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United Kingdom, South Coast Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "United Kingdom, South Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the English Channel's renowned coastal waters stretching from Dorset to Kent. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the South Coast's unique ecosystem—home to over 300 sea fish species including bass, cod, rays, and wrasse—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. 38

    South Coast Spring Tides: Bass, Mackerel and Plaice Action from Solent to Swanage

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing rundown. We’ll start with the tide: along the Solent and Dorset stretch we’ve got a decent set of springy tides rolling through tonight and into tomorrow, with low water around first light and a healthy push of flood through the morning. That flood over banks and reef edges is switching the fish on nicely, especially around headlands and harbour mouths. Weather-wise, it’s classic changeable English fare: light to moderate south‑westerlies, mostly settled with broken cloud and the odd clearer spell. Air temps are mild, sea temps hovering in the mid‑teens, enough to keep bass and mackerel active close in. Sunrise is around twenty past four, sunset just after nine, so you’ve got long, lazy evenings and a short, sharp dawn window. Fish activity’s been lively in patches. Local charter skippers out of Brighton and Portsmouth have reported mackerel shoals in good numbers a mile or two off, with slivers of feather rigs coming back full most drifts when the sounder’s lit up. Inshore, schoolie bass are showing along surf beaches and around piers, with the odd better fish nudging the 5–6 lb mark. From Weymouth round to Swanage there’ve been plaice and dabs on the cleaner ground, plus dogfish keeping the rods nodding after dark. The wrecks further off are still producing pollack and ling for the boats willing to steam. On lures, think natural and subtle in the clear water. Small **silver or blue metal jigs**, 20–40 g, are doing the business for mackerel and schoolie bass when worked fast through mid‑water. Soft plastics in the 4–5 inch range – **white, sandeel or motor‑oil shads** on 7–14 g jig heads – are deadly along reefy edges and in the current lines. Around pier lights at dusk, tiny **white paddle‑tails** and **slim minnow plugs** are tempting bass and the odd garfish. If you’re fishing bait, fresh is king. **Ragworm and lugworm** are scoring for plaice, dabs and general mixed bags on two‑ or three‑hook flappers, especially on the last of the flood and first of the ebb. For bass, a **peeler crab** or a neat **mackerel fillet** fished just behind the surf line is hard to beat. Mackerel strips and squid cocktails are pulling in rays and dogs from the slightly rougher ground. Couple of hotspots to consider: First, **Chesil Beach** – classic shingle, deep water close, and with these tides you’ve a real shot at mixed bags of mackerel, gurnard, rays and the ever‑present dogfish, especially into the evening on a flooding tide. Second, the **Brighton Marina area** – both the walls and nearby inshore ground are worth a go, with mackerel, bass and occasional bream showing when the tide’s running and the water has a bit of colour. Work the tide, keep an eye on the wind, and don’t be afraid to move if the mark feels lifeless – right now, the fish are there if you go looking and keep changing tactics. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates 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

  2. 37

    South Coast Summer Bass: Settled Weather, Lively Tides, and Consistent Action from Dorset to Sussex

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. On the Channel side from Dorset through Hampshire to Sussex, we’ve had a run of settled high‑pressure weather: light north‑westerlies easing through the day, mostly dry, with broken cloud and good visibility. Air temps are sitting low teens at dawn, pushing up towards high teens by late afternoon. Sunrise is just after 4:40 a.m. with sunset around 9:20 p.m., giving a long, bright fishing window. Tides along the central South Coast are on the bigger side, with a lively flood pushing in mid‑morning and again late evening, and plenty of movement over the banks and in the harbour mouths. The stronger parts of the flood and the first of the ebb have been the key bite times, especially for predators. Inshore, bass fishing has perked up nicely. Local charter skippers out of Brighton and Shoreham report consistent schoolies with a fair few fish nudging the 4–6 lb mark coming off the rough ground and in the surf lines. Weymouth boats have also seen mixed bags of bass, pollack, and the odd codling from the inshore wrecks. Shore anglers working evening tides along Chesil and the shingle marks in Sussex have picked up bass, smoothhounds, and plenty of dogfish. Flatfish action has been steady rather than spectacular. Plaice are still showing on clean sand marks off Hayling and Bracklesham, with smaller fish common and the odd better plate‑sized one mixed in. Bream fishing over inshore reefs off Selsey and the Isle of Wight has been good, with some tidy double‑figure bags on the right tides. For lures, bass are falling to **white or silver sandeel‑style soft plastics**, slim paddle tails, and 20–30 g metal jigs worked fairly briskly through the mid‑water in that pushing tide. In clearer water, natural baitfish colours and subtle presentations are doing best; when it colours up, a bit of chartreuse or pink is turning lookers into takers. Surface plugs and walk‑the‑dog stickbaits are worth a go at first light over shallow reefs and surfy beaches. For bait, **lugworm and ragworm** still top the list for general clean‑ground work, with peeler crab a must if you’re targeting bass and smoothhounds along the surf beaches. Fresh mackerel strip or squid cocktail is doing the business for rays and dogfish, and small squid or worm baits are accounting for plaice and bream. A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on: - **Chesil Beach (Dorset)** – Especially the Portland end into the evening flood. Good chance of bass in the surf, smoothhounds and rays further out, plus the usual dogfish and pout. Keep mobile, look for colour lines and working gulls. - **Selsey to Bracklesham (West Sussex)** – The banks and gullies here have produced bass, bream, and rays on both bait and lures. Work the flooding tide along the channels, and don’t ignore the last light surface activity close in. If you’re heading out, fish the stronger parts of the tide, keep an eye on the wind against tide making it choppy over shallows, and pack both lures and bait to stay flexible. 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. 36

    South Coast Spring Tides: Bass, Mackerel and Perfect Evening Light

    Evening folks, Artificial Lure here with your South Coast fishing report. We’re on the back end of a waxing gibbous moon and the tides have been pushing hard along the Channel. Down Portsmouth and Solent way it’s been classic big spring water: proper flooding late afternoon, then a lively ebb running into the dark. Over Brighton, Shoreham and along to Newhaven, the evening high has been stacking bait tight to the beaches, especially around piers and harbour mouths. Around Poole and Christchurch Harbour, that same push has been pulling baitfish over the bars and onto the flats. Weather-wise it’s been settled but fresh, with a westerly breeze putting a gentle chop on open marks and a bit more shelter inside the harbours. Air temps are mild, sea temps running in the mid-teens, enough to keep the bass and mackerel switched on. Skies have been broken cloud with some clear spells, giving those magic low-light windows at first and last light. Sunrise has been early, with usable light in the 4-ish hour, and sunset late, keeping the evening session going well into the night. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Along the Sussex beaches there’ve been steady schoolie bass with the odd better fish nudging a few pounds, plus mixed bags of plaice, flounder and dabs for the bait anglers. Night tides have seen dogfish and the occasional small smoothhound nosing in. Off the piers, mackerel shoals have been showing in flurries rather than all-out mayhem, but when they’re in you can fill a bucket quickly on small metals or feathers. In the Solent and around Hayling and Selsey, bass have been the main talking point: plenty of fish mid-40s cm with a few proper lumps for those working artificials over rough ground and gutter lines. Wrasse have been active over the reefs and rockier marks, smashing soft plastics fished tight to structure. Poole Bay and Christchurch have produced some nice rays and smoothhounds on crab and squid cocktails, with school bass picking up smaller baits. Best lures right now: small to mid-size metal jigs and slim shore spoons for mackerel and schoolie bass; 4–5 inch paddle-tail and straight-tail soft plastics in natural baitfish colours for working surf gutters and harbour entrances; and weedless, slightly weighted soft plastics for probing rough and snaggy ground. On the bait front, ragworm and lug are still top choices for general beach work, with peeler crab, squid and mackerel strip doing the damage for rays, hounds and better bass. Couple of hotspots to keep in mind: Brighton Marina walls have been producing mackerel, garfish and bass on both bait and lures when the water colours up just right; and around Langstone and Chichester Harbour entrances, the flooding tide into dusk has been very kind to lure anglers targeting bass along the channels and sandbars. Further west, Hengistbury Head into Christchurch Bay continues to throw up mixed bags of rays, bass and flatfish for those willing to move and locate the fish. That’s your South Coast round-up 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. 35

    South Coast Summer: Tides, Light and Steady Action from Portland to Brighton

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. We’ve got a classic settled summer pattern running along the Channel. Light west to south‑westerly breeze most of the day, picking up a touch in the afternoon, then easing off into the evening. Skies are a mix of bright spells and cloud, with only the odd light shower hinted at by the inshore forecasts. Air temps are sitting comfortably in the mid‑teens to around 18–19°C; sea temps nudging 15–17°C inshore, just warm enough to get the baitfish and predators on the move. Tides today are on the making side of mid‑range springs. Expect a decent push, especially around headlands and harbour mouths, so plan your sessions around the top and bottom of the tide if you’re boat or kayak, and that last two hours of the flood and first of the ebb if you’re on the rocks or beaches. First light comes in the very early hours, with proper sunrise soon after, and sunset late evening, leaving a long, fishy dusk that’s been the prime window all week. Reports from local charter skippers and marina gossip up and down the South Coast have been positive. Out of Weymouth and Portland, boats are seeing steady bream, gurnard, a few huss and the odd tope on the banks, with mackerel shoals finally starting to show more consistently. Brighton and Shoreham boats have had mixed bags of bass, smoothhound and rays over the inshore banks, plus plenty of pout and dogfish on the rougher ground. Further west, out of Poole and the Solent, smoothhounds and rays are keeping anglers busy, with some decent bream on the ledges and inshore reefs. From the shore, the night and low‑light sessions are out‑fishing the bright middle of the day. Beach anglers are picking up schoolies and the odd better bass in the surf, plus dogfish, small rays and the first proper run of mackerel and scad once the light drops. LRF anglers working harbours and marina walls are finding wrasse, pollack, scorpion fish and plenty of small schoolies tight to structure. Bait‑wise, ragworm is still king on the South Coast: threaded on size 2–1 hooks for bream, wrasse and general scratching; bigger bunches for bass and hounds. Peeler crab and hardback are doing the damage on smoothhound, with squid and bluey cocktails excellent for rays. Mackerel strip remains the go‑to for dogs and general bits, and whole joey mackerel or launce are tempting better bass and tope from the boats. For lures, keep it simple. Small metal jigs and slim spinners in the 20–40 g range are perfect for mackerel and schoolie bass off piers and rock marks. Soft plastics on 7–14 g jigheads fished close to the bottom are picking up wrasse and pollack around rough ground and harbour walls; natural baitfish and sand‑eel colours are working best in the clearer water. On the open beaches in a bit of surf, white or silver paddle‑tails and surface walkers fished at dawn and dusk are finding the more active bass. A couple of hotspots to put on your list: First, the rock and reef ground around Portland Bill. Fished on a flooding tide with ragworm and crab, it’s producing wrasse, bream and bass, and on settled evenings it’s a cracking spot for plugging and soft‑plastics for bass and pollack. Second, the beaches and piers around Brighton and Shoreham. The piers are throwing up mackerel, pout and schoolie bass to both bait and lures, while the beaches produce rays, hounds and bass after dark on crab and fish baits, especially around the bigger tides. In short, it’s very much a case of fish the tides, fish the light, and match your tackle to the ground. Keep mobile, keep your rigs simple, and you’ll find fish. 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

  5. 34

    South Coast Spring: Bass Biting, Tides Firing, Light Hours Golden

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. Along the Hampshire, Dorset and Sussex stretch it’s been a settled, early‑summer pattern: light to moderate south‑westerlies most of the day, easing in the evenings, with decent clarity inshore except where the wind’s pushed a bit of colour into the surf beaches. Daytime temps have been mild, cooling off nicely after sunset. Sunrise is around the very early hours, with sunset late evening, giving you long, workable dawn and dusk windows. Tides along the central Channel are on a steady set of springs: big pushes, plenty of run over the banks and reefy ground. Over most of the south coast you’re looking at mid‑morning and late‑evening highs, with lively flood tides giving the best bite. Slack water has been predictably quiet; the hour either side of the tide turning is where it’s at. Bass have woken up properly. Shore lads around Hayling, Selsey and Brighton’s rockier marks are reporting schoolies with the odd better fish up into the 5–6 lb bracket. The night tides have been the pick, especially where there’s a bit of surf and baitfish showing. Soft‑plastics in natural baitfish colours, small surface walkers at first light, and simple 3"–5" paddle tails on light jig heads have all been doing damage. For bait, peeler crab, fresh lug and whole sandeel are the stand‑outs. Plaice and dabs are still showing across the shingle and clean sand – think Christchurch Bay, Bracklesham and the wider Solent. Two‑ and three‑hook flappers baited with rag, lug and a bit of coloured bead are turning up mixed bags, mostly hand‑sized fish with the odd better plate‑sized plaice when the tide’s not tearing. Further offshore and on the deeper marks, charter skippers out of Poole, Lymington and Brighton have been finding smoothhounds, rays and the odd tope. Smoothies are really on the crabs now: whole peeler or hardbacks doing the trick. Thornbacks and small‑eyes are coming to fish baits – mackerel, squid and bluey. Where there’s proper tide, keep rigs simple: pulley pennels, strong hooks, nothing fancy. Speaking of mackerel, they’re starting to show in more consistent numbers. Piers and headlands like Brighton Marina, South Parade Pier and the outer harbour walls have seen small shoals push through on the bigger tides. Standard feathers, sabiki rigs or a small silver jig worked mid‑water are enough when they’re in. Lure anglers after wrasse and pollack have had joy around Portland, Swanage and the rough ground near Selsey. Weedless soft‑plastics, small metal jigs and slim minnow plugs worked tight to structure are the way to go. Expect plenty of smaller fish with the chance of a better wrasse if you fish close and patient. A couple of hot spots to put on your list right now: – The eastern side of **Selsey Bill**, fishing the flooding tide into darkness for bass and rays. – **Brighton Marina** walls, especially on a pushing evening tide, for mackerel, bass mooching under the wall, and mixed bottom species. In short, work the tides, favour low light, travel light with a mix of crab, worm and fish baits, and always have a small selection of naturallooking soft‑plastics and a topwater or two in the bag. The fish are there if you time it right. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local 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

  6. 33

    South Coast Bass & Hounds Firing on Evening Tides – Sussex & Dorset Report

    This is Artificial Lure with your South Coast UK fishing report. We’ve just come off the back of the evening tides and it’s been a decent spell for both shore and boat anglers from Dorset round to Sussex. I’ll keep it local and straight. Along much of the Channel coast the evening tide has been a **falling tide through dusk**, with a decent bit of run – exactly what you want for bass and rays in the surf. Light north‑westerlies easing off have kept the sea reasonably calm, with a gentle chop on the open beaches. Skies have been mostly clear to broken cloud, cool after dark, and that bit of clarity has given good water visibility in the bays but still enough colour off the surf beaches for confidence. Sunset’s been just after **9 pm** with first light creeping in well before **5 am**, so your prime windows right now are: - Last two hours of the flood into dusk. - First light through the top of the morning tide. **Fish activity and recent catches** From reports on local charter pages and tackle shops along the coast: - **Bass**: Good numbers of schoolies with the odd better fish to 6–7 lb from the Sussex and Hampshire surf beaches and harbour mouths. Peeler crab and fresh lug have been the standouts. After dark, small paddle‑tail shads and shallow‑diving minnows have picked off fish in the first gutter. - **Plaice & bream**: Out on the banks off Brighton, Selsey and the eastern Isle of Wight, boats have seen steady plaice to around 2–3 lb with black lug and rag tipped with squid. Black bream showing well over rough ground and inshore reefs, plenty of fish in the 1–3 lb bracket. - **Smoothhounds**: The hounds are well in across the Solent and down towards Sussex. Crab baits fished in the tide on pulley rigs are taking double‑figure fish; several local boats and pier regulars have reported multiple hound sessions on evening tides. - **Rays & conger**: Small‑eyed and thornback rays from the Bristol Channel–facing marks further west and also from some Hampshire and Dorset banks. Mackerel, squid or bluey on a simple up‑and‑over is doing the trick. Conger still very active after dark on the reefs and pier piles. - **Mackerel**: Sporadic but improving shoals close in when the light’s low. Feathers at first and last light are your best bet. **Best lures and bait right now** - For **bass**: - Lures: 4–5 inch white or natural‑coloured paddle‑tail shads, surface walkers for the calm spells at first light, and slim diving plugs around the harbour mouths. - Bait: Peeler crab, fresh lugworm, whole sandeel or mackerel strip in the surf. - For **hounds and rays**: - Peeler crab is king for smoothhounds. - Squid, bluey or mackerel fillet for rays and conger. - For **plaice and bream**: - Ragworm or black lug, small hooks, light gear, beads and blades for plaice. - Rag and squid cocktail or strips of squid for bream over rough ground. **Couple of current hot spots** - **Bracklesham & East Wittering (West Sussex)**: Surf beaches producing bass in the evening surf and smoothhounds once it’s properly dark, especially around the bigger tides. Fish close in; don’t blast it to France. - **Chesil Beach (Dorset)**: Still the banker. Mixed bags of bream, rays, dogfish and the chance of a decent bass, with mackerel showing on the deeper stretches. Evening and dawn sessions on a moving tide are giving the best returns. If you’re heading out, keep an eye on local harbour notices and inshore forecasts, and fish the tide changes – that’s when it’s happening. Thanks for tuning in, this is Artificial Lure signing off. 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

  7. 32

    South Coast Fishing Report: Spring Neaps, Stable Weather, and Prime Bass Conditions

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report, covering the stretch from Dorset round to Sussex. We’re sat on small neap tides now, so tidal run is gentler than it’s been all week. Expect lows mid‑morning and late evening, with highs pushing early afternoon and just after midnight on most of the Hampshire and Sussex marks. That softer flow is ideal for working lures in close and presenting baits neatly on the beaches and in the harbours. Weather’s been settled: light to moderate westerlies, a calm to slight sea for most inshore spots, and just a bit of onshore ripple on the open beaches. Skies are a mix of broken cloud and clear spells, with a cool, fresh feel overnight and a comfortable, bright daytime. Sunrise is around twenty‑past four, with sunset near nine‑thirty in the evening, giving you a long window for those prime low‑light bite times at dawn and dusk. Fish activity has perked up nicely with the stable conditions. Bass have been the main draw along the surf beaches and rougher ground marks. There’ve been good numbers of schoolies with the odd better fish over 5 lb coming from the shingle and sand‑to‑rock transitions. Night tides and first light have produced the better stamp, especially where you’ve got baitfish and a bit of fizz in the waves. Plaice fishing on the cleaner sand has been steady rather than frantic, with a few decent-sized fish showing to blinged‑up rigs tipped with worm and a strip of squid. Bream are moving in on the inshore reefs and rough ground, giving good sport on lighter tackle when the tide eases. A few rays have shown from the deeper beaches and in the Solent channels, mostly small‑eyed and thornback, with the odd better fish sneaking in on fresh fish baits. Best lures for bass right now are slim minnows and surface walkers in natural sandeel and silver patterns. Soft plastics on weedless hooks are working well over the rough ground and kelpy gullies – think pale, translucent shads and paddletails in the 4–5 inch range. When the light’s low or the water’s a bit coloured, something with a touch of chartreuse or a darker silhouette can turn lookers into takers. For bait anglers, ragworm and lugworm are still hard to beat on the beaches and in the estuaries, especially for plaice, flounder, and school bass. Fresh mackerel strips, squid, and sandeel are doing the damage for rays and better bass. In the harbours and marinas, small bits of rag or maddies on light gear are picking up mini species and the odd surprise bream or wrasse around structure. A couple of hotspots to have on your radar: First, **Chesil Beach**, particularly the Portland end. Work the surf line at first light with surface lures for bass, then switch to bait for plaice and the chance of a ray as the sun gets up. Keep mobile, looking for any colour lines and shoals of fry. Second, **Pagham and the Bognor area** in West Sussex. On a flooding evening tide with a bit of surf, bass patrol close in, and there’s always the chance of a ray or a better fish if you put in the time with fresh bait. Fish light and keep your casts short; the fish often run right under your feet. Closer to the Solent, inshore reefs off Hayling and Selsey are worth a look for bream and bass from boat or kayak, especially as the tide eases at either end of the flow. That’s your South Coast round‑up 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

  8. 31

    South Coast Spring Bass and Mackerel: Tide Times and Lure Tactics for June

    I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing rundown. On the Channel side from Dorset round to Kent, we’re sitting under a settled early‑summer pattern: light to moderate west–southwesterlies, mostly dry, air temps in the mid‑teens Celsius, and sea temps hovering around 14–16°C. According to the Met Office coastal outlook, that means comfortable conditions and decent water clarity in the more sheltered bays. Tides along the central Channel—think Portsmouth, Brighton, Eastbourne—are on a **springy** side of mid‑range right now, with a good push of water on the flood and a sharp ebb. Highs are falling in the late afternoon to early evening window, which lines up nicely with the prime feeding spell. Local harbour boards are showing roughly 4.5–5.5 m ranges depending where you are, so expect a bit of tide run over banks and reefs. Sunrise across the South Coast is just after 4:40 a.m., with sunset around 9:15 p.m., giving you a long, lazy day but the real action has been stacked in the low‑light slots. First light and that last 90 minutes before dark have been the money periods. Catch reports from shore and small boats this week have been encouraging. Charter skippers out of Weymouth and Brighton have been seeing consistent **bream**, **pollack**, and mixed **wrasse** over the rough ground, with plenty of school **bass** showing on inshore banks. Pier and beach anglers from Bournemouth through to Shoreham are picking up **mackerel** on the evening tides, with scattered **garfish**, plus the odd better **ray** and **cong** from the deeper marks. Kent’s open beaches have turned up **dogfish**, **smoothhound pups**, and a sprinkling of **sole** on the smaller night tides. Fish activity is very tide‑led: the flood is key, especially the middle third when the tide is really rolling. Bass and mackerel are pushing bait tight to structure—harbour mouths, pier ends, and any rough patches off the sand. Over slack water things quieten noticeably, then fire back up as the ebb starts. For lures, keep it simple and match what’s in the water. Slim **metal jigs and small feathers** are still the quickest way to find mackerel from piers and headlands. For bass, **white or sandeel‑coloured soft plastics** on 10–20 g jigheads are outfishing most other options, especially fished slow and low along the current edge. Surface plugs—pencil poppers and walk‑the‑dog styles—are starting to score in the evening chop where there’s a bit of breeze over shallow reef. If you’re bait fishing, fresh is king. **Ragworm** and **lugworm** are picking up bream, wrasse, and general bits from rough ground. **Peeler crab** or good crab cocktail baits are tempting the better bass and smoothhounds. For rays and conger, step up to **mackerel, squid, or bluey** on heavier gear after dark from the deeper rock and pier marks. Two hot spots to keep in mind: - **Chesil Beach, Dorset** – Classic early‑summer form: mackerel and gars on the day tides, with bream and the chance of rays as the light drops. Watch the swell and don’t push your luck in any onshore blow. - **Brighton Marina walls, Sussex** – Producing mackerel, bass, and wrasse on a mix of lures and bait. Work the corners and any visible tide lines, especially around the top of the flood into dusk. Closer to the Solent, shallow banks and harbour mouths—Langstone, Chichester, and the approaches to Portsmouth—are all worth a go for schoolies on small soft plastics, particularly when that flood tide pushes bait over the edges. That’s your South Coast round‑up 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

  9. 30

    South Coast Fishing Report: Bass, Mackerel and Mid-Range Tides

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. Along the English Channel tonight we’ve got a fairly settled run of weather. Light to moderate westerlies easing through the night, sea state generally slight to a low chop in the open stretches, with air temps hovering in the mid-teens Celsius. Skies are broken cloud with the odd clear spell, so you’ll get some decent stars between patches of overcast. Sunrise along the South Coast is roughly just after 4:40 in the morning, with sunset just before 9:20 in the evening, give or take a few minutes depending where you are between Dorset and Kent. Tides on this cycle are around the mid‑range, not full springs but with enough movement to get things feeding on the flood and early ebb. That first push of the flood after low water is where most of the action has been, especially around harbour mouths and rough ground. Slack water has been predictably quiet except for the odd dogfish and pout picking at static baits. Bass have been the main talking point all week. Plenty of schoolies with the odd better fish into the 5–7 lb bracket reported from surf beaches and rocky headlands. Peeler crab and fresh lug have done the damage for bait anglers, with surface and shallow‑running hard plastics working well at first light. A simple white or sandeel‑pattern soft plastic on a light jig head has been deadly over the rough stuff when the tide eases. Mackerel shoals are patchy but when they show, they’re thick. Anglers feathering from piers and breakwaters have been finding small flurries rather than all‑day sport, so be ready to move. Standard day‑glo feathers, sabikis and small metal jigs in the 20–40 g range are all producing. Mixed in with the mackerel are scad and the odd garfish, especially around dusk under the pier lights. On the cleaner ground, rays are still about. Small‑eyed and thornbacks have been taken on sandeel and bluey cocktail baits fished at range. Night tides have been best, with bites often bunched into short, busy spells an hour either side of the top of the tide. Dogfish remain ever‑present, so bring plenty of bait if you’re fishing static from the beach. Wrasse are very active along the rockier marks and harbour walls. Ragworm is still the top natural bait, but soft plastic creature baits and small paddle tails fished Texas‑rig style are producing some cracking fish for lure anglers tight into the kelp and boulder fields. If you’re looking for a couple of current hot spots, keep an eye on: • The Brighton to Shoreham stretch: bass on the early flood, mackerel and scad from the piers when the shoals push in, plus the odd ray for the bait soakers after dark. • The Portland to Chesil section: classic surf‑bass conditions when there’s a bit of lift on the water, along with mixed bags of mackerel, plaice and rays from the shingle where the tide runs hardest. Best all‑round lure choices right now: white or natural sandeel‑style soft plastics, small silver metals, and a couple of surface walkers for those calm dawn sessions. For bait, you can’t go wrong with fresh lug, rag, peeler crab if you can get it, and a few packs of sandeel or mackerel strip for rays and general scratching. That’s it from me 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

  10. 29

    South Coast Fishing Report: Bass Rising, Tides Running Strong

    Artificial Lure here with your South Coast fishing report. On the English Channel today the barometer’s steady and the weather’s fairly settled: light to moderate westerlies, cooler air pushing through after recent warmth, with a mix of cloud and brighter spells. Along much of the Dorset and Hampshire stretch you’re looking at 12–16°C through the morning, nudging up later with clearer skies and a bit of chop on open beaches. Further east towards Sussex and Kent, winds ease slightly but there’s still just enough ripple to keep predators hunting close in. Sunrise came early over the Solent around twenty past four, with sunset heading for just after nine this evening, giving a decent window for low‑light sessions at dawn and dusk. Those shoulder hours are fishing best: the water’s come alive then, especially on the flooding tide. Tides along the South Coast are on a decent mid‑range cycle right now, neither tiny nor spring‑big, which suits lure work. Around Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight you’ve got strong but manageable flow over the banks and reefs; in Lyme Bay and around Portland Bill that tide races hard over structure, kicking baitfish up into the water column. Plan to fish the last two hours of the flood and first of the ebb for most inshore marks, and the very top of the tide inside harbours and estuaries. Bass activity has picked up nicely. Local charter skippers from Chichester and Hayling report schoolies in good numbers with the odd 4–6lb fish off rough ground and surf beaches. Shore lads on the Brighton and Seaford stretches have been picking bass from the shingle in the evening surf, mostly on lures. Pollack and wrasse are showing on the Dorset rock marks, particularly around Portland and the Purbeck coast, with mackerel shoals starting to push tight in whenever the light drops and the tide runs. Recent catches have been mixed but encouraging: plenty of school bass, mackerel in ones and twos from piers and headlands, some tidy wrasse to 3lb on the rough stuff, and a few rays and smoothhounds for those soaking baits on the sandier Hampshire and Sussex beaches. Inside the harbours, school bass and flounder are keeping light‑tackle anglers busy. For lures, keep it simple. Slim white or olive **soft plastics** on a light jig head are doing damage for bass around structure and current seams. Smaller **surface walkers** and **pencils** are working at dawn over shallow reefs and surf tables; when the sun gets up, switch to **sub‑surface minnows** or paddletails. Pollack and wrasse are taking **weedless soft plastics** in darker colours bounced close to the rocks. For mackerel, small **metal jigs** or **feathers** still rule – cast long, let them sink, and work them back through the water. If you’re bait‑fishing, fresh **ragworm and lugworm** are top for bass, flatties, and general scratching on the beaches and harbour walls. **Peeler crab** is dynamite for better bass and smoothhounds where you can get it. A strip of fresh **mackerel** or **sandeel** on a simple running ledger will pick up rays and hounds over clean ground, and will still tempt a passing bass. A couple of hot spots to think about: - The **Solent and surrounding marks** – places like Hayling, Hill Head, and the deeper channels off Gilkicker – are fishing well for school bass, rays, and hounds on the making tide, with good lure sport over the rough patches and along the harbour mouths. - The **Portland and Purbeck coast** in Dorset – working lures around the rock ledges and tide runs is turning up bass, wrasse, and pollack, especially where the tide funnels hard over broken ground. Fish safely, watch that swell on exposed rock marks, and keep an eye on the tide behind you. 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

  11. 28

    South Coast Summer Bass: Small Neaps and Perfect Conditions from Portsmouth to Brighton

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report for tonight. We’ve got small neaps running along much of the south shore. Around Portsmouth and the Solent, the last of the flood has been pushing through late evening with a gentler ebb after dark, making it easier to present baits cleanly in the tide runs. Over toward Brighton and Newhaven, that softer tide is lining up nicely with the low just after dark, giving good windows for bass tight in on the shingle edges and around pier structures. Weather along the Channel has been settled, with light to moderate south‑westerlies and a lingering swell under half a metre on the more sheltered stretches. Skies have been partly cloudy, good visibility, and barometric pressure holding fairly steady – all in all, classic summer conditions. Sunrise has been early, just after four‑thirty, and sunset well after nine, so you’re working with long crepuscular periods – ideal for lure work at first and last light. Water clarity has improved since the last blow; where the wind has stayed under the headlands, the sea’s gone a nice green‑brown rather than chocolate. That’s switched the fish back on. Charter skippers out of Brighton Marina and Eastbourne have reported steady catches of bream on the inshore rough ground, with mixed plaice and dabs on the cleaner patches. Weymouth and Poole boats have been into plenty of mackerel and scad on feathers just offshore, with a few summer tope showing to those soaking bigger baits over the banks. Inshore, shore anglers around Hayling, Langstone, and the Chichester Harbour entrances have seen a decent run of schoolie bass with the odd better fish nudging 6–7 lb. Folk drifting or wading with weedless paddletails and white or sandeel‑pattern soft plastics have done well over the last of the flood and first of the ebb. Night tides have produced smoothhounds from Brighton westward through Shoreham and down to Selsey, particularly where crab bait is getting well presented in the gutter channels. Best baits right now: peeler crab is king for hounds and better bass, with fresh lug and rag doing the damage for flats and general scratching. Frozen mackerel strip is picking up rays and the odd dogfish on the mixed ground. On the lure side, slim metal jigs and small surface walkers at dawn and dusk are deadly around bait showers, while 4–5 inch soft shads in natural or olive backs are working along rock arms and groynes. Couple of hot spots to put on the list: First, the stretch between Brighton Marina and Rottingdean – fish the flooding tide at dawn for bass on lures in the first surf line, then switch to bait for bream and plaice as the sun climbs. Second, the entrance channels around Hayling Island and the outer reaches of Chichester Harbour – work the turns of the tide with soft plastics for bass, then drop fresh crab baits into the deeper runs after dark for smoothhounds. That’s it from me, 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

  12. 27

    South Coast Summer Fishing: Bass Bites and Light Lures from Dawn to Dusk

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. Down the Channel today we’ve got a fairly settled early‑summer pattern: light to moderate south‑westerlies, generally 8–14 knots, with broken cloud and clear spells. Air temps are sitting in the mid‑teens, feeling cooler on the breeze. Most inshore marks have a slight chop but plenty of clean water between Portland and Beachy Head. High pressure close by is keeping things steady, so nothing too lumpy unless you’re well offshore. Along much of the South Coast, sunrise is just after 4:50 a.m., sunset around 9:15 p.m. That gives a long low‑light window, and it’s been the key. Most of the better bags have come first light through mid‑flood, then again into dusk on the ebb. Tides on the Channel side are running neaps to middling, so not raging, but enough push to set up nice current lines around headlands, pier piles, and reef edges. The softer tide has helped the lure anglers: more time in the strike zone and less lead needed. Bass and pollack have pushed right in tight where there’s bait pinned against structure. Speaking of fish activity, bass are the main story from Poole across to Selsey and on toward Brighton. Plenty of schoolies with a sprinkling of 4–6 lb fish, and the odd better one if you put the hours in. Shore lads on the open beaches are seeing flurries of fish rather than all‑day action, usually around the top of the flood in that first hour of daylight. Gurnard, dogs, and the odd ray are making up the numbers for bait anglers on the sandbanks and into Lyme Bay. Off the stones and rough ground you’ve got wrasse waking up properly now, with good sport on light gear in clear water. Offshore charter boats out of Weymouth, Brighton, and Eastbourne have been into mixed bags: pollack on the wrecks, a few codling still hanging about, plus ling and plenty of pouting. Some nice turbot and brill reported from the banks off Dorset, but you’ve got to commit a full day and be ready to move around. Lure choice: early and late, small **paddle‑tail shads** in natural baitfish patterns and slim **metal jigs** have been killing it on the bass and pollack. White, silver, and sand‑eel greens are the go‑to colours. For surface action on calm patches, walk‑the‑dog style topwaters and small poppers are turning follows into takes, especially over shallow reefs and around estuary mouths. When they get fussy, switching to a **weightless soft plastic** or a lightly‑weighted weedless sand‑eel has saved the blank more than once. If you’re soaking bait, the classics are still doing the business. For bass, **fresh peeler crab**, whole or flapper mackerel, and big lug or rag cocktail baits have all produced fish. For rays and hounds, crab and squid on a pulley rig, fished just beyond the first rough, are worth a chuck once the light drops. Wrasse are all over hardback crabs and big ragworm right in under the rocks. A couple of hot spots to think about: • **Chesil Beach, Dorset** – Especially the Portland end on a flooding tide at dawn. Bass, mackerel starting to show, plus the usual dogs and rays. Lure anglers working close in, just beyond the first breaker, have been doing well with small shads. • **Brighton Marina walls, East Sussex** – Great for mixed bags and a real favourite with locals. Pollack and bass on lures tight to the structure, plus bream and wrasse on bait around the rough patches. Handy access, but gets busy, so mind your casting etiquette. Closer inshore, any rough ground with a bit of tide – ledges near Selsey Bill, reefy patches off Bournemouth and Swanage, or the rockier corners around Newhaven and Seaford – will reward a stealthy approach and light gear. Fish the change of light, keep mobile, and match the hatch: small baitfish and sandeels are the main menu, so keep your lures slim and subtle. That’s it from me, Artificial Lure, for this South Coast session. 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. 26

    South Coast Springs: Bass Bites and Mackerel Flurries from Sussex to Dorset

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. Down along the English Channel it’s been a fairly settled spell: light to moderate westerlies, seas slight to moderate, and a mostly dry, bright pattern between passing cloud bands. Air temps are sitting mid‑teens by day, cooler at night. Sunrise on the South Coast is around twenty‑to‑five past four in the morning, with sunset not long after nine‑twenty in the evening, giving you a long, workable window at first and last light. The tide today is running on a decent set of springs. Around Portsmouth and the Solent, high water falls early morning with the next high late afternoon; similar timing along to Brighton and Eastbourne, shifting slightly as you move west towards Poole and Weymouth. Overfalls on the ebb have been lively, but the slack around the top of the flood has produced the best bites for many. Bass have been the headline. Plenty of schoolies with the odd better fish to 5–6 lb reported from surf beaches and rock marks between Selsey and Brighton, as well as around structure in the Solent and Poole Harbour. The bait boys have done well on fresh lugworm, rag, and peeler crab, with mackerel or squid strips picking out the slightly larger fish. Lure anglers are finding success on white or sandeel‑pattern soft plastics, 20–30 g metals, and shallow‑diving minnows worked just as the light goes. Speaking of mackerel, the shoals have been pushing in and out with the clearer water. Piers at Brighton, Worthing, and Bournemouth have seen flurries of fish on small feathers and sabikis, mostly at first light and on the flooding tide. A few scad mixed in after dark. Where the baitfish are thickest, gannet and tern activity has been a good giveaway, and bass have been under them. Further offshore and on the deeper rough ground, boats out of Weymouth, Poole, and Brighton have been getting a mix of codling, pollack, smoothhound, and rays. Smoothhounds have shown well in the eastern Solent and off Sussex banks on crab baits, with fish well into double figures. Thornback rays are taking sandeel and bluey on clean sand patches. Plaice remain on the banks, though they’re a bit fussy in the brighter part of the day; small beads and spoons above lug or rag baits are still worth a go. For lure choice, if you’re targeting bass from the shore, have a couple of 5–6 inch sandeel‑style soft plastics in natural and olive, a small white surface walker for those calm dawns, and a few 20–30 g silver or green metals for covering water from piers and rock marks. Bait anglers should stick with the classics: fresh lug and rag on two‑hook flappers for general surf work, and peeler crab or squid wraps when you’re sorting out the better fish or rays. Two hotspots to consider: First, the Selsey to Pagham stretch. The mix of shingle, sand bars, and tide run has produced bass, smoothhound, and rays on evening floods, especially where the banks form gutters close in. Fish your baits just behind the breakers, and keep mobile until you find feeding fish. Second, the Brighton area – both the marina walls and nearby beaches. The marina has turned up bass, mackerel, and the odd bream and wrasse on small baits and lures, while the open beaches east and west have given schoolie bass and the occasional better fish at dusk and dawn. That’s your South Coast round‑up 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

  14. 25

    South Coast Evening Session: Bass on the Tide Turn

    Good evening, this is **Artificial Lure** with your South Coast fishing report for the United Kingdom. For tonight’s session, the **tide** is the big player along the South Coast: wherever the flood is pushing bait tight to the tide lines, that’s where you want your casts. On a working tide, the best action is usually the last of the ebb into the first of the flood, with gull activity and nervous baitfish telling the story before the rod does. The **weather** is typical early-summer South Coast fare: a decent evening often means light winds, a settled sea state, and enough cloud cover to keep the water from getting too bright. That kind of low-light window can be ideal for dawn and dusk, especially around rough ground, harbour mouths, and any patch where the current pinches through. For **sunrise and sunset**, you’ll want to focus on the first light bite and the last half-hour before dark. Those edges of the day are prime time for bass, pollack, and mackerel when they’re in feeding mode, and they’re often the difference between a quiet cast and a bent rod. Recent local signs point to **bass** being the headline species, with **mackerel** showing on the hunt and the odd **pollack**, **wrasse**, and **schoolie cod** possible in the right water. When the bait is thick, bass will often shadow it close in, and mackerel can suddenly tear through a mark with little warning. A good evening session can produce a handful of fish rather than big numbers, but the right tide window can stack the odds. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and local: a white or sand-eel style soft plastic, a slim metal lure for mackerel, and a shallow-diving hard lure if you’re covering weed edges or points. If the water’s coloured, go a bit brighter; if it’s clear, natural baitfish tones usually win. A slow, steady retrieve with the occasional twitch is often enough when bass are tracking prey in the surf. For **bait**, nothing beats fresh local offerings. **Lugworm** is still a classic for bass and flatfish, **mackerel strip** is deadly for scent, and **ragworm** can save the day when fish are finicky. If you’re fishing mixed ground, a baited pennell rig with a well-presented strip bait can be the most consistent option. A couple of **hot spots** worth checking are the **outer harbour mouths** where the tide funnels bait, and the **rocky points or shingle fringes** where deeper water sits close to shore. South-facing beaches with nearby gullies can also produce well on the turn of the tide, especially if there’s bird activity or bait flicking on the surface. If you’re out tonight, work the tide, watch the birds, and keep moving until you find life. Thank you for tuning in, and please **subscribe** for more local fishing reports. 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. 24

    South Coast Evening Rundown: Bass, Bream and Mackerel in Prime Summer Conditions

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from the South Coast with your evening fishing rundown. On the Channel side it’s been a classic early‑summer pattern: light to moderate south‑westerlies, generally settled, with air temps hovering in the mid‑teens Celsius along most of Dorset, Hampshire and West Sussex. Cloud has been in and out, but enough clear breaks to keep the water just coloured rather than chocolate. The inshore sea temp is sitting around 14–16°C, which has really switched the summer species on. Tides along the central South Coast are on decent springs right now, with a good push either side of the middle of the day and again late evening. Over high water, the harbours and estuary mouths have been livelier, while the bigger surf species have preferred the last of the flood and first of the ebb into darkness. Low water has fished slower on the open beaches unless you’re tight to the features. Sunrise has been very early, with first light creeping in before most alarms go off, and sunset late enough to give you a solid evening session straight after work. Dawn and dusk have easily been the top feeding windows, especially the hour either side of them. Bass reports have been strong all week from Brighton west through Selsey, Hayling, the Solent marks and into Dorset. Plenty of schoolies with enough fish in the 3–6 lb bracket to keep things interesting. Most of the better fish have come to **surface lures and shallow divers** worked over reefy ground and along shingle drop‑offs at first light, plus **paddle‑tail soft plastics** drifted through the tide at estuary mouths after dark. For bait anglers, **fresh lugworm, ragworm, and peeler crab** have been the standouts, with mackerel or squid strip picking up bonus fish. Bream are well in over the inshore rough ground and around the reef marks off Sussex and the Isle of Wight. Small **black or two‑hook paternosters** baited with **squid strips or small bits of prawn** have found good numbers, with the odd better specimen mixed in. Plaice and dabs are still turning up over the banks off Hayling and along the sandier stretches towards Bracklesham on **blinged flatfish rigs with rag or lug**. Mackerel shoals have been patchy but improving. When they’ve pushed within range, standard **silver feathers, small Sabiki rigs, and 20–40 g metals** have filled a bucket fast, especially on the flooding tide into the evening. Keep an eye on working birds; when they bunch up tight, you’re in with a shout. For those fishing lures from shore, top producers right now: - **Topwater walkers and poppers** for bass over shallow reef and rough ground. - **White, pearl, or sandeel‑coloured soft plastics** on light jig heads or weedless hooks for working channels and gulleys. - **Slim metal jigs** when the mackerel show or for prospecting deeper rock marks. Baitwise, if you’re only bringing a small selection, I’d pack **lug, rag, and fresh mackerel**. Add peeler crab if you can get it; it’s been deadly on better bass and wrasse. Couple of current hotspots to put on your list: - **Chesil Beach**: schoolie bass, mackerel when they move in, plus a mix of bream and rays after dark on fish and squid baits. - **Selsey to Bracklesham stretch**: bass on both bait and lures along the shingle and into the surf, with bream and the odd smoothhound showing on crab. That’s the South Coast picture for tonight 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

  16. 23

    South Coast Summer Bass: Light Winds, Medium Springs, and Prime Evening Fishing

    Name’s Artificial Lure here, checking in with your South Coast fishing round‑up. Along the English Channel today the weather’s fairly typical changeable summer stuff: light to moderate south‑westerlies across much of Dorset, Hampshire and Sussex, easing a bit by late afternoon, with broken cloud, good visibility and only the odd shower threat further west. Air temps are mild, creeping into the high teens on the coast. Barometer’s fairly steady, which usually keeps things ticking over rather than explosive, but the breeze will put a bit of life on the water that bass anglers like. Tides along the central South Coast are on medium springs. Expect a decent push on the flood, particularly around headlands and harbour mouths. First light has been coming just after 4:30 in the morning, with sunrise not long after; sunset is just after 9 in the evening, and you’ve got that nice extended gloaming that so often produces the better fish. Aim for the hour either side of high water at dawn or dusk if you can swing it. Inshore, bass have been the main story. Anglers from Poole Bay through the Solent and along to Selsey have been finding schoolies in numbers, with the odd better fish into the mid‑50s centimetres. There have also been reports of mackerel shoals close in on the clearer days, along with scad and a few garfish, which is always a good sign of life. On the rougher mixed ground, dogfish and pout are ever‑present, with a sprinkling of small rays and the odd huss for those soaking bigger baits. Lure work is doing the business for bass. Slim soft plastics in natural baitfish colours, 4–6 inches, fished weightless or on light jig heads, have been consistent around shallow reefs and rock fringes. Topwaters and small subsurface stickbaits are worth a go in the chop when the wind puts a bit of fizz on the surface. If you’re bait fishing, peeler crab is still king on many marks, with ragworm and fresh mackerel strips taking plenty of fish. For rays and huss, step up to squid or mackerel cocktail on a strong pulley rig. Water clarity has been a bit hit and miss depending on how exposed your mark is. The more sheltered Solent marks and the lee sides of headlands are holding the clearer water; that’s where the lures are really shining. Where it colours up, switch to darker or more solid silhouettes, or revert to crab and worm baits. Couple of hot spots to consider: first, the area around Selsey Bill and the adjacent beaches. The tide run here is strong, but the banks and gullies throw up bass, smoothhounds and rays when you time it right, especially on the flooding tide into dusk. Second, the reefy ground and ledges around Portland and the approaches to Weymouth Bay, where early‑morning lure sessions have produced bass and wrasse, with mackerel shoals pushing bait tight to shore when the light’s low. Harbour walls at Portsmouth, Langstone and Poole are also worth a roam with a light lure rod in the evenings for schoolie bass, pollack and mackerel. Keep mobile, cover water, and match the hatch – small baitfish patterns when you see fry dimpling, or a simple metal spoon if you’re prospecting. That’s your South Coast fix 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

  17. 22

    South Coast Springs: Bass, Rays and Early Summer Conditions

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. Down along the English Channel it’s been a settled, early‑summer pattern: light to moderate westerlies, a bit more breeze in the afternoon, and generally good visibility. Air temps are sitting mid‑teens to low‑20s, with only the odd shower sliding through. Sunrise is around ten past four in the morning, with sunset just before nine thirty in the evening, giving a long, fishable day with proper low‑light windows at dawn and dusk. Tides along the central South Coast are running on a decent set of springs right now, with lively flows through the main channels and around headlands. Expect strong pushes on the flood over sandbanks and into the harbours, easing back nicely towards the top. The bigger water has really kicked the inshore life into gear. Bass fishing has picked up well. Shore lads have been finding schoolies with the odd better fish off shingle marks and reefy ground, especially on the flooding tide into darkness. Small metal lures, white or sandeel‑pattern soft plastics, and surface walkers at first light are all doing damage. Where there’s bait—sandeels, sprats, or whitebait—you’re in with a shout. On the bait front, ragworm and lug tipped with a sliver of squid are working for mixed bags from the beaches: pout, dogfish, small smoothhounds and the occasional better ray. Peeler crab, if you can get it, is still the top offering for smoothhounds and a decent bass close in. After dark, whole squid or bluey on a pulley rig chucked just beyond the first gully has turned up a few thornies and small conger. From the boats, inshore wrecks and rough ground are producing codling, pollack and more bass on shads, pirks and sidewinder‑style lures worked mid‑water. Feathering for mackerel is starting to become more consistent; when you find them, you’ll often see garfish and scad mixed in, which is always a good sign for predator action. A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on: • Around the Needles and the adjacent banks: fast tide runs, plenty of structure, and good reports of bass and pollack on lures, plus rays on the sandier edges with fish baits. • The stretch from Shoreham through Brighton and on towards Peacehaven: mixed rough ground and gullies that have been turning up bass, rays, and summer species on both worm and fish baits, especially on the evening flood. Harbour mouths and channel entrances—Portsmouth, Langstone, Chichester—are also worth a go at first light with small soft plastics for schoolie bass riding the tide. Keep rigs simple, match lure size to the baitfish you’re seeing, and time your sessions around that first push of the flood or the last of the ebb. That’s when most of the better bites have been coming. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s South Coast report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next one. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  18. 21

    South Coast Fishing Report: Bass, Mackerel and Smoothhound – Mid-Range Tides and Dawn Bite

    I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with your South Coast fishing report. We’ll start with conditions. Along the Dorset, Hampshire and Sussex stretch, we’re sitting under a light south‑westerly air flow tonight rolling into a fairly settled morning, with patchy cloud and a bit of haze along the water. Daytime highs are hovering mid‑teens to just over 18°C in the afternoon, with a gentle onshore breeze, stronger around exposed headlands. Barometer is steady, which usually keeps the fish on a predictable pattern. Overnight temps are cool enough that a light jacket on the pier won’t go amiss. Sunrise on the Channel coast is around ten to five in the morning, with sunset just before nine thirty in the evening, giving a long, workable tide window either side of dawn and dusk. Low light remains the prime time; you’ll notice the bass and mackerel pushing bait tight in against structure when the light’s off the water. Tides are on a mid‑range set, neither big springs nor tiny neaps, so current is useful without being brutal. Expect a decent flood through the morning, making the first couple of hours of the incoming and the first of the ebb the pick for lure work from shore. Rock marks and harbour mouths will see a nice push of water – perfect for working baits naturally with the flow. Recently, reports up and down the South Coast have been consistent. Schoolie and mid‑size bass are showing off the surf beaches from Bournemouth across to Christchurch, with the odd better fish nudging the 6–7 lb mark. The piers at Brighton, Worthing and South Parade have seen steady mackerel on small metals and feathers when the shoals push in, plus a mix of scad and herring after dark. Bream numbers are building on the inshore reefs off Selsey, the Isle of Wight side banks, and Portland direction, with anglers picking up bags of plate‑size fish on small baits. Smoothhounds are moving for crab along the shingle of Hayling and Pagham, with a fair few double‑figure fish reported on evening tides. Plaice and the odd sole continue to come from the cleaner sand patches out of Langstone and Chichester harbours. Lure choice: for bass, keep it simple. Slim white or sandeel‑coloured soft plastics on 7–14 g jig heads, or weightless weedless setups over rough ground. Surface lures – small pencil poppers and walk‑the‑dog styles – are worth a go at first light over shallow surf or reef. For mackerel and scad from piers, 15–30 g silver or chrome metals and standard feather rigs in mackerel or blue patterns will do the job; just match the size to the bait you see flicking. Around rock marks, small 7–10 cm shads in natural baitfish colours will pick up pollack, wrasse and bonus bass. Best bait right now: fresh or frozen peeler crab is top ticket for smoothhound and better bass. Ragworm and lugworm are still the staple for plaice, bream and general scratching rigs on the sand. For bream over rougher ground, strips of squid or small sections of prawn presented on size 4–6 hooks are producing tidy bags. Mackerel strip remains a reliable all‑rounder for rays and bigger predators on heavier gear. Couple of hotspots to consider: First, the Christchurch and Hengistbury stretch – work the groynes and harbour mouth on the flooding tide at dawn with soft plastics for bass, and you’ve got a real shout at a better fish if the bait is present. Second, the Selsey to Bracklesham shingle and banks – ideal for evening sessions targeting smoothhound on crab, with bream and rays as welcome by‑catch if you spread your baits at different ranges. Tactically, keep mobile. If you’re not seeing life – no birds, no fry, no follows – move marks rather than grinding it out. Scale down leaders in clear water, and fish as light as the conditions allow; the South Coast fish see plenty of gear, so a bit of finesse goes a long way. 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

  19. 20

    South Coast Late May: Bass, Mackerel and Prime Tide Windows

    Evening folks, Artificial Lure here with your South Coast fishing round‑up. We’re into that lovely late‑May pattern now: longer evenings, settled seas between fronts, and fish finally pushing in tight. Along the central Channel coast today we’ve had light to moderate south‑westerlies, a bit fresher around headlands, with air temps in the mid‑teens. Skies have been mixed cloud with brighter spells, and the water’s nudging 12–13°C inshore. Tides along the Hampshire and Sussex stretch are on a decent set – good movement but not crazy. Around Portsmouth and the Solent, high water has been late afternoon sliding into early evening, with lows through the small hours. Over toward Brighton and Shoreham, highs have been roughly an hour later. Either way, that last two hours of the flood into slack, and the first hour of the ebb, have been the prime bite windows. Sunrise has been early, just after five, and sunset knocking on a quarter past nine, giving loads of crepuscular feeding time. The best activity reports today have come from anglers fishing dawn or the first couple of hours after sunset, especially where there’s a bit of colour in the water. Bass are very much the headline. Along the Dorset and Hampshire coast, schoolies with the odd better fish have shown around rough ground and harbour mouths. Paddle‑tail shads in natural baitfish colours, small metal jigs, and 10–12cm surface walkers have all accounted for fish where there’s tide and bait. Those fishing bait have done well with fresh rag, peeler crab, and small mackerel or squid strips, kept neat and not over‑scented. Plaice and dabs are still on the cards over the cleaner sand off Sussex, with lug and rag cocktails doing the work on two‑ or three‑hook flappers. There’ve been mixed bags of pouting, dogs, and the odd ray from boats working the inshore banks; bluey and squid wraps have tempted thornbacks where the tide eases. Early mackerel shoals have been sketchy but improving: a few strings filled today from piers and small boats off Brighton, Worthing and Bournemouth when the birds pushed in tight. Simple silver feathers and slim metals worked fast have outfished heavier gear. Where mackerel have appeared, the bass haven’t been far behind. For lures, think subtle and natural in the clearer patches: sand‑eel imitations, slim minnows, and weedless soft plastics bounced along the bottom. In the churned‑up edges of the tide, a slightly larger profile or something with a rattle has turned follows into hits. On bait, freshness is king right now: properly lively ragworm, good peeler, and tidy squid strips will out‑fish anything old and mushy. A couple of spots to keep on your radar: First, the stretch around South Parade Pier and the adjacent shingle into Eastney. Fish the flooding tide into dusk with small lures for bass and the chance of mackerel or gar; switch to bottom rigs with rag and crab as the light goes for rays and the odd better bass. Second, the rough ground and pier area at Brighton. Work lures along the wall and around the structure on the making tide for bass and pollack, then drop baits out over the cleaner sand for plaice and bits. If the mackerel push in tight, it can switch on in minutes, so keep a spinner rod ready. That’s your South Coast snapshot 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

  20. 19

    South Coast Bass and Plaice Report: Settled Conditions and Prime Tide Windows

    This is Artificial Lure with your South Coast fishing report for this evening and into tomorrow’s light session. We’ve got a fairly settled pattern along the English Channel tonight. Along the central and eastern South Coast, winds are generally light west to south‑westerly, 5–12 knots, with a slight chop; the western stretch towards Dorset seeing a touch more breeze. Air temps dipping into the low teens overnight, climbing to the mid‑teens through the day. Skies are mixed cloud with clear breaks – decent conditions for both a late session and an early dawn raid. Channel tide times vary a bit port to port, but Brighton, Portsmouth and Weymouth are all on a similar cycle: a late‑evening high followed by a falling tide through much of the night, then a pre‑dawn low and a flooding tide into breakfast. That gives two prime windows: the first two hours of the ebb after high, and the classic “first light on the flood” bite. Water temps offshore are running in the low to mid‑teens Celsius, and that’s switched fish activity up a gear. Bass are pushing in tight to the beaches and structure, especially where there’s rough ground meeting sand. Local charter skippers from Brighton and Portsmouth have been reporting increasing numbers of schoolies with a better stamp of fish nudging into the 4–6 lb bracket, plus the odd double for those working the tides hard. Solent inshore marks have also seen a steady pick of smaller bass with rays and dogs mixed in. Plaice fishing over the sandbanks off Sussex and the eastern Solent has been decent on the smaller neap tides, with a fair few keepers reported by local match lads over the last few days. Flounder and dabs are still showing in the softer estuary mud. Further west, Weymouth and Portland boats have been into pollack and wrasse over the inshore reefs, with mackerel shoals starting to show in better numbers on the clearer days. For lures, bass chasers should lean on 4–5 inch soft plastics in natural baitfish tones – silvers, sandeels and muted olive backs – on 10–20 g jigheads, worked across the flood over gullies and along harbour walls. Slim surface walkers and small sub‑surface minnows will come into their own around first light if the wind stays down, especially over shallow reef and surf tables. Night‑time sessions around piers and groynes call for darker patterns – black or purple soft plastics and small shads silhouetting against any ambient light. Bait anglers should bring ragworm and lug as the staples. Ragworm tipped with a sliver of squid on flowing traces is doing well for plaice, dabs and the odd early bream. Peeler crab, when you can get it, remains top drawer for better bass and smoothhounds, particularly along the Hampshire and Dorset stretches. Fresh mackerel or herring strips are a solid shout after dark for rays and huss on the rougher stuff. A couple of hotspots to consider: First, the stretch between Shoreham and Brighton Marina – the beaches, arm walls and rock groynes there have been producing a nice mix of schoolie bass, plaice and the odd thornback, especially on the evening high into the first of the ebb. Work lures along the edges of the structure, or fish worm baits just beyond the breakers. Second, the eastern side of Christchurch Bay up towards Hengistbury Head and the Christchurch Harbour entrance. On a flooding tide around dawn, bass move in to ambush bait along the bars and channels, and there have been recent reports of decent fish taken on both soft plastics and whole sandeel baits there. Just mind the tide and boat traffic in the harbour mouth. Overall, conditions are lining up nicely for those willing to time their sessions around the moving water and the low‑light periods. Travel safe, keep an eye on the local forecasts and port tide tables, and take only what you need for the table. 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

  21. 18

    South Coast Spring Awakening: Bass, Mackerel, and Perfect Tide Windows

    Alright, here’s your South Coast fishing report from Artificial Lure: Good evening, anglers. Along the United Kingdom’s South Coast, it’s been a proper mixed bag lately, but there are fish to be had if you pick your tides and fish with a bit of patience. Around Hampshire, Dorset, and Sussex, the inshore waters are waking up for the season, with more bait showing and a steady increase in predator activity. According to local tide tables for the South Coast, the strongest fishing windows are still the last two hours of the flood and the first hour or so of the ebb, especially around channel edges, pier heads, and harbour mouths. On a typical mid-May tide, you want to be on the ground around dawn or dusk if you can. Sunrise is landing just after 5:00 AM, with sunset a little after 8:30 PM, giving you a long evening to work a lure. The weather across the South Coast has been fairly changeable, with light to moderate westerly or south-westerly breezes, scattered cloud, and those odd bright spells that switch fish on. Sea states have generally been manageable, though a bit of colour in the water has helped the bite in some places. If the water’s got that clean green tinge and there’s a bit of push in the tide, you’re in business. Fish activity has been encouraging. Mackerel are starting to show in increasing numbers offshore and around tide-swept marks, with small packs of bass shadowing the bait. According to recent catches shared by local anglers in Dorset and Hampshire, school bass, the occasional better-sized bass, mackerel, and a few schoolie pollack have all been coming over the side. Around the harbours, anglers have also reported decent flounder, small plaice, and the odd smoothhound where the mud gives way to sand and shingle. Best lure? For bass, keep it simple: soft plastics in sandeel or baitfish colours, 4 to 5 inches, rigged on a light jig head. A slim metal lure for mackerel will still do the damage when the shoals move through. On the rougher ground, a small paddle-tail worked slowly near the bottom is a fine shout. If the water’s clear, go natural. If it’s a bit coloured, try white, silver, or chartreuse. Best bait right now is fresh sandeel, lugworm, ragworm, and small strips of mackerel. For harbour species and flatfish, lug and rag are the old reliables. For bass over sandbanks and foamy shore marks, a fresh bait presented neatly on a pulley or clipped-down rig can out-fish a lot of fancy gear. A couple of hot spots to keep an eye on: the mixed ground around Portland Bill on the Dorset side when conditions are safe and the tide’s running, and the harbour entrances and groyne systems along the Solent and eastern Dorset coast, where bait gets funneled through and predators patrol the edges. Beach anglers should also watch the gullies and slacks around Chichester and Selsey when the tide is moving well. So there you have it, proper South Coast fishing: fish the tide, match the bait, and keep your eyes on the birds and baitfish. Tight lines, 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

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Tune in to the "United Kingdom, South Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the English Channel's renowned coastal waters stretching from Dorset to Kent. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the South Coast's unique ecosystem—home to over 300 sea fish species including bass, cod, rays, and wrasse—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 "United Kingdom, South Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the English Channel's renowned coastal waters stretching from Dorset to Kent. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast...

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