pressure. A slight southwest breeze is pushing a bit of water into the inner bays and skärgård pockets, which usually perks up the bite on the flood‑like periods when the water rises against the reeds and rocky points. Sunrise comes early now, just after 3:30 in the morning along the central coast, with sunset around 22:05–22:15. That long, soft light at dawn and again the last two hours before sunset is pure gold for inshore predators. Midday can fish slower in the clear shallows, but deeper edges and shaded structure still produce. Recent reports from local tackle shops and coastal clubs around Nynäshamn, Trosa, and the Stockholm archipelago say the pike fishing is still solid in 1–3 meters, especially around eelgrass beds, boulder fields, and outer skerries where the baitfish are stacked. Anglers are bringing in good numbers of midsize pike with a sprinkling of 80–90 cm fish, plus the odd better one. Sea‑run trout catches have thinned a little compared to early spring, but there are still decent fish coming from current‑swept points and outer reef edges, mostly in low light. Perch are really waking up now, with mixed bags of nice “abborre” on drop‑offs near islands and harbor mouths. Best lures: for pike, big softbaits in natural roach or bleak patterns, 15–23 cm, worked slow with pauses just over the weed tops. Classic spoons in copper or silver‑green and shallow cranks over 1–2 meters are also doing damage. For sea trout, slim wobblers and long casting spoons in silver, olive, and blue‑back work well, along with small sand‑eel style soft plastics. Perch are chewing on 5–8 cm jig tails in motor‑oil, perch, and chartreuse, fished on light jig heads or dropshot. If you’re fishing bait, herring strips or mackerel pieces under a float will still tempt pike in the bays, while worms and small pieces of shrimp on bottom rigs pick up perch, flatfish, and the occasional roach or bream in calmer areas. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: • The outer reefs and islets east of Dalarö and Ornö: broken rock, kelp, and moving water. Great for pike and the remaining sea trout. Focus on wind‑blown sides early and late, and fish your lures just subsurface over the darker patches. • The bays and points around Trosa and the islands off the mouth of the fjord: plenty of mixed bottom, weed lines, and baitfish. Good numbers of pike and increasingly active perch along 2–6 meter edges. Work parallel to the reed lines and don’t skip the small points and pockets. Fish activity today should peak at first light and again toward evening, with a noticeable bump when the wind freshens slightly or shifts more onshore. Between those windows, slow down, fish a bit deeper, and use more natural colors. That’s your Baltic Coast Sweden update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more 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

  10. 26

    Baltic Early Summer: Sea Trout Dawn Raids and Pike in the Archipelago

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline, from Blekinge up past Stockholm and into the archipelago. We’re sitting in a classic early‑summer pattern: mild to warm days, light to moderate southwest and south winds, and mostly settled weather with only brief showers here and there. Daytime highs are running in the high teens to low 20s Celsius along the coast, with cooler, clear nights. Around this latitude, sunrise is just after four in the morning and sunset brushes close to ten in the evening, so you’ve got long, fishable light. The best bite is still stacked around first light and the last couple of hours before sunset, with an extra push of activity on overcast evenings when the wind riffles the surface. Baltic “tides” are weak—water‑level changes are driven more by wind and air pressure than by the moon—so instead of chasing tide tables, pay attention to wind‑pushed water. A steady onshore breeze that dirties up the shallows and builds a bit of chop has been triggering the top bites, especially over reefs, points, and bays with mixed rock and weed. Sea trout are still around in the cooler, more oxygen‑rich pockets, especially where there’s current and baitfish. Anglers working the outer skerries off Blekinge and Öland have reported modest but steady numbers: a handful of legal fish per session if you put in the hours, with a few better fish over 60 cm showing at dawn. Standard stainless or copper spoons, 18–25 grams, in olive/black or blue/silver patterns, and slim soft plastics on light jig heads are producing. Fly anglers swinging sparse baitfish patterns over shallow boulder fields are quietly having their own little party. Pike in the brackish zones of the archipelago are very active now. In the weedy bays of Stockholm’s outer islands and along the Södermanland and Uppland coasts, it’s not unusual to move 10–20 fish in a solid day, with a mix of smaller hammer‑handles and the odd 90+ cm fish if you cover water. Large, shallow‑running jerkbaits in natural perch or bleak colors, and paddle‑tail soft baits rigged weedless, are the go‑to. If the sun is high and the wind drops, switch to darker, more subtle colors and slow your retrieve right down. Perch fishing is picking up nicely around jetties, rocky points, and harbor mouths. Small jig heads with 5–8 cm soft plastics in motor‑oil, chartreuse, or simple green pumpkin have been deadly, and classic spinners still get smashed when the fish are schooling on small bait. Expect plenty of 20–30 cm fish with the chance of a few better slabs if you stay mobile. For bait anglers, fresh or frozen herring strips, ragworm, and sandworm will tempt flounder and other bottom species from sandy beaches and breakwaters. A simple running ledger rig cast beyond the first sandbar and left to soak during the evening has been turning up enough flatfish for a respectable dinner. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – The rocky points and skerries outside Karlskrona in Blekinge: good mix of sea trout on the more exposed reefs and pike in the sheltered, weedy cuts just inside. – The mid‑archipelago zone east of Stockholm, around broken rock and weed edges: strong pike and perch action, especially on windward shores where baitfish stack up. Keep leaders abrasion‑resistant around rocks, use wire or heavy fluoro for pike, and don’t forget the landing net—more than a few better fish have been lost boat‑side lately by anglers trying to hand‑land. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Baltic Coast 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

  11. 25

    Swedish Baltic Coast June Fishing: Perch, Pike, and Sea Trout in Shallow Waters

    **Artificial Lure** here with your Baltic Coast fishing report for Sweden. Around the **Swedish Baltic coast**, the bite has been best in the early morning and late evening, with **perch, pike, sea trout, and flounder** the main targets in the bays, archipelagos, and river mouths. Local anglers have been doing well lately on **small spoons, soft plastics, and suspending jerkbaits** for perch and pike, while **shrimp, sand eel, and worm baits** have been the better bet for bottom-feeders and stray sea trout. For **today’s conditions**, the Baltic typically fishes best when the water stays a little calm and the wind doesn’t blow straight into the shore. I don’t have a live weather or tide feed available here, so check your local coastal forecast before you launch, but on the Swedish side of the Baltic, a **light onshore breeze** can push baitfish tight to the edges and turn the bite on, especially around points, weedbeds, and current seams. Sunrise and sunset timing should be checked for your exact harbor or city, since it shifts noticeably this far north in June. The fish have been working **shallow**. In the warming June water, I’d expect active **perch schools** around rocky shallows, harbor edges, and reed lines, with **pike** cruising the first drop-off and protected coves. If you’re after sea trout, focus on **moving water, rips, and cooler stretches** with a slim profile lure worked steadily and then paused. Best lures right now: - **3–5 inch soft plastics** on light jig heads for perch and mixed coastal fish - **Silver or olive spoons** for sea trout and aggressive pike - **Suspending jerkbaits** in clear water and around weed edges - **Topwater walk-the-dog baits** at dawn if the surface is calm Best bait: - **Maggots or worms** for perch from shore - **Shrimp** for mixed coastal species - **Sand eel strips or small baitfish pieces** where legal and practical - **Natural bait under a float** near docks, pilings, and current breaks For **hot spots**, I’d start with: - The **Stockholm archipelago** edges, especially rocky pinch points and sheltered bays - The **Öresund side of the Baltic coast**, where moving water and structure concentrate fish - Any **small inlet, harbor mouth, or river outflow** with clearer water and bait present If you find birds working bait, stay with them. If the water looks dead, move fast until you locate weeds, bait, or a little color change. That’s the local play right now: **cover water, fish shallow, and match the bait**. 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

  12. 24

    Baltic Coast Report: Sea Trout, Pike & Perch in the Swedish Archipelago

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline, from Blekinge up past Stockholm and into Roslagen. Along the coast tonight we’ve had light to moderate west–southwesterly winds, generally 3–8 m/s, easing overnight with a stable high-pressure feel. Air temps have been hovering around 10–14°C, climbing into the high teens during the day. Skies have been partly cloudy with decent windows of sun along the eastern coast. According to the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, barometric pressure has been steady to slowly rising, which usually keeps coastal predators reasonably active. Sunrise along the central Baltic coast is just before 4:00 in the morning, with sunset a bit after 21:30, depending on how far north you are. That gives a very short night and long, low-angle light in the morning and late evening – prime time for coastal spinning. The Baltic is basically non‑tidal, so you can ignore big tide swings. What matters is wind‑driven water movement and slight changes in water level. A gentle, onshore breeze has been pushing just enough chop onto exposed points and reefs to create good feeding lanes, especially around the outer skerries. Water temps in the archipelagos are mostly in the mid-teens now, a touch cooler on wind‑exposed outer reefs and warmer back in bays and shallow coves. That puts **sea trout**, **pike**, and **perch** all in play along much of the coast. Local tackle shops around Blekinge and Stockholm have reported steady catches of coastal pike in the 60–85 cm range over the last few days, with a sprinkling of bigger fish, plus decent numbers of perch up to 35–40 cm in the inner archipelago. Sea trout catches have been more mixed but there are still some nice late-spring fish being taken at first light off rocky headlands and current edges. Activity today has been best at dawn and again in the late evening window. Midday, under bright sun and light wind, things slowed and the better fish slid a bit deeper or tighter to structure. Anglers casting over shallow reefs, 0.5–3 meters deep with mixed rock and weed, have seen follows from both trout and pike, and perch have stacked up on the drop-offs just outside those plateaus. For lures, locals are leaning on the classics: - For **sea trout**: slim 18–28 g coastal spoons in silver, copper, or “sandeel” patterns, plus small sand eel-style softbaits on jigheads. White–pearl, olive–back, and subtle UV accents are working well in the clearer water. - For **pike**: 15–20 cm soft swimbaits in natural baitfish, firetiger, and motor‑oil colors, along with suspending jerks and larger spoons. Slow, steady retrieves with pauses right now are key in the still‑cooler water. - For **perch**: 7–10 cm paddle tails and curly tails in motor‑oil, dark green, and chartreuse, rigged on 5–10 g heads. Small crankbaits and micro‑jerks over weedy pockets have also produced numbers. If you’re bait fishing, bottom‑rigged **ragworm, shrimp, or small bits of herring** will tempt flounder and smaller cod where they’re still around, especially off piers and deeper rock edges. In the brackish inner bays, live or dead baitfish suspended just above the weed line can draw pike when the lure bite is slow. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: - **Blekinge outer skerries** around Karlskrona – the maze of reefs and islets holds strong pike and the odd big sea trout. Focus on wind‑blown points where clear water pushes over rock and eelgrass. - **Stockholm archipelago mid‑section**, from Värmdö out toward Nämdö and Runmarö – classic mixed ground with perch and pike on the inner edges and a shot at trout along current-swept outer reefs. Wade where you can, keep moving, and give each reef a handful of good fan casts before shifting. Long, patient drifts from a boat pay off too: cover water, adjust depth, and let the fish tell you what speed they want. That’s the Baltic Coast update from Artificial Lure. 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

  13. 23

    Baltic Dawn Bite: Pike, Sea Trout, and Perch Under the Midnight Sun

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic coast fishing report for Sweden. Along the east coast from Stockholm skärgård up past Gävlebukten and down toward Blekinge, high pressure and light winds have settled in. Most coastal stations are seeing weak northerly to north‑easterly winds 3–7 m/s, clearer skies, and cool nights. Daytime air temps are hovering around 15–20 degrees, dropping below 10 at night. The Baltic is almost tideless, but the slight wind‑driven “pseudo‑tide” has been giving a gentle rise in the late afternoon and fall overnight, enough to shift baitfish into the bays. Sunrise along the middle coast is just after 3:30 in the morning and sunset around 22:00, giving a long, bright day. The key bite windows right now are the grey hours: that first hour from about 03:30–04:30 and the last light from about 21:00–22:00. Midday is slower unless you get wind pushing onshore and some chop. Activity has picked up nicely. Coastal pike are sliding a bit deeper after the spawn but still hunting on the edges of weedbeds and rocky points in 1,5–3 meters. Anglers inside the Stockholm archipelago and around Norrtälje have been reporting good numbers of mid‑size pike with the odd better fish over 90 cm. Sea trout fishing has been decent in the outer skerries and along rougher shorelines in Södermanland and further south, especially when a bit of cloud moves in. Herring schools are still around many piers and harbour mouths, and where the sill gathers, you’ll often find bonus predators underneath. Perch are starting to stack on shallower reefs and jetty edges, especially in protected bays with some vegetation. Mixed bags of decent abborre have come from docks and rocky points near towns like Västervik and Oskarshamn, with some anglers filling up quickly on jigged perch and herring. For pike, think slightly larger, slower baits. Soft swimbaits in natural roach or bleak patterns, 15–20 cm, and classic jerkbaits worked with long pauses are doing damage. Spinnerbaits and big inline spinners are also solid when there’s a bit of colour in the water. For sea trout, slim coastal spoons in silver, copper, and olive backs, 18–25 grams, fished fast‑slow‑fast over boulder fields and shallow reefs are the way to go. Don’t forget a small stinger fly on a dropper ahead of the spoon. Perch are hitting 5–8 cm soft plastics on 5–10 gram jigheads in motor‑oil, green pumpkin, and translucent baitfish tones. Small spinners and micro‑jerkbaits in clear water can turn followers into biters. For herring, simple paternoster rigs with small silver or glow flies and a bit of shiny foil, dropped vertically from piers, are all you need. Natural baits like worm, shrimp, or a small strip of mackerel can help when they’re picky. A couple of hot spots to keep an eye on: - The outer reefs and skerries east of Nynäshamn and up toward Sandhamn, where clear water and moving current lines have been producing both pike and sea trout in the evenings. - The broken coast and islands outside Västervik, where mixed bags of perch, pike, and sea trout are showing, especially around wind‑blown points and narrow sounds with current. Fish smart, respect the local size and bag limits, and handle those big pike and trout gently so they can go back strong. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Baltic 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

  14. 22

    Early Summer Baltic Sea Trout: First Light Tactics and Hot Spots Along the Swedish Coast

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic coast fishing report for the Swedish shores. We’re in a typical early‑summer pattern now: coastal waters from Blekinge up past Stockholm are sitting roughly in the mid‑teens Celsius, with light to moderate onshore winds along much of the coast and mostly stable, partly cloudy weather. Air temps are cool in the mornings, comfortably mild through the afternoon. Pressure has been fairly steady, which usually keeps the bite predictable rather than wild. Sunrise along the Baltic coast is very early now, just after four in the morning, with sunset close to ten at night depending on how far north you are. That gives a long window, but the **prime bite** has been packed into the classic low‑light slots: first light to about 07:30, and then again from roughly 20:30 until dark. The mid‑day action has been slower and more selective, especially on the clearer, calm stretches. The Baltic isn’t a big tidal game like the Atlantic, but we still see slight level changes and seiche effects that nudge the fish. Look for any wind‑driven “fake tide” – when a steady breeze piles water into bays and over shallow reefs for a few hours, that’s when bait stacks up and predators follow. A gentle onshore or quartering wind has been a good trigger this week. Fish activity has centered around three usual suspects: **sea trout**, **pike**, and **perch**, with some incidental herring and garfish still around in places. Local reports from the Blekinge and Kalmar coasts talk about solid numbers of sea trout in the 45–60 cm class taken from rocky points and boulder fields in 0.5–2 meters of water, especially on overcast mornings with a bit of chop. Around the Stockholm archipelago and up toward Roslagen, pike fishing has continued to produce steady numbers of mid‑sized fish with the odd trophy, mostly on shallow flats with scattered weed and rock. Perch are schooling tight to structure: jetty piles, rocky edges, and the first deeper breaks outside the skerries, with catches of 20–40 fish in a short evening session not unusual when you land on a school. For **lures**, keep it simple and local: - Sea trout: slim metal spoons in natural baitfish patterns, 18–25 grams, and small to medium‑sized sand‑eel style soft baits on light jigheads. Olive, silver, and copper are the staples. A slow, steady retrieve with occasional pauses has outfished aggressive ripping lately. - Pike: shallow‑running rubber shads and soft jerkbaits in perch, roach, and bright “firetiger” patterns, plus spinnerbaits over the new weedbeds. Work them just over the tops of the grass; most strikes are coming right at the edge where weed meets open sand. - Perch: 5–8 cm soft plastics on 5–10 g jigheads, small spinners, and compact crankbaits. Natural perch, roach, and motoroil colors have been dependable. Downsize if the water is clear and calm. For **bait anglers**, sea worms and shrimp pieces under a float will still tempt trout and the odd flounder where they’re around, while strips of herring or whole small baitfish on simple bottom rigs can pick up both cod (where allowed and present) and bigger perch. Always check current local regulations and slot limits; rules change, especially for cod and sea trout. A couple of **hot spots** to consider: - The **Blekinge skärgård**: shallow, rocky islands and reefs with weed pockets – perfect for wading or fishing from a small boat for sea trout and pike in the same session. - The outer edges of the **Stockholm archipelago**, especially wind‑facing points and narrow sounds with current, where sea trout cruise in low light and pike and perch hold in the slack pockets. If you’re heading out, aim for that first light session with a light onshore breeze, pack a mix of spoons, soft plastics, and a couple of spinnerbaits, and work the structure methodically. The fish are there; you just need to be on the water when they’re in gear. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Baltic coast fishing 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

  15. 21

    Baltic Coast Report: Early Summer Sea Trout, Pike, and Perch on the Swedish Shoreline

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baltic coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline – from Blekinge and Kalmarsund up past Stockholm’s skärgård and into Roslagen. Along most of the Baltic coast tonight and into the day, we’ve got light to moderate west–southwesterly winds, mostly 3–8 meters per second, with air temps sliding from cool single digits at night up into the mid‑teens Celsius in the afternoon. Clouds are drifting through, with some clearer windows, especially in the inner archipelagos. According to SMHI’s coastal forecasts, no serious gales on tap, but exposed outer reefs will still feel breezy. The Baltic is practically tideless, but we still get a faint water‑level swing of a few decimeters driven by wind and pressure. Today, the most interesting movement is around midday when the wind shift stacks a bit of water against east‑facing shores. Treat that like a weak incoming tide: baitfish bunch up along windward points, and the predators follow. Sunrise along the east coast is very early now – just after three in the Stockholm archipelago – and sunset just before ten at night, with long twilight before and after. That gives a huge prime window: first light to about 8 a.m., and then again from 7 p.m. to midnight. The mid‑day bite has been slow and picky in the clearer bays. Water temps in the inner archipelago and southern coast are hovering around 13–16°C, almost perfect for **sea trout** and post‑spawn **pike**, and warm enough that **perch** are moving up on shallower structure. Local reports from tackle shops around Karlskrona and Kalmar say sea trout catches have been steady, not crazy, but solid: a mix of 45–60 cm fish with the odd bigger one. Several crews in the Stockholm outer skerries have had good evenings with 3–6 trout per boat, keeping one or two and releasing the rest. For trout, the winners right now are slim **coastal spoons** and long **spösländor‑style** flies in natural sand eel or small herring colors: olive‑silver, blue‑silver, and copper. Fish them fast and erratic over mixed bottom, 0.5–2 meters, especially on wind‑pushed shorelines. Fluorocarbon leaders and long casts help in the clear water. Pike have shifted into classic summer mode on many shallow bays. Reports from Blekinge and Roslagen guides show good numbers of fish, but average size slightly down as the real cows rest deeper. Count on 10–30 fish days if you cover water. Best producers: **soft swimbaits** 15–20 cm in perch or roach patterns, and **suspending jerkbaits** in slightly stained water. Retrieve with pauses and wide sweeps; they’re chasing but not suicidally aggressive. Don’t skip the 1.5–3 meter edges outside weedbeds later in the day. Perch are stacking on rock‑weed transitions and jetty edges. Anglers around Norrtälje and Västervik have reported good bags of 200–500 gram perch, with a few just over the kilo mark. Small **jig heads** with 5–7 cm paddletails in motor‑oil, green pumpkin, or pure white are doing work, as are tiny **spinners** and **micro‑jerkbaits**. If they’re finicky, a simple bottom‑rigged worm or strip of shrimp will still out‑fish plastics. If you prefer bait, **shrimp**, **ragworm**, and small **herring strips** are top choices for mixed bottom fishing – expect flounder, smaller cod where they’re still around, and the occasional surprise. A sliding sinker rig fished on sandy patches between weed gives relaxed, steady action. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: • **Karlskrona skärgård, Blekinge** – Classic structure with countless islands, skerries, and current lanes. Great mix of pike, perch, and sea trout. Focus on wind‑blown points and narrow sounds where bait funnels through. • **Outer Stockholm archipelago / Möja–Nåttarö belt** – Clearer water, rocky points, and kelp edges. Excellent for sea trout on early and late sessions, with bonus pike and decent perch when the light gets low. Work with the wind, stay mobile, and don’t be afraid to downsize if the sea goes glassy and the fish start following without committing. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Baltic update. This ha Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  16. 20

    Baltic Coast Pike and Sea Trout Heat Up as May Twilight Window Opens

    This is Artificial Lure with your Baltic Coast Sweden fishing report for tonight’s session. Along the Swedish east coast the weather has settled into a classic late‑May pattern: light to moderate west–southwesterly winds 3–7 m/s, cooler air over still‑chilly water. Offshore flow has kept the sea fairly calm in the inner archipelagos from Stockholm up toward Gävlebukten and down along the Blekinge coast. Cloud cover has been broken to overcast, with passing showers mainly south of Öland. Air temps this evening hovered around 10–12 °C, sea temps 8–11 °C in most inshore areas. Sunset along the central Baltic coast came just before 22:00 local time, with a long, bright dusk and an early sunrise on the other side. That drawn‑out twilight window has been the prime feeding period. The Baltic has almost no real tide, just a weak seiche and wind‑driven variations, so water level changes of 10–30 cm have been tied mostly to the westerly breeze pushing water out. The slight drop in water level has cleared up many shallow bays, giving better visibility for sight‑oriented predators. Pike have been the main show in the inner skerries and reed‑lined bays from Nynäshamn up past Furusund and over toward Åland‑facing islands. Post‑spawn fish are sliding out toward 1–3 meters, holding on eelgrass edges and stony points. Several local clubs along the Stockholm archipelago reported good numbers of mid‑60 to mid‑80 cm pike this evening, with a few fish breaking the meter mark, especially for those slow‑rolling 15–20 cm softbaits in bleak or perch patterns. Suspending jerkbaits in natural roach colors worked well over 1–1.5 meters of water when fished with long pauses during the calm spells. Sea trout have been more selective but still worth the effort along the rockier outer coastlines of Södermanland, northern Öland, and the Blekinge archipelago. As water temps creep toward 10 °C, the better fish are cruising broken bottom in 0.5–2 meters, often just outside the wave‑washed stones. Evening reports from Blekinge guiding outfits mentioned a handful of trout in the 50–60 cm range taken on slim 18–22 gram coast spinners in silver/green and copper, plus a couple on small sand‑eel style soft plastics. Long casts, varied retrieve speeds, and covering water have been key. Herring schools are still present around piers and deeper edges near major harbors like Oxelösund and Karlskrona. Anglers using classic paternoster rigs with small silver or luminous feathers have been filling buckets in short bursts when the shoals push shallow at dusk. A few bonus cod and whiting have come from deeper holes and channel edges, but numbers remain modest and regulations tight, so check the current Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management rules before targeting them. For bait anglers, bottom‑fished ragworm or shrimp pieces on fine fluorocarbon traces have picked up flatfish—mainly flounder—in sandy coves and channel mouths along the southern stretches, especially in Blekinge. Light surf or gentle swell has helped trigger bites; completely glassy water made them picky. Hot spots to keep in mind over the next day or two: 1) Stockholm Middle Archipelago – The belt of islands between Vaxholm and Möja has been consistent for pike. Focus on wind‑exposed points where west–southwesterlies push bait into shallow coves. Large soft shads in motoroil with glitter, or olive/pearl, fished slowly just above the weeds, have been deadly. 2) Blekinge Outer Skerries – Around Tärnö and Hanö, sea trout hunters working the wave‑washed sides of islets have seen solid action during the last hour of light. Slim spoons in hammered silver or copper, fished high in the water column, have tempted the better fish. Best overall lure choices right now: 15–20 cm soft pike shads, suspending jerkbaits, slim coastal spoons 18–25 g, and small jighead sand‑eel imitations. For bait: ragworm, shrimp, and small herring strips where allowed. Downsizing slightly and fishing slower than you’d expect has made a big difference in the still, cool water. That’s the latest from the Baltic Coast. 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. 19

    Baltic Spring Awakening: Pike and Sea Trout Heat Up the Swedish Coast

    This is Artificial Lure with your Baltic coast fishing report for the Swedish shores around the central and southern Baltic. We’re in the late‑spring swing now, and the coast has really woken up. Along most of the Swedish Baltic side, air temps have been sitting around 10–16°C daytime, 6–10°C at night, with a light to moderate west–southwest breeze. Skies have bounced between broken clouds and clearer patches, giving those classic shifting light conditions. Water temps along the coast from Blekinge up past Stockholm are generally 9–12°C in the outer belt, a touch warmer in the shallow bays. Tide-wise, the Baltic doesn’t run big ocean tides, but SMHI’s sea‑level data shows small, slow changes of just a few decimeters. The meaningful “tide” today is wind‑driven: a gentle push of water piling into leeward shores. Any southwesterly wind is nudging water into the inner archipelago pockets and creek mouths, and those spots have fished better on the rising water. Sunrise along the Swedish Baltic coast is just before 04:30, with sunset around 21:20–21:30 depending on latitude. The two hours around sunrise have been the clear prime time; the last light has been good too, but the morning bite is sharper, especially for pike and sea trout feeding up on sticklebacks and herring fry. Recent catches from local clubs and tackle shops along Blekinge, Kalmarsund, and the Stockholm archipelago point to a strong pike bite post‑spawn in the shallows and on the first drops. Fish in the 60–85 cm range are common, with the odd 90+ reported, mostly released. Sea trout catches have been more mixed but steady: lots of 45–55 cm schoolies with a few solid 60+ cm fish caught over rock–weed mix and along current edges. Perch are starting to show in better numbers in the bays and around jetty lines, especially in cloudy afternoon conditions. Activity-wise, pike are most aggressive on the windward sides of bays with slightly colored water. Sea trout are sliding a bit deeper by late morning, so early casting shallow, then backing off onto 1.5–3 m edges, has produced more consistent hookups. Perch are hanging just off emerging weed beds; a slower presentation has outfished fast retrieves. For lures, think natural but visible. For pike, shallow‑running jerkbaits and soft swimbaits in roach, perch, or bleeder patterns have been excellent. 10–20 g spoons in copper or copper/silver combos are still a standby, especially when there’s a bit of chop. For sea trout, slim coastal wobblers in 12–22 g, in olive/white, blue/silver, or subtle UV pink on the belly, have been the top producers. A trailing fly behind a small spoon has fooled some of the more cautious fish. For perch, 5–8 cm soft plastics in motor‑oil, green pumpkin, or yellow with a red tail on 5–10 g jig heads have been reliable. On the bait side, where you’re allowed to fish bait, small live or dead baitfish like sprat or small herring, fished under a float in harbor areas and deeper piers, have taken both perch and the odd bonus sea trout. Check local regs carefully though; many stretches are lure‑only and have strict sea trout rules, so know your slot sizes, closed areas, and mandatory release zones. Two hotspots to keep an eye on: First, the Blekinge skärgård around Karlskrona. The maze of skerries, shallow plateaus, and deeper slots has been producing consistent pike, plus occasional sea trout cruising the outer edges. Focus on wind‑hit points with 0.5–2.5 m depth, casting parallel to the reed lines and rocky outcrops. When the wind picks up, step out onto exposed islets and work spoons across the current seams. Second, the Stockholm outer archipelago edges toward Nämdö and Runmarö. Clearer water here means you may need longer leaders and more subtle colors. Sea trout have been patrolling broken rock and sparse weed in 1–3 m, especially where there’s a hint of current. Early morning, fan‑cast spoons and coastal wobblers across points that drop into 5–8 m. As the sun climbs, shift to shadowed sides of islands and deeper lanes. If you’re shore‑bound, don’t overlook piers and small harbors along the east coast—Gävle down through Nyköping. Perch and smaller pike have been stacking on the outside edge Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  18. 18

    Baltic Spring Pike and Perch: Late Evening Hot Bite in Swedish Archipelagos

    This is Artificial Lure with your Baltic Coast fishing report for the Swedish shoreline around the Östergötland and Stockholm archipelagos, covering the late evening and night period around 22:00 local time. We’re under a stable late‑spring pattern: along much of the central Baltic coast, winds have been light to moderate from the southeast, around 3–7 m/s earlier, easing overnight. Air temps have been sitting near 14–17°C in the evening, dropping toward 10°C by dawn. The sky’s been partly cloudy with good breaks, and barometric pressure has been gently rising—always a nice sign for predator activity. This stretch of the Baltic is basically non‑tidal, with only weak seiche and wind‑driven level changes, so you don’t get the big tide swings you’d see in the North Sea. Instead, pay attention to wind direction: tonight’s gentle SE has been pushing bait toward leeward shorelines, small bays, and the inner side of the skerries. Sunset along the east coast of Sweden was just before 21:20, and sunrise will creep in just after 04:00, so we’ve got a long, dim twilight. That dusk window from about 20:30 to 23:00 has been the prime bite, with a second flurry expected around first light. Recent reports from local tackle shops in Norrköping and the Stockholm archipelago point to strong spring pike fishing in the 2–6 kg class, with a few fish over 8 kg coming from shallow reed bays and rocky points close to spawning bays. Perch have been schooling on points and drop‑offs in 2–5 meters, with lots of 200–500 gram fish and the occasional kilo‑class “bonus” stripey. Sea trout catches have been more hit‑or‑miss, but a handful of 45–55 cm fish have been taken off current‑washed points and outer reefs on cloudy days. Fish activity this evening favored pike and perch. The stabilizing pressure and light wind set up classic conditions: pike sliding just off the shallows as the light faded, and perch pushing baitfish up on the edges. Sea trout stayed picky in the clearer water, with better odds where you had some chop and colour. Best lures lately: for pike, slow‑rolled softbaits in natural roach or perch patterns, 15–23 cm, rigged shallow over 1–2 meters, and mid‑sized jerkbaits with long pauses over weed edges. A lot of locals are doing well with green‑gold or copper flash in the evening light. For perch, 5–9 cm paddle‑tails or curly tails on 7–14 g jig heads in motor‑oil, black‑and‑gold, or plain white, plus 8–12 g spinners. For sea trout, slim 18–25 g coast‑spoons in silver, blue‑silver, or olive‑back, retrieved fairly fast with short stops. If you prefer bait, pike are taking deadbait like herring or small mackerel fished under a float just outside the reeds, while perch respond well to small livebaits or worm pieces on light paternoster rigs along the edges of weedbeds and piers. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: First, the outer edges of Bråviken near Arkösund: focus on the rocky points leading out toward the open Baltic and the mouths of shallow bays. Work big softbaits for pike at dusk, then switch to jigs for perch once you mark schools on the sounder. Second, the mid‑archipelago zone east of Värmdö in the Stockholm area: look for wind‑blown coves and reefs in 2–5 meters with scattered boulders. Sea trout on the more exposed sides if you’ve got some chop, and pike and perch tucked just inside where the bait is stacking up. Tonight and into the early morning, keep your presentations slow and deliberate—let those lures hang around the strike zone. With the long twilight and mild temps, there’s a real chance of connecting with a better‑class pike or a fat perch before the sun climbs again. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports and tactics. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Tune in to the "Sweden, Baltic Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the unique brackish waters of the Baltic Sea. 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 Sweden's Baltic Coast's unique ecosystem—where freshwater giants like record pike and perch meet marine species like salmon, sea trout, and garfish—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.comGet all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

HOSTED BY

Inception Point AI

Produced by Quiet. Please

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Tune in to the "Sweden, Baltic Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the unique brackish waters of the Baltic Sea. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the...

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