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Tokyo Bay, Japan Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Tokyo Bay, Japan Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from this premier urban fishery blending high-rise cityscapes with world-class saltwater angling. 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 Tokyo Bay's unique ecosystem of seasonal migrations, trophy Japanese seabass, and diverse game fish, 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. 33

    Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Sea Bass on the Afternoon Push

    This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’re on a classic early-summer pattern around the bay now. According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, today brought warm, humid weather with highs in the upper 20s Celsius, light south to southeast winds, and only a slight chop in the inner bay. Skies have been partly cloudy, with good visibility and just enough breeze to keep it comfortable on the water. Sunrise was around 4:25 a.m., with sunset near 6:55 p.m., giving a long daylight window. Local tide tables for Tokyo Bay show a typical semi‑diurnal cycle: a predawn high, dropping to a late‑morning low, then flooding again through the afternoon into evening. The stronger current on the afternoon push has really been the key bite window, especially along channel edges and structure lines. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Sea bass – our beloved “suzuki” – have been the main story. Boats working the shipping channels and bridge pylons report steady numbers of school-size fish with the occasional 60–70 cm model mixed in. Shore anglers along the piers have been pulling a few each on the nighttime and first-light tides, especially where there’s light and current intersecting. Flounder and hirame are still around sandy flats near river mouths, though not red‑hot; a handful of keepers have come from anglers slow-rolling soft plastics on the bottom. Around rocky areas and breakwalls, small rockfish and scorpionfish are biting consistently, great targets for light tackle in the evening. For lures, it’s hard to beat small metal vibrations and minnows in natural bait colors. Locals have been doing well with 10–20 g vibration plugs in silver or sardine patterns worked along the bottom in the channels. Slim sinking minnows and shallow divers in clear or slightly stained water are getting reaction bites on the current seams. When the wind drops and the light is low, topwater pencils and poppers are drawing explosive strikes around the bridge shadows. If you prefer bait, try fresh sardine strips or small live bait on a simple running rig for sea bass and flounder. For rockfish, bits of shrimp or squid on a small jig head or sabiki-style setup are very effective, especially around submerged structure at night. Two hot spots to keep on your radar right now: • The **Tokyo Gate Bridge area** – Work the pylons and nearby drop-offs during the incoming tide. Drift along the current lines with vibration lures or jig heads and you’ll find roaming sea bass. • The **Yokohama Bay area, especially around Daikoku Pier and surrounding structures** – Shore and boat anglers are connecting with sea bass and bottom fish here, particularly on the evening flood when bait stacks up around the lights and pilings. Timing is everything: aim for the start of the incoming or the last of the outgoing tide, and fish the edges of current where bait naturally collects. Keep your tackle light but strong, and be ready for sudden, boat-wake chop from ship traffic. That’s it from Artificial Lure today. 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

  2. 32

    Tokyo Bay Early Summer Bite: Sea Bass, Structure, and the Flood Tide Advantage

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’re on a building moon phase with decent tide movement today. JMA tide tables for Tokyo Bay show a solid morning high followed by a good afternoon push, so water’s been moving nicely around channel edges and river mouths. That moving water has really helped the bite, especially between the first of the flood and just before peak high. Weather‑wise, the Kanto forecast has us under early‑summer conditions: warm, humid air, light south to southeast breeze, and relatively stable barometric pressure. Cloud cover has been mixed, with some high overcast—perfect for keeping fish comfortable in the shallows a bit longer. According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, winds have mostly stayed under 10 knots, which has kept the bay manageable for both small boats and shore anglers. Sunrise this morning was just after 4:25 a.m., with sunset near 6:55 p.m., typical early‑June daylight. That gives you long low‑light windows; the best action has lined up around first light and the last hour before dark, especially where current meets structure. Fishing has been lively. Local charter captains out of Yokohama and Urayasu have reported steady **sea bass (suzuki)** in the 40–60 cm class, with the odd 70‑plus fish for crews working hard along bridge pylons and ship channels. Tokyo Bay light‑game boats have also been getting into **chiba‑mebaru (rockfish)** and **kurodai (black sea bream)** along riprap and tetrapods, especially when the tide is pushing bait tight to the wall. Shore anglers on the Tokyo side, particularly around the Arakawa and Edogawa river mouths, have picked up **small flounder (hirame)**, **kisu (Japanese whiting)**, and school‑size sea bass on days with cleaner water. Yokohama piers and the Daikoku area have seen mixed bags: horse mackerel (aji) at night, some sardine schools rolling through, and occasional mackerel when the bait tightens up. Lure choice has mattered. Boat and wading anglers are doing well on: - **10–14 cm minnow plugs** in natural baitfish colors—silver, clear, or sardine patterns—for sea bass along bridges and shipping lanes. - **Vibration baits and metal vibes** bounced near the bottom on the channel edges for fish holding deep in the daytime. - **Soft plastic shads** on 10–20 g jig heads around river mouths; white, chartreuse, or clear with silver flake have been standout colors in the slightly stained bay water. For bait fishing, local tackle shops report: - **Aji and small mackerel** responding to sabiki rigs tipped with a small piece of shrimp or fish skin around lighted piers at night. - **Kisu** taking **ragworm (ise‑ebi type worms / isome)** on light bottom rigs along sandy stretches near the Futtsu side and the inner bay sandbars. - **Kurodai** showing up on crab and shell baits pitched tight to structure during the slower parts of the tide. A couple of current hot spots: - **Yokohama Bay Bridge and Honmoku area**: Great current lines, lots of bait, and classic structure. Early‑morning boat anglers working minnow plugs along the pilings and breakwaters have been doing very well on sea bass when the tide starts running. At night, the bridge lights pull in bait and make for consistent aji and sea bass action. - **Arakawa river mouth / Kasai side**: On the flood, slightly cooler, nutrient‑rich water pushes in and piles baitfish along the color change. Waders throwing small minnows and soft plastics across the seams have picked up sea bass and the occasional flounder. On the slack, bait anglers with worms and small pieces of shrimp are finding kisu and smaller bottom fish. If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan your session around that moving water: hit the start of the flood at dawn or ride the evening push into sunset. Keep your lure sizes modest, match the local baitfish, and don’t be afraid to fish right up against concrete and steel—Tokyo Bay fish love structure. 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

  3. 31

    Tokyo Bay Seabass: Vibes and Minnows on the Evening Tide Push

    This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. We’re on a gentle post‑front pattern around the bay today. Japan Meteorological Agency data shows light south to southeast winds 4–7 m/s, air temps sitting in the low 20s Celsius, and mostly cloudy skies with a few sunny breaks. Sunrise was just before 4:30 a.m., sunset just after 6:50 p.m., so we’ve got long light and nice, extended low‑light windows. According to the Japan Coast Guard tide tables for Tokyo Wan, we’re on a moderate tidal swing today, not a huge spring tide but enough current to move bait. The stronger pushes are in the early morning and again toward evening. The mid‑day slack has been predictably slow, but once the water starts moving, the bite has picked up fast, especially along channel edges and structure. Recent boat and shore reports from local Tokyo Bay charter captains and tackle shops around Yokohama, Kawasaki, and Urayasu all say the same thing: seabass are still the main attraction. Most days you can expect good numbers of school‑size fish in the 40–60 cm range, with a few 70‑plus mixed in when the current and bait line up. There’s also been a steady by‑catch of small chinu and kisu on lighter rigs, and some decent tachiuo showing on night runs out toward the offshore edges when the water stays clear. Best lures lately have been compact **vibes** and **minnows** that get down quickly in current. Locals are leaning on 7–12 cm metal vibes in silver, chart back, or pink when the sun is up, then switching to shallow‑running minnows and soft plastics once the light drops. At night around the bridges, small sinking pencils and 9–11 cm minnows in pearl or clear with a bit of glow have been deadly when twitched slowly across the current seam. For bait anglers, fresh **saba** strips and small **aji** have outfished frozen offerings. Around piers and rock edges, **ragworm** and **isome** on light bottom rigs are producing kisu and small rockfish. If you’re soaking bait for bigger seabass, keep it just off the bottom along the drop‑offs; the better fish are hugging that first break where the current hits. Two hot spots to keep on your radar: • The **Yokohama Bay Bridge and Honmoku** area: plenty of structure, strong current lines, and consistent seabass action. Work the bridge shadows at night with small minnows and pencils, and the deeper edges with vibes during the day. • The **Edogawa river mouth and Urayasu side of the bay**: when the tide is moving, bait stacks up here and so do the seabass. Shore anglers can do well with small metal jigs and soft plastics, especially on the evening push when the wind lays down. Overall fish activity has been best in the early morning and late afternoon into night, right when the current and low light overlap. Mid‑day has been tougher, so if you’re locked into those hours, go smaller and slower, and target deeper structure or shaded water. That’s the Tokyo Bay report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide and tackle rundown. 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. 30

    Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Chase the Tide for Bass and Bream

    This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. Around Tokyo Bay today we’ve had early summer patterns settling in: warm, humid air, light south to southeast breeze, and mostly stable barometric pressure. Coastal stations around Yokohama and Chiba are showing air temps in the mid‑20s Celsius this afternoon, dipping into the high teens overnight. Skies have been mixed clouds and sun with a few passing showers inland, but visibility on the bay itself has stayed good. Tides today are classic bay-style: a solid morning high, dropping to a mid‑day low, then filling again toward evening. On this kind of day, the last two hours of the falling tide and the first push of the flood have been the most productive. The moving water has lined fish up along channel edges, breakwalls, and river mouths. Sunrise came just after 4:25 a.m., with sunset around 6:50 p.m., so we’re in that long-day window where the best bites are tight to low light. The first light window saw the strongest action, and there’s another good shot lining up from late afternoon into dusk as that evening tide starts climbing. Fish activity has been solid for early June. Tokyo Bay charter captains and local anglers are reporting good numbers of: - **Sea bass (suzuki)**: Still the main target. Lots of school-size fish with the occasional 60–70 cm class mixed in. Night harbor games picked up around lighted structures, and daytime fish are holding along rock piles and current seams. - **Black sea bream (kurodai)**: Steady along tetrapods and inner-bay structures, especially where there’s some algae growth and shell on the bottom. - **Mackerel and horse mackerel (aji)**: Small to medium schools moving in and out of piers and inner bay channels, especially when the tide is pushing clean water past the structure. - **Flounder (hirame) and flathead (ma-gochi)**: Not huge numbers, but enough to stay interesting along sandy drop-offs and river mouths when the water’s a bit stained. Lure-wise, the usual Tokyo Bay staples are doing work. For sea bass, 9–12 cm minnow plugs in natural baitfish colors, small metal vibes, and 20–30 g metal jigs are producing. Soft plastics on 10–20 g jigheads, especially paddle tails, have been deadly when you slow-roll them along the bottom in the channels. At night, switching to black or dark silhouettes around bridge lights has triggered some better fish. For bait anglers, shrimp and sandworms are hard to beat. Kurodai are eating crab baits and clams fished tight to structure, while aji and mackerel are coming on small sabiki rigs tipped with a bit of shrimp or isome. If the water gets a little murky after showers, scented soft baits and fresh-cut strips have an edge. Two hot spots to keep an eye on: - **Yokohama Bay area**: Around the piers, breakwalls, and the inner harbor structures. Sea bass have been stacking up where the current sweeps past pilings, and aji schools are sliding through in the evening. Work minnow plugs and vibes along the current edges, then downsize and go vertical when you mark bait. - **Tokyo side around the Arakawa and Edogawa river mouths**: On the dropping tide, bait gets flushed out and sea bass and flathead sit along the channels waiting. Cast soft plastics or small metals slightly up-current and let them swing down, tapping bottom as you go. Overall, it’s a good time to be on Tokyo Bay: comfortable temps, plenty of daylight, and fish that are willing if you time your tides and chase that low-light window. 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. 29

    Tokyo Bay Early Summer: Sea Bass and Bream on the Evening Tide

    This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Tokyo Bay report. We’re sitting on a solid early‑summer pattern now. According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, today’s weather around Tokyo Bay has been mostly clear to partly cloudy, light south to southeast winds around 3–6 m/s, and daytime highs in the mid‑20s Celsius. Humidity is up, but not brutal yet—good conditions to stay out a bit longer. Sunrise this morning was just before 4:30, with sunset a little after 18:50, giving us a long window to play with the tides. Tide tables from the Japan Coast Guard for Tokyo Bay show a stronger incoming in the late afternoon into evening, with slack around midday. That evening push has been lining up nicely with the low‑light bite. Fish activity has picked up nicely the last few days. Local tackle shops around Urayasu and Yokohama have been reporting consistent **Suzuki (sea bass)** catches, along with **chinu and kurodai (black sea bream)** around structures, and scattered **aji (horse mackerel)** and **sabiki‑size sardines** under lights at night. Offshore boats inside the bay mouth are still finding **tachiuo (cutlassfish)** deeper when the light drops, plus some **small madai (red sea bream)** on the edges. For sea bass, the most productive lures have been: - **Small to mid‑size minnows** and shallow‑runner plugs in sardine or kibinago patterns, 9–12 cm. - **Vibration baits and metal vibes** worked along the bottom around the shipping channels. - **Soft plastics on 10–20 g jig heads** around bridge pilings and lighted areas after dark. Locals have been doing well with slow, steady retrieves just under the surface during the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing. At night, switching to darker silhouettes—black or dark purple—has been key around the piers. For bream, docks and rock edges have been producing on: - **Crab and shrimp‑style soft plastics** on light Texas or cheb rigs. - **Bottom‑bouncing jig heads** tipped with small worms or gulp‑style baits. Bait anglers soaking **clam, peeled shrimp, or worms** on simple running rigs are still putting good numbers in the bucket, especially around slower current. Aji and small sardines have been piling up under lights. Sabiki rigs with small pieces of shrimp or just bare, glow‑style sabiki flies are enough. Light game anglers are having fun with: - **1–3 g micro jigs** - Tiny soft plastics on **jig heads** under a float or straight‑retrieve As for hot spots, a couple stand out right now: - **Odaiba / Rainbow Bridge area**: The bridge legs, ferry piers, and surrounding seawalls are holding sea bass on the tide changes. Try casting minnows and vibes across the current seams and letting them swing. After dark, work the shadow lines under the bridge. - **Yokohama Bay Area (Yamashita Park to Honmoku)**: Sea walls, harbor structures, and the piers are giving up sea bass and bream. Evening incoming tide with a light southeast wind has been excellent. Toss soft plastics tight to structure and crawl them back. If you’re on the Chiba side, the Urayasu river mouths and canal entrances have been quietly delivering school‑size sea bass on small plugs at dawn and dusk, especially when the water is moving hard. Best windows today: one to two hours before and after the stronger tides—late afternoon into evening is your prime shot. Keep an eye on wind shifts; if it goes too strong onshore, duck into the inner canals and fish the lee side walls. That’s it from Artificial Lure for 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

  6. 28

    Tokyo Bay Spring Tide Evening Bite: Suzuki, Flounder, and Chinu Fire Up

    This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. A humid south wind has rolled up the bay this afternoon, with air temps sitting around the low to mid‑20s and a light haze over the water. According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, clouds are thickening with a chance of showers later, but winds are mostly gentle out of the south to southeast, keeping the bay very fishable. Sunrise was just after 4:30 a.m., sunset just before 6:45 p.m., giving us a long, bright day on the water. The Tokyo Wan Kanko information shows a classic spring tide cycle this week: a solid high tide mid‑morning, dropping to low early afternoon, and a second push toward evening. That late‑afternoon flood is the money window right now. When that incoming tide lines up with the fading light, the bait stacks along the edges and everything with fins wakes up. Sea bass—our beloved suzuki—have been the main story. Several local charter captains out of Kachidoki and Ichihara reported steady numbers of schoolies in the 40–60 cm range, with the odd 70‑up mixed in. Boats working the lighted pillars of the Tokyo Gate Bridge last night picked off a dozen or more fish per boat once the tide started ripping, mostly on small metal vibes and 9–12 cm minnows in sardine and pink back patterns. Around the Aqualine and the man‑made islands off Kawasaki, anglers throwing half‑ounce jigheads with 3‑inch soft plastics in clear silver or pearl have been connecting with flounder and some nice kisu. The bites aren’t red‑hot, but patient drifters are putting a few fish in the cooler—two to five flatties a session is common right now, with the better ones running around 40 cm. Chinu (black sea bream) are waking up along the rock walls and tetrapods. Local bait shops along the Urayasu waterfront report customers doing well on crab and peeled shrimp fished tight to structure. Late afternoon on the rising tide, the float rigs are going down regularly; expect a handful of fish per angler, many just under 40 cm with the occasional bruiser. Best lures today: – For suzuki: 7–10 cm sinking minnows, slim vibration baits, and 20–30 g metal jigs. Go natural—iwashi, anchovy, or clear with a bit of chart tail in the stained water. – For flounder and kisu: 1/2 oz jigheads with small paddle‑tails, and simple sabiki rigs tipped with tiny bits of shrimp. – For chinu luring: small cranks and creature baits in dark colors crawled along the bottom during low‑light periods. Top baits: live or freshly dead sardine strips for sea bass, shrimp and crab for bream, and worms for kisu. Local shops in Funabashi and Yokohama say they’ve been selling out of good‑quality shrimp by midday, so plan ahead. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: First, the Tokyo Gate Bridge area. Work the shadow lines of the bridge and the nearby shipping buoys on the evening flood. Cast your minnows upcurrent, let them swing down and twitch them through the seam—bites often come right where the light fades into darkness. Second, the west side of Tokyo Bay near Yokohama’s Daikoku Pier and the surrounding breakwaters. The mix of current, structure, and city lights pulls in bait and predators alike after sunset. Perfect territory for hopping vibes and jigs along the bottom for sea bass and the occasional chinu. Timing is everything today: focus on that incoming tide from late afternoon into early night, when the bay comes alive and the boat traffic eases off. The water’s warm, the bait’s moving, and Tokyo Bay is in that sweet late‑spring pattern where one good tide change can turn a quiet drift into a session to remember. 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

  7. 27

    Tokyo Bay Spring Tide: Sea Bass and Flounder on the Move

    This is Artificial Lure with your Tokyo Bay fishing report. Tokyo Bay woke up to an easy-going spring pattern today. Sunrise came in around 4:35 a.m., sunset close to 6:45 p.m., giving us a long daylight window but the real action has been tied to the tide. The Kannonzaki and Yokohama tide tables show a moderate semi‑diurnal cycle today: decent morning flood, slack late morning, then another push in the late afternoon into evening. That late incoming has been the sweet spot for most anglers. Weather along the bay stayed early‑summer mild: low 20s Celsius at daybreak, creeping into the mid‑20s under broken clouds, with a light south to southeast breeze. The wind put a little chop on the surface but nothing nasty, and water temps in the inner bay are sitting around 18–19°C, a touch cooler and clearer toward the mouth near Futtsu and Kannonzaki. Fish activity has reflected that mix. Sea bass—our beloved suzuki—have been cruising the current edges and structure whenever the tide moves. Boats working the pilings off Odaiba and the Tokyo Gate Bridge reported solid numbers of school‑size fish with a few 60–70 cm mixed in. Anglers throwing small metal vibration lures and 9–11 cm minnow plugs in natural baitfish colors got the most hits, especially when they slowed the retrieve just enough to tick the current seams. In the shallow flats around Haneda and the Kawasaki side, folks drifting soft plastics on 10–14 g jig heads picked up a steady pick of flounder and the odd karei. Nothing huge overall, but enough keepers to keep rods bending. Squid and small sardine strips on simple bottom rigs also did well for those fishing from piers and sea walls. Around the central bay reefs and artificial structures, anglers targeting rockfish and small grouper did nicely on creature‑bait soft plastics and short, fat metal jigs hopped along bottom. The bite came in bursts right as the tide turned; outside those windows it went quiet fast. Bait-wise, live or fresh iwashi and aji have been the top producers for both boat and shore, especially when fished on light leaders and small hooks. For lures, think compact: 14–21 g metal vibrations, slim minnow plugs, and 3–4 inch soft plastics in clear, silver, or slight chartreuse. Topwater hasn’t really turned on yet except in the very calm pockets at first light; a few lucky anglers did tease sea bass up with small pencil baits along shadow lines. Two hotspots to circle on your chart: First, the Tokyo Gate Bridge area. The bridge pillars and nearby dredge holes are holding bait, and where the bait stacks, suzuki are right behind. Work the down‑current sides during the last half of the flood and first of the ebb with sinking minnows and vibrations. Second, the Yokohama Bay Bridge to Honmoku Wharf stretch. The shipping channels and breakwaters there have been producing mixed bags: sea bass, small tachiuo, and occasional chinu. Shore anglers soaking bait at night along accessible sea walls picked up some decent fish when the boat traffic settled down. Overall, it’s a classic transition‑season day on Tokyo Bay: nothing insane, but plenty of opportunities if you time the tides, fish light, and match those small baitfish the predators are keyed in on. 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

  8. 26

    Tokyo Bay Early Summer Heat: Black Sea Bream and Jacks Firing

    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in Tokyo Bay. It's May 4th, 2026, 2 PM local time, and we're lovin' this early summer vibe out here. Weather's cooperatin' nice—partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' around 22°C with light winds from the southeast at 5-10 knots, per Japan Meteorological Agency updates. Perfect for a day on the water, no sweat. Sunrise was at 4:48 AM, sunset's comin' at 6:37 PM, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of light to chase bites. Tides today? High at 10:17 AM reachin' 1.4 meters, low at 4:42 PM droppin' to 0.2 meters, accordin' to Tokyo Bay tide charts from the Japan Coast Guard. Fishin' the incomin' tide 'til now has been prime—currents stirrin' up the baitfish. Action's heatin' up with black sea bream and Japanese jack mackerel goin' strong. Locals report hauls of 10-20 bream per boat yesterday near the bay mouth, plus limits on mackerel schools crashin' the surface. Whoppin' Japanese sea bass hittin' too—some up to 5kg caught trollin' edges. Sardines and horse mackerel are thick, drawin' predators in. Best lures? Go with **minnow plugs** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow in sardine pattern for bass—jerk 'em slow on the drop. For bream, tiny **jigs** (20-40g) with soft plastics in pink or chartreuse. Live bait? Small shrimp or bloodworms on sabiki rigs for mackerel; ebi (prawns) rule for bream. Hot spots: Hit **Uranouchi Inlet** off Kanagawa for bass ambushin' drop-offs, or **Yokosuka Harbor** where mackerel are ballin' up—anchor and chum it up. Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines! Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for more reports! 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.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Tune in to the "Tokyo Bay, Japan Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from this premier urban fishery blending high-rise cityscapes with world-class saltwater angling. 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 Tokyo Bay's unique ecosystem of seasonal migrations, trophy Japanese seabass, and diverse game fish, 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

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Tune in to the "Tokyo Bay, Japan Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from this premier urban fishery blending high-rise cityscapes with world-class saltwater angling. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast...

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