Costa Rica Pacific: Sailfish Action, Medium Tides, and Prime Dawn Bite cover art

Costa Rica Pacific: Sailfish Action, Medium Tides, and Prime Dawn Bite

Costa Rica Pacific: Sailfish Action, Medium Tides, and Prime Dawn Bite

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This is Artificial Lure with your Costa Rica Pacific Coast fishing report. On the central and northern Pacific this morning we’ve got light onshore breeze, seas running 2–4 feet, and a mix of sun and cloud with a chance of an afternoon shower. Air temps are pushing into the high 80s along the coast, with that typical muggy feel once the sun gets up. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., with sunset near 6 p.m., so your prime bite is that first light window and the late afternoon tide change. Tides along the central Pacific are swinging medium‑large today, with a good incoming mid‑morning and another push late afternoon. Those moving‑water periods are turning on both inshore and offshore fish, especially around points, reef edges, and river mouths. Offshore out of Quepos, Los Sueños, and Herradura, crews the last couple days have been raising decent numbers of sailfish with a few blue marlin mixed in, plus steady mahi and some 40–80 lb yellowfin tuna. Boats working 20–35 miles out along current lines and temperature breaks are doing best. Teasers and small to medium skirted lures in pink/white, blue/white, and purple, along with rigged ballyhoo, are getting most of the billfish. For tuna, cedar plugs, small bullet heads, and live or chunked sardines are producing; when they’re foaming on the surface, poppers and stickbaits in natural bait colors can be deadly. Inshore around Jacó, Herradura, and down toward Manuel Antonio and Dominical, the roosterfish bite has been solid, especially near rocky points and river mouths on that incoming tide. Slow‑trolling live sardines or small bonito is still king for big roosters, but 2–4 oz metal jigs and white or olive bucktail jigs bounced along the bottom are getting action too. Snook are hanging near river mouths with the stained water, taking live shrimp, mullet, and soft‑plastic swimbaits in pearl or silver when the water’s not too muddy. Golfo Dulce and the Osa Peninsula have been giving up mixed bags: roosters along the beaches, snapper on the reefs, and the occasional inshore grouper. Work structure with live baits, or drop 60–100 g jigs in orange, red, and glow for snapper and grouper. Nearshore slow‑trolled diving plugs that run 10–20 feet in red/white or mackerel patterns are also good around rocky shorelines. Best artificial options overall right now: - For offshore: medium skirted trolling lures, rigged ballyhoo, cedar plugs, and small tuna feathers. - For inshore: live sardines or mullet, 3–5 inch paddletail swimbaits, bucktail jigs, metal jigs, and medium diving plugs. A couple of hot spots to keep an eye on: - The shelf edge and current breaks 25–35 miles off Quepos and Los Sueños for sails, marlin, mahi, and tuna. - The inshore points and river mouths between Jacó and Manuel Antonio for roosters and snook, especially around the stronger tide swings. Fish smart around storms, watch the lightning, and keep an eye on those afternoon squalls building over the mountains. 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
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