Episodes

  • Oman Coastal Fishing: Kingfish and Trevally Dominating the Evening Bite
    Apr 7 2026
    # Artificial Lure's Oman Coastal Fishing Report

    Salaam, friends! Artificial Lure here with your evening fishing report from the stunning Oman coast.

    We're looking at excellent conditions tonight. The tide is pushing in nicely, which means the fish are moving into the shallows to feed. Sunset was around 6:45 PM, and we've got a comfortable 72-degree water temperature with light winds from the northeast—perfect for both boat and shore fishing.

    The weather's been cooperative these past few days, with mostly clear skies and calm seas. This spring period brings increased activity as the warm waters attract pelagics and reef species.

    **What's Biting:**
    Kingfish have been absolutely hammering the waters around Muscat and Qurayyat. Local anglers have been landing 15 to 25-pounders consistently. Giant trevally are showing up in good numbers, with several catches in the 20-35 pound range reported. Grouper and snapper are active around the rocky outcrops and deeper reefs. Barracuda have been spotted cruising the shallows at dawn and dusk.

    **Best Lures and Baits:**
    Live mullet and mackerel are your go-to baits for kingfish and trevally. Metal jigs in silver and blue patterns work brilliantly in the deeper channels. For lures, try 4-6 inch shads and poppers near the surface. Small live sardines will get you grouper and snapper around structure.

    **Hot Spots:**
    Head to the Muscat Harbor approaches—the channels hold tremendous trevally activity. Qurayyat's rocky coastline is legendary for kingfish and grouper, especially around the deeper drop-offs.

    Thanks for tuning in to the report, friends! Don't forget to subscribe for daily updates on the best fishing conditions around Oman.

    This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
  • Oman's April Barracuda and Kingfish Bite Heats Up with Strong Tides
    Apr 6 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to bloke for all things angling along the Oman coast. It's April 6, 2026, 7 PM local time, and the Arabian Sea's calling us out. Weather's balmy today—mid-30s Celsius under clear skies, light northerly breeze at 10-15 knots easing off by dusk, perfect for a late session. Sunrise was at 5:45 AM, sunset 6:30 PM, so we've had a full day of prime light. Tides are running strong with the new moon pull—high at 11 AM and 11 PM, low around 5 PM, pushing fish into the shallows.

    Fish activity's heating up as waters hit 28-30°C. Recent catches from Muscat Bay and around Qurum Beach report solid numbers: plenty of **barracuda** up to 5kg slashing surface lures, **kingfish** (tuna cousins) boiling on bait balls averaging 8-12kg, **queenfish** schooling 2-4kg, and **grouper** hugging reefs at 5-10kg. Local boats tallied 20-30 fish per outing last few days, per chatter from Duqm charters and Seeb jetty crews. Smaller **trevally** and **snapper** filling gaps too.

    Best lures right now? Jig those shiny **metal slugs** or **poppers** in chrome/silver for barri and kings—work 'em fast over reefs. Soft plastics like paddle tails on 1/2oz jigheads for queens. Live bait shines: sardines or garfish hooked through the nose under a float, or chunks of squid for grouper. Cut mullet on circle hooks for bottom dwellers.

    Hot spots? Hit **Bandar Al Khayran** reefs—tide rips there stack the pelagics. Or **Yiti Beach** rocks at dusk for ambush feeders. Launch small boats or shore cast, but watch currents.

    Stay safe, wet a line, and respect bag limits.

    Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
  • Oman's Arabian Sea: Kings, Queens, and Trevally Running Hot This April Evening
    Apr 5 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling along the Oman coast. It's Sunday evening, April 5th, 2026, and the Arabian Sea's calling us out. Sunrise hit around 5:45 AM, sunset's wrapping up at 6:15 PM—perfect for that evening bite as the khamsin winds ease off.

    Weather's been kind today: light northeast breezes at 10-15 knots, temps in the low 30s Celsius dropping to 25 by dusk, clear skies with seas calm at 1-2 meters. Tides are pumping with a very high solunar coefficient—high water peaked mid-morning around 9:45 AM at 1.4 feet equivalent here, outgoing now through evening low at 4:33 PM, then building back with a night tide at 9:39 PM. Fish are feeding hard during these shifts, especially around dawn and dusk peaks.

    Action's been red-hot lately, mates. Locals report solid catches of **kingfish (kabati)** up to 15kg, **barracuda**, **queenfish**, and **trevally** hammering the reefs. Grouper and snapper stacking up on the drops, with recent hauls of 20-30 fish per boat on half-days. Smaller **bonefish** and **travellers** schooling shallow for fly guys.

    Best lures? Go **metal slugs** and **poppers** like Yo-Zuri or Halco for surface chaos on kings and queens—cast into the wash. Jig heads with soft plastics in white/pink for deeper queens. Live **shrimps** or **mullet chunks** on circle hooks rule for bottom dwellers; **sardines** trolled behind a skirt for pelagics.

    Hit these hot spots: **Al Ashkharah Beach** for shore kings on the rocks, or boat out to **Daymaniyat Islands**—20km offshore, reefs loaded with everything big. Safety first, check your gear.

    Thanks for tuning in, anglers—subscribe for weekly updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Tight lines!

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
  • Oman Evening Bite: Kingfish, Queenfish and Barracuda Heat Up the Arabian Sea
    Apr 4 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling along the Oman coast. It's 7 PM here on April 4th, 2026, and the Arabian Sea's calling with that classic evening glow. Weather's holding steady—clear skies, light northeast winds around 10-15 knots from typical April patterns, temps dipping to 28°C as the sun sets around 6:45 PM, sunrise was 5:45 AM. Tides are prime: high at 11 AM and 11 PM, low around 5 PM, pulling baitfish right into the shallows per local charts.

    Fish are fired up with warming waters hitting 26-28°C—moon phase's waxing gibbous, one of those top feeding windows where predators chase hard. Recent catches? Locals and charters report solid hauls of **kingfish (kanad)** up to 20kg, **barracuda** slashing lines, **queenfish** boiling on topwater, and **grouper** from reefs—20-30 fish days common off Muscat and Duqm, with trevally schools pushing 10kg averages. Tuna showing sporadic, 15-40kg blues on the edges.

    Best lures: **metal jigs** like 60-100g Kastmasters in chrome for casting into queens and kings—rip 'em fast. **Poppers** such as Yo-Zuri 110mm for surface explosions on barracuda. Soft plastics on 40g jigheads for grouper drops. Live bait? Small **herring** or **sardines** on circle hooks under balloons, or **squid strips** for overnight kingfish runs. Stick to 20-50lb braid with 80lb leader— these fish don't mess around.

    Hot spots: **Bawshar Rocks** near Muscat for jigging kings at 10-20m, and **Duqm Bay reefs** for grouper and queens—anchor up and drop baits, but watch currents. Safety first, check flags.

    Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    3 mins