Newfoundland Coast Report: North Atlantic Pattern, Mackerel Moving, Cod on the Drop cover art

Newfoundland Coast Report: North Atlantic Pattern, Mackerel Moving, Cod on the Drop

Newfoundland Coast Report: North Atlantic Pattern, Mackerel Moving, Cod on the Drop

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Newfoundland coast fishing report. We’re sitting under a cool North Atlantic pattern this morning: onshore breeze 10–20 knots along much of the east and northeast coasts, air temps hovering single digits to low teens, and that familiar mix of low cloud, drizzle, and fog banks sliding in and out. Marine forecasts are calling 1–2 metre seas in most exposed areas, calmer inside the bays. Dress for damp and hang on to your hat. Sunrise came early over the Atlantic and sunset will be mid‑evening, so there’s a long fishing window. The best bite has been tight to **first light** and again through the **last two hours of daylight**, especially when it lines up with a tide change. Tides along the Avalon and northeast coast are running the usual modest range, roughly 1–1.5 metres. You’ll see a morning high, a mid‑day low, and another evening push. Plan your inshore work for the **last hour of the flood and first hour of the ebb**—that’s when the current wakes up the bait and the game fish follow. Inshore, folks have been into a mixed bag. Mackerel are starting to show in better numbers around wharves and headlands, mostly small to medium but enough for a feed. Cod, where and when you’re allowed to target or keep them, are turning up steady on structure in 40–80 feet: rock ledges, shoals, and the edges of deeper holes. There’s also been a pick of sea trout nosing around river mouths and cobble beaches when the light is low and the water’s a touch coloured. Typical catches from the last few days in sheltered coves have been a few dozen mackerel for the harder‑working crews, a handful of keeper‑sized cod per boat on the drops, plus the odd nice trout in the 1–3 pound range for those putting in the dawn patrol. For **lures**, keep it simple and local: - For mackerel, small silver or chrome **gotchas, feather rigs, and shiny spoons** worked with a quick jigging retrieve are doing damage. Anything that flashes like capelin will get hammered. - For cod, 4–8 oz **jigging irons** in silver, green, or parrot colours, bounced just off bottom, have been the go‑to. Add a bit of twinkle tape or a glo stripe and you’re in business. - For sea trout, slim **spoons** in copper or silver, and small **minnow plugs** in natural patterns, twitched slow along the shoreline, are your best bet. On the **bait** front, fresh or frozen **capelin, herring, or mackerel strips** on a simple dropper rig are hard to beat for cod. For mackerel, tiny pieces of bait above a shiny jig will keep you busy when they’re finicky. Sea trout will happily take worms or roe bags drifted in the estuaries, if regulations in your area allow. A couple of **hot spots** to circle on the chart: - The outer edges and points around **Conception Bay**: work the drop‑offs near Bell Island and the points on the south side of the bay for cod on the jig, and check the wharves and breakwaters for early mackerel when the tide’s pushing. - The shoals and rocky points near the mouth of **Trinity Bay**: classic cod country with steady picks on jigs over structure, plus good mackerel action when the schools push in on a flooding tide. Trout anglers should nose around river mouths along the inner bay at dawn. Mind the weather, keep an ear on the marine forecast, and always give yourself lots of room with the fog and swell—fish’ll be there again tomorrow. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing talk and on‑the‑water updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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