Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today
Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today

Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today

Inception Point AI

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Tune in to the "Fiji, South Pacific Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the pristine tropical waters surrounding Fiji's 300+ islands. 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 Fiji's legendary big-game fishery, vibrant reef ecosystems, and nutrient-rich pelagic zones, and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Recent Episodes

Fiji Dry Season Fire: Yellowfin, Marlin, and Reef Action in the South Pacific
JUN 16, 2026
Fiji Dry Season Fire: Yellowfin, Marlin, and Reef Action in the South Pacific
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fiji fishing report, straight from the middle of the South Pacific. We’ve got classic dry‑season conditions across the main islands today: light to moderate southeast trade winds, 10–18 knots, mostly sunny skies with a few passing showers on the windward sides, and humidity still up there but not brutal. Air temps are sitting around the high 20s Celsius, sea surface temps about 27–28 degrees – just right to keep the pelagics interested. Sunrise was right around twenty past six this morning, and sunset will be just after six this evening, so you’ve got a solid dawn and dusk window to play with. Around Fiji this week, the tides are running a typical mixed semidiurnal pattern – decent morning high, dropping to a late‑morning or midday low, then building again toward an afternoon push. That moving water has been the key: when it’s slack, the bite drops right off; when it starts to run, everything wakes up. Offshore, local skippers out of Port Denarau and Pacific Harbour have been doing well. Boats working the drop‑offs and seamounts west of Viti Levu have brought in good numbers of yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kilo class, a few bigger models mixed in, with mahi‑mahi and the odd wahoo on the temperature breaks. Around the outer reefs and channels, blue marlin and the occasional black have been raised; not every knock has stuck, but there’ve been enough hookups to keep the lures in the water. Best offshore offerings have been medium‑sized skirted lures in lumo green, pink‑and‑silver, and purple‑black, run off the short and long corners. For tuna and mahi, small to medium metal jigs and stickbaits worked around birds and bait balls have produced, along with bibbed minnows in blue‑white and sardine patterns trolled at 6–7 knots. If you’re live‑baiting, a bridled live kawakawa or small bonito slow‑trolled along the reef edge is still your highest‑percentage shot at a marlin. Inshore and on the reefs, the action has been steady early and late. Lagoon flats and fringing reefs are giving up bluefin trevally, coral trout, and sweetlip, with some solid GTs pushing bait up onto the edges on the top half of the tide. A few bonefish have been sighted on the sand flats around the Mamanucas and Yasawas for those willing to stalk the shallows. For lures, reef fish have been smashing 20–40 gram metal jigs, small stickbaits, and 4–6 inch soft plastics in natural baitfish colors. GTs are still all about big surface: cup‑faced poppers and pencil poppers in white, pearl, and mackerel patterns. If you prefer bait, fresh cut skipjack, squid, and local pilchard‑style baits drifted back into the current around bommies have been reliable, especially when you keep your leader just heavy enough to survive the coral but not so thick it kills the bite. Couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: First, the channels and reef edges off Pacific Harbour and Beqa. Work the pressure edges on the making tide for GTs, coral trout, and the chance of a dogtooth deeper down. Second, the drop‑offs and pinnacles west of the Mamanuca and Yasawa island chains. Those spots have been holding bait, and where there’s bait, the yellowfin, mahi, and marlin haven’t been far behind. If you’re heading out, time your sessions around the tide changes, keep an eye on the birds and the color lines, and don’t be afraid to switch from lure to bait when the sun gets high and the fish sulk deeper. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update from Artificial Lure. 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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3 MIN
Fiji Winter Fishing: Trevally, Tuna, and Reef Action on the Moving Tide
JUN 15, 2026
Fiji Winter Fishing: Trevally, Tuna, and Reef Action on the Moving Tide
**Artificial Lure** here with your Fiji fishing report for **Monday, June 15**. Around Fiji right now, the bite is typically strongest in the early light and again near dusk, with the **best action** usually lining up around moving tide rather than dead slack. In the South Pacific winter pattern, expect the **trade-wind feel** to keep the surface a little sporty on exposed reefs and channels, while sheltered bays and lagoon edges should fish cleaner. For the most accurate **tide, sunrise, sunset, and weather** details for today, I’d normally check a live local tide and marine forecast before heading out, because those numbers shift by location across Fiji’s islands and I don’t have live data available here. What’s been getting touched lately in these waters is the usual Fiji mix: **trevally, reef snapper, Spanish mackerel, tuna, barracuda, and mahi-mahi** when the bait is pushing. On the reef edges and current lines, school fish often come first, then the better predators follow once the bait gets nervous. If you find bait flicking on the surface or birds working, that’s your green light to stay put and cast tight. For **lures**, the hottest stuff around Fiji is still the hard-pulling basics: - **Metal slugs** for tuna, mackerel, and fast-moving surface feeders - **Small to medium poppers** for GTs, trevally, and reef hunters - **Stickbaits** when fish are wary or the water is clear - **Soft plastics** on jigheads for reef edges, drop-offs, and channel mouths For **bait**, locals will tell you fresh always wins: - **Live sardines or small baitfish** for predatory action - **Strip bait of bonito or skipjack** for reef and ledge fishing - **Prawns and squid** for mixed reef species - **Fresh cut bait** worked slow near structure when the bite is finicky If you want a couple of **hot spots**, I’d point you toward: - **Reef passes and channel mouths** where the tide funnels bait and the predators stack up - **Outer reef edges near drop-offs** around Viti Levu and Vanua Levu, especially where current seams and bird activity line up The local pattern is simple: fish the moving water, match the hatch with small baitfish profiles, and be ready to switch from lure to bait if the fish get picky. First light, last light, and any hard-ripping tide around structure are the windows that matter most in Fiji. Thanks for tuning in, and please 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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2 MIN
Fiji Fishing Report: Steady Trade Winds and Hot Offshore Action Around Viti Levu and Kadavu
JUN 14, 2026
Fiji Fishing Report: Steady Trade Winds and Hot Offshore Action Around Viti Levu and Kadavu
Bula, this is Artificial Lure with your Fiji fishing report. Trade winds have been steady out of the southeast, 10 to 15 knots around the main islands, with a light chop on the reef edges and cleaner water on the leeward sides. Skies have been partly cloudy, with just enough overcast to soften the sun and keep the fish comfortable up in the water column. Humidity is high, but the wind is taking the edge off. Around Viti Levu, sunrise is coming just after 6 in the morning and sunset just before 6 in the evening. The early bite has been strongest from first light through about 9 a.m., then again on the late afternoon push. Midday has been slower on the shallow reefs, with better action a bit deeper. Tides today are running a moderate range. The incoming tide has been the most productive, especially that last hour of flood over the fringing reefs and lagoon passes. On the outgoing, the main action has shifted to the drop-offs where the current is pinching bait. Offshore, boats working the blue water off Pacific Harbour and the Kadavu passage edges have been into good numbers of yellowfin tuna in the 10 to 25 kilo range, along with the odd bigger fish. A few mahi-mahi have been picked up around flotsam and current lines, and the occasional wahoo has come tight along the steeper contours. Skirted lures in purple-black, lumo green, and pink have been the top producers, with small to medium cup-faced pushers and bullet heads doing the damage. Rigged ballyhoo and small bonito slow-trolled along the drop-offs have also been accounting for strikes. On the outer reefs, GTs and bluefin trevally have been active on the pressure points where the swell hits the reef first. Surface stickbaits in natural sardine and flying fish patterns, plus big cup-faced poppers in white or bone, have drawn brutal strikes, especially on that building tide. Strong leaders and solid hooks are a must; these fish are heading straight for the coral. Inshore, the lagoon flats and bommie edges have produced a mix of coral trout, sweetlip, and small trevally. Soft plastics in 3 to 5 inch sizes, paddletails and jerk shads in pearl, chartreuse, and natural baitfish colors, hopped along the bottom, have been very effective. Fresh cut bait – strips of mullet, pilchard, or squid – fished on light running rigs has been doing the job for those soaking baits from the boat or the shore. Best baits right now are fresh local offerings: small live fusiliers and scad for GTs and Spanish mackerel, fresh skipjack strips for tuna, and squid for almost everything on the reef. If you’re limited to lures, focus on quality terminal tackle and natural movement – the fish are not too fussy, but they’re testing gear. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: First, the Navula Passage area off western Viti Levu. The outer drop-offs and nearby seamounts have held tuna, wahoo, and mahi, while the reef shoulders are alive with trevally on the pressure edges. Work skirted lures along the contour in 80 to 200 meters, then switch to poppers and stickbaits when you move in shallow. Second, the Great Astrolabe Reef off Kadavu. The passes on the eastern and southeastern sides are firing on the incoming tide, with dogtooth tuna down deep and GTs smashing bait up top. Jigging metal jigs in the 80 to 150 gram range around the ledges is turning up doggies and jobfish, while big surface lures are cleaning up in the whitewater. As always, keep an eye on the weather, respect the reefs and local customs, and take only what you need. The fishing is good, and with the right tide and a bit of patience, there’s plenty of action out there. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more fishing reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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3 MIN
Fiji Early Winter: Yellowfin Tuna, Reef Edges, and Low-Light Bites
JUN 13, 2026
Fiji Early Winter: Yellowfin Tuna, Reef Edges, and Low-Light Bites
This is Artificial Lure with your Fiji fishing report. We’ve got a classic early winter pattern settling over the islands. Light to moderate southeast trades around 10–15 knots, a gentle southeast swell, and mostly fine skies with a few passing showers on the windward sides. According to Fiji Meteorological Service forecasts, seas are slight to moderate, so most small boats are good to go with common‑sense caution. Sunrise came in just after 6 a.m. for most of Viti Levu, with sunset expected a little before 6 p.m. The shorter days are helping the bite in the low‑light windows. Around the main islands, anglers reported the morning session from grey light to about 9 a.m. as the prime bite, with another pick‑up in action from about 4 p.m. right into dusk. Tides are running moderate today on the mid‑June cycle. Around Suva and the southern coast, the bigger push has been mid‑morning on the rising tide, then again in the late afternoon. Local skippers out of Pacific Harbour and Denarau have been timing their reef drifts to start about an hour before the top of the tide and finishing as it starts to ease off. That moving water has been key for both reef and inshore pelagics. Offshore, the bluewater has been waking up nicely. Charter operators out of Denarau, Wailoaloa, and Pacific Harbour report solid numbers of **yellowfin tuna** in the 10–25 kg range, with a few bigger models mixed in. Smaller **skipjack** and **wahoo** have been showing along the current lines, with the odd **mahi‑mahi** turning up around flotsam and FADs. The hot lures offshore have been **small to medium skirted lures** in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink‑silver, trolled at 6–8 knots. Diver‑style bibbed minnows in blue‑white have also been taking tuna when they’re up on the surface. On the reef edges and drop‑offs, the jig and bait crews have done well. Reports from Beqa Channel and the outer reefs off Nadi mention good hauls of **coral trout**, **jobfish**, and a few **GTs (giant trevally)** smashing topwater early. Best artificials have been **40–80 g metal jigs** in blue and silver, **soft plastics** on 1/2–1 oz jig heads in natural baitfish colors, and of course **stickbaits and poppers** for the trevally. Work those edges right on first light and again near sunset. Inshore, the lagoon and mangrove lines have produced **trevally**, **queenfish**, and **barracuda** on smaller lures. Local boys have been doing damage with **3–5 inch soft plastics**, **small metal slices**, and **minnow‑style hardbodies** in gold and green. For bait fishing around bridges, wharves, and river mouths, **fresh cut skipjack**, **sardines**, and **squid** remain the top producers, especially on that incoming tide pushing clean water back into the estuaries. For the bait‑soakers on the reef flats, **prawn**, **squid strips**, and **fresh pilchard** have been pulling a mixed bag of reefies: emperors, goatfish, and smaller snapper. Keep your leaders a bit heavier—around 40–60 lb—if you’re near bommies; the brutes will dust you quick. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Beqa Channel and outer Beqa reefs**: Good word of mouth from local skippers on yellowfin tuna, wahoo, and quality reef fish. Work the pressure points and current lines with skirts and jigs. - **Mamanuca drop‑offs west of Denarau**: Consistent action on school‑size tuna and mahi, with solid reef fishing on the ledges. Early‑morning passes along the 80–150 m line have been especially productive. Overall fish activity is better when you line up three things: low light, moving tide, and a bit of breeze ruffling the surface. Midday, when the sun is high and the tide slack, the bite has been noticeably slower, so use that time to move spots, rig gear, and prep baits. That’s the wrap from your mate 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
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4 MIN
Fiji Winter Bite: Tuna, GTs, and Prime Tide Windows Firing Up
JUN 12, 2026
Fiji Winter Bite: Tuna, GTs, and Prime Tide Windows Firing Up
Bula, this is Artificial Lure with your Fiji fishing report. Around the main islands today we’ve got light to moderate trade winds, generally easterly, with warm, humid conditions and a few passing showers—classic Fiji winter pattern, keeping the lagoon a bit choppy on the windward side but nice and glassier on the leeward reefs. Local marine forecasts call for small to moderate seas outside the reef, very workable for both inshore and offshore crews. Tides around Suva and Nadi are running a morning high pushing through late morning, dropping to a mid‑afternoon low and filling again toward evening. That falling tide late morning into early afternoon has been the prime bite window on the reef edges and passes, with the last of the run‑out really firing up the predators. Sunrise was just after six and sunset will be just before six, so you’ve got tight daylight hours—dawn and last light are gold. The first hour of light has been excellent for topwater and stickbaits over the reef flats; the final hour before dark is seeing a second wind, especially on the lee sides where the wind eases. Offshore, the bluewater boys reporting in from the waters off Pacific Harbour and south of Beqa have been into yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kilo range, a few bigger models mixed in. Skirted lures in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink have been doing damage, with cedar plugs and small metal bullets also pulling strikes when the fish are shy. A couple of boats picked up mahi‑mahi on the current lines, and there’s been the odd striped marlin raised on the shelf in 200–400 meters. On the reefs around Kadavu, the Mamanucas, and the Yasawas, the GTs have been active on the pressure edges where the current hits the reef face. Big cup‑faced poppers in blue‑silver or white, and long stickbaits in natural fusilier colors, are getting smashed in the low light and on that falling tide. Remember, most operators here encourage release of the big GTs—get your photos and send them home. Inside the lagoon and along the reef drop‑offs, anglers are seeing good numbers of coral trout and red bass on soft plastics and deep‑running minnows. Natural bait like fresh skipjack strips, pilchards, and squid fished on a simple running rig or paternoster is still king if you’re anchoring up. Around the river mouths and mangroves on Viti Levu’s south and west coasts, there’ve been solid catches of small trevally, queenfish, and the odd barracuda on small metal slices and 3–4 inch soft plastics in pearl or chartreuse. Best lures today: - For offshore pelagics: 6–9 inch skirted lures in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink; rigged garfish or saury as skip‑baits if you can get them. - For GT and reef predators: big poppers, stickbaits, and 40–80 g metal jigs; colors matching baitfish—blue, silver, and green—are working well. - For inshore and lagoon: small diving minnows, soft plastics on 1/4–1/2 oz jigheads, and chrome slices for casting to bust‑ups. Best natural bait: - Fresh skipjack tuna cubes or strips - Squid and octopus for bottom species - Live fusiliers and scads where legal, for GTs and mackerel A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - The passages and outer reef corners off Beqa and Pacific Harbour—good for yellowfin, mahi‑mahi, and the chance of marlin, with GTs patrolling the points. - The outer reef drop‑offs of the Mamanuca and Yasawa chains—excellent GT popping, dogtooth on jigs in deeper water, and mixed reef fish for the table. If you’re land‑based, work the wharves and rocky points around Suva and Lautoka on the changing tides with small metals and bait; plenty of trevally, queenfish, and reef pickers to keep the rod bent. That’s the word from the water here in Fiji. 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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4 MIN