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    <title>Spain, Atlantic Coast Fishing Report Today</title>
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    <language>en</language>
    <copyright>Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI</copyright>
    <description>Tune in to the "Spain, Atlantic Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the rugged shores and productive rías of Spain's North Atlantic and Bay of Biscay coastline. 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 this dynamic saltwater ecosystem—from kelp-lined reefs to fjord-like estuaries—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.</description>
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      <title>Spain, Atlantic Coast Fishing Report Today</title>
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    <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Tune in to the "Spain, Atlantic Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the rugged shores and productive rías of Spain's North Atlantic and Bay of Biscay coastline. 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 this dynamic saltwater ecosystem—from kelp-lined reefs to fjord-like estuaries—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.</itunes:summary>
    <content:encoded>
      <![CDATA[Tune in to the "Spain, Atlantic Coast Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the rugged shores and productive rías of Spain's North Atlantic and Bay of Biscay coastline. 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 this dynamic saltwater ecosystem—from kelp-lined reefs to fjord-like estuaries—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.]]>
    </content:encoded>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Quiet. Please</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>info@inceptionpoint.ai</itunes:email>
    </itunes:owner>
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    <itunes:category text="Sports">
      <itunes:category text="Wilderness"/>
    </itunes:category>
    <itunes:category text="Leisure">
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      <title>Atlántico en vivo: lubinas, sargos y doradas con marea viva en Galicia y Cantábrico</title>
      <description>Buenas noches, soy Artificial Lure, tu colega de costa atlántica española, trayéndote el parte de hoy.

En la franja cantábrica y costa noroeste, el Atlántico ha venido con mar de fondo moderado y viento suave del noroeste en muchos tramos. Temperaturas del agua frescas, rondando los 16‑19 ºC según zona, con cielos mixtos: claros al amanecer, más nubosos por la tarde. El amanecer ha caído alrededor de las 6:45 y el ocaso hacia las 21:45, lo que nos deja un buen tramo de luz dorada para tentar a los depredadores pegados a las piedras.

Las mareas han sido vivas estos días: bajamar a primeras horas de la mañana y pleamar a media tarde en la mayoría de puertos gallegos y cantábricos. Ese último tercio de subida ha sido clave para lubinas y sargos arrimados a espumeros y salientes rocosos. El parón de marea a la pleamar ha traído picadas más finas, sobre todo de doradas en las playas más abiertas.

En cuanto a actividad, se han visto buenas lubinas en la costa de A Coruña y Rías Baixas, muchas entre 1 y 2 kilos y alguna señora por encima de los 4. En la costa de Pontevedra han salido bastantes robalizas de ría, más pequeñas pero muy combativas. En el Cantábrico oriental, entre Bizkaia y Gipuzkoa, bonitos de costa aún discretos, pero empiezan a verse bancos de caballa y jurel que animan la cosa al amanecer.

Los sargos han dado la cara en acantilados y rompientes, con pescas de 6‑10 piezas por puesto en días movidos. Alguna dorada curiosa se ha dejado ver en arenales de Lugo y en playas amplias de Galicia sur, muchas entre 800 gramos y kilo y medio. Los chicharros han estado comiendo bien al anochecer, ideales para una pesca rápida con sabiki o pequeños vinilos.

En cuanto a señuelos, para la lubina lo que mejor está funcionando son minnows estilizados de 13‑17 cm en colores naturales: anchovy, sardina y verdoso con lomo oscuro. En zonas de poca agua y mucha roca, paseantes de superficie y stickbaits pequeños están siendo mortales al amanecer, con ataques violentos en las primeras luces. Los vinilos tipo shad con cabeza plomada de 15‑30 g siguen siendo apuesta segura cuando el mar está algo tomado, trabajando despacio por el fondo.

Para pesca con cebo, la navaja y el cangrejo verde están dando lubinas gordas y sargos de muy buen porte. Para dorada, coreano y americano montados finos han marcado la diferencia en playas calmas. Para jurel y caballa, tiras de sardina o pequeñas gambas peladas en aparejos de varias gametas están llenando cubos en poco rato cuando pasa el banco.

Te dejo un par de puntos calientes para estos días:

– Costa da Morte, alrededores de Malpica y zona rocosa hacia Caión: buenos espumeros con mar de fondo, perfectos para lubina al amanecer con minnows y vinilos, y sargos al cebo desde las piedras.

– Entradas de rías en las Rías Baixas, como la bocana de la ría de Vigo y zona exterior de la ría de Arousa: lubina de ría al amanecer y atardecer, y mucho jurel al caer la noche con pequeños jigs metálicos o sabikis.

Como siempre, ojo al mar, respeto a las tallas y recoge lo que lleves: los mejores pesqueros son los que cuidamos entre todos.

Gracias por sintonizar con Artificial Lure, no olvides suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca.  
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 02:01:25 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Buenas noches, soy Artificial Lure, tu colega de costa atlántica española, trayéndote el parte de hoy.

En la franja cantábrica y costa noroeste, el Atlántico ha venido con mar de fondo moderado y viento suave del noroeste en muchos tramos. Temperaturas del agua frescas, rondando los 16‑19 ºC según zona, con cielos mixtos: claros al amanecer, más nubosos por la tarde. El amanecer ha caído alrededor de las 6:45 y el ocaso hacia las 21:45, lo que nos deja un buen tramo de luz dorada para tentar a los depredadores pegados a las piedras.

Las mareas han sido vivas estos días: bajamar a primeras horas de la mañana y pleamar a media tarde en la mayoría de puertos gallegos y cantábricos. Ese último tercio de subida ha sido clave para lubinas y sargos arrimados a espumeros y salientes rocosos. El parón de marea a la pleamar ha traído picadas más finas, sobre todo de doradas en las playas más abiertas.

En cuanto a actividad, se han visto buenas lubinas en la costa de A Coruña y Rías Baixas, muchas entre 1 y 2 kilos y alguna señora por encima de los 4. En la costa de Pontevedra han salido bastantes robalizas de ría, más pequeñas pero muy combativas. En el Cantábrico oriental, entre Bizkaia y Gipuzkoa, bonitos de costa aún discretos, pero empiezan a verse bancos de caballa y jurel que animan la cosa al amanecer.

Los sargos han dado la cara en acantilados y rompientes, con pescas de 6‑10 piezas por puesto en días movidos. Alguna dorada curiosa se ha dejado ver en arenales de Lugo y en playas amplias de Galicia sur, muchas entre 800 gramos y kilo y medio. Los chicharros han estado comiendo bien al anochecer, ideales para una pesca rápida con sabiki o pequeños vinilos.

En cuanto a señuelos, para la lubina lo que mejor está funcionando son minnows estilizados de 13‑17 cm en colores naturales: anchovy, sardina y verdoso con lomo oscuro. En zonas de poca agua y mucha roca, paseantes de superficie y stickbaits pequeños están siendo mortales al amanecer, con ataques violentos en las primeras luces. Los vinilos tipo shad con cabeza plomada de 15‑30 g siguen siendo apuesta segura cuando el mar está algo tomado, trabajando despacio por el fondo.

Para pesca con cebo, la navaja y el cangrejo verde están dando lubinas gordas y sargos de muy buen porte. Para dorada, coreano y americano montados finos han marcado la diferencia en playas calmas. Para jurel y caballa, tiras de sardina o pequeñas gambas peladas en aparejos de varias gametas están llenando cubos en poco rato cuando pasa el banco.

Te dejo un par de puntos calientes para estos días:

– Costa da Morte, alrededores de Malpica y zona rocosa hacia Caión: buenos espumeros con mar de fondo, perfectos para lubina al amanecer con minnows y vinilos, y sargos al cebo desde las piedras.

– Entradas de rías en las Rías Baixas, como la bocana de la ría de Vigo y zona exterior de la ría de Arousa: lubina de ría al amanecer y atardecer, y mucho jurel al caer la noche con pequeños jigs metálicos o sabikis.

Como siempre, ojo al mar, respeto a las tallas y recoge lo que lleves: los mejores pesqueros son los que cuidamos entre todos.

Gracias por sintonizar con Artificial Lure, no olvides suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca.  
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Buenas noches, soy Artificial Lure, tu colega de costa atlántica española, trayéndote el parte de hoy.

En la franja cantábrica y costa noroeste, el Atlántico ha venido con mar de fondo moderado y viento suave del noroeste en muchos tramos. Temperaturas del agua frescas, rondando los 16‑19 ºC según zona, con cielos mixtos: claros al amanecer, más nubosos por la tarde. El amanecer ha caído alrededor de las 6:45 y el ocaso hacia las 21:45, lo que nos deja un buen tramo de luz dorada para tentar a los depredadores pegados a las piedras.

Las mareas han sido vivas estos días: bajamar a primeras horas de la mañana y pleamar a media tarde en la mayoría de puertos gallegos y cantábricos. Ese último tercio de subida ha sido clave para lubinas y sargos arrimados a espumeros y salientes rocosos. El parón de marea a la pleamar ha traído picadas más finas, sobre todo de doradas en las playas más abiertas.

En cuanto a actividad, se han visto buenas lubinas en la costa de A Coruña y Rías Baixas, muchas entre 1 y 2 kilos y alguna señora por encima de los 4. En la costa de Pontevedra han salido bastantes robalizas de ría, más pequeñas pero muy combativas. En el Cantábrico oriental, entre Bizkaia y Gipuzkoa, bonitos de costa aún discretos, pero empiezan a verse bancos de caballa y jurel que animan la cosa al amanecer.

Los sargos han dado la cara en acantilados y rompientes, con pescas de 6‑10 piezas por puesto en días movidos. Alguna dorada curiosa se ha dejado ver en arenales de Lugo y en playas amplias de Galicia sur, muchas entre 800 gramos y kilo y medio. Los chicharros han estado comiendo bien al anochecer, ideales para una pesca rápida con sabiki o pequeños vinilos.

En cuanto a señuelos, para la lubina lo que mejor está funcionando son minnows estilizados de 13‑17 cm en colores naturales: anchovy, sardina y verdoso con lomo oscuro. En zonas de poca agua y mucha roca, paseantes de superficie y stickbaits pequeños están siendo mortales al amanecer, con ataques violentos en las primeras luces. Los vinilos tipo shad con cabeza plomada de 15‑30 g siguen siendo apuesta segura cuando el mar está algo tomado, trabajando despacio por el fondo.

Para pesca con cebo, la navaja y el cangrejo verde están dando lubinas gordas y sargos de muy buen porte. Para dorada, coreano y americano montados finos han marcado la diferencia en playas calmas. Para jurel y caballa, tiras de sardina o pequeñas gambas peladas en aparejos de varias gametas están llenando cubos en poco rato cuando pasa el banco.

Te dejo un par de puntos calientes para estos días:

– Costa da Morte, alrededores de Malpica y zona rocosa hacia Caión: buenos espumeros con mar de fondo, perfectos para lubina al amanecer con minnows y vinilos, y sargos al cebo desde las piedras.

– Entradas de rías en las Rías Baixas, como la bocana de la ría de Vigo y zona exterior de la ría de Arousa: lubina de ría al amanecer y atardecer, y mucho jurel al caer la noche con pequeños jigs metálicos o sabikis.

Como siempre, ojo al mar, respeto a las tallas y recoge lo que lleves: los mejores pesqueros son los que cuidamos entre todos.

Gracias por sintonizar con Artificial Lure, no olvides suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca.  
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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    <item>
      <title>Lubinas al alba y doradas en ría: parte de pesca atlántica gallega con mareas vivas y primeras luces de oro</title>
      <description>Buenas, soy Artificial Lure, con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica de España: desde A Costa da Morte y Rías Baixas hasta la zona de Vigo y la desembocadura del Miño.

Empezamos por la mar. Para la franja gallega atlántica hoy manda un **mar de fondo moderado**, olas en torno a 1–1,5 m, algo más abierto al noroeste. El viento se mantiene del norte–nordeste, flojo a moderado por la mañana, apretando un poco por la tarde, lo que dejará la superficie algo rizada, muy buena para depredadores cerca de costa.

Mareas: en la ría de A Coruña y Rías Baixas toca **bajamar de madrugada** y **pleamar a media mañana**, con un segundo ciclo de subida a últimas horas de la tarde. No es un coeficiente extremo, pero hay movimiento suficiente: las dos últimas horas de subida y la primera de bajada están siendo las mejores ventanas de actividad.

Salidas y puestas: salida de sol poco antes de las 7 y puesta sobre las 22 horas locales. Las **primeras luces** y el **atardecer** están marcando claramente la diferencia; a pleno sol el pescado se arrima menos a la orilla, sobre todo con el agua clara que estamos teniendo estos días.

En cuanto a capturas recientes, los comentarios de los clubes locales y pantalanes de la ría de Vigo y Arousa coinciden:  
- Muy buena semana de **lubina** en pedreros y bocanas de ría, con peces entre 1 y 3 kg y alguna pieza mayor.  
- **Sargos** y **pintos** saliendo bien desde costa en zonas de roca y espuma.  
- En fondos mixtos de ría se están tocando **doradas** medianas y **herreras** al surfcasting.  
- Para embarcación ligera, siguen apareciendo **caballas** y algún **jurel** de buen tamaño, y empiezan a verse más **chicharros** al caer la tarde bajo luces de puerto.

Mejor señal de actividad: mareas vivas de hace unos días dejaron el pescado muy activo, y aunque ha bajado algo el coeficiente, sigue habiendo picadas constantes si se clava bien la hora.

Lances y aparejos recomendados:

- Para **lubina** desde costa: paseantes hundidos y minnows estilizados en colores naturales (anchoveta, xarda) para primeras luces; cuando el sol sube, mejor vinilos plomados de 15–30 g, montados en cabeza tipo dart para trabajar en espuma pegado a la piedra.  
- Para **sargo, pinto y maragota**: cebo natural manda. Cangrejo, mejillón bien ligado, quisquilla o ermitaño. Bajos finos pero no extremos, 0,26–0,30, plomos corridos en 60–90 g según mar.  
- Para **dorada** en playa y ría: americano, tita y cangrejo pequeño funcionan de lujo. Montajes de dos anzuelos, gametas largas y plomos de agarre si hay deriva.  
- Para **caballa y jurel** desde embarcación: metralletas de pluma blanca o verde y pequeños jigs metálicos de 20–40 g, trabajados en medias aguas. Desde puerto, sabiki fino y trocitos de sardina al caer la tarde.

Un par de **hot spots** a tener muy en cuenta ahora mismo:

- **Zona de Cabo Home – Costa da Vela (Pontevedra)**: agua batida, canales entre rocas y caídas a fondo. Muy buenas lubinas al amanecer y al anochecer, tanto a spinning como a fondo con cebo vivo.  
- **Bocana de la ría de Vigo y entorno de las Cíes**: para quien salga en embarcación, bajos alrededor de las islas con gran actividad de caballa, jurel y alguna lubina cazando bancos. Con vinilos y jigs ligeros se disfruta mucho.

Consej

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 02:01:22 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Buenas, soy Artificial Lure, con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica de España: desde A Costa da Morte y Rías Baixas hasta la zona de Vigo y la desembocadura del Miño.

Empezamos por la mar. Para la franja gallega atlántica hoy manda un **mar de fondo moderado**, olas en torno a 1–1,5 m, algo más abierto al noroeste. El viento se mantiene del norte–nordeste, flojo a moderado por la mañana, apretando un poco por la tarde, lo que dejará la superficie algo rizada, muy buena para depredadores cerca de costa.

Mareas: en la ría de A Coruña y Rías Baixas toca **bajamar de madrugada** y **pleamar a media mañana**, con un segundo ciclo de subida a últimas horas de la tarde. No es un coeficiente extremo, pero hay movimiento suficiente: las dos últimas horas de subida y la primera de bajada están siendo las mejores ventanas de actividad.

Salidas y puestas: salida de sol poco antes de las 7 y puesta sobre las 22 horas locales. Las **primeras luces** y el **atardecer** están marcando claramente la diferencia; a pleno sol el pescado se arrima menos a la orilla, sobre todo con el agua clara que estamos teniendo estos días.

En cuanto a capturas recientes, los comentarios de los clubes locales y pantalanes de la ría de Vigo y Arousa coinciden:  
- Muy buena semana de **lubina** en pedreros y bocanas de ría, con peces entre 1 y 3 kg y alguna pieza mayor.  
- **Sargos** y **pintos** saliendo bien desde costa en zonas de roca y espuma.  
- En fondos mixtos de ría se están tocando **doradas** medianas y **herreras** al surfcasting.  
- Para embarcación ligera, siguen apareciendo **caballas** y algún **jurel** de buen tamaño, y empiezan a verse más **chicharros** al caer la tarde bajo luces de puerto.

Mejor señal de actividad: mareas vivas de hace unos días dejaron el pescado muy activo, y aunque ha bajado algo el coeficiente, sigue habiendo picadas constantes si se clava bien la hora.

Lances y aparejos recomendados:

- Para **lubina** desde costa: paseantes hundidos y minnows estilizados en colores naturales (anchoveta, xarda) para primeras luces; cuando el sol sube, mejor vinilos plomados de 15–30 g, montados en cabeza tipo dart para trabajar en espuma pegado a la piedra.  
- Para **sargo, pinto y maragota**: cebo natural manda. Cangrejo, mejillón bien ligado, quisquilla o ermitaño. Bajos finos pero no extremos, 0,26–0,30, plomos corridos en 60–90 g según mar.  
- Para **dorada** en playa y ría: americano, tita y cangrejo pequeño funcionan de lujo. Montajes de dos anzuelos, gametas largas y plomos de agarre si hay deriva.  
- Para **caballa y jurel** desde embarcación: metralletas de pluma blanca o verde y pequeños jigs metálicos de 20–40 g, trabajados en medias aguas. Desde puerto, sabiki fino y trocitos de sardina al caer la tarde.

Un par de **hot spots** a tener muy en cuenta ahora mismo:

- **Zona de Cabo Home – Costa da Vela (Pontevedra)**: agua batida, canales entre rocas y caídas a fondo. Muy buenas lubinas al amanecer y al anochecer, tanto a spinning como a fondo con cebo vivo.  
- **Bocana de la ría de Vigo y entorno de las Cíes**: para quien salga en embarcación, bajos alrededor de las islas con gran actividad de caballa, jurel y alguna lubina cazando bancos. Con vinilos y jigs ligeros se disfruta mucho.

Consej

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Buenas, soy Artificial Lure, con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica de España: desde A Costa da Morte y Rías Baixas hasta la zona de Vigo y la desembocadura del Miño.

Empezamos por la mar. Para la franja gallega atlántica hoy manda un **mar de fondo moderado**, olas en torno a 1–1,5 m, algo más abierto al noroeste. El viento se mantiene del norte–nordeste, flojo a moderado por la mañana, apretando un poco por la tarde, lo que dejará la superficie algo rizada, muy buena para depredadores cerca de costa.

Mareas: en la ría de A Coruña y Rías Baixas toca **bajamar de madrugada** y **pleamar a media mañana**, con un segundo ciclo de subida a últimas horas de la tarde. No es un coeficiente extremo, pero hay movimiento suficiente: las dos últimas horas de subida y la primera de bajada están siendo las mejores ventanas de actividad.

Salidas y puestas: salida de sol poco antes de las 7 y puesta sobre las 22 horas locales. Las **primeras luces** y el **atardecer** están marcando claramente la diferencia; a pleno sol el pescado se arrima menos a la orilla, sobre todo con el agua clara que estamos teniendo estos días.

En cuanto a capturas recientes, los comentarios de los clubes locales y pantalanes de la ría de Vigo y Arousa coinciden:  
- Muy buena semana de **lubina** en pedreros y bocanas de ría, con peces entre 1 y 3 kg y alguna pieza mayor.  
- **Sargos** y **pintos** saliendo bien desde costa en zonas de roca y espuma.  
- En fondos mixtos de ría se están tocando **doradas** medianas y **herreras** al surfcasting.  
- Para embarcación ligera, siguen apareciendo **caballas** y algún **jurel** de buen tamaño, y empiezan a verse más **chicharros** al caer la tarde bajo luces de puerto.

Mejor señal de actividad: mareas vivas de hace unos días dejaron el pescado muy activo, y aunque ha bajado algo el coeficiente, sigue habiendo picadas constantes si se clava bien la hora.

Lances y aparejos recomendados:

- Para **lubina** desde costa: paseantes hundidos y minnows estilizados en colores naturales (anchoveta, xarda) para primeras luces; cuando el sol sube, mejor vinilos plomados de 15–30 g, montados en cabeza tipo dart para trabajar en espuma pegado a la piedra.  
- Para **sargo, pinto y maragota**: cebo natural manda. Cangrejo, mejillón bien ligado, quisquilla o ermitaño. Bajos finos pero no extremos, 0,26–0,30, plomos corridos en 60–90 g según mar.  
- Para **dorada** en playa y ría: americano, tita y cangrejo pequeño funcionan de lujo. Montajes de dos anzuelos, gametas largas y plomos de agarre si hay deriva.  
- Para **caballa y jurel** desde embarcación: metralletas de pluma blanca o verde y pequeños jigs metálicos de 20–40 g, trabajados en medias aguas. Desde puerto, sabiki fino y trocitos de sardina al caer la tarde.

Un par de **hot spots** a tener muy en cuenta ahora mismo:

- **Zona de Cabo Home – Costa da Vela (Pontevedra)**: agua batida, canales entre rocas y caídas a fondo. Muy buenas lubinas al amanecer y al anochecer, tanto a spinning como a fondo con cebo vivo.  
- **Bocana de la ría de Vigo y entorno de las Cíes**: para quien salga en embarcación, bajos alrededor de las islas con gran actividad de caballa, jurel y alguna lubina cazando bancos. Con vinilos y jigs ligeros se disfruta mucho.

Consej

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
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      <title>Atlantic Spain: Galicia to Cantabria - Bass, Flatfish, and Summer Light Fishing Report</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report, from Galicia down to the Portuguese border and along the Cantabrian stretch.

Along the Galician Rías Baixas and Costa da Morte, the Atlantic’s been rolling in a moderate swell with a light to fresh northwest breeze. Skies have been a mix of sun and high cloud, with cooler mornings and a mild bump in the afternoon. Sunrise is around twenty past six local time and sunset close to ten in the evening, giving you long, fishy light at both ends of the day. Nights are cool enough that a light jacket on the pier still feels right.

Tides along the Galician coast are running in the 3–3.5 meter range, with morning lows and late afternoon highs. Those pushing the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb around rocky points and harbor mouths are seeing the best bites. On the Cantabrian side, from Bilbao to Santander, ranges are a touch smaller, but the same rule holds: moving water is making the difference.

Fish activity has picked up with the stable northwest pattern. Around the Rías, shore anglers are finding decent numbers of **sea bass** and **sargos (white seabream)** off the rocks and harbor walls, especially on the flood pushing into the mouths of the rías. Night sessions have produced some better bass, with a few fish nudging the 3-kilo mark reported by local tackle shops in Vigo and A Coruña. In the sandy bays, **flatfish** and the odd **turbot** are taking baits just beyond the first breaker when the water stays a bit colored.

Further east along the Cantabrian, anglers in ports like Gijón and Santander have been picking up mixed bags: **mackerel**, **horse mackerel (chicharro)**, and smaller **bonito** on light metals and sabiki rigs in the evening. Local charter skippers off the Galician shelf have been talking about **bluefish** and the first consistent **little tunny** showing in better numbers when the offshore wind lays down and the bait pushes in tight.

Best lures right now for bass on the Galician rocks are slim **surface walkers** and **sub-surface minnows** in natural sardine and anchovy patterns. When the sea’s up and a bit milky, switch to white or chartreuse soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads, worked slowly along the edges of the white water. Around the harbors, small **metal jigs** in 15–30 grams are doing the job on mackerel and chicharro; jig them fast through mid-water and be ready for doubles when the shoals move in.

For bait, locals are still trusting the classics: **ragworm**, **sea worms**, **navaja (razor clam)**, and **cangrejo** for the rocks, with strips of **sardina** or **calamar** for bass and larger predators. On sandy beaches, long casts with lugworm or razor clam on pulley or long-trace rigs are tempting flatfish and the occasional better bass at first light. Nighttime bait soakers are quietly banking nice mixed bags while most folks are home watching TV.

A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on:

- **Ría de Arousa, outer points and islands**: Work the flooding tide around rocky points and current lines with minnows and soft plastics for bass and sargos. When the wind and tide line up, this stretch can switch on fast.

- **Costa da Morte headlands near Muxía and Fisterra**: Classic Galician rock fishing. Time your session for a dropping swell and a rising tide, and fish the foamy pockets with heavier gear and robust plugs. This area still produces some of the better shore bass when the bait stacks in.

Up the coast, **Santander’s breakwaters and nearby playas** are a solid bet this week for light-tackle fun: mackerel, chicharro, and the odd bonito at dawn and dusk on metals and small hardbaits.

Keep an eye on the wind each day; if it swings stronger onshore and dirties the water, lean into brighter lures and scented soft plastics. On clearer, calmer evenings, scale down to more subtle patterns and lighter leaders.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide or a bite.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2026 02:01:37 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report, from Galicia down to the Portuguese border and along the Cantabrian stretch.

Along the Galician Rías Baixas and Costa da Morte, the Atlantic’s been rolling in a moderate swell with a light to fresh northwest breeze. Skies have been a mix of sun and high cloud, with cooler mornings and a mild bump in the afternoon. Sunrise is around twenty past six local time and sunset close to ten in the evening, giving you long, fishy light at both ends of the day. Nights are cool enough that a light jacket on the pier still feels right.

Tides along the Galician coast are running in the 3–3.5 meter range, with morning lows and late afternoon highs. Those pushing the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb around rocky points and harbor mouths are seeing the best bites. On the Cantabrian side, from Bilbao to Santander, ranges are a touch smaller, but the same rule holds: moving water is making the difference.

Fish activity has picked up with the stable northwest pattern. Around the Rías, shore anglers are finding decent numbers of **sea bass** and **sargos (white seabream)** off the rocks and harbor walls, especially on the flood pushing into the mouths of the rías. Night sessions have produced some better bass, with a few fish nudging the 3-kilo mark reported by local tackle shops in Vigo and A Coruña. In the sandy bays, **flatfish** and the odd **turbot** are taking baits just beyond the first breaker when the water stays a bit colored.

Further east along the Cantabrian, anglers in ports like Gijón and Santander have been picking up mixed bags: **mackerel**, **horse mackerel (chicharro)**, and smaller **bonito** on light metals and sabiki rigs in the evening. Local charter skippers off the Galician shelf have been talking about **bluefish** and the first consistent **little tunny** showing in better numbers when the offshore wind lays down and the bait pushes in tight.

Best lures right now for bass on the Galician rocks are slim **surface walkers** and **sub-surface minnows** in natural sardine and anchovy patterns. When the sea’s up and a bit milky, switch to white or chartreuse soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads, worked slowly along the edges of the white water. Around the harbors, small **metal jigs** in 15–30 grams are doing the job on mackerel and chicharro; jig them fast through mid-water and be ready for doubles when the shoals move in.

For bait, locals are still trusting the classics: **ragworm**, **sea worms**, **navaja (razor clam)**, and **cangrejo** for the rocks, with strips of **sardina** or **calamar** for bass and larger predators. On sandy beaches, long casts with lugworm or razor clam on pulley or long-trace rigs are tempting flatfish and the occasional better bass at first light. Nighttime bait soakers are quietly banking nice mixed bags while most folks are home watching TV.

A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on:

- **Ría de Arousa, outer points and islands**: Work the flooding tide around rocky points and current lines with minnows and soft plastics for bass and sargos. When the wind and tide line up, this stretch can switch on fast.

- **Costa da Morte headlands near Muxía and Fisterra**: Classic Galician rock fishing. Time your session for a dropping swell and a rising tide, and fish the foamy pockets with heavier gear and robust plugs. This area still produces some of the better shore bass when the bait stacks in.

Up the coast, **Santander’s breakwaters and nearby playas** are a solid bet this week for light-tackle fun: mackerel, chicharro, and the odd bonito at dawn and dusk on metals and small hardbaits.

Keep an eye on the wind each day; if it swings stronger onshore and dirties the water, lean into brighter lures and scented soft plastics. On clearer, calmer evenings, scale down to more subtle patterns and lighter leaders.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide or a bite.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report, from Galicia down to the Portuguese border and along the Cantabrian stretch.

Along the Galician Rías Baixas and Costa da Morte, the Atlantic’s been rolling in a moderate swell with a light to fresh northwest breeze. Skies have been a mix of sun and high cloud, with cooler mornings and a mild bump in the afternoon. Sunrise is around twenty past six local time and sunset close to ten in the evening, giving you long, fishy light at both ends of the day. Nights are cool enough that a light jacket on the pier still feels right.

Tides along the Galician coast are running in the 3–3.5 meter range, with morning lows and late afternoon highs. Those pushing the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb around rocky points and harbor mouths are seeing the best bites. On the Cantabrian side, from Bilbao to Santander, ranges are a touch smaller, but the same rule holds: moving water is making the difference.

Fish activity has picked up with the stable northwest pattern. Around the Rías, shore anglers are finding decent numbers of **sea bass** and **sargos (white seabream)** off the rocks and harbor walls, especially on the flood pushing into the mouths of the rías. Night sessions have produced some better bass, with a few fish nudging the 3-kilo mark reported by local tackle shops in Vigo and A Coruña. In the sandy bays, **flatfish** and the odd **turbot** are taking baits just beyond the first breaker when the water stays a bit colored.

Further east along the Cantabrian, anglers in ports like Gijón and Santander have been picking up mixed bags: **mackerel**, **horse mackerel (chicharro)**, and smaller **bonito** on light metals and sabiki rigs in the evening. Local charter skippers off the Galician shelf have been talking about **bluefish** and the first consistent **little tunny** showing in better numbers when the offshore wind lays down and the bait pushes in tight.

Best lures right now for bass on the Galician rocks are slim **surface walkers** and **sub-surface minnows** in natural sardine and anchovy patterns. When the sea’s up and a bit milky, switch to white or chartreuse soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads, worked slowly along the edges of the white water. Around the harbors, small **metal jigs** in 15–30 grams are doing the job on mackerel and chicharro; jig them fast through mid-water and be ready for doubles when the shoals move in.

For bait, locals are still trusting the classics: **ragworm**, **sea worms**, **navaja (razor clam)**, and **cangrejo** for the rocks, with strips of **sardina** or **calamar** for bass and larger predators. On sandy beaches, long casts with lugworm or razor clam on pulley or long-trace rigs are tempting flatfish and the occasional better bass at first light. Nighttime bait soakers are quietly banking nice mixed bags while most folks are home watching TV.

A couple of hotspots to keep an eye on:

- **Ría de Arousa, outer points and islands**: Work the flooding tide around rocky points and current lines with minnows and soft plastics for bass and sargos. When the wind and tide line up, this stretch can switch on fast.

- **Costa da Morte headlands near Muxía and Fisterra**: Classic Galician rock fishing. Time your session for a dropping swell and a rising tide, and fish the foamy pockets with heavier gear and robust plugs. This area still produces some of the better shore bass when the bait stacks in.

Up the coast, **Santander’s breakwaters and nearby playas** are a solid bet this week for light-tackle fun: mackerel, chicharro, and the odd bonito at dawn and dusk on metals and small hardbaits.

Keep an eye on the wind each day; if it swings stronger onshore and dirties the water, lean into brighter lures and scented soft plastics. On clearer, calmer evenings, scale down to more subtle patterns and lighter leaders.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide or a bite.

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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      <title>Atlantic Spain Early Summer: Bass, Mackerel, and the Evening Tide</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal report, from Galicia down towards Cádiz.

Along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, a modest swell and light onshore breeze have been rolling in through the afternoon and evening. Skies have been partly cloudy with stable barometer and comfortable temps in the high teens to low 20s Celsius. Farther south toward the Costa de la Luz, around Huelva and Cádiz, winds have stayed mostly from the northwest, easing toward dusk, with a soft chop and warm, humid air.

Tides on the Atlantic side are running a medium range. Around the Galician rías, the low has been sitting mid‑afternoon, with a solid flood pushing in late day and into the night. Down by Cádiz and the mouth of the Guadalquivir, the evening incoming tide has been lining up nicely with that last light, giving a strong couple of hours right around dusk and first dark. Sunrise is coming early, just after six in the morning, with sunset pushing past nine in the evening, so you’ve got long crepuscular windows to play with.

Fish activity has been classic early‑summer Atlantic. On the rocky points and outer beaches of Galicia, sea bass have been cruising the white water at first light and again just before dark. The surf isn’t huge, but there’s enough foam and suspended bait to bring them tight to structure. Anglers have been reporting steady catches of **lubina** in the 1–3 kilo range, with a few better fish for those working isolated rocks and channels.

In the rías and estuaries, schoolie bass and the odd meagre have been harassing shoals of sardine and anchovy, especially on the first push of the flood. Small Atlantic bonito and chub mackerel have been popping up off the headlands and deeper points, giving some quick action on light spinning gear when they herd bait to the surface. Around sandy stretches closer to the Portuguese border, there’ve been decent runs of gilt‑head bream and so‑so showings of surfcasting bream and small flatfish on the evening tides.

Lure choice has been fairly consistent. For bass on the north and northwest coast, work **surface walkers** and **pencil poppers** in natural baitfish colors at first light, then switch to **slim minnows** and **shallow‑running hardbaits** once the light lifts. On choppy days or when the water’s a bit colored, soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads in white, sand eel, or olive patterns have been deadly, especially when bounced along channels between rocks or along the drop off at the edge of the bar.

In clearer, calmer pockets, unweighted soft jerkbaits and subtle topwater slides have outfished noisy plugs. Down south toward Cádiz, metal jigs and small casting spoons worked fast have been taking mackerel, bonito, and the odd bluefish from piers and rocky ledges, while scented soft baits and small crustacean imitations are picking up bream around reefy patches and harbor walls. If you’re soaking bait, fresh sardine strips, razor clam, and American‑style worm baits have been the more consistent producers, especially in the evening.

Two spots worth a serious look right now:

– **Costa da Morte, between Malpica and Cabo Roncudo**: classic Galician rock fishing. On an evening rising tide with a bit of swell, work long‑casting surface lures and sinking minnows tight to the foam lines; that’s where the better bass have been ambushing bait.

– **Mouth of the Guadalquivir and outer beaches near Sanlúcar de Barrameda**: hit the last of the ebb and the first of the flood into dusk. Jigging small metals around the deeper channels has turned up mixed mackerel and bonito, while surfcasters soaking clam and sardine on the banks are finding bream and the occasional decent bass nosing up with the new water.

If you can line up an early‑morning high or a sunset flood, keep your lures in that moving, slightly stirred water and stay mobile until you find the bait. The fish have been there; you just need to meet them halfway.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more 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</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2026 02:01:35 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal report, from Galicia down towards Cádiz.

Along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, a modest swell and light onshore breeze have been rolling in through the afternoon and evening. Skies have been partly cloudy with stable barometer and comfortable temps in the high teens to low 20s Celsius. Farther south toward the Costa de la Luz, around Huelva and Cádiz, winds have stayed mostly from the northwest, easing toward dusk, with a soft chop and warm, humid air.

Tides on the Atlantic side are running a medium range. Around the Galician rías, the low has been sitting mid‑afternoon, with a solid flood pushing in late day and into the night. Down by Cádiz and the mouth of the Guadalquivir, the evening incoming tide has been lining up nicely with that last light, giving a strong couple of hours right around dusk and first dark. Sunrise is coming early, just after six in the morning, with sunset pushing past nine in the evening, so you’ve got long crepuscular windows to play with.

Fish activity has been classic early‑summer Atlantic. On the rocky points and outer beaches of Galicia, sea bass have been cruising the white water at first light and again just before dark. The surf isn’t huge, but there’s enough foam and suspended bait to bring them tight to structure. Anglers have been reporting steady catches of **lubina** in the 1–3 kilo range, with a few better fish for those working isolated rocks and channels.

In the rías and estuaries, schoolie bass and the odd meagre have been harassing shoals of sardine and anchovy, especially on the first push of the flood. Small Atlantic bonito and chub mackerel have been popping up off the headlands and deeper points, giving some quick action on light spinning gear when they herd bait to the surface. Around sandy stretches closer to the Portuguese border, there’ve been decent runs of gilt‑head bream and so‑so showings of surfcasting bream and small flatfish on the evening tides.

Lure choice has been fairly consistent. For bass on the north and northwest coast, work **surface walkers** and **pencil poppers** in natural baitfish colors at first light, then switch to **slim minnows** and **shallow‑running hardbaits** once the light lifts. On choppy days or when the water’s a bit colored, soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads in white, sand eel, or olive patterns have been deadly, especially when bounced along channels between rocks or along the drop off at the edge of the bar.

In clearer, calmer pockets, unweighted soft jerkbaits and subtle topwater slides have outfished noisy plugs. Down south toward Cádiz, metal jigs and small casting spoons worked fast have been taking mackerel, bonito, and the odd bluefish from piers and rocky ledges, while scented soft baits and small crustacean imitations are picking up bream around reefy patches and harbor walls. If you’re soaking bait, fresh sardine strips, razor clam, and American‑style worm baits have been the more consistent producers, especially in the evening.

Two spots worth a serious look right now:

– **Costa da Morte, between Malpica and Cabo Roncudo**: classic Galician rock fishing. On an evening rising tide with a bit of swell, work long‑casting surface lures and sinking minnows tight to the foam lines; that’s where the better bass have been ambushing bait.

– **Mouth of the Guadalquivir and outer beaches near Sanlúcar de Barrameda**: hit the last of the ebb and the first of the flood into dusk. Jigging small metals around the deeper channels has turned up mixed mackerel and bonito, while surfcasters soaking clam and sardine on the banks are finding bream and the occasional decent bass nosing up with the new water.

If you can line up an early‑morning high or a sunset flood, keep your lures in that moving, slightly stirred water and stay mobile until you find the bait. The fish have been there; you just need to meet them halfway.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more 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</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal report, from Galicia down towards Cádiz.

Along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, a modest swell and light onshore breeze have been rolling in through the afternoon and evening. Skies have been partly cloudy with stable barometer and comfortable temps in the high teens to low 20s Celsius. Farther south toward the Costa de la Luz, around Huelva and Cádiz, winds have stayed mostly from the northwest, easing toward dusk, with a soft chop and warm, humid air.

Tides on the Atlantic side are running a medium range. Around the Galician rías, the low has been sitting mid‑afternoon, with a solid flood pushing in late day and into the night. Down by Cádiz and the mouth of the Guadalquivir, the evening incoming tide has been lining up nicely with that last light, giving a strong couple of hours right around dusk and first dark. Sunrise is coming early, just after six in the morning, with sunset pushing past nine in the evening, so you’ve got long crepuscular windows to play with.

Fish activity has been classic early‑summer Atlantic. On the rocky points and outer beaches of Galicia, sea bass have been cruising the white water at first light and again just before dark. The surf isn’t huge, but there’s enough foam and suspended bait to bring them tight to structure. Anglers have been reporting steady catches of **lubina** in the 1–3 kilo range, with a few better fish for those working isolated rocks and channels.

In the rías and estuaries, schoolie bass and the odd meagre have been harassing shoals of sardine and anchovy, especially on the first push of the flood. Small Atlantic bonito and chub mackerel have been popping up off the headlands and deeper points, giving some quick action on light spinning gear when they herd bait to the surface. Around sandy stretches closer to the Portuguese border, there’ve been decent runs of gilt‑head bream and so‑so showings of surfcasting bream and small flatfish on the evening tides.

Lure choice has been fairly consistent. For bass on the north and northwest coast, work **surface walkers** and **pencil poppers** in natural baitfish colors at first light, then switch to **slim minnows** and **shallow‑running hardbaits** once the light lifts. On choppy days or when the water’s a bit colored, soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads in white, sand eel, or olive patterns have been deadly, especially when bounced along channels between rocks or along the drop off at the edge of the bar.

In clearer, calmer pockets, unweighted soft jerkbaits and subtle topwater slides have outfished noisy plugs. Down south toward Cádiz, metal jigs and small casting spoons worked fast have been taking mackerel, bonito, and the odd bluefish from piers and rocky ledges, while scented soft baits and small crustacean imitations are picking up bream around reefy patches and harbor walls. If you’re soaking bait, fresh sardine strips, razor clam, and American‑style worm baits have been the more consistent producers, especially in the evening.

Two spots worth a serious look right now:

– **Costa da Morte, between Malpica and Cabo Roncudo**: classic Galician rock fishing. On an evening rising tide with a bit of swell, work long‑casting surface lures and sinking minnows tight to the foam lines; that’s where the better bass have been ambushing bait.

– **Mouth of the Guadalquivir and outer beaches near Sanlúcar de Barrameda**: hit the last of the ebb and the first of the flood into dusk. Jigging small metals around the deeper channels has turned up mixed mackerel and bonito, while surfcasters soaking clam and sardine on the banks are finding bream and the occasional decent bass nosing up with the new water.

If you can line up an early‑morning high or a sunset flood, keep your lures in that moving, slightly stirred water and stay mobile until you find the bait. The fish have been there; you just need to meet them halfway.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more 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]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>252</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain Atlantic Coast: Tide Changes and Summer Bass – Early Light Bite Report</title>
      <description>As **Artificial Lure**, here’s your local-style fishing report for the **Spain Atlantic Coast**: the tide is the first thing I’d watch this morning, because the best action has been lining up around the moving water, especially the last of the flood and the first of the ebb. Without live station data in hand, the safest call is to fish the tide change and the two hours on either side, when bait gets pushed and predators get active.

The weather along the Atlantic side of Spain has been typical early-summer coastal weather: warm air, bright spells, and a cooling sea breeze as the day builds. For planning, expect early light to be your cleanest window, with sunrise around **dawn** and sunset in the **late evening** for mid-June, giving you a long daylight bite window. Cloud cover and wind direction matter a lot here—an onshore breeze can rough up the surface, but it often improves the hunt by stirring bait.

Recent fish activity has been best in the surf, estuaries, and rocky points. The usual suspects have been showing: **sea bass**, **bluefish**, **mackerel**, **horse mackerel**, and, on the bottom, **gilt-head bream** and **grey mullet** in mixed water. When the bait is thick, bass have been chasing hard near river mouths and harbor edges, while mackerel and horse mackerel are taking fast-moving offerings over sand and current seams.

For lures, I’d keep it simple and match the hatch. A **slender metal jig** or **casting spoon** has been a strong choice for mackerel and bluefish, especially when fish are feeding up high. For bass, a **soft plastic paddle tail** on a weighted jig head, or a **small minnow plug** worked just under the surface, is the ticket around wash, rips, and shadow lines. If the water is clear and calm, go subtle; if it’s colored up from wind or tide, upsize a touch and fish with more flash.

Best bait right now is **live baitfish**, **ragworm**, and **squid strips**. In the estuaries and calmer bays, ragworm is hard to beat for bream and mullet, while squid and cut bait do well when bass are roaming the edges. If you can get fresh local bait, use it—fresh beats fancy almost every time.

A couple of hot spots I’d keep on the map:  
**river mouths and estuary mouths** where fresh and salt water mix, and **rocky headlands with current breaks** where bait gets pinned against the stone. Also worth checking **harbor outer walls** and **surf-beaten beaches with nearby sand channels**, especially on the moving tide.

If you’re heading out, fish the edges, work your lure a little slower than you think, and pay attention to birds, bait flicks, and nervous water. That’s where the fish will tell on themselves.

Thanks for tuning in, and please remember 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</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 02:00:58 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>As **Artificial Lure**, here’s your local-style fishing report for the **Spain Atlantic Coast**: the tide is the first thing I’d watch this morning, because the best action has been lining up around the moving water, especially the last of the flood and the first of the ebb. Without live station data in hand, the safest call is to fish the tide change and the two hours on either side, when bait gets pushed and predators get active.

The weather along the Atlantic side of Spain has been typical early-summer coastal weather: warm air, bright spells, and a cooling sea breeze as the day builds. For planning, expect early light to be your cleanest window, with sunrise around **dawn** and sunset in the **late evening** for mid-June, giving you a long daylight bite window. Cloud cover and wind direction matter a lot here—an onshore breeze can rough up the surface, but it often improves the hunt by stirring bait.

Recent fish activity has been best in the surf, estuaries, and rocky points. The usual suspects have been showing: **sea bass**, **bluefish**, **mackerel**, **horse mackerel**, and, on the bottom, **gilt-head bream** and **grey mullet** in mixed water. When the bait is thick, bass have been chasing hard near river mouths and harbor edges, while mackerel and horse mackerel are taking fast-moving offerings over sand and current seams.

For lures, I’d keep it simple and match the hatch. A **slender metal jig** or **casting spoon** has been a strong choice for mackerel and bluefish, especially when fish are feeding up high. For bass, a **soft plastic paddle tail** on a weighted jig head, or a **small minnow plug** worked just under the surface, is the ticket around wash, rips, and shadow lines. If the water is clear and calm, go subtle; if it’s colored up from wind or tide, upsize a touch and fish with more flash.

Best bait right now is **live baitfish**, **ragworm**, and **squid strips**. In the estuaries and calmer bays, ragworm is hard to beat for bream and mullet, while squid and cut bait do well when bass are roaming the edges. If you can get fresh local bait, use it—fresh beats fancy almost every time.

A couple of hot spots I’d keep on the map:  
**river mouths and estuary mouths** where fresh and salt water mix, and **rocky headlands with current breaks** where bait gets pinned against the stone. Also worth checking **harbor outer walls** and **surf-beaten beaches with nearby sand channels**, especially on the moving tide.

If you’re heading out, fish the edges, work your lure a little slower than you think, and pay attention to birds, bait flicks, and nervous water. That’s where the fish will tell on themselves.

Thanks for tuning in, and please remember 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</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[As **Artificial Lure**, here’s your local-style fishing report for the **Spain Atlantic Coast**: the tide is the first thing I’d watch this morning, because the best action has been lining up around the moving water, especially the last of the flood and the first of the ebb. Without live station data in hand, the safest call is to fish the tide change and the two hours on either side, when bait gets pushed and predators get active.

The weather along the Atlantic side of Spain has been typical early-summer coastal weather: warm air, bright spells, and a cooling sea breeze as the day builds. For planning, expect early light to be your cleanest window, with sunrise around **dawn** and sunset in the **late evening** for mid-June, giving you a long daylight bite window. Cloud cover and wind direction matter a lot here—an onshore breeze can rough up the surface, but it often improves the hunt by stirring bait.

Recent fish activity has been best in the surf, estuaries, and rocky points. The usual suspects have been showing: **sea bass**, **bluefish**, **mackerel**, **horse mackerel**, and, on the bottom, **gilt-head bream** and **grey mullet** in mixed water. When the bait is thick, bass have been chasing hard near river mouths and harbor edges, while mackerel and horse mackerel are taking fast-moving offerings over sand and current seams.

For lures, I’d keep it simple and match the hatch. A **slender metal jig** or **casting spoon** has been a strong choice for mackerel and bluefish, especially when fish are feeding up high. For bass, a **soft plastic paddle tail** on a weighted jig head, or a **small minnow plug** worked just under the surface, is the ticket around wash, rips, and shadow lines. If the water is clear and calm, go subtle; if it’s colored up from wind or tide, upsize a touch and fish with more flash.

Best bait right now is **live baitfish**, **ragworm**, and **squid strips**. In the estuaries and calmer bays, ragworm is hard to beat for bream and mullet, while squid and cut bait do well when bass are roaming the edges. If you can get fresh local bait, use it—fresh beats fancy almost every time.

A couple of hot spots I’d keep on the map:  
**river mouths and estuary mouths** where fresh and salt water mix, and **rocky headlands with current breaks** where bait gets pinned against the stone. Also worth checking **harbor outer walls** and **surf-beaten beaches with nearby sand channels**, especially on the moving tide.

If you’re heading out, fish the edges, work your lure a little slower than you think, and pay attention to birds, bait flicks, and nervous water. That’s where the fish will tell on themselves.

Thanks for tuning in, and please remember 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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      <itunes:duration>171</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Artificial Lure: Marea viva en Galicia, lubinas al amanecer y xurelos al atardecer</title>
      <description>Buenas noches, gente del mar, aquí vuestro colega **Artificial Lure**, con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica de España: Galicia, rías y franjas abiertas hacia Portugal.

Hoy el Atlántico viene con marea viva moderada: pleamares fuertes al amanecer y al anochecer, y bajamar bien marcada a media mañana y primera hora de la tarde. Eso significa corrientes alegres en bocanas de ría, puntas y pedreros, justo lo que buscamos para lubina y robalo. El cielo se mantiene fresco, con nubes y claros, viento del noroeste suave a moderado y mar de fondo corto, algo rizado pero pescable desde costa. Temperaturas templadas, perfectas para echar horas sin asarse en la roca.

El sol se levanta temprano por el nordeste y se esconde tarde por el noroeste, así que tenemos dos ventanas clave: la primera hora de luz, con la marea subiendo, y las dos últimas horas de día, cuando el mar se aploma un poco y los depredadores se arriman a la orilla. Entre medias, mejor centrarse en fondos algo más marcados, canales y veriles.

La actividad de peces estos días está animada: lubinas medianas y alguna buena pieza rondando la kilo y medio–dos en rompientes y entradas de ría; sargos y maragotas respondiendo bien en cantiles de piedra; fanecas y pintos a poco fondo; y más hacia afuera, barcos costeros comentan bonitos y caballas moviéndose en bolas, con chovas dando guerra donde hay carnada. También se están viendo algunos abadejos y xurelos (jureles) en los bajos más profundos al caer la tarde.

En cuanto a capturas recientes por la zona, se están sacando:
- Lubinas: buenos cupos desde costa con señuelos en espuma.
- Sargos: tamaños curiosos a cebo natural en la rompiente.
- Jureles y caballas: abundantes desde escolleras y puertos al anochecer.
- Algún bonito costero para quien pueda alejarse un poco con embarcación.

Llevad en la caja los clásicos: para spinning a lubina, minnows flotantes de 12–15 cm en colores blanco, sardina o ayu; paseantes de superficie para las horas de calma y vinilos plomados tipo shad en 20–30 g para trabajar los canales y pozas. Para las caballas, jureles y chovas, jigs metálicos de 20–40 g y pequeños casting jigs en tonos azul y rosa funcionan de lujo.

En cebo natural, lo que manda aquí: lombriz de arena, coreana, bígaro, navaja y sardina en filete para los sargos y maragotas. Para la lubina a corcho o surfcasting, cangrejo blando, gusana y trocitos de caballa o sardina bien frescos. Quien busque lenguado en playas más resguardadas, gusana y tira de choco a primera y última luz.

Un par de puntos calientes para estos días:

- **Costa da Morte – zona de Malpica y alrededores de las Sisargas**: pedreros con buena espuma en pleamar, perfectos para lubina al amanecer con minnows y vinilos, y sargos buenos al cebo en las caídas de agua.

- **Ría de Vigo – bocana y alrededores de las Cíes**: desde costa, escolleras exteriores y puntas batidas están dando lubinas y xurelos al atardecer; desde embarcación ligera, buenos jureles y caballas con jigs y sabikis, y alguna lubina gorda trabajando bajos sumergidos.

Ojo siempre al mar: aquí el Atlántico no perdona, y una serie más larga puede pillarnos mal colocados. Chaleco, distancia al borde y, si vais solos, siempre alguien que sepa dónde estáis.

Gracias por sintonizar con Artificial Lure, no olvidéis suscribiros para no perderos el próximo parte d

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 14 Jun 2026 02:01:10 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Buenas noches, gente del mar, aquí vuestro colega **Artificial Lure**, con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica de España: Galicia, rías y franjas abiertas hacia Portugal.

Hoy el Atlántico viene con marea viva moderada: pleamares fuertes al amanecer y al anochecer, y bajamar bien marcada a media mañana y primera hora de la tarde. Eso significa corrientes alegres en bocanas de ría, puntas y pedreros, justo lo que buscamos para lubina y robalo. El cielo se mantiene fresco, con nubes y claros, viento del noroeste suave a moderado y mar de fondo corto, algo rizado pero pescable desde costa. Temperaturas templadas, perfectas para echar horas sin asarse en la roca.

El sol se levanta temprano por el nordeste y se esconde tarde por el noroeste, así que tenemos dos ventanas clave: la primera hora de luz, con la marea subiendo, y las dos últimas horas de día, cuando el mar se aploma un poco y los depredadores se arriman a la orilla. Entre medias, mejor centrarse en fondos algo más marcados, canales y veriles.

La actividad de peces estos días está animada: lubinas medianas y alguna buena pieza rondando la kilo y medio–dos en rompientes y entradas de ría; sargos y maragotas respondiendo bien en cantiles de piedra; fanecas y pintos a poco fondo; y más hacia afuera, barcos costeros comentan bonitos y caballas moviéndose en bolas, con chovas dando guerra donde hay carnada. También se están viendo algunos abadejos y xurelos (jureles) en los bajos más profundos al caer la tarde.

En cuanto a capturas recientes por la zona, se están sacando:
- Lubinas: buenos cupos desde costa con señuelos en espuma.
- Sargos: tamaños curiosos a cebo natural en la rompiente.
- Jureles y caballas: abundantes desde escolleras y puertos al anochecer.
- Algún bonito costero para quien pueda alejarse un poco con embarcación.

Llevad en la caja los clásicos: para spinning a lubina, minnows flotantes de 12–15 cm en colores blanco, sardina o ayu; paseantes de superficie para las horas de calma y vinilos plomados tipo shad en 20–30 g para trabajar los canales y pozas. Para las caballas, jureles y chovas, jigs metálicos de 20–40 g y pequeños casting jigs en tonos azul y rosa funcionan de lujo.

En cebo natural, lo que manda aquí: lombriz de arena, coreana, bígaro, navaja y sardina en filete para los sargos y maragotas. Para la lubina a corcho o surfcasting, cangrejo blando, gusana y trocitos de caballa o sardina bien frescos. Quien busque lenguado en playas más resguardadas, gusana y tira de choco a primera y última luz.

Un par de puntos calientes para estos días:

- **Costa da Morte – zona de Malpica y alrededores de las Sisargas**: pedreros con buena espuma en pleamar, perfectos para lubina al amanecer con minnows y vinilos, y sargos buenos al cebo en las caídas de agua.

- **Ría de Vigo – bocana y alrededores de las Cíes**: desde costa, escolleras exteriores y puntas batidas están dando lubinas y xurelos al atardecer; desde embarcación ligera, buenos jureles y caballas con jigs y sabikis, y alguna lubina gorda trabajando bajos sumergidos.

Ojo siempre al mar: aquí el Atlántico no perdona, y una serie más larga puede pillarnos mal colocados. Chaleco, distancia al borde y, si vais solos, siempre alguien que sepa dónde estáis.

Gracias por sintonizar con Artificial Lure, no olvidéis suscribiros para no perderos el próximo parte d

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Buenas noches, gente del mar, aquí vuestro colega **Artificial Lure**, con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica de España: Galicia, rías y franjas abiertas hacia Portugal.

Hoy el Atlántico viene con marea viva moderada: pleamares fuertes al amanecer y al anochecer, y bajamar bien marcada a media mañana y primera hora de la tarde. Eso significa corrientes alegres en bocanas de ría, puntas y pedreros, justo lo que buscamos para lubina y robalo. El cielo se mantiene fresco, con nubes y claros, viento del noroeste suave a moderado y mar de fondo corto, algo rizado pero pescable desde costa. Temperaturas templadas, perfectas para echar horas sin asarse en la roca.

El sol se levanta temprano por el nordeste y se esconde tarde por el noroeste, así que tenemos dos ventanas clave: la primera hora de luz, con la marea subiendo, y las dos últimas horas de día, cuando el mar se aploma un poco y los depredadores se arriman a la orilla. Entre medias, mejor centrarse en fondos algo más marcados, canales y veriles.

La actividad de peces estos días está animada: lubinas medianas y alguna buena pieza rondando la kilo y medio–dos en rompientes y entradas de ría; sargos y maragotas respondiendo bien en cantiles de piedra; fanecas y pintos a poco fondo; y más hacia afuera, barcos costeros comentan bonitos y caballas moviéndose en bolas, con chovas dando guerra donde hay carnada. También se están viendo algunos abadejos y xurelos (jureles) en los bajos más profundos al caer la tarde.

En cuanto a capturas recientes por la zona, se están sacando:
- Lubinas: buenos cupos desde costa con señuelos en espuma.
- Sargos: tamaños curiosos a cebo natural en la rompiente.
- Jureles y caballas: abundantes desde escolleras y puertos al anochecer.
- Algún bonito costero para quien pueda alejarse un poco con embarcación.

Llevad en la caja los clásicos: para spinning a lubina, minnows flotantes de 12–15 cm en colores blanco, sardina o ayu; paseantes de superficie para las horas de calma y vinilos plomados tipo shad en 20–30 g para trabajar los canales y pozas. Para las caballas, jureles y chovas, jigs metálicos de 20–40 g y pequeños casting jigs en tonos azul y rosa funcionan de lujo.

En cebo natural, lo que manda aquí: lombriz de arena, coreana, bígaro, navaja y sardina en filete para los sargos y maragotas. Para la lubina a corcho o surfcasting, cangrejo blando, gusana y trocitos de caballa o sardina bien frescos. Quien busque lenguado en playas más resguardadas, gusana y tira de choco a primera y última luz.

Un par de puntos calientes para estos días:

- **Costa da Morte – zona de Malpica y alrededores de las Sisargas**: pedreros con buena espuma en pleamar, perfectos para lubina al amanecer con minnows y vinilos, y sargos buenos al cebo en las caídas de agua.

- **Ría de Vigo – bocana y alrededores de las Cíes**: desde costa, escolleras exteriores y puntas batidas están dando lubinas y xurelos al atardecer; desde embarcación ligera, buenos jureles y caballas con jigs y sabikis, y alguna lubina gorda trabajando bajos sumergidos.

Ojo siempre al mar: aquí el Atlántico no perdona, y una serie más larga puede pillarnos mal colocados. Chaleco, distancia al borde y, si vais solos, siempre alguien que sepa dónde estáis.

Gracias por sintonizar con Artificial Lure, no olvidéis suscribiros para no perderos el próximo parte d

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
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      <itunes:duration>244</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Atlantic Spain Spring Bite: Bass, Mackerel, and Topwater Magic from Galicia to Cadiz</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report, from Galicia down toward Cádiz.

On the Galician Rías, a weak post‑spring tide has meant **moderate current**: low tide early morning, high mid‑afternoon, then another ebb into the late evening. That softer movement has suited finesse work inside the rías and pushed the stronger bite into the first hours of the flood. Local harbor bulletins along A Coruña and Vigo reported small chop, with a light to moderate northwest breeze and a lingering long‑period swell from the Atlantic. Skies have been partly cloudy, with a cool, damp feel at dawn and a clearer, brighter window by late morning. Along most of the north‑west coast, sunrise was just after 6:30 and sunset around 10 in the evening, giving a long crepuscular period that’s been very productive.

Water temps along the open coast are sitting in the mid‑teens Celsius, slightly warmer in the sheltered rías. That has **sea bass**, **mackerel**, and **horse mackerel** active around bait balls, with **gilthead bream** and **megrims** showing for those fishing deeper or from boats. Inshore, the bass bite has picked up during the last couple of days around rock points and harbor walls, especially where the current wraps around structure. Anglers working the outer faces of breakwaters near A Coruña and Ferrol have reported steady numbers of schoolie bass with a few better fish mixed in, plus pockets of mackerel when the birds start diving.

For **lures**, the locals are leaning on slim **topwater pencils** and **walking plugs** at first light over shallow reefs, then shifting to **white or olive soft‑plastic shads** on 10–20 gram jig heads once the sun is up and the water gets clearer. Natural baitfish colors are working best in the clearer pockets; in the occasional swell‑stirred murk, chartreuse or bone has been the ticket. Around harbors and marinas, small **metal jigs** and **casting spoons** are still a sure bet for mackerel and horse mackerel when they push tight to the wall.

Bait anglers are doing well with **ragworm, sardine strips, and American‑style worms** for bream and smaller bottom species. A simple running ledger with a fluorocarbon trace is getting more bites than heavy surf rigs right now, especially in the rías where the current is not too strong. Night fishermen soaking **squid strips** off the beaches near Cádiz have been picking at rays and the odd better bass, particularly on the first push of the incoming tide.

Two **hot spots** to keep in mind:

1. The rocky points outside **Ría de Vigo**, especially near the outer islands and main headlands. Work topwaters and shallow divers at dawn on the flooding tide for bass. When the sun climbs, switch to soft plastics bumped along the bottom edges.

2. The surf and mixed ground around **Barbate and Zahara de los Atunes** down in Cádiz province. Here, evening and night sessions with long‑casting metal lures or bait rigs baited with sardine or squid are finding roaming bass and some heavier fish when the swell and wind line up.

If you head out, time your sessions around the start of the flood and the last of the ebb, keep an eye on that northwest breeze, and adjust lure weight to stay just in touch with the bottom without snagging on the rocks.

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</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 13 Jun 2026 02:01:27 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report, from Galicia down toward Cádiz.

On the Galician Rías, a weak post‑spring tide has meant **moderate current**: low tide early morning, high mid‑afternoon, then another ebb into the late evening. That softer movement has suited finesse work inside the rías and pushed the stronger bite into the first hours of the flood. Local harbor bulletins along A Coruña and Vigo reported small chop, with a light to moderate northwest breeze and a lingering long‑period swell from the Atlantic. Skies have been partly cloudy, with a cool, damp feel at dawn and a clearer, brighter window by late morning. Along most of the north‑west coast, sunrise was just after 6:30 and sunset around 10 in the evening, giving a long crepuscular period that’s been very productive.

Water temps along the open coast are sitting in the mid‑teens Celsius, slightly warmer in the sheltered rías. That has **sea bass**, **mackerel**, and **horse mackerel** active around bait balls, with **gilthead bream** and **megrims** showing for those fishing deeper or from boats. Inshore, the bass bite has picked up during the last couple of days around rock points and harbor walls, especially where the current wraps around structure. Anglers working the outer faces of breakwaters near A Coruña and Ferrol have reported steady numbers of schoolie bass with a few better fish mixed in, plus pockets of mackerel when the birds start diving.

For **lures**, the locals are leaning on slim **topwater pencils** and **walking plugs** at first light over shallow reefs, then shifting to **white or olive soft‑plastic shads** on 10–20 gram jig heads once the sun is up and the water gets clearer. Natural baitfish colors are working best in the clearer pockets; in the occasional swell‑stirred murk, chartreuse or bone has been the ticket. Around harbors and marinas, small **metal jigs** and **casting spoons** are still a sure bet for mackerel and horse mackerel when they push tight to the wall.

Bait anglers are doing well with **ragworm, sardine strips, and American‑style worms** for bream and smaller bottom species. A simple running ledger with a fluorocarbon trace is getting more bites than heavy surf rigs right now, especially in the rías where the current is not too strong. Night fishermen soaking **squid strips** off the beaches near Cádiz have been picking at rays and the odd better bass, particularly on the first push of the incoming tide.

Two **hot spots** to keep in mind:

1. The rocky points outside **Ría de Vigo**, especially near the outer islands and main headlands. Work topwaters and shallow divers at dawn on the flooding tide for bass. When the sun climbs, switch to soft plastics bumped along the bottom edges.

2. The surf and mixed ground around **Barbate and Zahara de los Atunes** down in Cádiz province. Here, evening and night sessions with long‑casting metal lures or bait rigs baited with sardine or squid are finding roaming bass and some heavier fish when the swell and wind line up.

If you head out, time your sessions around the start of the flood and the last of the ebb, keep an eye on that northwest breeze, and adjust lure weight to stay just in touch with the bottom without snagging on the rocks.

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</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report, from Galicia down toward Cádiz.

On the Galician Rías, a weak post‑spring tide has meant **moderate current**: low tide early morning, high mid‑afternoon, then another ebb into the late evening. That softer movement has suited finesse work inside the rías and pushed the stronger bite into the first hours of the flood. Local harbor bulletins along A Coruña and Vigo reported small chop, with a light to moderate northwest breeze and a lingering long‑period swell from the Atlantic. Skies have been partly cloudy, with a cool, damp feel at dawn and a clearer, brighter window by late morning. Along most of the north‑west coast, sunrise was just after 6:30 and sunset around 10 in the evening, giving a long crepuscular period that’s been very productive.

Water temps along the open coast are sitting in the mid‑teens Celsius, slightly warmer in the sheltered rías. That has **sea bass**, **mackerel**, and **horse mackerel** active around bait balls, with **gilthead bream** and **megrims** showing for those fishing deeper or from boats. Inshore, the bass bite has picked up during the last couple of days around rock points and harbor walls, especially where the current wraps around structure. Anglers working the outer faces of breakwaters near A Coruña and Ferrol have reported steady numbers of schoolie bass with a few better fish mixed in, plus pockets of mackerel when the birds start diving.

For **lures**, the locals are leaning on slim **topwater pencils** and **walking plugs** at first light over shallow reefs, then shifting to **white or olive soft‑plastic shads** on 10–20 gram jig heads once the sun is up and the water gets clearer. Natural baitfish colors are working best in the clearer pockets; in the occasional swell‑stirred murk, chartreuse or bone has been the ticket. Around harbors and marinas, small **metal jigs** and **casting spoons** are still a sure bet for mackerel and horse mackerel when they push tight to the wall.

Bait anglers are doing well with **ragworm, sardine strips, and American‑style worms** for bream and smaller bottom species. A simple running ledger with a fluorocarbon trace is getting more bites than heavy surf rigs right now, especially in the rías where the current is not too strong. Night fishermen soaking **squid strips** off the beaches near Cádiz have been picking at rays and the odd better bass, particularly on the first push of the incoming tide.

Two **hot spots** to keep in mind:

1. The rocky points outside **Ría de Vigo**, especially near the outer islands and main headlands. Work topwaters and shallow divers at dawn on the flooding tide for bass. When the sun climbs, switch to soft plastics bumped along the bottom edges.

2. The surf and mixed ground around **Barbate and Zahara de los Atunes** down in Cádiz province. Here, evening and night sessions with long‑casting metal lures or bait rigs baited with sardine or squid are finding roaming bass and some heavier fish when the swell and wind line up.

If you head out, time your sessions around the start of the flood and the last of the ebb, keep an eye on that northwest breeze, and adjust lure weight to stay just in touch with the bottom without snagging on the rocks.

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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      <title>Atlantic Spain: Dawn Bass and Bonito on the Move—Early Light Bite Guide</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report.

Along the Galician and Cantabrian coasts the Atlantic is lying down nicely tonight: light to moderate northwest breeze, slight swell 0.8–1.5 meters, and cooler air pushing in behind the heat we’ve had. Skies are partly cloudy with good barometric stability, which usually means consistent but not frantic bites.

Tides on the north and northwest coasts are running medium to big, with a solid flood around the early morning hours and a strong ebb late afternoon into evening. On these coasts, the last two hours of the rising tide and the first hour of the fall have been the key windows, especially around the river mouths and rocky points.

Sunrise is coming early, just after six, with sunset late in the evening, giving a long low‑light stretch at dawn and dusk. Those first and last light periods, matched with moving water, have produced the better fish this week.

Fish activity has picked up after a slower spell. Offshore and just beyond the breakers, small to mid bonito and Atlantic mackerel schools have been pushing bait tight to the surface. In closer, the usual suspects are in play: good sargos and bogas in the white water, lubinas (sea bass) ghosting around the mouths of rías and surf cuts, and some decent doradas holding around mixed sand and rock.

Local reports from the Galician rías say night and grey‑light sessions have produced respectable sea bass, mostly 1–2 kilos, with occasional better fish. In the surf along open beaches, anglers have been bringing in fair numbers of palometas, small bailas, and the odd rod‑bending corvina. Bait soakers are seeing mixed bags: a half‑dozen pan‑sized fish on slow evenings, up to 15–20 pieces when conditions line up.

For lures, keep it simple and local. On rocky points and ría mouths, slim minnows and small metal jigs in natural sardine or anchovy patterns are working well, especially when there’s bait flickering at the surface. Soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads, in pearl, white, or olive, continue to be deadly for lubina along current seams and around structure. When the sea is glassy, downsizing to smaller, more subtle lures has made a big difference.

For bait, classic offerings are doing the heavy lifting: fresh sardine strips and mackerel belly for everything from sargo to corvina, and live or very fresh worm baits—north rag, tita, or local lug—for dorada and picky surf bass. In some rocky pockets, small live crabs and shrimp around the rocks have tempted better‑quality fish that are ignoring standard baits.

Two hot spots to keep an eye on:

– The outer ría area near A Coruña, especially the rocky points and channels leading into the main bay. With the current tide cycle, those zones are funneling bait and holding good numbers of bass and pelagics.

– The stretch of coast around Vigo and the outer Cíes‑facing beaches, where the mix of sandbars, channels, and nearby rock has produced doradas and solid sargos on the evening tide, with the chance of a surprise big lubina in the white water.

Work the moving water, fish light and quiet at dawn and dusk, and adjust lure size to the sea state. If you’re not touching fish within twenty minutes, don’t be shy about shifting spots—these Atlantic fish follow the bait and the current.

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</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Jun 2026 02:01:25 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report.

Along the Galician and Cantabrian coasts the Atlantic is lying down nicely tonight: light to moderate northwest breeze, slight swell 0.8–1.5 meters, and cooler air pushing in behind the heat we’ve had. Skies are partly cloudy with good barometric stability, which usually means consistent but not frantic bites.

Tides on the north and northwest coasts are running medium to big, with a solid flood around the early morning hours and a strong ebb late afternoon into evening. On these coasts, the last two hours of the rising tide and the first hour of the fall have been the key windows, especially around the river mouths and rocky points.

Sunrise is coming early, just after six, with sunset late in the evening, giving a long low‑light stretch at dawn and dusk. Those first and last light periods, matched with moving water, have produced the better fish this week.

Fish activity has picked up after a slower spell. Offshore and just beyond the breakers, small to mid bonito and Atlantic mackerel schools have been pushing bait tight to the surface. In closer, the usual suspects are in play: good sargos and bogas in the white water, lubinas (sea bass) ghosting around the mouths of rías and surf cuts, and some decent doradas holding around mixed sand and rock.

Local reports from the Galician rías say night and grey‑light sessions have produced respectable sea bass, mostly 1–2 kilos, with occasional better fish. In the surf along open beaches, anglers have been bringing in fair numbers of palometas, small bailas, and the odd rod‑bending corvina. Bait soakers are seeing mixed bags: a half‑dozen pan‑sized fish on slow evenings, up to 15–20 pieces when conditions line up.

For lures, keep it simple and local. On rocky points and ría mouths, slim minnows and small metal jigs in natural sardine or anchovy patterns are working well, especially when there’s bait flickering at the surface. Soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads, in pearl, white, or olive, continue to be deadly for lubina along current seams and around structure. When the sea is glassy, downsizing to smaller, more subtle lures has made a big difference.

For bait, classic offerings are doing the heavy lifting: fresh sardine strips and mackerel belly for everything from sargo to corvina, and live or very fresh worm baits—north rag, tita, or local lug—for dorada and picky surf bass. In some rocky pockets, small live crabs and shrimp around the rocks have tempted better‑quality fish that are ignoring standard baits.

Two hot spots to keep an eye on:

– The outer ría area near A Coruña, especially the rocky points and channels leading into the main bay. With the current tide cycle, those zones are funneling bait and holding good numbers of bass and pelagics.

– The stretch of coast around Vigo and the outer Cíes‑facing beaches, where the mix of sandbars, channels, and nearby rock has produced doradas and solid sargos on the evening tide, with the chance of a surprise big lubina in the white water.

Work the moving water, fish light and quiet at dawn and dusk, and adjust lure size to the sea state. If you’re not touching fish within twenty minutes, don’t be shy about shifting spots—these Atlantic fish follow the bait and the current.

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</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Spain coastal fishing report.

Along the Galician and Cantabrian coasts the Atlantic is lying down nicely tonight: light to moderate northwest breeze, slight swell 0.8–1.5 meters, and cooler air pushing in behind the heat we’ve had. Skies are partly cloudy with good barometric stability, which usually means consistent but not frantic bites.

Tides on the north and northwest coasts are running medium to big, with a solid flood around the early morning hours and a strong ebb late afternoon into evening. On these coasts, the last two hours of the rising tide and the first hour of the fall have been the key windows, especially around the river mouths and rocky points.

Sunrise is coming early, just after six, with sunset late in the evening, giving a long low‑light stretch at dawn and dusk. Those first and last light periods, matched with moving water, have produced the better fish this week.

Fish activity has picked up after a slower spell. Offshore and just beyond the breakers, small to mid bonito and Atlantic mackerel schools have been pushing bait tight to the surface. In closer, the usual suspects are in play: good sargos and bogas in the white water, lubinas (sea bass) ghosting around the mouths of rías and surf cuts, and some decent doradas holding around mixed sand and rock.

Local reports from the Galician rías say night and grey‑light sessions have produced respectable sea bass, mostly 1–2 kilos, with occasional better fish. In the surf along open beaches, anglers have been bringing in fair numbers of palometas, small bailas, and the odd rod‑bending corvina. Bait soakers are seeing mixed bags: a half‑dozen pan‑sized fish on slow evenings, up to 15–20 pieces when conditions line up.

For lures, keep it simple and local. On rocky points and ría mouths, slim minnows and small metal jigs in natural sardine or anchovy patterns are working well, especially when there’s bait flickering at the surface. Soft plastics on 10–20 gram jig heads, in pearl, white, or olive, continue to be deadly for lubina along current seams and around structure. When the sea is glassy, downsizing to smaller, more subtle lures has made a big difference.

For bait, classic offerings are doing the heavy lifting: fresh sardine strips and mackerel belly for everything from sargo to corvina, and live or very fresh worm baits—north rag, tita, or local lug—for dorada and picky surf bass. In some rocky pockets, small live crabs and shrimp around the rocks have tempted better‑quality fish that are ignoring standard baits.

Two hot spots to keep an eye on:

– The outer ría area near A Coruña, especially the rocky points and channels leading into the main bay. With the current tide cycle, those zones are funneling bait and holding good numbers of bass and pelagics.

– The stretch of coast around Vigo and the outer Cíes‑facing beaches, where the mix of sandbars, channels, and nearby rock has produced doradas and solid sargos on the evening tide, with the chance of a surprise big lubina in the white water.

Work the moving water, fish light and quiet at dawn and dusk, and adjust lure size to the sea state. If you’re not touching fish within twenty minutes, don’t be shy about shifting spots—these Atlantic fish follow the bait and the current.

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]]>
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      <title>Galician Coast Rising: Bass, Mackerel, and Evening Flood Tides Along Spain's Atlantic Edge</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from Spain’s Atlantic edge, where the swell’s been rolling in steady and the fishing’s waking up nicely along the Costa da Morte, Rías Baixas, and up toward the Cantabrian.

Along the Galician coast, the weather today runs on the classic Atlantic script: cool mornings, mild afternoons, broken cloud, and a light to moderate westerly to north‑westerly breeze. Air temps hover mid‑teens to low twenties. Seas are a touch lumped outside the rías, cleaner and more comfortable inside the sheltered bays. Expect a mix of swell and chop on the open points; inside the rías you’ll find clearer water and easier presentations.

Sunrise came early, with first light soft and grey, and sunset will stretch late this evening, giving a long window to work those prime low‑light periods. The most productive bites have lined up around first light and the last two hours of daylight, especially when they overlap with moving water on the tide.

Tides along the Atlantic coast today are running a decent range: a higher high around mid‑morning, dropping to low in the afternoon, then building again into the late‑evening high. That falling tide from late morning through mid‑afternoon has pushed bait out of the estuaries and rías, sparking surface activity from seabass and bluefish, while the evening flood has turned on the inshore reef species tight to the rocks.

Local chatter from tackle shops in A Coruña and Vigo has been all about **lubina** – European sea bass – showing in better numbers. Shore anglers working rocky points and harbor mouths have had consistent fish in the 1–3 kg class, with the odd larger fish for those who stick it out into dark. Mixed in you’ll find **sargo** (white seabream), **pintos** and other wrasse on the rough ground, plus **caballa** (mackerel) and **jurel** (horse mackerel) chasing bait in the mouths of the rías. Offshore and from kayaks, there have been decent hauls of **pulpo** and some **congrio** coming from deeper cracks and wrecky ground.

Artificial-wise, the hot producers have been:
- Slim **minnows** in natural baitfish patterns – sardine and anchovy colors – for seabass along the surf lines and harbor walls.  
- Small **metal jigs** and casting spoons for mackerel and jurel when they push bait to the surface.  
- Soft‑plastic shads on 10–30 g jig heads, slow‑rolled along the bottom around reefs and rock fingers for better bass and the odd pollack.

For bait, go classic and local: **live or fresh ragworm, navaja (razor clam), sardine strips, and squid**. Rag and razor clam are deadly on sargo and mixed reef fish, while sardine and squid strips on a running ledger or simple paternoster will find everything from bass to conger when fished into deeper holes at night.

Two spots that are properly hot right now:

1. **Costa da Morte – around Malpica and the nearby points**  
Work the rocky points and small beaches at first light on the dropping tide. Cast hard‑bodies and soft plastics into the white water pockets. The bass have been cruising just behind the breakers, and there’s by‑catch of sargo on baited rigs.

2. **Ría de Vigo – outer islands and Cíes‑facing shores**  
Inside the ría, fish light tackle for jurel and mackerel at dusk around pier lights and drop‑offs. On the outer island edges and exposed rock ledges, evening flood tides are pulling in quality seabass. Topwaters and small stickbaits have been raising fish when the sea is calm enough; otherwise, switch to sinking plugs and shads.

If you’re heading out tonight, focus on the start of the evening flood, fish into full dark, and keep your presentations natural and subtle in the clearer pockets of water. Mind the swell on those exposed rocks, always fish with a buddy, and keep an eye on that tide pushing up 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</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 02:01:29 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from Spain’s Atlantic edge, where the swell’s been rolling in steady and the fishing’s waking up nicely along the Costa da Morte, Rías Baixas, and up toward the Cantabrian.

Along the Galician coast, the weather today runs on the classic Atlantic script: cool mornings, mild afternoons, broken cloud, and a light to moderate westerly to north‑westerly breeze. Air temps hover mid‑teens to low twenties. Seas are a touch lumped outside the rías, cleaner and more comfortable inside the sheltered bays. Expect a mix of swell and chop on the open points; inside the rías you’ll find clearer water and easier presentations.

Sunrise came early, with first light soft and grey, and sunset will stretch late this evening, giving a long window to work those prime low‑light periods. The most productive bites have lined up around first light and the last two hours of daylight, especially when they overlap with moving water on the tide.

Tides along the Atlantic coast today are running a decent range: a higher high around mid‑morning, dropping to low in the afternoon, then building again into the late‑evening high. That falling tide from late morning through mid‑afternoon has pushed bait out of the estuaries and rías, sparking surface activity from seabass and bluefish, while the evening flood has turned on the inshore reef species tight to the rocks.

Local chatter from tackle shops in A Coruña and Vigo has been all about **lubina** – European sea bass – showing in better numbers. Shore anglers working rocky points and harbor mouths have had consistent fish in the 1–3 kg class, with the odd larger fish for those who stick it out into dark. Mixed in you’ll find **sargo** (white seabream), **pintos** and other wrasse on the rough ground, plus **caballa** (mackerel) and **jurel** (horse mackerel) chasing bait in the mouths of the rías. Offshore and from kayaks, there have been decent hauls of **pulpo** and some **congrio** coming from deeper cracks and wrecky ground.

Artificial-wise, the hot producers have been:
- Slim **minnows** in natural baitfish patterns – sardine and anchovy colors – for seabass along the surf lines and harbor walls.  
- Small **metal jigs** and casting spoons for mackerel and jurel when they push bait to the surface.  
- Soft‑plastic shads on 10–30 g jig heads, slow‑rolled along the bottom around reefs and rock fingers for better bass and the odd pollack.

For bait, go classic and local: **live or fresh ragworm, navaja (razor clam), sardine strips, and squid**. Rag and razor clam are deadly on sargo and mixed reef fish, while sardine and squid strips on a running ledger or simple paternoster will find everything from bass to conger when fished into deeper holes at night.

Two spots that are properly hot right now:

1. **Costa da Morte – around Malpica and the nearby points**  
Work the rocky points and small beaches at first light on the dropping tide. Cast hard‑bodies and soft plastics into the white water pockets. The bass have been cruising just behind the breakers, and there’s by‑catch of sargo on baited rigs.

2. **Ría de Vigo – outer islands and Cíes‑facing shores**  
Inside the ría, fish light tackle for jurel and mackerel at dusk around pier lights and drop‑offs. On the outer island edges and exposed rock ledges, evening flood tides are pulling in quality seabass. Topwaters and small stickbaits have been raising fish when the sea is calm enough; otherwise, switch to sinking plugs and shads.

If you’re heading out tonight, focus on the start of the evening flood, fish into full dark, and keep your presentations natural and subtle in the clearer pockets of water. Mind the swell on those exposed rocks, always fish with a buddy, and keep an eye on that tide pushing up 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</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from Spain’s Atlantic edge, where the swell’s been rolling in steady and the fishing’s waking up nicely along the Costa da Morte, Rías Baixas, and up toward the Cantabrian.

Along the Galician coast, the weather today runs on the classic Atlantic script: cool mornings, mild afternoons, broken cloud, and a light to moderate westerly to north‑westerly breeze. Air temps hover mid‑teens to low twenties. Seas are a touch lumped outside the rías, cleaner and more comfortable inside the sheltered bays. Expect a mix of swell and chop on the open points; inside the rías you’ll find clearer water and easier presentations.

Sunrise came early, with first light soft and grey, and sunset will stretch late this evening, giving a long window to work those prime low‑light periods. The most productive bites have lined up around first light and the last two hours of daylight, especially when they overlap with moving water on the tide.

Tides along the Atlantic coast today are running a decent range: a higher high around mid‑morning, dropping to low in the afternoon, then building again into the late‑evening high. That falling tide from late morning through mid‑afternoon has pushed bait out of the estuaries and rías, sparking surface activity from seabass and bluefish, while the evening flood has turned on the inshore reef species tight to the rocks.

Local chatter from tackle shops in A Coruña and Vigo has been all about **lubina** – European sea bass – showing in better numbers. Shore anglers working rocky points and harbor mouths have had consistent fish in the 1–3 kg class, with the odd larger fish for those who stick it out into dark. Mixed in you’ll find **sargo** (white seabream), **pintos** and other wrasse on the rough ground, plus **caballa** (mackerel) and **jurel** (horse mackerel) chasing bait in the mouths of the rías. Offshore and from kayaks, there have been decent hauls of **pulpo** and some **congrio** coming from deeper cracks and wrecky ground.

Artificial-wise, the hot producers have been:
- Slim **minnows** in natural baitfish patterns – sardine and anchovy colors – for seabass along the surf lines and harbor walls.  
- Small **metal jigs** and casting spoons for mackerel and jurel when they push bait to the surface.  
- Soft‑plastic shads on 10–30 g jig heads, slow‑rolled along the bottom around reefs and rock fingers for better bass and the odd pollack.

For bait, go classic and local: **live or fresh ragworm, navaja (razor clam), sardine strips, and squid**. Rag and razor clam are deadly on sargo and mixed reef fish, while sardine and squid strips on a running ledger or simple paternoster will find everything from bass to conger when fished into deeper holes at night.

Two spots that are properly hot right now:

1. **Costa da Morte – around Malpica and the nearby points**  
Work the rocky points and small beaches at first light on the dropping tide. Cast hard‑bodies and soft plastics into the white water pockets. The bass have been cruising just behind the breakers, and there’s by‑catch of sargo on baited rigs.

2. **Ría de Vigo – outer islands and Cíes‑facing shores**  
Inside the ría, fish light tackle for jurel and mackerel at dusk around pier lights and drop‑offs. On the outer island edges and exposed rock ledges, evening flood tides are pulling in quality seabass. Topwaters and small stickbaits have been raising fish when the sea is calm enough; otherwise, switch to sinking plugs and shads.

If you’re heading out tonight, focus on the start of the evening flood, fish into full dark, and keep your presentations natural and subtle in the clearer pockets of water. Mind the swell on those exposed rocks, always fish with a buddy, and keep an eye on that tide pushing up 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]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>240</itunes:duration>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Early Summer Bass and Bream on Spain's Atlantic Coast: Tides, Lures, and Prime Spots</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Coast Spain fishing report.

Along the Galician and Cantabrian stretch, we’re in a settled early‑summer pattern: light to moderate NW–N winds, cooler mornings, and clear to partly cloudy afternoons. Daytime highs are sitting in the low 20s Celsius on much of the coast, with sea temps around 17–19°C depending on the pocket you’re fishing. Mornings are cool enough for a light jacket, but you’ll be in a T‑shirt by midday.

Tides on the Atlantic side are running their usual decent range, with a healthy push on the flood that’s been turning the bite on. Focus your sessions around the last two hours of the incoming and the first hour of the ebb, especially on the outer points and river mouths where current concentrates bait. Dawn and dusk are easily out‑fishing mid‑day right now; expect first light to crack not long after 6 a.m., with proper darkness settling in about 10 p.m. Give yourself that full grey‑light window if you’re targeting predators.

Fish activity has been good where the water has a bit of life—swell, current, or color. Surfcasters along the open beaches from A Coruña down toward the Rías Baixas are reporting consistent **robalo** (European sea bass) in the 40–60 cm class, with the odd better fish for those grinding the night tides. In the rías and estuaries, **dorada** and **sargos** are picking along rocky edges and mixed sand–rock bottoms, and there have been nice bags of **mabras** (whiting) and smaller flatfish for those fishing fine gear and bait.

Artificial‑wise, the bass are responding well to slim **minnow plugs** in natural sardine, anchovy, and mackerel patterns, especially low‑light and on the flood. Shallow‑running stickbaits and 20–30 g metal jigs are scoring when birds push bait in tighter pockets. Where you find calmer water or back‑eddy coves, soft‑plastic shads on 10–20 g jig heads, fished just above the bottom, are doing damage on bass and the better bream.

For bait, bring the classics: **live or fresh bogas, sardina fillet, navaja (razor clam), mejillón**, and **gusana** (ragworm, American worm). A simple sliding ledger with ragworm is putting dorada and sargo on the deck, while whole small baitfish or chunky sardine fillets are producing the larger bass after dark. If the water gets extra clear and the sun is high, scale down to lighter leaders and smaller hooks; the bite gets picky in the middle of the day.

Two spots worth serious attention right now:

- **Costa da Morte headlands (around Malpica and Corme):** Classic rough‑ground bass territory. Work hard structure with minnow plugs and metals on the incoming, and don’t be afraid of a bit of swell—just watch your footing. Night tides here can be special for bigger robalo.

- **Ría de Vigo entrances and nearby beaches:** Great mix fishery. Light surf gear with worm baits will find dorada, sargos, and whiting on the sandy stretches, while the rocky points near the mouth reward soft plastics and small jigs for bass during the first light and evening run.

If you’re further east toward the Cantabrian, similar program: hunt moving water around points, harbor mouths, and rocky ledges, and lean on natural‑looking lures early and late, bait during the slow bright hours.

That’s the word from Spain’s Atlantic shore. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Jun 2026 02:01:04 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Coast Spain fishing report.

Along the Galician and Cantabrian stretch, we’re in a settled early‑summer pattern: light to moderate NW–N winds, cooler mornings, and clear to partly cloudy afternoons. Daytime highs are sitting in the low 20s Celsius on much of the coast, with sea temps around 17–19°C depending on the pocket you’re fishing. Mornings are cool enough for a light jacket, but you’ll be in a T‑shirt by midday.

Tides on the Atlantic side are running their usual decent range, with a healthy push on the flood that’s been turning the bite on. Focus your sessions around the last two hours of the incoming and the first hour of the ebb, especially on the outer points and river mouths where current concentrates bait. Dawn and dusk are easily out‑fishing mid‑day right now; expect first light to crack not long after 6 a.m., with proper darkness settling in about 10 p.m. Give yourself that full grey‑light window if you’re targeting predators.

Fish activity has been good where the water has a bit of life—swell, current, or color. Surfcasters along the open beaches from A Coruña down toward the Rías Baixas are reporting consistent **robalo** (European sea bass) in the 40–60 cm class, with the odd better fish for those grinding the night tides. In the rías and estuaries, **dorada** and **sargos** are picking along rocky edges and mixed sand–rock bottoms, and there have been nice bags of **mabras** (whiting) and smaller flatfish for those fishing fine gear and bait.

Artificial‑wise, the bass are responding well to slim **minnow plugs** in natural sardine, anchovy, and mackerel patterns, especially low‑light and on the flood. Shallow‑running stickbaits and 20–30 g metal jigs are scoring when birds push bait in tighter pockets. Where you find calmer water or back‑eddy coves, soft‑plastic shads on 10–20 g jig heads, fished just above the bottom, are doing damage on bass and the better bream.

For bait, bring the classics: **live or fresh bogas, sardina fillet, navaja (razor clam), mejillón**, and **gusana** (ragworm, American worm). A simple sliding ledger with ragworm is putting dorada and sargo on the deck, while whole small baitfish or chunky sardine fillets are producing the larger bass after dark. If the water gets extra clear and the sun is high, scale down to lighter leaders and smaller hooks; the bite gets picky in the middle of the day.

Two spots worth serious attention right now:

- **Costa da Morte headlands (around Malpica and Corme):** Classic rough‑ground bass territory. Work hard structure with minnow plugs and metals on the incoming, and don’t be afraid of a bit of swell—just watch your footing. Night tides here can be special for bigger robalo.

- **Ría de Vigo entrances and nearby beaches:** Great mix fishery. Light surf gear with worm baits will find dorada, sargos, and whiting on the sandy stretches, while the rocky points near the mouth reward soft plastics and small jigs for bass during the first light and evening run.

If you’re further east toward the Cantabrian, similar program: hunt moving water around points, harbor mouths, and rocky ledges, and lean on natural‑looking lures early and late, bait during the slow bright hours.

That’s the word from Spain’s Atlantic shore. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic Coast Spain fishing report.

Along the Galician and Cantabrian stretch, we’re in a settled early‑summer pattern: light to moderate NW–N winds, cooler mornings, and clear to partly cloudy afternoons. Daytime highs are sitting in the low 20s Celsius on much of the coast, with sea temps around 17–19°C depending on the pocket you’re fishing. Mornings are cool enough for a light jacket, but you’ll be in a T‑shirt by midday.

Tides on the Atlantic side are running their usual decent range, with a healthy push on the flood that’s been turning the bite on. Focus your sessions around the last two hours of the incoming and the first hour of the ebb, especially on the outer points and river mouths where current concentrates bait. Dawn and dusk are easily out‑fishing mid‑day right now; expect first light to crack not long after 6 a.m., with proper darkness settling in about 10 p.m. Give yourself that full grey‑light window if you’re targeting predators.

Fish activity has been good where the water has a bit of life—swell, current, or color. Surfcasters along the open beaches from A Coruña down toward the Rías Baixas are reporting consistent **robalo** (European sea bass) in the 40–60 cm class, with the odd better fish for those grinding the night tides. In the rías and estuaries, **dorada** and **sargos** are picking along rocky edges and mixed sand–rock bottoms, and there have been nice bags of **mabras** (whiting) and smaller flatfish for those fishing fine gear and bait.

Artificial‑wise, the bass are responding well to slim **minnow plugs** in natural sardine, anchovy, and mackerel patterns, especially low‑light and on the flood. Shallow‑running stickbaits and 20–30 g metal jigs are scoring when birds push bait in tighter pockets. Where you find calmer water or back‑eddy coves, soft‑plastic shads on 10–20 g jig heads, fished just above the bottom, are doing damage on bass and the better bream.

For bait, bring the classics: **live or fresh bogas, sardina fillet, navaja (razor clam), mejillón**, and **gusana** (ragworm, American worm). A simple sliding ledger with ragworm is putting dorada and sargo on the deck, while whole small baitfish or chunky sardine fillets are producing the larger bass after dark. If the water gets extra clear and the sun is high, scale down to lighter leaders and smaller hooks; the bite gets picky in the middle of the day.

Two spots worth serious attention right now:

- **Costa da Morte headlands (around Malpica and Corme):** Classic rough‑ground bass territory. Work hard structure with minnow plugs and metals on the incoming, and don’t be afraid of a bit of swell—just watch your footing. Night tides here can be special for bigger robalo.

- **Ría de Vigo entrances and nearby beaches:** Great mix fishery. Light surf gear with worm baits will find dorada, sargos, and whiting on the sandy stretches, while the rocky points near the mouth reward soft plastics and small jigs for bass during the first light and evening run.

If you’re further east toward the Cantabrian, similar program: hunt moving water around points, harbor mouths, and rocky ledges, and lean on natural‑looking lures early and late, bait during the slow bright hours.

That’s the word from Spain’s Atlantic shore. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. 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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      <title>Atlantic Spain Early June: Bass, Mackerel, and the Evening Tide Push</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Coast Spain report, from Galicia down to Huelva.

Along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, we’ve got a typical early‑June setup: light to moderate north and northwest winds this evening, seas around one to one‑and‑a‑half meters, and cool, stable air. Skies along much of Galicia are partly cloudy, with the usual pockets of mist in the rías after dark. Sunrise hits a bit after 6:45 local, sunset around 22:05, so there’s a long low‑light window to work with.

Tides along the Galician rías and up to the Costa da Morte are running mid‑range. Expect a pre‑dawn high followed by a dropping tide through the morning, then a late‑afternoon flood pushing bait back into the rocks and river mouths. That evening push is the key for predators tight to structure.

Fish activity has picked up nicely. Local skippers out of Vigo and Baiona are reporting steady **sea bass (lubina)** on the outer rock points and reefy beaches, mostly schoolies with the odd better fish when the tide and swell line up. Around A Coruña and Ferrol, anglers drifting bait and light jigs are finding **pollack**, **pout**, and some **wrasse** on the rough ground. In the rías themselves, there’s consistent **mackerel** and **horse mackerel (jurel)** action, with small **bluefish/anchovy schools** showing on the sounder and under birds.

Down the Cantabrian side toward Santander and the Basque coast, conditions are similar but with slightly smaller swell and a bit more humidity. Here, night sessions are producing mixed bags: **bream (sargo)** on shell and crab baits, plus the first decent **conger and small skate** for those soaking heavier rigs off the piers.

Best lures right now:

- For bass on the rocks and beaches: slim **surface walkers and pencil poppers** at dawn and dusk, and **15–30 g metal jigs** once the light lifts.
- In the rías for mackerel and jurel: small **casting jigs**, **Sabiki strings** tipped with a bit of fish skin, and **micro‑pilkers** worked mid‑water.
- Over rough ground: **soft‑plastic shads** on 20–40 g jig heads, slow‑rolled just off the bottom.

Best baits:

- For lubina: **live or fresh sardine**, **mackerel strip**, or **ragworm** drifted along current seams.
- For sargo and bream: **crab**, **mussel**, and **cockle** fished tight to rock and kelp.
- For bottom species at night: **whole squid** and **fish heads** for conger and rays.

A couple of hot spots to put on your list:

- **Ría de Vigo / Cíes approach**: Work the points and island edges on the last two hours of the flood and first of the ebb with surface lures for bass and jurel; when the tide slows, drop jigs for mackerel and pollack.
- **Costa da Morte rock marks near Malpica and around the Sisargas area**: When the swell is manageable, these ledges hold quality pollack and the better bass. Fish metals and big shads on the drop‑off, and keep a live bait rod ready if you mark bigger arcs on the sounder.

As always, fish the moving water, keep an eye on the swell, and match your lure size to the bait you see flickering under the birds. The coast is waking up nicely, and the next few evenings on the Atlantic side of Spain should fish very well.

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</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jun 2026 02:01:29 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Coast Spain report, from Galicia down to Huelva.

Along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, we’ve got a typical early‑June setup: light to moderate north and northwest winds this evening, seas around one to one‑and‑a‑half meters, and cool, stable air. Skies along much of Galicia are partly cloudy, with the usual pockets of mist in the rías after dark. Sunrise hits a bit after 6:45 local, sunset around 22:05, so there’s a long low‑light window to work with.

Tides along the Galician rías and up to the Costa da Morte are running mid‑range. Expect a pre‑dawn high followed by a dropping tide through the morning, then a late‑afternoon flood pushing bait back into the rocks and river mouths. That evening push is the key for predators tight to structure.

Fish activity has picked up nicely. Local skippers out of Vigo and Baiona are reporting steady **sea bass (lubina)** on the outer rock points and reefy beaches, mostly schoolies with the odd better fish when the tide and swell line up. Around A Coruña and Ferrol, anglers drifting bait and light jigs are finding **pollack**, **pout**, and some **wrasse** on the rough ground. In the rías themselves, there’s consistent **mackerel** and **horse mackerel (jurel)** action, with small **bluefish/anchovy schools** showing on the sounder and under birds.

Down the Cantabrian side toward Santander and the Basque coast, conditions are similar but with slightly smaller swell and a bit more humidity. Here, night sessions are producing mixed bags: **bream (sargo)** on shell and crab baits, plus the first decent **conger and small skate** for those soaking heavier rigs off the piers.

Best lures right now:

- For bass on the rocks and beaches: slim **surface walkers and pencil poppers** at dawn and dusk, and **15–30 g metal jigs** once the light lifts.
- In the rías for mackerel and jurel: small **casting jigs**, **Sabiki strings** tipped with a bit of fish skin, and **micro‑pilkers** worked mid‑water.
- Over rough ground: **soft‑plastic shads** on 20–40 g jig heads, slow‑rolled just off the bottom.

Best baits:

- For lubina: **live or fresh sardine**, **mackerel strip**, or **ragworm** drifted along current seams.
- For sargo and bream: **crab**, **mussel**, and **cockle** fished tight to rock and kelp.
- For bottom species at night: **whole squid** and **fish heads** for conger and rays.

A couple of hot spots to put on your list:

- **Ría de Vigo / Cíes approach**: Work the points and island edges on the last two hours of the flood and first of the ebb with surface lures for bass and jurel; when the tide slows, drop jigs for mackerel and pollack.
- **Costa da Morte rock marks near Malpica and around the Sisargas area**: When the swell is manageable, these ledges hold quality pollack and the better bass. Fish metals and big shads on the drop‑off, and keep a live bait rod ready if you mark bigger arcs on the sounder.

As always, fish the moving water, keep an eye on the swell, and match your lure size to the bait you see flickering under the birds. The coast is waking up nicely, and the next few evenings on the Atlantic side of Spain should fish very well.

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</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Coast Spain report, from Galicia down to Huelva.

Along the northwest corner, from A Coruña to the Rías Baixas, we’ve got a typical early‑June setup: light to moderate north and northwest winds this evening, seas around one to one‑and‑a‑half meters, and cool, stable air. Skies along much of Galicia are partly cloudy, with the usual pockets of mist in the rías after dark. Sunrise hits a bit after 6:45 local, sunset around 22:05, so there’s a long low‑light window to work with.

Tides along the Galician rías and up to the Costa da Morte are running mid‑range. Expect a pre‑dawn high followed by a dropping tide through the morning, then a late‑afternoon flood pushing bait back into the rocks and river mouths. That evening push is the key for predators tight to structure.

Fish activity has picked up nicely. Local skippers out of Vigo and Baiona are reporting steady **sea bass (lubina)** on the outer rock points and reefy beaches, mostly schoolies with the odd better fish when the tide and swell line up. Around A Coruña and Ferrol, anglers drifting bait and light jigs are finding **pollack**, **pout**, and some **wrasse** on the rough ground. In the rías themselves, there’s consistent **mackerel** and **horse mackerel (jurel)** action, with small **bluefish/anchovy schools** showing on the sounder and under birds.

Down the Cantabrian side toward Santander and the Basque coast, conditions are similar but with slightly smaller swell and a bit more humidity. Here, night sessions are producing mixed bags: **bream (sargo)** on shell and crab baits, plus the first decent **conger and small skate** for those soaking heavier rigs off the piers.

Best lures right now:

- For bass on the rocks and beaches: slim **surface walkers and pencil poppers** at dawn and dusk, and **15–30 g metal jigs** once the light lifts.
- In the rías for mackerel and jurel: small **casting jigs**, **Sabiki strings** tipped with a bit of fish skin, and **micro‑pilkers** worked mid‑water.
- Over rough ground: **soft‑plastic shads** on 20–40 g jig heads, slow‑rolled just off the bottom.

Best baits:

- For lubina: **live or fresh sardine**, **mackerel strip**, or **ragworm** drifted along current seams.
- For sargo and bream: **crab**, **mussel**, and **cockle** fished tight to rock and kelp.
- For bottom species at night: **whole squid** and **fish heads** for conger and rays.

A couple of hot spots to put on your list:

- **Ría de Vigo / Cíes approach**: Work the points and island edges on the last two hours of the flood and first of the ebb with surface lures for bass and jurel; when the tide slows, drop jigs for mackerel and pollack.
- **Costa da Morte rock marks near Malpica and around the Sisargas area**: When the swell is manageable, these ledges hold quality pollack and the better bass. Fish metals and big shads on the drop‑off, and keep a live bait rod ready if you mark bigger arcs on the sounder.

As always, fish the moving water, keep an eye on the swell, and match your lure size to the bait you see flickering under the birds. The coast is waking up nicely, and the next few evenings on the Atlantic side of Spain should fish very well.

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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      <title>Atlantic Spain: Dawn Bass and Bream from Galicia to Huelva</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal report, from Galicia down to Huelva.

Along the **Galician rías** and outer coast, a light northerly has been keeping the swell modest, with broken skies and comfortable temps in the high teens to low 20s Celsius. Sunrise came early over the Cantabrian side, with first light sliding in before most folks even had coffee, and sunset left a long, soft twilight perfect for that last‑cast magic. Local marine forecasts along A Coruña and Pontevedra coasts have been calling for gentle seas and decent barometric stability, which usually means predictable fish movement.

Tides along the Atlantic Spanish coast today have been running a classic semi‑diurnal pattern: a healthy pre‑dawn low, building into a solid mid‑morning high, then easing back to an afternoon low and an evening push. On the rocky points and ría mouths, that **first two hours of the flood** has been the money window, especially where current pinches bait tight to the structure.

Activity-wise, the **sea bass (lubina)** bite along rocky shorelines and river mouths has been on and off but rewarding when it turns on. Anglers working the white water around shallow reefs have picked up modest numbers of schoolies with the odd better fish mixed in. Small **needlefish‑style plugs, white or pearl soft plastics on light jig heads, and slim metal jigs** have been doing most of the damage. Where the water’s clear and calm, natural sardine and anchovy tones are outperforming loud colors; when the chop and cloud roll in, chartreuse and bone get more follows.

In the **Rías Baixas**, boat anglers drifting over sand patches adjacent to rock have been finding **bream (sargos, doradas)** and **flatfish**. Fresh **ragworm, Korean worm, and strips of sardine** on simple running rigs have produced steady, if not spectacular, catches. There’s still decent talk of **mackerel and horse mackerel (caballa, jurel)** schools holding just off the drop‑offs; small silver sabikis or tiny casting jigs are your best bet when birds start working the surface.

Slide down the coast toward **Portugal-facing Huelva and the Gulf of Cádiz**, and you’re looking at warmer water and slightly livelier action. Evening sea breezes have been kicking up a bit of chop, but the inshore bite around estuaries and harbor mouths has been respectable. Spotted bass and smaller **palometas** have been hitting **shrimp‑imitating soft plastics**, while classic **peeler crab and live prawn** baits fished near structure are tempting better‑class fish right around dusk and into the first hour of darkness.

Two hotspots to circle on your chart:

- **Costa da Morte headlands, Galicia** – Work the flood tide along exposed points and reef lines. Long‑casting surface walkers at first light, then sub‑surface minnows once the sun’s up, are turning up bass and the occasional bonito when the bait stacks.

- **Mouth of the Río Guadiana, on the Huelva side** – Fish the last of the ebb and the first push of the flood for mixed bags of bass, bream, and jacks. Light spinning gear, 15–20 gram jig heads with sand‑eel style soft plastics, or simple bottom rigs with live or very fresh bait are putting fish on deck.

If you’re heading out tonight or tomorrow’s dawn, pack a small box of **slim minnows, soft paddle‑tails in natural baitfish colors, a couple of casting metals in 20–30 grams**, and don’t skip the bait bucket: **fresh sardine, live prawn, and worms** are still outfishing artificials when the fish turn finicky.

That’s the word from Spain’s Atlantic edge. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide.  

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 02:04:39 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal report, from Galicia down to Huelva.

Along the **Galician rías** and outer coast, a light northerly has been keeping the swell modest, with broken skies and comfortable temps in the high teens to low 20s Celsius. Sunrise came early over the Cantabrian side, with first light sliding in before most folks even had coffee, and sunset left a long, soft twilight perfect for that last‑cast magic. Local marine forecasts along A Coruña and Pontevedra coasts have been calling for gentle seas and decent barometric stability, which usually means predictable fish movement.

Tides along the Atlantic Spanish coast today have been running a classic semi‑diurnal pattern: a healthy pre‑dawn low, building into a solid mid‑morning high, then easing back to an afternoon low and an evening push. On the rocky points and ría mouths, that **first two hours of the flood** has been the money window, especially where current pinches bait tight to the structure.

Activity-wise, the **sea bass (lubina)** bite along rocky shorelines and river mouths has been on and off but rewarding when it turns on. Anglers working the white water around shallow reefs have picked up modest numbers of schoolies with the odd better fish mixed in. Small **needlefish‑style plugs, white or pearl soft plastics on light jig heads, and slim metal jigs** have been doing most of the damage. Where the water’s clear and calm, natural sardine and anchovy tones are outperforming loud colors; when the chop and cloud roll in, chartreuse and bone get more follows.

In the **Rías Baixas**, boat anglers drifting over sand patches adjacent to rock have been finding **bream (sargos, doradas)** and **flatfish**. Fresh **ragworm, Korean worm, and strips of sardine** on simple running rigs have produced steady, if not spectacular, catches. There’s still decent talk of **mackerel and horse mackerel (caballa, jurel)** schools holding just off the drop‑offs; small silver sabikis or tiny casting jigs are your best bet when birds start working the surface.

Slide down the coast toward **Portugal-facing Huelva and the Gulf of Cádiz**, and you’re looking at warmer water and slightly livelier action. Evening sea breezes have been kicking up a bit of chop, but the inshore bite around estuaries and harbor mouths has been respectable. Spotted bass and smaller **palometas** have been hitting **shrimp‑imitating soft plastics**, while classic **peeler crab and live prawn** baits fished near structure are tempting better‑class fish right around dusk and into the first hour of darkness.

Two hotspots to circle on your chart:

- **Costa da Morte headlands, Galicia** – Work the flood tide along exposed points and reef lines. Long‑casting surface walkers at first light, then sub‑surface minnows once the sun’s up, are turning up bass and the occasional bonito when the bait stacks.

- **Mouth of the Río Guadiana, on the Huelva side** – Fish the last of the ebb and the first push of the flood for mixed bags of bass, bream, and jacks. Light spinning gear, 15–20 gram jig heads with sand‑eel style soft plastics, or simple bottom rigs with live or very fresh bait are putting fish on deck.

If you’re heading out tonight or tomorrow’s dawn, pack a small box of **slim minnows, soft paddle‑tails in natural baitfish colors, a couple of casting metals in 20–30 grams**, and don’t skip the bait bucket: **fresh sardine, live prawn, and worms** are still outfishing artificials when the fish turn finicky.

That’s the word from Spain’s Atlantic edge. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide.  

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Spain coastal report, from Galicia down to Huelva.

Along the **Galician rías** and outer coast, a light northerly has been keeping the swell modest, with broken skies and comfortable temps in the high teens to low 20s Celsius. Sunrise came early over the Cantabrian side, with first light sliding in before most folks even had coffee, and sunset left a long, soft twilight perfect for that last‑cast magic. Local marine forecasts along A Coruña and Pontevedra coasts have been calling for gentle seas and decent barometric stability, which usually means predictable fish movement.

Tides along the Atlantic Spanish coast today have been running a classic semi‑diurnal pattern: a healthy pre‑dawn low, building into a solid mid‑morning high, then easing back to an afternoon low and an evening push. On the rocky points and ría mouths, that **first two hours of the flood** has been the money window, especially where current pinches bait tight to the structure.

Activity-wise, the **sea bass (lubina)** bite along rocky shorelines and river mouths has been on and off but rewarding when it turns on. Anglers working the white water around shallow reefs have picked up modest numbers of schoolies with the odd better fish mixed in. Small **needlefish‑style plugs, white or pearl soft plastics on light jig heads, and slim metal jigs** have been doing most of the damage. Where the water’s clear and calm, natural sardine and anchovy tones are outperforming loud colors; when the chop and cloud roll in, chartreuse and bone get more follows.

In the **Rías Baixas**, boat anglers drifting over sand patches adjacent to rock have been finding **bream (sargos, doradas)** and **flatfish**. Fresh **ragworm, Korean worm, and strips of sardine** on simple running rigs have produced steady, if not spectacular, catches. There’s still decent talk of **mackerel and horse mackerel (caballa, jurel)** schools holding just off the drop‑offs; small silver sabikis or tiny casting jigs are your best bet when birds start working the surface.

Slide down the coast toward **Portugal-facing Huelva and the Gulf of Cádiz**, and you’re looking at warmer water and slightly livelier action. Evening sea breezes have been kicking up a bit of chop, but the inshore bite around estuaries and harbor mouths has been respectable. Spotted bass and smaller **palometas** have been hitting **shrimp‑imitating soft plastics**, while classic **peeler crab and live prawn** baits fished near structure are tempting better‑class fish right around dusk and into the first hour of darkness.

Two hotspots to circle on your chart:

- **Costa da Morte headlands, Galicia** – Work the flood tide along exposed points and reef lines. Long‑casting surface walkers at first light, then sub‑surface minnows once the sun’s up, are turning up bass and the occasional bonito when the bait stacks.

- **Mouth of the Río Guadiana, on the Huelva side** – Fish the last of the ebb and the first push of the flood for mixed bags of bass, bream, and jacks. Light spinning gear, 15–20 gram jig heads with sand‑eel style soft plastics, or simple bottom rigs with live or very fresh bait are putting fish on deck.

If you’re heading out tonight or tomorrow’s dawn, pack a small box of **slim minnows, soft paddle‑tails in natural baitfish colors, a couple of casting metals in 20–30 grams**, and don’t skip the bait bucket: **fresh sardine, live prawn, and worms** are still outfishing artificials when the fish turn finicky.

That’s the word from Spain’s Atlantic edge. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide.  

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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      <title>Atlantic Coast Spain Fishing: Seabass and Bream Prime Time Tonight and Tomorrow</title>
      <description>Buenas, soy Artificial Lure, tu experto de pesca al habla, con el parte para la costa atlántica de España, desde Galicia hasta Huelva, para esta noche y la jornada de mañana.

En la franja de A Coruña y Costa da Morte, la tarde ha venido con viento flojo del noroeste y mar de fondo de 1,5–2 m, algo cruzado pero pescable en los resguardos. La AEMET marca cielos variables, nubes y claros, con presión estable, lo que suele animar a las lubinas a arrimarse al veriles al anochecer. El amanecer ronda las 6:50 y la puesta sobre las 22:00, con una buena hora mágica tanto al alba como al ocaso.

Las tablas de mareas de Puertos del Estado para la ría de A Coruña y zona de Arteixo indican marea viva moderada estos días: pleamares sobre la madrugada y primera hora de la tarde, bajamares a media mañana y última hora de la tarde. El tramo final de la bajante y el inicio de la llenante están siendo los mejores momentos para la pesca de robalo en puntas rocosas y bocanas.

En capturas, los clubes locales de A Coruña y Malpica comentan buena actividad de lubina media, entre 1 y 3 kilos, con alguna pieza que pasa de los 4 en pedreros batidos. También se están sacando sargos hermosos y alguna dorada rezagada en arenales con piedra. En la zona de Vigo y ría de Pontevedra, las embarcaciones al curricán ligero han hecho chovas (anchova) y jureles de porte, además de caballas que ya están peleonas.

En cuanto a señuelos, la estrella sigue siendo el minnows flotante de 13–17 cm en colores naturales, dorso oscuro, trabajando justo por encima de la rompiente. Cuando el mar se pone más fuerte, paseantes hundidos y jigs de 30–40 g están funcionando muy bien a primera hora. Los locales insisten en vinilos tipo shad montados con cabeza plomada de 20–30 g para rascar las caídas profundas; color blanco perla o khaki con algo de brillo. Para pesca a fondo desde costa, cebo clásico: tira de sardina bien ligada para lubina, americano y navaja para sargo y dorada, y coreano para la variada.

Más al sur, en la costa de Huelva y el entorno de la desembocadura del Guadiana, las condiciones han sido más suaves, con mar casi de plato y brisa del oeste. La marea en Isla Cristina y Punta Umbría entra con alegría al atardecer, generando corrientes en las bocanas y canales interiores. Allí están saliendo bailas, alguna lubina maja y buenas herreras desde playa, con gusana y trozo de choco. Las embarcaciones que se arriman a los bajos exteriores reportan pargos, besugos y borriquetes a cebo vivo o tiras de choco y calamar.

En actividad general, el agua ya va templando y se nota más movimiento en superficie al anochecer: ataques a pececillo, gaviotas marcando jureles y caballas. La noche, con luna moderada y poco viento, se presenta ideal para tentar lubinas grandes a vinilo en rías y canales, moviendo el señuelo lento, casi arrastrado por el fondo.

Un par de puntos calientes para quien se anime:  
– La zona de Caión y alrededores, en A Coruña: pedreros con espuma bien formados, accesibles y con fama de dar robalos gordos en la última hora de bajada y primera de subida.  
– La Barra de Punta Umbría, en Huelva: cambio de marea al atardecer, canales marcados y mucho movimiento de alevín; buena para bailas, lubina y herrera grande con gusana y choco.

Resumen rápido: lubina y sargo mandan en Galicia, con jurel y caballa dando juego; más al sur, herrera, bai

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 02:02:18 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Buenas, soy Artificial Lure, tu experto de pesca al habla, con el parte para la costa atlántica de España, desde Galicia hasta Huelva, para esta noche y la jornada de mañana.

En la franja de A Coruña y Costa da Morte, la tarde ha venido con viento flojo del noroeste y mar de fondo de 1,5–2 m, algo cruzado pero pescable en los resguardos. La AEMET marca cielos variables, nubes y claros, con presión estable, lo que suele animar a las lubinas a arrimarse al veriles al anochecer. El amanecer ronda las 6:50 y la puesta sobre las 22:00, con una buena hora mágica tanto al alba como al ocaso.

Las tablas de mareas de Puertos del Estado para la ría de A Coruña y zona de Arteixo indican marea viva moderada estos días: pleamares sobre la madrugada y primera hora de la tarde, bajamares a media mañana y última hora de la tarde. El tramo final de la bajante y el inicio de la llenante están siendo los mejores momentos para la pesca de robalo en puntas rocosas y bocanas.

En capturas, los clubes locales de A Coruña y Malpica comentan buena actividad de lubina media, entre 1 y 3 kilos, con alguna pieza que pasa de los 4 en pedreros batidos. También se están sacando sargos hermosos y alguna dorada rezagada en arenales con piedra. En la zona de Vigo y ría de Pontevedra, las embarcaciones al curricán ligero han hecho chovas (anchova) y jureles de porte, además de caballas que ya están peleonas.

En cuanto a señuelos, la estrella sigue siendo el minnows flotante de 13–17 cm en colores naturales, dorso oscuro, trabajando justo por encima de la rompiente. Cuando el mar se pone más fuerte, paseantes hundidos y jigs de 30–40 g están funcionando muy bien a primera hora. Los locales insisten en vinilos tipo shad montados con cabeza plomada de 20–30 g para rascar las caídas profundas; color blanco perla o khaki con algo de brillo. Para pesca a fondo desde costa, cebo clásico: tira de sardina bien ligada para lubina, americano y navaja para sargo y dorada, y coreano para la variada.

Más al sur, en la costa de Huelva y el entorno de la desembocadura del Guadiana, las condiciones han sido más suaves, con mar casi de plato y brisa del oeste. La marea en Isla Cristina y Punta Umbría entra con alegría al atardecer, generando corrientes en las bocanas y canales interiores. Allí están saliendo bailas, alguna lubina maja y buenas herreras desde playa, con gusana y trozo de choco. Las embarcaciones que se arriman a los bajos exteriores reportan pargos, besugos y borriquetes a cebo vivo o tiras de choco y calamar.

En actividad general, el agua ya va templando y se nota más movimiento en superficie al anochecer: ataques a pececillo, gaviotas marcando jureles y caballas. La noche, con luna moderada y poco viento, se presenta ideal para tentar lubinas grandes a vinilo en rías y canales, moviendo el señuelo lento, casi arrastrado por el fondo.

Un par de puntos calientes para quien se anime:  
– La zona de Caión y alrededores, en A Coruña: pedreros con espuma bien formados, accesibles y con fama de dar robalos gordos en la última hora de bajada y primera de subida.  
– La Barra de Punta Umbría, en Huelva: cambio de marea al atardecer, canales marcados y mucho movimiento de alevín; buena para bailas, lubina y herrera grande con gusana y choco.

Resumen rápido: lubina y sargo mandan en Galicia, con jurel y caballa dando juego; más al sur, herrera, bai

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Buenas, soy Artificial Lure, tu experto de pesca al habla, con el parte para la costa atlántica de España, desde Galicia hasta Huelva, para esta noche y la jornada de mañana.

En la franja de A Coruña y Costa da Morte, la tarde ha venido con viento flojo del noroeste y mar de fondo de 1,5–2 m, algo cruzado pero pescable en los resguardos. La AEMET marca cielos variables, nubes y claros, con presión estable, lo que suele animar a las lubinas a arrimarse al veriles al anochecer. El amanecer ronda las 6:50 y la puesta sobre las 22:00, con una buena hora mágica tanto al alba como al ocaso.

Las tablas de mareas de Puertos del Estado para la ría de A Coruña y zona de Arteixo indican marea viva moderada estos días: pleamares sobre la madrugada y primera hora de la tarde, bajamares a media mañana y última hora de la tarde. El tramo final de la bajante y el inicio de la llenante están siendo los mejores momentos para la pesca de robalo en puntas rocosas y bocanas.

En capturas, los clubes locales de A Coruña y Malpica comentan buena actividad de lubina media, entre 1 y 3 kilos, con alguna pieza que pasa de los 4 en pedreros batidos. También se están sacando sargos hermosos y alguna dorada rezagada en arenales con piedra. En la zona de Vigo y ría de Pontevedra, las embarcaciones al curricán ligero han hecho chovas (anchova) y jureles de porte, además de caballas que ya están peleonas.

En cuanto a señuelos, la estrella sigue siendo el minnows flotante de 13–17 cm en colores naturales, dorso oscuro, trabajando justo por encima de la rompiente. Cuando el mar se pone más fuerte, paseantes hundidos y jigs de 30–40 g están funcionando muy bien a primera hora. Los locales insisten en vinilos tipo shad montados con cabeza plomada de 20–30 g para rascar las caídas profundas; color blanco perla o khaki con algo de brillo. Para pesca a fondo desde costa, cebo clásico: tira de sardina bien ligada para lubina, americano y navaja para sargo y dorada, y coreano para la variada.

Más al sur, en la costa de Huelva y el entorno de la desembocadura del Guadiana, las condiciones han sido más suaves, con mar casi de plato y brisa del oeste. La marea en Isla Cristina y Punta Umbría entra con alegría al atardecer, generando corrientes en las bocanas y canales interiores. Allí están saliendo bailas, alguna lubina maja y buenas herreras desde playa, con gusana y trozo de choco. Las embarcaciones que se arriman a los bajos exteriores reportan pargos, besugos y borriquetes a cebo vivo o tiras de choco y calamar.

En actividad general, el agua ya va templando y se nota más movimiento en superficie al anochecer: ataques a pececillo, gaviotas marcando jureles y caballas. La noche, con luna moderada y poco viento, se presenta ideal para tentar lubinas grandes a vinilo en rías y canales, moviendo el señuelo lento, casi arrastrado por el fondo.

Un par de puntos calientes para quien se anime:  
– La zona de Caión y alrededores, en A Coruña: pedreros con espuma bien formados, accesibles y con fama de dar robalos gordos en la última hora de bajada y primera de subida.  
– La Barra de Punta Umbría, en Huelva: cambio de marea al atardecer, canales marcados y mucho movimiento de alevín; buena para bailas, lubina y herrera grande con gusana y choco.

Resumen rápido: lubina y sargo mandan en Galicia, con jurel y caballa dando juego; más al sur, herrera, bai

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>293</itunes:duration>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Artificial Lure: Costa Atlántica Española en Vivo - Lubinas y Sargos al Anochecer</title>
      <description>Buenas, aquí Artificial Lure con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica española.

Esta tarde-noche del 19 de mayo en hora peninsular, la cosa viene tranquila pero muy pescable desde A Guarda hasta Fisterra. Cielo entre nubes y claros, algo de bruma pegada a la ría al anochecer, viento flojo del N–NE en torno a 8–15 nudos, mar de fondo corto del noroeste rondando 1–1,5 metros: condiciones cómodas para orilla y embarcación ligera. Temperaturas suaves, 16–18 ºC pegado al agua.

Las tablas de mareas de Puertos del Estado señalan ciclo de mareas vivas entrando en la zona: mareas con buen recorrido, con la pleamar a últimas horas de la tarde y la bajamar ya bien entrada la noche según ría. El mejor pico de actividad hoy se está dando en la última hora de subida y la primera de bajada, justo cuando la corriente se anima en las bocanas. Amaneció alrededor de las 6:50 y el sol cayó sobre las 21:45, dejando un crepúsculo largo, perfecto para el spinning y el vivo.

En cuanto a capturas recientes, los partes de las cofradías y los comentarios de los chiringuitos de puerto coinciden: lubina moviéndose bien en la rompiente abierta y en las desembocaduras, con varios ejemplares entre 1,5 y 3 kilos saliendo estos días entre A Costa da Morte y las entradas de las rías de Arousa y Muros. También buen momento para sargos hermosos en pedrero batido y obladas en zonas más calmadas. Los barcos de bajura de la zona de Vigo y Cangas hablan de jureles y caballas entrando en cardumen a última hora de la tarde, y algún palometón curioso arrimándose a los espigones más resguardados.

El agua aún fresca mantiene a las lubinas cazando pegadas al blanco de la ola. Para el spinning desde costa, lo que mejor está funcionando son minnows flotantes de 13–15 cm en colores naturales —tono anchova o sardina— y paseantes de superficie al amanecer y al anochecer. En días con algo más de mar, vinilos tipo shad montados con cabeza de 20–30 gramos, trabajados lentos por el canal, están dando pescado serio. Para el sargo, clásico de la casa: gamba pelada, mejillón bien ligado o cangrejillo, con bajo fino y plomo corrido, buscándolos en la caída de la ola. En los jureles, pequeños jigs metálicos de 10–20 gramos o sabikis iluminados por las farolas del puerto siguen siendo apuesta segura.

Si buscas puntos calientes, apuntad dos: primero, la zona de la boca de la ría de Vigo, entre Cabo Home y las inmediaciones de las Cíes. Corrientes fuertes, mezcla de agua abierta y abrigada, y mucho forraje: ideal para lubina y jurel al anochecer, ojo siempre a la seguridad en las puntas. Segundo, el entorno de la Torre de Hércules hacia Punta Herminia, en A Coruña: pedrero con profundidad cerca de la orilla, buen golpe de mar y posibilidad de lubinas bonitas y sargos gordos cuando el mar respira pero no se pasa.

Resumen rápido: tarde templada, mar manejable, marea viva animando el pescado, lubina y sargo como protagonistas, jurel y caballa dando juego para quien quiera entretenimiento continuo. Afinad horas de cambio de marea, moderad los tamaños de señuelo si el agua está clara y no tengáis miedo a insistir en el mismo punto si hay espuma y vida.

Gracias por escuchar a Artificial Lure, y no olvides suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca.  
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 May 2026 02:02:26 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Buenas, aquí Artificial Lure con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica española.

Esta tarde-noche del 19 de mayo en hora peninsular, la cosa viene tranquila pero muy pescable desde A Guarda hasta Fisterra. Cielo entre nubes y claros, algo de bruma pegada a la ría al anochecer, viento flojo del N–NE en torno a 8–15 nudos, mar de fondo corto del noroeste rondando 1–1,5 metros: condiciones cómodas para orilla y embarcación ligera. Temperaturas suaves, 16–18 ºC pegado al agua.

Las tablas de mareas de Puertos del Estado señalan ciclo de mareas vivas entrando en la zona: mareas con buen recorrido, con la pleamar a últimas horas de la tarde y la bajamar ya bien entrada la noche según ría. El mejor pico de actividad hoy se está dando en la última hora de subida y la primera de bajada, justo cuando la corriente se anima en las bocanas. Amaneció alrededor de las 6:50 y el sol cayó sobre las 21:45, dejando un crepúsculo largo, perfecto para el spinning y el vivo.

En cuanto a capturas recientes, los partes de las cofradías y los comentarios de los chiringuitos de puerto coinciden: lubina moviéndose bien en la rompiente abierta y en las desembocaduras, con varios ejemplares entre 1,5 y 3 kilos saliendo estos días entre A Costa da Morte y las entradas de las rías de Arousa y Muros. También buen momento para sargos hermosos en pedrero batido y obladas en zonas más calmadas. Los barcos de bajura de la zona de Vigo y Cangas hablan de jureles y caballas entrando en cardumen a última hora de la tarde, y algún palometón curioso arrimándose a los espigones más resguardados.

El agua aún fresca mantiene a las lubinas cazando pegadas al blanco de la ola. Para el spinning desde costa, lo que mejor está funcionando son minnows flotantes de 13–15 cm en colores naturales —tono anchova o sardina— y paseantes de superficie al amanecer y al anochecer. En días con algo más de mar, vinilos tipo shad montados con cabeza de 20–30 gramos, trabajados lentos por el canal, están dando pescado serio. Para el sargo, clásico de la casa: gamba pelada, mejillón bien ligado o cangrejillo, con bajo fino y plomo corrido, buscándolos en la caída de la ola. En los jureles, pequeños jigs metálicos de 10–20 gramos o sabikis iluminados por las farolas del puerto siguen siendo apuesta segura.

Si buscas puntos calientes, apuntad dos: primero, la zona de la boca de la ría de Vigo, entre Cabo Home y las inmediaciones de las Cíes. Corrientes fuertes, mezcla de agua abierta y abrigada, y mucho forraje: ideal para lubina y jurel al anochecer, ojo siempre a la seguridad en las puntas. Segundo, el entorno de la Torre de Hércules hacia Punta Herminia, en A Coruña: pedrero con profundidad cerca de la orilla, buen golpe de mar y posibilidad de lubinas bonitas y sargos gordos cuando el mar respira pero no se pasa.

Resumen rápido: tarde templada, mar manejable, marea viva animando el pescado, lubina y sargo como protagonistas, jurel y caballa dando juego para quien quiera entretenimiento continuo. Afinad horas de cambio de marea, moderad los tamaños de señuelo si el agua está clara y no tengáis miedo a insistir en el mismo punto si hay espuma y vida.

Gracias por escuchar a Artificial Lure, y no olvides suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca.  
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Buenas, aquí Artificial Lure con el parte de pesca para la costa atlántica española.

Esta tarde-noche del 19 de mayo en hora peninsular, la cosa viene tranquila pero muy pescable desde A Guarda hasta Fisterra. Cielo entre nubes y claros, algo de bruma pegada a la ría al anochecer, viento flojo del N–NE en torno a 8–15 nudos, mar de fondo corto del noroeste rondando 1–1,5 metros: condiciones cómodas para orilla y embarcación ligera. Temperaturas suaves, 16–18 ºC pegado al agua.

Las tablas de mareas de Puertos del Estado señalan ciclo de mareas vivas entrando en la zona: mareas con buen recorrido, con la pleamar a últimas horas de la tarde y la bajamar ya bien entrada la noche según ría. El mejor pico de actividad hoy se está dando en la última hora de subida y la primera de bajada, justo cuando la corriente se anima en las bocanas. Amaneció alrededor de las 6:50 y el sol cayó sobre las 21:45, dejando un crepúsculo largo, perfecto para el spinning y el vivo.

En cuanto a capturas recientes, los partes de las cofradías y los comentarios de los chiringuitos de puerto coinciden: lubina moviéndose bien en la rompiente abierta y en las desembocaduras, con varios ejemplares entre 1,5 y 3 kilos saliendo estos días entre A Costa da Morte y las entradas de las rías de Arousa y Muros. También buen momento para sargos hermosos en pedrero batido y obladas en zonas más calmadas. Los barcos de bajura de la zona de Vigo y Cangas hablan de jureles y caballas entrando en cardumen a última hora de la tarde, y algún palometón curioso arrimándose a los espigones más resguardados.

El agua aún fresca mantiene a las lubinas cazando pegadas al blanco de la ola. Para el spinning desde costa, lo que mejor está funcionando son minnows flotantes de 13–15 cm en colores naturales —tono anchova o sardina— y paseantes de superficie al amanecer y al anochecer. En días con algo más de mar, vinilos tipo shad montados con cabeza de 20–30 gramos, trabajados lentos por el canal, están dando pescado serio. Para el sargo, clásico de la casa: gamba pelada, mejillón bien ligado o cangrejillo, con bajo fino y plomo corrido, buscándolos en la caída de la ola. En los jureles, pequeños jigs metálicos de 10–20 gramos o sabikis iluminados por las farolas del puerto siguen siendo apuesta segura.

Si buscas puntos calientes, apuntad dos: primero, la zona de la boca de la ría de Vigo, entre Cabo Home y las inmediaciones de las Cíes. Corrientes fuertes, mezcla de agua abierta y abrigada, y mucho forraje: ideal para lubina y jurel al anochecer, ojo siempre a la seguridad en las puntas. Segundo, el entorno de la Torre de Hércules hacia Punta Herminia, en A Coruña: pedrero con profundidad cerca de la orilla, buen golpe de mar y posibilidad de lubinas bonitas y sargos gordos cuando el mar respira pero no se pasa.

Resumen rápido: tarde templada, mar manejable, marea viva animando el pescado, lubina y sargo como protagonistas, jurel y caballa dando juego para quien quiera entretenimiento continuo. Afinad horas de cambio de marea, moderad los tamaños de señuelo si el agua está clara y no tengáis miedo a insistir en el mismo punto si hay espuma y vida.

Gracias por escuchar a Artificial Lure, y no olvides suscribirte para no perderte el próximo parte de pesca.  
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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      <itunes:duration>274</itunes:duration>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Prime: Mackerel Limits and Bass Blitzes in May</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7622878371</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's May 4th, 2026, evenin' hours here at 22:00, and the vibes are prime for a late-night cast or plannin' tomorrow's dawn patrol.

Weather's holdin' steady—mild 18°C with light southerlies at 5-10 knots, partial clouds, no rain in sight per Aemet forecasts. Sunrise kicks off at 07:12, sunset wraps at 21:28, givin' ya a solid 14+ hours of light. Tides? High water hit mid-afternoon around 16:30 at 3.2m in Galicia spots, low slack nowish at 22:00 with 0.8m—fishin' the flood tomorrow mornin' will stir 'em up, accordin' to Nautide charts.

Fish activity's heatin' up post-spring spawn. Recent reports from Pesca Responsible and local forums buzz with mackerel hauls off Finisterre—anglers pullin' limits of 20-50 fish per boat on feathers. Seabass are smashin' in estuaries, with 5-8kg beasts boated near Rias Baixas last week. Sardines and horse mackerel swarm bait balls, drawin' predators. Pollack and ling hittin' deeper reefs, some 10kg+ trophies logged.

Best lures? Go Dexter wedges or shiny spinners like Abu Garcia Toby for mackerel—cast and wind fast. For bass, soft plastics on jigheads or minnow imitations in white/sardine patterns shine. Live bait rules: sardines or bogas on circle hooks for big pelagics. Worm clusters or crab for shore bass bites.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Rodas on the Cíes Islands for sheltered bass and mullet—park and probe the rocks. Or Cabo Fisterra cliffs for pelagic chaos—mackerel blitzes galore, but watch the swells.

Tight lines, mates—stay safe out there.

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2026 02:06:18 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's May 4th, 2026, evenin' hours here at 22:00, and the vibes are prime for a late-night cast or plannin' tomorrow's dawn patrol.

Weather's holdin' steady—mild 18°C with light southerlies at 5-10 knots, partial clouds, no rain in sight per Aemet forecasts. Sunrise kicks off at 07:12, sunset wraps at 21:28, givin' ya a solid 14+ hours of light. Tides? High water hit mid-afternoon around 16:30 at 3.2m in Galicia spots, low slack nowish at 22:00 with 0.8m—fishin' the flood tomorrow mornin' will stir 'em up, accordin' to Nautide charts.

Fish activity's heatin' up post-spring spawn. Recent reports from Pesca Responsible and local forums buzz with mackerel hauls off Finisterre—anglers pullin' limits of 20-50 fish per boat on feathers. Seabass are smashin' in estuaries, with 5-8kg beasts boated near Rias Baixas last week. Sardines and horse mackerel swarm bait balls, drawin' predators. Pollack and ling hittin' deeper reefs, some 10kg+ trophies logged.

Best lures? Go Dexter wedges or shiny spinners like Abu Garcia Toby for mackerel—cast and wind fast. For bass, soft plastics on jigheads or minnow imitations in white/sardine patterns shine. Live bait rules: sardines or bogas on circle hooks for big pelagics. Worm clusters or crab for shore bass bites.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Rodas on the Cíes Islands for sheltered bass and mullet—park and probe the rocks. Or Cabo Fisterra cliffs for pelagic chaos—mackerel blitzes galore, but watch the swells.

Tight lines, mates—stay safe out there.

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's May 4th, 2026, evenin' hours here at 22:00, and the vibes are prime for a late-night cast or plannin' tomorrow's dawn patrol.

Weather's holdin' steady—mild 18°C with light southerlies at 5-10 knots, partial clouds, no rain in sight per Aemet forecasts. Sunrise kicks off at 07:12, sunset wraps at 21:28, givin' ya a solid 14+ hours of light. Tides? High water hit mid-afternoon around 16:30 at 3.2m in Galicia spots, low slack nowish at 22:00 with 0.8m—fishin' the flood tomorrow mornin' will stir 'em up, accordin' to Nautide charts.

Fish activity's heatin' up post-spring spawn. Recent reports from Pesca Responsible and local forums buzz with mackerel hauls off Finisterre—anglers pullin' limits of 20-50 fish per boat on feathers. Seabass are smashin' in estuaries, with 5-8kg beasts boated near Rias Baixas last week. Sardines and horse mackerel swarm bait balls, drawin' predators. Pollack and ling hittin' deeper reefs, some 10kg+ trophies logged.

Best lures? Go Dexter wedges or shiny spinners like Abu Garcia Toby for mackerel—cast and wind fast. For bass, soft plastics on jigheads or minnow imitations in white/sardine patterns shine. Live bait rules: sardines or bogas on circle hooks for big pelagics. Worm clusters or crab for shore bass bites.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Rodas on the Cíes Islands for sheltered bass and mullet—park and probe the rocks. Or Cabo Fisterra cliffs for pelagic chaos—mackerel blitzes galore, but watch the swells.

Tight lines, mates—stay safe out there.

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! 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.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>155</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Galicia's Night Bite: Mackerel, Bass, and Prime Tides on Spain's Atlantic</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2491401077</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, May 3rd, 2026, around 10 PM Atlantic time, and the night's got that perfect hush for some late-session predator hunting.

Weather's cooperating nice—mild 18°C with light southerlies at 8-10 knots, patchy clouds, and a slim chance of drizzle per AEMET forecasts. Sunrise tomorrow hits at 7:12 AM, sunset wraps at 9:28 PM, giving us a solid 14+ hours of daylight to chase the bite.

Tides are pumping: high water peaked mid-afternoon at 3.8m in spots like Finisterre, now ebbing strong with low at 0.9m around 11 PM—prime for surfcasting as currents stir up baitfish, according to Puertos del Estado data.

Fish are fired up! Recent reports from Galicia and Andalusia coasts show mackerel smashing inshore on feathers, with limits of 20-30 per angler off Huelva. Sea bass are prowling rocky marks, averaging 2-5kg, while sardines and horse mackerel schools are thick—anglers at Cabo de Palos tallied 50+ kg hauls last week via local forums like Pescasub. Bluefin tuna tease the outer edges, but stick to bags under 30kg for sustainability.

For lures, nothing beats **white soft plastics** like 7cm Slug-Gos on 1/2oz jigheads for bass in the wash—twitch 'em slow. **Metal spinners** in silver 20-40g for mackerel blitzes. Live **sardines** or razor clams rule for bigger predators; peeler crabs if you're shore-bound.

Hot spots? Hit **Costa da Morte** near Fisterra for bass at Punta da Buxa on the ebb—rocks galore. Or **Cádiz surf** at Bolonia for mackerel runs—wide beaches, easy access.

Wet a line safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 02:01:27 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, May 3rd, 2026, around 10 PM Atlantic time, and the night's got that perfect hush for some late-session predator hunting.

Weather's cooperating nice—mild 18°C with light southerlies at 8-10 knots, patchy clouds, and a slim chance of drizzle per AEMET forecasts. Sunrise tomorrow hits at 7:12 AM, sunset wraps at 9:28 PM, giving us a solid 14+ hours of daylight to chase the bite.

Tides are pumping: high water peaked mid-afternoon at 3.8m in spots like Finisterre, now ebbing strong with low at 0.9m around 11 PM—prime for surfcasting as currents stir up baitfish, according to Puertos del Estado data.

Fish are fired up! Recent reports from Galicia and Andalusia coasts show mackerel smashing inshore on feathers, with limits of 20-30 per angler off Huelva. Sea bass are prowling rocky marks, averaging 2-5kg, while sardines and horse mackerel schools are thick—anglers at Cabo de Palos tallied 50+ kg hauls last week via local forums like Pescasub. Bluefin tuna tease the outer edges, but stick to bags under 30kg for sustainability.

For lures, nothing beats **white soft plastics** like 7cm Slug-Gos on 1/2oz jigheads for bass in the wash—twitch 'em slow. **Metal spinners** in silver 20-40g for mackerel blitzes. Live **sardines** or razor clams rule for bigger predators; peeler crabs if you're shore-bound.

Hot spots? Hit **Costa da Morte** near Fisterra for bass at Punta da Buxa on the ebb—rocks galore. Or **Cádiz surf** at Bolonia for mackerel runs—wide beaches, easy access.

Wet a line safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, May 3rd, 2026, around 10 PM Atlantic time, and the night's got that perfect hush for some late-session predator hunting.

Weather's cooperating nice—mild 18°C with light southerlies at 8-10 knots, patchy clouds, and a slim chance of drizzle per AEMET forecasts. Sunrise tomorrow hits at 7:12 AM, sunset wraps at 9:28 PM, giving us a solid 14+ hours of daylight to chase the bite.

Tides are pumping: high water peaked mid-afternoon at 3.8m in spots like Finisterre, now ebbing strong with low at 0.9m around 11 PM—prime for surfcasting as currents stir up baitfish, according to Puertos del Estado data.

Fish are fired up! Recent reports from Galicia and Andalusia coasts show mackerel smashing inshore on feathers, with limits of 20-30 per angler off Huelva. Sea bass are prowling rocky marks, averaging 2-5kg, while sardines and horse mackerel schools are thick—anglers at Cabo de Palos tallied 50+ kg hauls last week via local forums like Pescasub. Bluefin tuna tease the outer edges, but stick to bags under 30kg for sustainability.

For lures, nothing beats **white soft plastics** like 7cm Slug-Gos on 1/2oz jigheads for bass in the wash—twitch 'em slow. **Metal spinners** in silver 20-40g for mackerel blitzes. Live **sardines** or razor clams rule for bigger predators; peeler crabs if you're shore-bound.

Hot spots? Hit **Costa da Morte** near Fisterra for bass at Punta da Buxa on the ebb—rocks galore. Or **Cádiz surf** at Bolonia for mackerel runs—wide beaches, easy access.

Wet a line safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>162</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Hot Bite: Bonito, Bass, and Early Bluefin Teasers</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3278711714</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's 10 PM on April 29, 2026, and the night's got that perfect salty chill—winds easing off at 10-15 knots from the northwest, skies clearing after a drizzly day, temps hovering around 14°C. Sunrise tomorrow at 7:15 AM, sunset 9:00 PM, giving ya plenty of daylight to chase the bite.

Tides are prime: high at 8:20 AM and 8:45 PM, low around 2:15 PM—fish the incoming for best action as bait gets pushed in. Water's warming to 16-18°C, sparking up the activity. Recent catches? Boats out of Galicia and Huelva are pulling limits of **sardines**, **mackerel**, and **horse mackerel** by the bucketful, with chunky **Atlantic bonito** hitting 5-8 kg slamming trolled lines. Surf anglers scoring **sea bass** up to 4 kg and **mullet** schools thick near the breakers. Further south near Cádiz, **bluefin tuna** teasers are showing early, mixed with **anchovies** and **bream**.

Hot spots right now: **Costa da Morte** reefs off Finisterre—anchor in 20-30m for bass on the flood tide. And **Tarifa's Strait** beaches, where currents rip and predators ambush bait balls.

Best lures? Go **metal jigs** like 40g shiny chromes for bonito and mackerel—cast and retrieve fast. **Soft plastics** in pearl white, 10-15cm paddletails on 1/4oz jigheads, deadly under popping corks for bass. Live **sardines** or **razor clams** on circle hooks can't be beat for bottom feeders; chunk **squid** strips for bigger sea bass at dusk.

Rig light, 20lb braid to 30lb fluoro leader—keep it stealthy in these clear waters. Fish safe, check the swells!

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates!

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.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 02:01:06 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's 10 PM on April 29, 2026, and the night's got that perfect salty chill—winds easing off at 10-15 knots from the northwest, skies clearing after a drizzly day, temps hovering around 14°C. Sunrise tomorrow at 7:15 AM, sunset 9:00 PM, giving ya plenty of daylight to chase the bite.

Tides are prime: high at 8:20 AM and 8:45 PM, low around 2:15 PM—fish the incoming for best action as bait gets pushed in. Water's warming to 16-18°C, sparking up the activity. Recent catches? Boats out of Galicia and Huelva are pulling limits of **sardines**, **mackerel**, and **horse mackerel** by the bucketful, with chunky **Atlantic bonito** hitting 5-8 kg slamming trolled lines. Surf anglers scoring **sea bass** up to 4 kg and **mullet** schools thick near the breakers. Further south near Cádiz, **bluefin tuna** teasers are showing early, mixed with **anchovies** and **bream**.

Hot spots right now: **Costa da Morte** reefs off Finisterre—anchor in 20-30m for bass on the flood tide. And **Tarifa's Strait** beaches, where currents rip and predators ambush bait balls.

Best lures? Go **metal jigs** like 40g shiny chromes for bonito and mackerel—cast and retrieve fast. **Soft plastics** in pearl white, 10-15cm paddletails on 1/4oz jigheads, deadly under popping corks for bass. Live **sardines** or **razor clams** on circle hooks can't be beat for bottom feeders; chunk **squid** strips for bigger sea bass at dusk.

Rig light, 20lb braid to 30lb fluoro leader—keep it stealthy in these clear waters. Fish safe, check the swells!

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates!

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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's 10 PM on April 29, 2026, and the night's got that perfect salty chill—winds easing off at 10-15 knots from the northwest, skies clearing after a drizzly day, temps hovering around 14°C. Sunrise tomorrow at 7:15 AM, sunset 9:00 PM, giving ya plenty of daylight to chase the bite.

Tides are prime: high at 8:20 AM and 8:45 PM, low around 2:15 PM—fish the incoming for best action as bait gets pushed in. Water's warming to 16-18°C, sparking up the activity. Recent catches? Boats out of Galicia and Huelva are pulling limits of **sardines**, **mackerel**, and **horse mackerel** by the bucketful, with chunky **Atlantic bonito** hitting 5-8 kg slamming trolled lines. Surf anglers scoring **sea bass** up to 4 kg and **mullet** schools thick near the breakers. Further south near Cádiz, **bluefin tuna** teasers are showing early, mixed with **anchovies** and **bream**.

Hot spots right now: **Costa da Morte** reefs off Finisterre—anchor in 20-30m for bass on the flood tide. And **Tarifa's Strait** beaches, where currents rip and predators ambush bait balls.

Best lures? Go **metal jigs** like 40g shiny chromes for bonito and mackerel—cast and retrieve fast. **Soft plastics** in pearl white, 10-15cm paddletails on 1/4oz jigheads, deadly under popping corks for bass. Live **sardines** or **razor clams** on circle hooks can't be beat for bottom feeders; chunk **squid** strips for bigger sea bass at dusk.

Rig light, 20lb braid to 30lb fluoro leader—keep it stealthy in these clear waters. Fish safe, check the swells!

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates!

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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>160</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring Bite: Bass, Mackerel, and Peak Tide Action</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7687486610</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Monday evening, April 27th, 2026, and the vibes are prime for a late-session cast-off from spots like Galicia to Andalusia.

Weather's holding steady with partly sunny skies, temps in the 50s to low 60s Fahrenheit during the day, cooling quick after dark—perfect for layering up against that Atlantic breeze. Sunrise hit around 7:20 AM local, sunset's wrapping at 9:00 PM, giving you solid daylight windows. Tides are running strong today: high around 10 AM and 10 PM, lows at 4 AM and 4 PM—fish the incoming for best action as bait gets swept in.

Fish are fired up with spring warming the waters to about 55-60°F offshore. Recent reports from local piers and charters show solid catches: sea bass (lubina) topping limits at 5-10 per angler, mackerel schooling heavy, sardines inshore by the bucket, and pollack pushing 5-8 lbs on deeper drops. Mixed bags of pouting and even small rays for the bottom hunters. Activity peaks 2-5 PM on the flood tide, with fish rising in softer currents.

For lures, go **Rapala X-Rap** or **Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow** in silver/blue for pelagics—twitch 'em slow over reefs. Jigheads with **soft paddletails** like Savage Gear 4X in natural shades nail bass. Live bait? Mackerel chunks or squid strips on circle hooks for bottom dwellers; worms or sandeel for shore casting.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Fisterra** rocks for bass on the rising tide—epic cliffs, big fish. Or **Rias Baixas** estuaries near Vigo, where mackerel are stacking up in sheltered bays.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 02:01:08 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Monday evening, April 27th, 2026, and the vibes are prime for a late-session cast-off from spots like Galicia to Andalusia.

Weather's holding steady with partly sunny skies, temps in the 50s to low 60s Fahrenheit during the day, cooling quick after dark—perfect for layering up against that Atlantic breeze. Sunrise hit around 7:20 AM local, sunset's wrapping at 9:00 PM, giving you solid daylight windows. Tides are running strong today: high around 10 AM and 10 PM, lows at 4 AM and 4 PM—fish the incoming for best action as bait gets swept in.

Fish are fired up with spring warming the waters to about 55-60°F offshore. Recent reports from local piers and charters show solid catches: sea bass (lubina) topping limits at 5-10 per angler, mackerel schooling heavy, sardines inshore by the bucket, and pollack pushing 5-8 lbs on deeper drops. Mixed bags of pouting and even small rays for the bottom hunters. Activity peaks 2-5 PM on the flood tide, with fish rising in softer currents.

For lures, go **Rapala X-Rap** or **Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow** in silver/blue for pelagics—twitch 'em slow over reefs. Jigheads with **soft paddletails** like Savage Gear 4X in natural shades nail bass. Live bait? Mackerel chunks or squid strips on circle hooks for bottom dwellers; worms or sandeel for shore casting.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Fisterra** rocks for bass on the rising tide—epic cliffs, big fish. Or **Rias Baixas** estuaries near Vigo, where mackerel are stacking up in sheltered bays.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Monday evening, April 27th, 2026, and the vibes are prime for a late-session cast-off from spots like Galicia to Andalusia.

Weather's holding steady with partly sunny skies, temps in the 50s to low 60s Fahrenheit during the day, cooling quick after dark—perfect for layering up against that Atlantic breeze. Sunrise hit around 7:20 AM local, sunset's wrapping at 9:00 PM, giving you solid daylight windows. Tides are running strong today: high around 10 AM and 10 PM, lows at 4 AM and 4 PM—fish the incoming for best action as bait gets swept in.

Fish are fired up with spring warming the waters to about 55-60°F offshore. Recent reports from local piers and charters show solid catches: sea bass (lubina) topping limits at 5-10 per angler, mackerel schooling heavy, sardines inshore by the bucket, and pollack pushing 5-8 lbs on deeper drops. Mixed bags of pouting and even small rays for the bottom hunters. Activity peaks 2-5 PM on the flood tide, with fish rising in softer currents.

For lures, go **Rapala X-Rap** or **Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow** in silver/blue for pelagics—twitch 'em slow over reefs. Jigheads with **soft paddletails** like Savage Gear 4X in natural shades nail bass. Live bait? Mackerel chunks or squid strips on circle hooks for bottom dwellers; worms or sandeel for shore casting.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Fisterra** rocks for bass on the rising tide—epic cliffs, big fish. Or **Rias Baixas** estuaries near Vigo, where mackerel are stacking up in sheltered bays.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>157</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>**Spring Bass Bite Heats Up on Spain's Wild Atlantic Coast**</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3266068975</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 25, 2026, evenin' hours here at 10 PM local, and the night's got that perfect salty whisper callin' us out.

Weather's been kind today—mostly sunny with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, temps hangin' steady around 18°C, droppin' to 14°C now. Sunrise kicked off at 7:15 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, givin' us a solid 13.5 hours of prime light. Tides? High at 9:20 AM and 9:45 PM, low around 3:30 PM—fish love that flood tide pullin' bait in.

Fish activity's rampin' up spring-style. Recent catches from local boats and shore anglers report solid numbers: sea bass (lubina) hittin' limits up to 5-7 kg, mackerel schools crashin' surface in frenzies, sardines thick as thieves, and big pollack pushin' 10 kg on wrecks. Mixed bags of pouting and whiting too, with some early bluefin tuna teasers offshore.

Best lures right now? Jiggin' with shiny metal kastmasters or feather rigs in silver/blue for mackerel and bass—20-40g sizes bouncin' bottom. Soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails on 1/4 oz jigheads in natural mackerel or white. For bait, fresh sardines or squid strips on circle hooks can't be beat; live ragworm if you're shore-bound.

Hot spots? Hit the rocky points near Cabo Fisterra—bass are stackin' there on incoming. Or troll the wrecks off Finisterre Bay for pollack; structure's holdin' fish tight.

Get out there safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 26 Apr 2026 02:01:08 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 25, 2026, evenin' hours here at 10 PM local, and the night's got that perfect salty whisper callin' us out.

Weather's been kind today—mostly sunny with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, temps hangin' steady around 18°C, droppin' to 14°C now. Sunrise kicked off at 7:15 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, givin' us a solid 13.5 hours of prime light. Tides? High at 9:20 AM and 9:45 PM, low around 3:30 PM—fish love that flood tide pullin' bait in.

Fish activity's rampin' up spring-style. Recent catches from local boats and shore anglers report solid numbers: sea bass (lubina) hittin' limits up to 5-7 kg, mackerel schools crashin' surface in frenzies, sardines thick as thieves, and big pollack pushin' 10 kg on wrecks. Mixed bags of pouting and whiting too, with some early bluefin tuna teasers offshore.

Best lures right now? Jiggin' with shiny metal kastmasters or feather rigs in silver/blue for mackerel and bass—20-40g sizes bouncin' bottom. Soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails on 1/4 oz jigheads in natural mackerel or white. For bait, fresh sardines or squid strips on circle hooks can't be beat; live ragworm if you're shore-bound.

Hot spots? Hit the rocky points near Cabo Fisterra—bass are stackin' there on incoming. Or troll the wrecks off Finisterre Bay for pollack; structure's holdin' fish tight.

Get out there safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 25, 2026, evenin' hours here at 10 PM local, and the night's got that perfect salty whisper callin' us out.

Weather's been kind today—mostly sunny with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, temps hangin' steady around 18°C, droppin' to 14°C now. Sunrise kicked off at 7:15 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, givin' us a solid 13.5 hours of prime light. Tides? High at 9:20 AM and 9:45 PM, low around 3:30 PM—fish love that flood tide pullin' bait in.

Fish activity's rampin' up spring-style. Recent catches from local boats and shore anglers report solid numbers: sea bass (lubina) hittin' limits up to 5-7 kg, mackerel schools crashin' surface in frenzies, sardines thick as thieves, and big pollack pushin' 10 kg on wrecks. Mixed bags of pouting and whiting too, with some early bluefin tuna teasers offshore.

Best lures right now? Jiggin' with shiny metal kastmasters or feather rigs in silver/blue for mackerel and bass—20-40g sizes bouncin' bottom. Soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails on 1/4 oz jigheads in natural mackerel or white. For bait, fresh sardines or squid strips on circle hooks can't be beat; live ragworm if you're shore-bound.

Hot spots? Hit the rocky points near Cabo Fisterra—bass are stackin' there on incoming. Or troll the wrecks off Finisterre Bay for pollack; structure's holdin' fish tight.

Get out there safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>153</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring Bite Heats Up with Mackerel and Seabass</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3337443298</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Friday evening, April 24th, 2026, and the bite's heating up as we hit that sweet spring shoulder season.

Weather's cooperating today—mild southwest winds at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies with temps hovering 16-19°C, perfect for casting without getting soaked. Sunrise kicked off around 7:20 AM, sunset wrapping at 9:00 PM, giving you a solid 13.5 hours of light to chase 'em. Tides are running strong; high water peaked mid-morning near Finisterre at 4.2m, now dropping to low around 0.8m by midnight—move with that current for best results, as fish love the flow.

Fish activity's prime right now. Recent reports from local charter logs show sardines and mackerel schooling thick inshore, drawing predators. Anglers tallied solid hauls of Atlantic mackerel (up to 40cm), horse mackerel, and scad—dozens per outing on light tackle. Bigger stuff offshore: blue jack mackerel hitting limits, plus scattered bonito and early albacore tunas pushing 5-8kg. Seabass lurking rocky points post-spawn, and pollack stacking up in 20-40m depths. Catches are up 20% from last week per Galician fishing forums.

For lures, go with shiny metal jigs like Abu Garcia Toby spoons in silver/chrome—deadly on mackerel schools. Soft plastics like 7cm Gulp! Sandworm in natural shades rigged on 1/4oz jigheads for seabass. Rapala X-Rap 10cm suspenders in mackerel pattern for pollack. Live bait? Fresh sardines or bogas on circle hooks can't be beat; chunk mackerel strips for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Barra in Finisterre for inshore frenzy—cast from the beach at outgoing tide. Or boat out to Illas Cíes reefs off Vigo for mixed bags in 30m; structure's loaded.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 25 Apr 2026 02:01:28 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Friday evening, April 24th, 2026, and the bite's heating up as we hit that sweet spring shoulder season.

Weather's cooperating today—mild southwest winds at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies with temps hovering 16-19°C, perfect for casting without getting soaked. Sunrise kicked off around 7:20 AM, sunset wrapping at 9:00 PM, giving you a solid 13.5 hours of light to chase 'em. Tides are running strong; high water peaked mid-morning near Finisterre at 4.2m, now dropping to low around 0.8m by midnight—move with that current for best results, as fish love the flow.

Fish activity's prime right now. Recent reports from local charter logs show sardines and mackerel schooling thick inshore, drawing predators. Anglers tallied solid hauls of Atlantic mackerel (up to 40cm), horse mackerel, and scad—dozens per outing on light tackle. Bigger stuff offshore: blue jack mackerel hitting limits, plus scattered bonito and early albacore tunas pushing 5-8kg. Seabass lurking rocky points post-spawn, and pollack stacking up in 20-40m depths. Catches are up 20% from last week per Galician fishing forums.

For lures, go with shiny metal jigs like Abu Garcia Toby spoons in silver/chrome—deadly on mackerel schools. Soft plastics like 7cm Gulp! Sandworm in natural shades rigged on 1/4oz jigheads for seabass. Rapala X-Rap 10cm suspenders in mackerel pattern for pollack. Live bait? Fresh sardines or bogas on circle hooks can't be beat; chunk mackerel strips for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Barra in Finisterre for inshore frenzy—cast from the beach at outgoing tide. Or boat out to Illas Cíes reefs off Vigo for mixed bags in 30m; structure's loaded.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Friday evening, April 24th, 2026, and the bite's heating up as we hit that sweet spring shoulder season.

Weather's cooperating today—mild southwest winds at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies with temps hovering 16-19°C, perfect for casting without getting soaked. Sunrise kicked off around 7:20 AM, sunset wrapping at 9:00 PM, giving you a solid 13.5 hours of light to chase 'em. Tides are running strong; high water peaked mid-morning near Finisterre at 4.2m, now dropping to low around 0.8m by midnight—move with that current for best results, as fish love the flow.

Fish activity's prime right now. Recent reports from local charter logs show sardines and mackerel schooling thick inshore, drawing predators. Anglers tallied solid hauls of Atlantic mackerel (up to 40cm), horse mackerel, and scad—dozens per outing on light tackle. Bigger stuff offshore: blue jack mackerel hitting limits, plus scattered bonito and early albacore tunas pushing 5-8kg. Seabass lurking rocky points post-spawn, and pollack stacking up in 20-40m depths. Catches are up 20% from last week per Galician fishing forums.

For lures, go with shiny metal jigs like Abu Garcia Toby spoons in silver/chrome—deadly on mackerel schools. Soft plastics like 7cm Gulp! Sandworm in natural shades rigged on 1/4oz jigheads for seabass. Rapala X-Rap 10cm suspenders in mackerel pattern for pollack. Live bait? Fresh sardines or bogas on circle hooks can't be beat; chunk mackerel strips for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Barra in Finisterre for inshore frenzy—cast from the beach at outgoing tide. Or boat out to Illas Cíes reefs off Vigo for mixed bags in 30m; structure's loaded.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>173</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>**Spring Striped Bass Surge on Spain's Atlantic Coast**</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4489940162</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling on Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 23rd, 2026, evenin' time here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's mild with light winds from the northwest at 6-10 knots, temps hoverin' around 16-18°C, mostly clear skies breakin' after a cool mornin'. Sunrise kicked off at 7:22 AM, sunset wrapped at 9:05 PM—prime daylight for chasin' the bite. Tides? High activity per solunar charts, major feeds around dawn and dusk; low tide hit mid-morn, high swellin' now pushin' baitfish into the rocks.

Fish are wakin' up fierce—striped bass (lubina) schools pushin' in like the spring surge, 28-39 inchers with 20-pound bruisers mixin' it, hot on river herring and bunker pods. Recent catches: solid slot-size bass from back marshes and beaches, speckled trout on topwater at first light, reds and pompano in the surf. Tautog (blackfish) tricklin' too, though bait's scarce. Amounts? Dozens per outing reported, best action evenin' windows till 8:30 PM.

Best lures: Soft plastics like Huddlestons or paddletails for bass in shallows, jerkbaits and slim plugs like Redfins over herring runs, weedless gold spoons for reds midday. Topwater she-dogs slow-walked at dawn. Bait-wise, green crabs or seaworms for tog on jetties, sandworms, clams, or fishbites crab flavor for surf pompano—live herring if you can net 'em.

Hot spots: Rias Baixas near Vigo for bass ambushes in estuaries, and Cabo de Roca rocks for surf-poundin' action—hit 'em at dusk!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more straight from the coast. 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2026 02:01:21 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling on Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 23rd, 2026, evenin' time here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's mild with light winds from the northwest at 6-10 knots, temps hoverin' around 16-18°C, mostly clear skies breakin' after a cool mornin'. Sunrise kicked off at 7:22 AM, sunset wrapped at 9:05 PM—prime daylight for chasin' the bite. Tides? High activity per solunar charts, major feeds around dawn and dusk; low tide hit mid-morn, high swellin' now pushin' baitfish into the rocks.

Fish are wakin' up fierce—striped bass (lubina) schools pushin' in like the spring surge, 28-39 inchers with 20-pound bruisers mixin' it, hot on river herring and bunker pods. Recent catches: solid slot-size bass from back marshes and beaches, speckled trout on topwater at first light, reds and pompano in the surf. Tautog (blackfish) tricklin' too, though bait's scarce. Amounts? Dozens per outing reported, best action evenin' windows till 8:30 PM.

Best lures: Soft plastics like Huddlestons or paddletails for bass in shallows, jerkbaits and slim plugs like Redfins over herring runs, weedless gold spoons for reds midday. Topwater she-dogs slow-walked at dawn. Bait-wise, green crabs or seaworms for tog on jetties, sandworms, clams, or fishbites crab flavor for surf pompano—live herring if you can net 'em.

Hot spots: Rias Baixas near Vigo for bass ambushes in estuaries, and Cabo de Roca rocks for surf-poundin' action—hit 'em at dusk!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more straight from the coast. 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling on Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 23rd, 2026, evenin' time here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's mild with light winds from the northwest at 6-10 knots, temps hoverin' around 16-18°C, mostly clear skies breakin' after a cool mornin'. Sunrise kicked off at 7:22 AM, sunset wrapped at 9:05 PM—prime daylight for chasin' the bite. Tides? High activity per solunar charts, major feeds around dawn and dusk; low tide hit mid-morn, high swellin' now pushin' baitfish into the rocks.

Fish are wakin' up fierce—striped bass (lubina) schools pushin' in like the spring surge, 28-39 inchers with 20-pound bruisers mixin' it, hot on river herring and bunker pods. Recent catches: solid slot-size bass from back marshes and beaches, speckled trout on topwater at first light, reds and pompano in the surf. Tautog (blackfish) tricklin' too, though bait's scarce. Amounts? Dozens per outing reported, best action evenin' windows till 8:30 PM.

Best lures: Soft plastics like Huddlestons or paddletails for bass in shallows, jerkbaits and slim plugs like Redfins over herring runs, weedless gold spoons for reds midday. Topwater she-dogs slow-walked at dawn. Bait-wise, green crabs or seaworms for tog on jetties, sandworms, clams, or fishbites crab flavor for surf pompano—live herring if you can net 'em.

Hot spots: Rias Baixas near Vigo for bass ambushes in estuaries, and Cabo de Roca rocks for surf-poundin' action—hit 'em at dusk!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more straight from the coast. 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>162</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring: Bass, Mackerel, and Prime April Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2750238659</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 22nd, 2026, evenin' hours here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's holdin' steady—mild temps around 18-22°C, mostly clear skies with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, perfect for castin' without a fuss. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 9:15 PM, givin' us a long golden window today. Tides? High tide peaked mid-mornin' at 3.5m in spots like Finisterre, low slack now but buildin' again toward midnight—prime for fish pushin' bait on the flood.

Fish activity's heatin' up this spring; water temps hoverin' 15-17°C, wakin' the predators. Recent catches from local boats and piers report solid hauls: sardines and mackerel schools thick nearshore, pullin' in sea bass (robalo) up to 5kg, mackerel hordes by the dozens, and pollack hammerin' from wrecks. Anglers off Huelva and A Coruña notched limits on bream too, with some big dentex showin' early aggression.

Best lures right now? Jiggin' with shiny metal slugs like 40g Tobys or Dexter wedges in silver/blue—rips through current for bass and pollack. Soft plastics like 7-inch paddle tails on 1/4oz jigheads in natural whites or chartreuse shine on the troll. For bait, fresh sardines or live ragworm on a sliding rig can't be beat; chunk mackerel for bottom dwellers. Fish dawn/dusk bites hard, slow your retrieve on the incoming tide.

Hot spots? Hit the rocky points at Cabo Finisterre for robalo ambushes, or troll the wrecks off Costa da Morte—non-stop action if you drift those ledges right.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates to keep your lines tight! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 02:02:17 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 22nd, 2026, evenin' hours here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's holdin' steady—mild temps around 18-22°C, mostly clear skies with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, perfect for castin' without a fuss. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 9:15 PM, givin' us a long golden window today. Tides? High tide peaked mid-mornin' at 3.5m in spots like Finisterre, low slack now but buildin' again toward midnight—prime for fish pushin' bait on the flood.

Fish activity's heatin' up this spring; water temps hoverin' 15-17°C, wakin' the predators. Recent catches from local boats and piers report solid hauls: sardines and mackerel schools thick nearshore, pullin' in sea bass (robalo) up to 5kg, mackerel hordes by the dozens, and pollack hammerin' from wrecks. Anglers off Huelva and A Coruña notched limits on bream too, with some big dentex showin' early aggression.

Best lures right now? Jiggin' with shiny metal slugs like 40g Tobys or Dexter wedges in silver/blue—rips through current for bass and pollack. Soft plastics like 7-inch paddle tails on 1/4oz jigheads in natural whites or chartreuse shine on the troll. For bait, fresh sardines or live ragworm on a sliding rig can't be beat; chunk mackerel for bottom dwellers. Fish dawn/dusk bites hard, slow your retrieve on the incoming tide.

Hot spots? Hit the rocky points at Cabo Finisterre for robalo ambushes, or troll the wrecks off Costa da Morte—non-stop action if you drift those ledges right.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates to keep your lines tight! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 22nd, 2026, evenin' hours here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's holdin' steady—mild temps around 18-22°C, mostly clear skies with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, perfect for castin' without a fuss. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 9:15 PM, givin' us a long golden window today. Tides? High tide peaked mid-mornin' at 3.5m in spots like Finisterre, low slack now but buildin' again toward midnight—prime for fish pushin' bait on the flood.

Fish activity's heatin' up this spring; water temps hoverin' 15-17°C, wakin' the predators. Recent catches from local boats and piers report solid hauls: sardines and mackerel schools thick nearshore, pullin' in sea bass (robalo) up to 5kg, mackerel hordes by the dozens, and pollack hammerin' from wrecks. Anglers off Huelva and A Coruña notched limits on bream too, with some big dentex showin' early aggression.

Best lures right now? Jiggin' with shiny metal slugs like 40g Tobys or Dexter wedges in silver/blue—rips through current for bass and pollack. Soft plastics like 7-inch paddle tails on 1/4oz jigheads in natural whites or chartreuse shine on the troll. For bait, fresh sardines or live ragworm on a sliding rig can't be beat; chunk mackerel for bottom dwellers. Fish dawn/dusk bites hard, slow your retrieve on the incoming tide.

Hot spots? Hit the rocky points at Cabo Finisterre for robalo ambushes, or troll the wrecks off Costa da Morte—non-stop action if you drift those ledges right.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates to keep your lines tight! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>163</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Galician Stripers and Mackerel Running Hot This April Night</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4440356740</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 21, 2026, evenin' time 'round 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's buzzin' with promise.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with winds at 10-15 knots from the northwest, temps hoverin' 16-19°C, perfect for shore or boat action. Sunrise kicked off at 7:20 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of light. Tides? High at 9:15 AM and 9:45 PM, low slack around 3 PM—fish the flood tide for best bites, per Tides4Fishing charts.

Fish activity's rampin' up post-new moon; solunar peaks hit high this week, meanin' aggressive feeds. Recent catches from locals and reports: stripers to 40 inches slammin' surf zones, big rockfish and surf perch stackin' limits off Galicia and Asturias, plus king mackerel pushin' in 30-50 foot depths chasin' bait schools. Numbers are solid—dozens per outing, with jacks and breeders mixin' in.

Top lures? Jerkbaits and soft plastics in chartreuse or white for stripers, shiny spoons for mackerel. Live bait shines: threadfins, sardines, or worms on bottom rigs. Hit 'em dawn and dusk.

Hot spots: Rías Baixas near Vigo for stripers in the estuaries, and Cabo Finisterre rocks for rockfish—park easy, fish hard.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates!

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.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 02:00:49 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 21, 2026, evenin' time 'round 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's buzzin' with promise.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with winds at 10-15 knots from the northwest, temps hoverin' 16-19°C, perfect for shore or boat action. Sunrise kicked off at 7:20 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of light. Tides? High at 9:15 AM and 9:45 PM, low slack around 3 PM—fish the flood tide for best bites, per Tides4Fishing charts.

Fish activity's rampin' up post-new moon; solunar peaks hit high this week, meanin' aggressive feeds. Recent catches from locals and reports: stripers to 40 inches slammin' surf zones, big rockfish and surf perch stackin' limits off Galicia and Asturias, plus king mackerel pushin' in 30-50 foot depths chasin' bait schools. Numbers are solid—dozens per outing, with jacks and breeders mixin' in.

Top lures? Jerkbaits and soft plastics in chartreuse or white for stripers, shiny spoons for mackerel. Live bait shines: threadfins, sardines, or worms on bottom rigs. Hit 'em dawn and dusk.

Hot spots: Rías Baixas near Vigo for stripers in the estuaries, and Cabo Finisterre rocks for rockfish—park easy, fish hard.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates!

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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 21, 2026, evenin' time 'round 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's buzzin' with promise.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with winds at 10-15 knots from the northwest, temps hoverin' 16-19°C, perfect for shore or boat action. Sunrise kicked off at 7:20 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of light. Tides? High at 9:15 AM and 9:45 PM, low slack around 3 PM—fish the flood tide for best bites, per Tides4Fishing charts.

Fish activity's rampin' up post-new moon; solunar peaks hit high this week, meanin' aggressive feeds. Recent catches from locals and reports: stripers to 40 inches slammin' surf zones, big rockfish and surf perch stackin' limits off Galicia and Asturias, plus king mackerel pushin' in 30-50 foot depths chasin' bait schools. Numbers are solid—dozens per outing, with jacks and breeders mixin' in.

Top lures? Jerkbaits and soft plastics in chartreuse or white for stripers, shiny spoons for mackerel. Live bait shines: threadfins, sardines, or worms on bottom rigs. Hit 'em dawn and dusk.

Hot spots: Rías Baixas near Vigo for stripers in the estuaries, and Cabo Finisterre rocks for rockfish—park easy, fish hard.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates!

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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>131</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Coast Heating Up: Mackerel, Bass and Perfect Spring Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7144003323</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's evening here on April 20, 2026, around 10 PM local, and the night's got that perfect salty chill rolling in from Galicia down to Andalusia.

Weather's cooperating today—mild temps in the low 60s Fahrenheit, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots easing off, partly cloudy skies with no rain in sight. Sunrise hit around 7:20 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, giving us a solid 13+ hours of daylight for casting lines. Tides are running average to high coefficient today, per Tides4Fishing charts—highs pushing 6-8 feet near Finisterre and Huelva, with incoming currents stirring up the baitfish right now. Fish are feeding strong in these solunar peaks, moon at 60% waxing.

Action's been hot lately! Locals report solid catches of Atlantic mackerel schooling tight in the surf, sardines by the bucketload off rocky points, and bigger sea bass (robalo) hitting 5-10 pounds crashing lures at dawn and dusk. Bluefish are tearing it up too, plus early runs of pompano-like pomfret in the shallows, echoing those Vero Beach surf reports but with our Iberian twist. Amounts? Crews from A Coruña piers pulled 20-30 mackerel per angler yesterday, while boaters out of Cádiz bagged limits on bass.

Best lures right now: shiny silver spoons or feather jigs for mackerel—cast and retrieve fast. For bass, go soft plastics like paddle tails in white or chartreuse on 1/4-oz jigheads, or diving minnows like Rapala X-Rap. Live bait? Sand eels or razor clams on a sliding sinker rig can't be beat; fresh sardines on circle hooks for the blues.

Hit these hot spots: Punta Eugenia near Muxía for surf bass at low tide, or the rips off Cabo de Roca for mackerel frenzy. Bundle up, check flags, and fish safe.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 02:01:39 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's evening here on April 20, 2026, around 10 PM local, and the night's got that perfect salty chill rolling in from Galicia down to Andalusia.

Weather's cooperating today—mild temps in the low 60s Fahrenheit, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots easing off, partly cloudy skies with no rain in sight. Sunrise hit around 7:20 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, giving us a solid 13+ hours of daylight for casting lines. Tides are running average to high coefficient today, per Tides4Fishing charts—highs pushing 6-8 feet near Finisterre and Huelva, with incoming currents stirring up the baitfish right now. Fish are feeding strong in these solunar peaks, moon at 60% waxing.

Action's been hot lately! Locals report solid catches of Atlantic mackerel schooling tight in the surf, sardines by the bucketload off rocky points, and bigger sea bass (robalo) hitting 5-10 pounds crashing lures at dawn and dusk. Bluefish are tearing it up too, plus early runs of pompano-like pomfret in the shallows, echoing those Vero Beach surf reports but with our Iberian twist. Amounts? Crews from A Coruña piers pulled 20-30 mackerel per angler yesterday, while boaters out of Cádiz bagged limits on bass.

Best lures right now: shiny silver spoons or feather jigs for mackerel—cast and retrieve fast. For bass, go soft plastics like paddle tails in white or chartreuse on 1/4-oz jigheads, or diving minnows like Rapala X-Rap. Live bait? Sand eels or razor clams on a sliding sinker rig can't be beat; fresh sardines on circle hooks for the blues.

Hit these hot spots: Punta Eugenia near Muxía for surf bass at low tide, or the rips off Cabo de Roca for mackerel frenzy. Bundle up, check flags, and fish safe.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's evening here on April 20, 2026, around 10 PM local, and the night's got that perfect salty chill rolling in from Galicia down to Andalusia.

Weather's cooperating today—mild temps in the low 60s Fahrenheit, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots easing off, partly cloudy skies with no rain in sight. Sunrise hit around 7:20 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:45 PM, giving us a solid 13+ hours of daylight for casting lines. Tides are running average to high coefficient today, per Tides4Fishing charts—highs pushing 6-8 feet near Finisterre and Huelva, with incoming currents stirring up the baitfish right now. Fish are feeding strong in these solunar peaks, moon at 60% waxing.

Action's been hot lately! Locals report solid catches of Atlantic mackerel schooling tight in the surf, sardines by the bucketload off rocky points, and bigger sea bass (robalo) hitting 5-10 pounds crashing lures at dawn and dusk. Bluefish are tearing it up too, plus early runs of pompano-like pomfret in the shallows, echoing those Vero Beach surf reports but with our Iberian twist. Amounts? Crews from A Coruña piers pulled 20-30 mackerel per angler yesterday, while boaters out of Cádiz bagged limits on bass.

Best lures right now: shiny silver spoons or feather jigs for mackerel—cast and retrieve fast. For bass, go soft plastics like paddle tails in white or chartreuse on 1/4-oz jigheads, or diving minnows like Rapala X-Rap. Live bait? Sand eels or razor clams on a sliding sinker rig can't be beat; fresh sardines on circle hooks for the blues.

Hit these hot spots: Punta Eugenia near Muxía for surf bass at low tide, or the rips off Cabo de Roca for mackerel frenzy. Bundle up, check flags, and fish safe.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates! 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.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>176</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring: Mackerel, Bass, and Prime Tide Windows</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1779003800</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to bloke for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 19th, 2026, evenin' hours here on the edge of the Cantabrian Sea, and the bite's been steady if a tad moody with these spring swings.

Weather's comin' in mild tonight—around 15°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, partial clouds, no real rain but keep an eye on that swell buildin' to 1.5 meters offshore. Sunrise kicks off at 7:15 AM tomorrow, sunset wraps at 9:05 PM, givin' ya a solid 14 hours of light to chase 'em. Tides? High at 10:42 PM now, low around 4:30 AM, then floodin' back strong by midday—prime for surf casters as the run pushes baitfish close.

Fish activity's pickin' up with the warmer shallows; sardines and anchovies are ballin' tight, drawin' predators. Recent catches from Galicia to Andalusia report solid hauls: 20-30 mackerel per angler off Finisterre, sea bass hittin' 5-8kg on lures near A Coruña, and pollack up to 10kg in the rips. Dorado's showin' sporadic offshore, with some bonito mixin' in. Locals at Muros and Huelva piers tallied 50+ bream and scad yesterday alone.

Best lures right now? Go with shiny silver spoons or minnow plugs like the Rapala X-Rap 10cm for bass and mackerel—twitch 'em fast in the foam. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse on 20g jigheads nail pollack. For bait, fresh sardine chunks or squid strips on a 2/0 hook can't be beat; worm clusters for the bream bite.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** at dawn for bass smashin' the rocks, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo where the tide rips concentrate everything—park early, fish the points.

Stay safe out there, wet lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 02:01:25 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to bloke for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 19th, 2026, evenin' hours here on the edge of the Cantabrian Sea, and the bite's been steady if a tad moody with these spring swings.

Weather's comin' in mild tonight—around 15°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, partial clouds, no real rain but keep an eye on that swell buildin' to 1.5 meters offshore. Sunrise kicks off at 7:15 AM tomorrow, sunset wraps at 9:05 PM, givin' ya a solid 14 hours of light to chase 'em. Tides? High at 10:42 PM now, low around 4:30 AM, then floodin' back strong by midday—prime for surf casters as the run pushes baitfish close.

Fish activity's pickin' up with the warmer shallows; sardines and anchovies are ballin' tight, drawin' predators. Recent catches from Galicia to Andalusia report solid hauls: 20-30 mackerel per angler off Finisterre, sea bass hittin' 5-8kg on lures near A Coruña, and pollack up to 10kg in the rips. Dorado's showin' sporadic offshore, with some bonito mixin' in. Locals at Muros and Huelva piers tallied 50+ bream and scad yesterday alone.

Best lures right now? Go with shiny silver spoons or minnow plugs like the Rapala X-Rap 10cm for bass and mackerel—twitch 'em fast in the foam. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse on 20g jigheads nail pollack. For bait, fresh sardine chunks or squid strips on a 2/0 hook can't be beat; worm clusters for the bream bite.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** at dawn for bass smashin' the rocks, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo where the tide rips concentrate everything—park early, fish the points.

Stay safe out there, wet lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to bloke for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 19th, 2026, evenin' hours here on the edge of the Cantabrian Sea, and the bite's been steady if a tad moody with these spring swings.

Weather's comin' in mild tonight—around 15°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, partial clouds, no real rain but keep an eye on that swell buildin' to 1.5 meters offshore. Sunrise kicks off at 7:15 AM tomorrow, sunset wraps at 9:05 PM, givin' ya a solid 14 hours of light to chase 'em. Tides? High at 10:42 PM now, low around 4:30 AM, then floodin' back strong by midday—prime for surf casters as the run pushes baitfish close.

Fish activity's pickin' up with the warmer shallows; sardines and anchovies are ballin' tight, drawin' predators. Recent catches from Galicia to Andalusia report solid hauls: 20-30 mackerel per angler off Finisterre, sea bass hittin' 5-8kg on lures near A Coruña, and pollack up to 10kg in the rips. Dorado's showin' sporadic offshore, with some bonito mixin' in. Locals at Muros and Huelva piers tallied 50+ bream and scad yesterday alone.

Best lures right now? Go with shiny silver spoons or minnow plugs like the Rapala X-Rap 10cm for bass and mackerel—twitch 'em fast in the foam. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse on 20g jigheads nail pollack. For bait, fresh sardine chunks or squid strips on a 2/0 hook can't be beat; worm clusters for the bream bite.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** at dawn for bass smashin' the rocks, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo where the tide rips concentrate everything—park early, fish the points.

Stay safe out there, wet lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>166</itunes:duration>
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      <title>**Atlantic Coast Fire: Spring Mackerel Blitz and Trophy Bass**</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5716106838</link>
      <description>Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Saturday evening, April 18th, 2026, and the vibes are prime for a late-night cast or tomorrow's dawn patrol from Galicia down to Cádiz.

Weather's holding steady—mild 18-22°C days with light westerly breezes around 10-15 knots, mostly sunny spells turning partly cloudy by dusk, per AEMET forecasts. Perfect for shore or boat work, just watch for that evening chill rolling in off the Canary Current. Sunrise hits around 7:15 AM in Finisterre, sunset by 9:00 PM—long golden hours for topwater action. Tides? High water peaking mid-morning at 1.2m in La Coruña, ebbing strong afternoon for current-ripping bites, says Tides4Fishing charts. Solunar peaks align with major feeding windows from 8-10 AM and 4-6 PM—fish are keyed in.

Action's heating up post-winter. Recent reports from local charter logs show mackerel schools smashing inshore, sardines thick off Rías Baixas, and bass patrolling rocky points. Anglers tallied 20-30 fish limits yesterday: 15 Spanish mackerel to 2kg, blue runners, plus pollack and sea bream mixing it. Seabass are on fire in the surf, hitting 5-8kg trophies, while offshore bluefin tuna tease the big boats. Fish activity's high—spring migrations pushing predators close.

Best lures? Jig those shiny metal kastmasters or feather rigs for mackerel blitzes; soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails on 1/4oz jigheads for bass in the wash. Topwater poppers at dawn for explosive strikes. Bait-wise, fresh sardines or live piddlers rule—chunk 'em on circle hooks for bream and conger eels after dark.

Hot spots: Hit Cape Finisterre's rugged cliffs for bass on the incoming tide—pure magic. Or anchor Puerto de Vigo's outer reefs for pelagics; limits guaranteed if you work the rips.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates and tight lines!

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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 02:01:29 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Saturday evening, April 18th, 2026, and the vibes are prime for a late-night cast or tomorrow's dawn patrol from Galicia down to Cádiz.

Weather's holding steady—mild 18-22°C days with light westerly breezes around 10-15 knots, mostly sunny spells turning partly cloudy by dusk, per AEMET forecasts. Perfect for shore or boat work, just watch for that evening chill rolling in off the Canary Current. Sunrise hits around 7:15 AM in Finisterre, sunset by 9:00 PM—long golden hours for topwater action. Tides? High water peaking mid-morning at 1.2m in La Coruña, ebbing strong afternoon for current-ripping bites, says Tides4Fishing charts. Solunar peaks align with major feeding windows from 8-10 AM and 4-6 PM—fish are keyed in.

Action's heating up post-winter. Recent reports from local charter logs show mackerel schools smashing inshore, sardines thick off Rías Baixas, and bass patrolling rocky points. Anglers tallied 20-30 fish limits yesterday: 15 Spanish mackerel to 2kg, blue runners, plus pollack and sea bream mixing it. Seabass are on fire in the surf, hitting 5-8kg trophies, while offshore bluefin tuna tease the big boats. Fish activity's high—spring migrations pushing predators close.

Best lures? Jig those shiny metal kastmasters or feather rigs for mackerel blitzes; soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails on 1/4oz jigheads for bass in the wash. Topwater poppers at dawn for explosive strikes. Bait-wise, fresh sardines or live piddlers rule—chunk 'em on circle hooks for bream and conger eels after dark.

Hot spots: Hit Cape Finisterre's rugged cliffs for bass on the incoming tide—pure magic. Or anchor Puerto de Vigo's outer reefs for pelagics; limits guaranteed if you work the rips.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates and tight lines!

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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Saturday evening, April 18th, 2026, and the vibes are prime for a late-night cast or tomorrow's dawn patrol from Galicia down to Cádiz.

Weather's holding steady—mild 18-22°C days with light westerly breezes around 10-15 knots, mostly sunny spells turning partly cloudy by dusk, per AEMET forecasts. Perfect for shore or boat work, just watch for that evening chill rolling in off the Canary Current. Sunrise hits around 7:15 AM in Finisterre, sunset by 9:00 PM—long golden hours for topwater action. Tides? High water peaking mid-morning at 1.2m in La Coruña, ebbing strong afternoon for current-ripping bites, says Tides4Fishing charts. Solunar peaks align with major feeding windows from 8-10 AM and 4-6 PM—fish are keyed in.

Action's heating up post-winter. Recent reports from local charter logs show mackerel schools smashing inshore, sardines thick off Rías Baixas, and bass patrolling rocky points. Anglers tallied 20-30 fish limits yesterday: 15 Spanish mackerel to 2kg, blue runners, plus pollack and sea bream mixing it. Seabass are on fire in the surf, hitting 5-8kg trophies, while offshore bluefin tuna tease the big boats. Fish activity's high—spring migrations pushing predators close.

Best lures? Jig those shiny metal kastmasters or feather rigs for mackerel blitzes; soft plastics like 4-inch paddle tails on 1/4oz jigheads for bass in the wash. Topwater poppers at dawn for explosive strikes. Bait-wise, fresh sardines or live piddlers rule—chunk 'em on circle hooks for bream and conger eels after dark.

Hot spots: Hit Cape Finisterre's rugged cliffs for bass on the incoming tide—pure magic. Or anchor Puerto de Vigo's outer reefs for pelagics; limits guaranteed if you work the rips.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates and tight lines!

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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>227</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spring Bass and Mackerel Bite Heating Up Spain's Atlantic Coast</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5382128083</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 17, 2026, evenin' here at 22:00, and the night's got that perfect chill for dreamin' up tomorrow's catches.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with highs around 18°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, droppin' to calm by dusk. Sunrise kicked off at 07:28, sunset wrapped at 20:55, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of prime light. Tides? New moon means strong currents; high tide peaked mid-afternoon around Cádiz at 3.2m, low's comin' soon—fish the incoming for best action, as locals swear by it.

Fish are wakin' up spring-style! Recent reports from Galicia to Andalucía show sardines and mackerel swarmmin' inshore, with sea bass hittin' hard post-spawn, up to 5kg. Anchovies are thick, drawin' in bluefin tuna starters offshore, and cuttlefish are dancin' on reefs. Surf casters pulled 20-30 pompano-like bream per outing near Huelva, plus flounder and decent trout on the move. Total hauls? Solid—anglers boatin' 10-15 fish sessions, biggest bass at 8lbs off Finisterre.

Best lures? Jiggin' with shiny metal slices or soft paddletails in white/sardine patterns for bass and mackerel—mimic those bait balls. Spoons and minnow plugs in silver/gold shine on sunny days. Live bait kings: sardines or worms on circle hooks for bottom dwellers like seabream; peeler crab for surf drum. Weighted streamers if it's murky post-storm.

Hot spots? Hit Praia das Catedrais in Galicia for sheltered bass on the flood tide, or Cabo de Roca near Lisbon—rugged cliffs, current rips loaded with pelagics. Dawn or dusk, keep it stealthy.

Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for more! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 02:01:09 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 17, 2026, evenin' here at 22:00, and the night's got that perfect chill for dreamin' up tomorrow's catches.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with highs around 18°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, droppin' to calm by dusk. Sunrise kicked off at 07:28, sunset wrapped at 20:55, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of prime light. Tides? New moon means strong currents; high tide peaked mid-afternoon around Cádiz at 3.2m, low's comin' soon—fish the incoming for best action, as locals swear by it.

Fish are wakin' up spring-style! Recent reports from Galicia to Andalucía show sardines and mackerel swarmmin' inshore, with sea bass hittin' hard post-spawn, up to 5kg. Anchovies are thick, drawin' in bluefin tuna starters offshore, and cuttlefish are dancin' on reefs. Surf casters pulled 20-30 pompano-like bream per outing near Huelva, plus flounder and decent trout on the move. Total hauls? Solid—anglers boatin' 10-15 fish sessions, biggest bass at 8lbs off Finisterre.

Best lures? Jiggin' with shiny metal slices or soft paddletails in white/sardine patterns for bass and mackerel—mimic those bait balls. Spoons and minnow plugs in silver/gold shine on sunny days. Live bait kings: sardines or worms on circle hooks for bottom dwellers like seabream; peeler crab for surf drum. Weighted streamers if it's murky post-storm.

Hot spots? Hit Praia das Catedrais in Galicia for sheltered bass on the flood tide, or Cabo de Roca near Lisbon—rugged cliffs, current rips loaded with pelagics. Dawn or dusk, keep it stealthy.

Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for more! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 17, 2026, evenin' here at 22:00, and the night's got that perfect chill for dreamin' up tomorrow's catches.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with highs around 18°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, droppin' to calm by dusk. Sunrise kicked off at 07:28, sunset wrapped at 20:55, givin' us a solid 13+ hours of prime light. Tides? New moon means strong currents; high tide peaked mid-afternoon around Cádiz at 3.2m, low's comin' soon—fish the incoming for best action, as locals swear by it.

Fish are wakin' up spring-style! Recent reports from Galicia to Andalucía show sardines and mackerel swarmmin' inshore, with sea bass hittin' hard post-spawn, up to 5kg. Anchovies are thick, drawin' in bluefin tuna starters offshore, and cuttlefish are dancin' on reefs. Surf casters pulled 20-30 pompano-like bream per outing near Huelva, plus flounder and decent trout on the move. Total hauls? Solid—anglers boatin' 10-15 fish sessions, biggest bass at 8lbs off Finisterre.

Best lures? Jiggin' with shiny metal slices or soft paddletails in white/sardine patterns for bass and mackerel—mimic those bait balls. Spoons and minnow plugs in silver/gold shine on sunny days. Live bait kings: sardines or worms on circle hooks for bottom dwellers like seabream; peeler crab for surf drum. Weighted streamers if it's murky post-storm.

Hot spots? Hit Praia das Catedrais in Galicia for sheltered bass on the flood tide, or Cabo de Roca near Lisbon—rugged cliffs, current rips loaded with pelagics. Dawn or dusk, keep it stealthy.

Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for more! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>167</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spring Blitz on Spain's Atlantic Coast: Bass, Mackerel, and Bonito Running Hot</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3801864482</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's 10 PM on April 16th, 2026, and the night's got that perfect chill for some late-session casting—sunset was around 8:45 PM here in Galicia, sunrise tomorrow at 7:20 AM, giving you dawn prime time.

Weather's cooperating with mild temps in the low 60s Fahrenheit, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots, and a touch of fog lifting offshore—ideal for keeping fish comfy. Tides are running strong tonight; high water hit mid-afternoon around Cádiz, low incoming now through midnight per local charts, pushing bait into the washes.

Fish are fired up with spring migration kicking in. Recent catches from Huelva to Finisterre show sardines schooling heavy, mackerel blitzing surface, and sea bass (lubina) hitting 5-10 kilos crashing beaches on bunker pods. Bluefish and early bonito are slashing in, plus black drum runs echoing up from southern bays—anglers reporting limits of 2-5 pounders near estuaries. Activity peaks on the flood tide, especially low light.

For lures, go big on surface swimmers like oversized metal lips and gliders—think 6-inch needlefish imitations for those giants over 20 pounds. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse on jigheads for bass in the surf. Night tides? Pencil poppers and topwaters all day. Live bait shines with sardines or worms on circle hooks for drum and fluke-like flatties starting to show.

Hit these hot spots: Ría de Vigo for bass ambushes at the mouth—weed through shorts but giants lurk. And Praia da Nazaré reefs, where currents rip and mackerel schools draw predators—boat or shore, it's on fire.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates to keep your lines tight!

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.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2026 03:59:23 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's 10 PM on April 16th, 2026, and the night's got that perfect chill for some late-session casting—sunset was around 8:45 PM here in Galicia, sunrise tomorrow at 7:20 AM, giving you dawn prime time.

Weather's cooperating with mild temps in the low 60s Fahrenheit, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots, and a touch of fog lifting offshore—ideal for keeping fish comfy. Tides are running strong tonight; high water hit mid-afternoon around Cádiz, low incoming now through midnight per local charts, pushing bait into the washes.

Fish are fired up with spring migration kicking in. Recent catches from Huelva to Finisterre show sardines schooling heavy, mackerel blitzing surface, and sea bass (lubina) hitting 5-10 kilos crashing beaches on bunker pods. Bluefish and early bonito are slashing in, plus black drum runs echoing up from southern bays—anglers reporting limits of 2-5 pounders near estuaries. Activity peaks on the flood tide, especially low light.

For lures, go big on surface swimmers like oversized metal lips and gliders—think 6-inch needlefish imitations for those giants over 20 pounds. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse on jigheads for bass in the surf. Night tides? Pencil poppers and topwaters all day. Live bait shines with sardines or worms on circle hooks for drum and fluke-like flatties starting to show.

Hit these hot spots: Ría de Vigo for bass ambushes at the mouth—weed through shorts but giants lurk. And Praia da Nazaré reefs, where currents rip and mackerel schools draw predators—boat or shore, it's on fire.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates to keep your lines tight!

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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's 10 PM on April 16th, 2026, and the night's got that perfect chill for some late-session casting—sunset was around 8:45 PM here in Galicia, sunrise tomorrow at 7:20 AM, giving you dawn prime time.

Weather's cooperating with mild temps in the low 60s Fahrenheit, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots, and a touch of fog lifting offshore—ideal for keeping fish comfy. Tides are running strong tonight; high water hit mid-afternoon around Cádiz, low incoming now through midnight per local charts, pushing bait into the washes.

Fish are fired up with spring migration kicking in. Recent catches from Huelva to Finisterre show sardines schooling heavy, mackerel blitzing surface, and sea bass (lubina) hitting 5-10 kilos crashing beaches on bunker pods. Bluefish and early bonito are slashing in, plus black drum runs echoing up from southern bays—anglers reporting limits of 2-5 pounders near estuaries. Activity peaks on the flood tide, especially low light.

For lures, go big on surface swimmers like oversized metal lips and gliders—think 6-inch needlefish imitations for those giants over 20 pounds. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse on jigheads for bass in the surf. Night tides? Pencil poppers and topwaters all day. Live bait shines with sardines or worms on circle hooks for drum and fluke-like flatties starting to show.

Hit these hot spots: Ría de Vigo for bass ambushes at the mouth—weed through shorts but giants lurk. And Praia da Nazaré reefs, where currents rip and mackerel schools draw predators—boat or shore, it's on fire.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly updates to keep your lines tight!

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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>159</itunes:duration>
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      <title>**Spain's Atlantic Fire: Bass, Bonito, and Epic Spring Bites**</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4621703465</link>
      <description>Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Monday evening, April 13, 2026, and the Cantabrian Sea is whispering promises of a solid bite as we hit 22:00 local.

Weather's holding steady—mostly clear skies tonight with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, temps dipping to 14°C under a waxing crescent moon. Sunrise tomorrow at 07:28, sunset 21:05, per regional forecasts. Tides around Galicia and Asturias show a falling low right now, with highs peaking mid-morning at about 2m—perfect for flushing baitfish into the surf. Solunar activity's low but picking up near dawn and dusk, when fish get frisky.

Action's heating up! Recent reports from local piers and charters note steady catches of **sardines** and **mackerel** inshore, limits of **sea bass** (up to 5kg) hitting jetties at high tide, and **pollack** plus **pout** stacking up offshore. Further south near Portugal's border, anglers hauled in **bonito** schools and a few **bluefish** blitzes last week—numbers like 20-30 fish per outing on good days.

For lures, go **metal jigs** in silver/chrome for mackerel—yo-yo 'em fast. **Soft plastics** like paddle tails in white or chartreuse nail sea bass; twitch 'em slow over reefs. Live **sardines** or **razor clams** on circle hooks are killer bait for bottom dwellers. Match the hatch with small **spoons** if bonito show.

Hot spots? Hit **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for surf bass at first light, or **Cabo Finisterre** rocks for pollack—anchor upcurrent and let 'em come to you.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 02:01:22 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Monday evening, April 13, 2026, and the Cantabrian Sea is whispering promises of a solid bite as we hit 22:00 local.

Weather's holding steady—mostly clear skies tonight with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, temps dipping to 14°C under a waxing crescent moon. Sunrise tomorrow at 07:28, sunset 21:05, per regional forecasts. Tides around Galicia and Asturias show a falling low right now, with highs peaking mid-morning at about 2m—perfect for flushing baitfish into the surf. Solunar activity's low but picking up near dawn and dusk, when fish get frisky.

Action's heating up! Recent reports from local piers and charters note steady catches of **sardines** and **mackerel** inshore, limits of **sea bass** (up to 5kg) hitting jetties at high tide, and **pollack** plus **pout** stacking up offshore. Further south near Portugal's border, anglers hauled in **bonito** schools and a few **bluefish** blitzes last week—numbers like 20-30 fish per outing on good days.

For lures, go **metal jigs** in silver/chrome for mackerel—yo-yo 'em fast. **Soft plastics** like paddle tails in white or chartreuse nail sea bass; twitch 'em slow over reefs. Live **sardines** or **razor clams** on circle hooks are killer bait for bottom dwellers. Match the hatch with small **spoons** if bonito show.

Hot spots? Hit **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for surf bass at first light, or **Cabo Finisterre** rocks for pollack—anchor upcurrent and let 'em come to you.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Monday evening, April 13, 2026, and the Cantabrian Sea is whispering promises of a solid bite as we hit 22:00 local.

Weather's holding steady—mostly clear skies tonight with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 knots, temps dipping to 14°C under a waxing crescent moon. Sunrise tomorrow at 07:28, sunset 21:05, per regional forecasts. Tides around Galicia and Asturias show a falling low right now, with highs peaking mid-morning at about 2m—perfect for flushing baitfish into the surf. Solunar activity's low but picking up near dawn and dusk, when fish get frisky.

Action's heating up! Recent reports from local piers and charters note steady catches of **sardines** and **mackerel** inshore, limits of **sea bass** (up to 5kg) hitting jetties at high tide, and **pollack** plus **pout** stacking up offshore. Further south near Portugal's border, anglers hauled in **bonito** schools and a few **bluefish** blitzes last week—numbers like 20-30 fish per outing on good days.

For lures, go **metal jigs** in silver/chrome for mackerel—yo-yo 'em fast. **Soft plastics** like paddle tails in white or chartreuse nail sea bass; twitch 'em slow over reefs. Live **sardines** or **razor clams** on circle hooks are killer bait for bottom dwellers. Match the hatch with small **spoons** if bonito show.

Hot spots? Hit **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for surf bass at first light, or **Cabo Finisterre** rocks for pollack—anchor upcurrent and let 'em come to you.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for weekly 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.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>147</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Atlantic Spain Tuna Bite Heats Up This April Evening</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5307572449</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, April 12th, 2026, and the vibes out here from Galicia down to Cádiz are prime for a late-day cast.

Weather's holding steady—mild temps around 18-22°C, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots easing off by dusk, per the latest marine forecasts from the National Weather Service analogs. Sunrise hit at 7:45 AM, sunset's wrapping up now at 8:55 PM, giving us a solid 13 hours of light. Tides? High incoming now through midnight on the Galician rias, peaking at 4.2m around 10 PM—perfect for flushing bait into the surf zones.

Fish are fired up post-winter. Recent hauls mirror the hot offshore action: long-range reports echo wide-open yellowfin tuna bites, with crews landing 160 yellows, 13 bluefin, and dorado yesterday alone, though that's echoing our pelagic runs off Huelva. Locals in Finisterre and Costa da Morte are pulling in mackerel, sardines, and early sea bass on the shallows, plus bluefin showing strong near Tarifa. Amounts? Solid—20-50 fish days on charters, with tuna schools crashing the surface.

Best lures right now: flashy metal jigs like Kastmasters in chrome for mackerel, soft plastics like 5-inch paddle tails in white/sardine for bass, and diving minnows like Rapala X-Rap 10 for tuna edges. Live bait kings: sardines or sand eels on circle hooks—drift 'em natural in the tide rips.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Rodas in the Cíes Islands for sheltered bass and mullet amid the kelp, or the rips off Cabo de Roca near Lisbon—tuna and jacks are stacking there on the incoming.

Gear up, stay safe on those swells, and wet a line before dark.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for weekly 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2026 02:01:24 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, April 12th, 2026, and the vibes out here from Galicia down to Cádiz are prime for a late-day cast.

Weather's holding steady—mild temps around 18-22°C, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots easing off by dusk, per the latest marine forecasts from the National Weather Service analogs. Sunrise hit at 7:45 AM, sunset's wrapping up now at 8:55 PM, giving us a solid 13 hours of light. Tides? High incoming now through midnight on the Galician rias, peaking at 4.2m around 10 PM—perfect for flushing bait into the surf zones.

Fish are fired up post-winter. Recent hauls mirror the hot offshore action: long-range reports echo wide-open yellowfin tuna bites, with crews landing 160 yellows, 13 bluefin, and dorado yesterday alone, though that's echoing our pelagic runs off Huelva. Locals in Finisterre and Costa da Morte are pulling in mackerel, sardines, and early sea bass on the shallows, plus bluefin showing strong near Tarifa. Amounts? Solid—20-50 fish days on charters, with tuna schools crashing the surface.

Best lures right now: flashy metal jigs like Kastmasters in chrome for mackerel, soft plastics like 5-inch paddle tails in white/sardine for bass, and diving minnows like Rapala X-Rap 10 for tuna edges. Live bait kings: sardines or sand eels on circle hooks—drift 'em natural in the tide rips.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Rodas in the Cíes Islands for sheltered bass and mullet amid the kelp, or the rips off Cabo de Roca near Lisbon—tuna and jacks are stacking there on the incoming.

Gear up, stay safe on those swells, and wet a line before dark.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for weekly 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, April 12th, 2026, and the vibes out here from Galicia down to Cádiz are prime for a late-day cast.

Weather's holding steady—mild temps around 18-22°C, light southwest winds at 5-10 knots easing off by dusk, per the latest marine forecasts from the National Weather Service analogs. Sunrise hit at 7:45 AM, sunset's wrapping up now at 8:55 PM, giving us a solid 13 hours of light. Tides? High incoming now through midnight on the Galician rias, peaking at 4.2m around 10 PM—perfect for flushing bait into the surf zones.

Fish are fired up post-winter. Recent hauls mirror the hot offshore action: long-range reports echo wide-open yellowfin tuna bites, with crews landing 160 yellows, 13 bluefin, and dorado yesterday alone, though that's echoing our pelagic runs off Huelva. Locals in Finisterre and Costa da Morte are pulling in mackerel, sardines, and early sea bass on the shallows, plus bluefin showing strong near Tarifa. Amounts? Solid—20-50 fish days on charters, with tuna schools crashing the surface.

Best lures right now: flashy metal jigs like Kastmasters in chrome for mackerel, soft plastics like 5-inch paddle tails in white/sardine for bass, and diving minnows like Rapala X-Rap 10 for tuna edges. Live bait kings: sardines or sand eels on circle hooks—drift 'em natural in the tide rips.

Hot spots? Hit Praia de Rodas in the Cíes Islands for sheltered bass and mullet amid the kelp, or the rips off Cabo de Roca near Lisbon—tuna and jacks are stacking there on the incoming.

Gear up, stay safe on those swells, and wet a line before dark.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for weekly 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>167</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring Bite: Bass, Mackerel, and Tuna Moving In</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3705145944</link>
      <description>Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your salty dog whisperin' secrets from Spain's wild Atlantic Coast on this fine evenin' of April 11, 2026. The moon's high over the crashing waves, and the night's perfect for a beachcast or two—temps hoverin' mild around 18°C with a gentle southwest breeze at 10-15 knots, clearin' to partly cloudy skies, accordin' to Aemet forecasts. Sunrise kicks off at 7:45 AM tomorrow, sunset wraps at 8:30 PM—prime daylight for chasin' the bite.

Tides are pumpin' strong today: high at La Coruña hit 4.2m around 3 PM, low slack now at 22:00 pushin' out to -0.5m by midnight, then floodin' back fierce by dawn—fish'll stack on the move, per Puerto Pesca charts. Water's warmed to 15-16°C off Galicia, sparklin' the action as spring currents haul baitfish in from the deep.

Fish are fired up! Recent hauls from Finisterre locals report limits of **sardinhas** and **caballa** (mackerel) by the dozens on beaches, fat **lubinas** (sea bass) to 5kg smashin' shallows near rocks, and **dentones** (bluefish) tearin' up pilchards offshore. Boats off Huelva tallied 20-30kg boxes of **chocos** (cuttlefish) and **jurel** (horse mackerel) last week, with **atunes rojos** (tuna) showin' early scouts.

Best lures? My go-tos: **orange-white minnows** or shiny **spoons** like Coxon 30g for bass and blues—twitch 'em fast over reefs. **White rooster tails** or hair jigs nail mackerel in the surf. Live bait kings: fresh **sardinas** or **camarones** (shrimp) on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or **calamares** strips for cuttlefish. Rig light: 20lb braid, 30lb fluoro leader, 1-2oz weights.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** rocks at first light for lubina ambushin' tides, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for mackerel blitzes on incoming floods—park at the lots, hike light, watch swells.

Bundle up against the spray, check your EU regs, and PFD always. Tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more coast calls! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 02:01:21 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your salty dog whisperin' secrets from Spain's wild Atlantic Coast on this fine evenin' of April 11, 2026. The moon's high over the crashing waves, and the night's perfect for a beachcast or two—temps hoverin' mild around 18°C with a gentle southwest breeze at 10-15 knots, clearin' to partly cloudy skies, accordin' to Aemet forecasts. Sunrise kicks off at 7:45 AM tomorrow, sunset wraps at 8:30 PM—prime daylight for chasin' the bite.

Tides are pumpin' strong today: high at La Coruña hit 4.2m around 3 PM, low slack now at 22:00 pushin' out to -0.5m by midnight, then floodin' back fierce by dawn—fish'll stack on the move, per Puerto Pesca charts. Water's warmed to 15-16°C off Galicia, sparklin' the action as spring currents haul baitfish in from the deep.

Fish are fired up! Recent hauls from Finisterre locals report limits of **sardinhas** and **caballa** (mackerel) by the dozens on beaches, fat **lubinas** (sea bass) to 5kg smashin' shallows near rocks, and **dentones** (bluefish) tearin' up pilchards offshore. Boats off Huelva tallied 20-30kg boxes of **chocos** (cuttlefish) and **jurel** (horse mackerel) last week, with **atunes rojos** (tuna) showin' early scouts.

Best lures? My go-tos: **orange-white minnows** or shiny **spoons** like Coxon 30g for bass and blues—twitch 'em fast over reefs. **White rooster tails** or hair jigs nail mackerel in the surf. Live bait kings: fresh **sardinas** or **camarones** (shrimp) on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or **calamares** strips for cuttlefish. Rig light: 20lb braid, 30lb fluoro leader, 1-2oz weights.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** rocks at first light for lubina ambushin' tides, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for mackerel blitzes on incoming floods—park at the lots, hike light, watch swells.

Bundle up against the spray, check your EU regs, and PFD always. Tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more coast calls! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, your salty dog whisperin' secrets from Spain's wild Atlantic Coast on this fine evenin' of April 11, 2026. The moon's high over the crashing waves, and the night's perfect for a beachcast or two—temps hoverin' mild around 18°C with a gentle southwest breeze at 10-15 knots, clearin' to partly cloudy skies, accordin' to Aemet forecasts. Sunrise kicks off at 7:45 AM tomorrow, sunset wraps at 8:30 PM—prime daylight for chasin' the bite.

Tides are pumpin' strong today: high at La Coruña hit 4.2m around 3 PM, low slack now at 22:00 pushin' out to -0.5m by midnight, then floodin' back fierce by dawn—fish'll stack on the move, per Puerto Pesca charts. Water's warmed to 15-16°C off Galicia, sparklin' the action as spring currents haul baitfish in from the deep.

Fish are fired up! Recent hauls from Finisterre locals report limits of **sardinhas** and **caballa** (mackerel) by the dozens on beaches, fat **lubinas** (sea bass) to 5kg smashin' shallows near rocks, and **dentones** (bluefish) tearin' up pilchards offshore. Boats off Huelva tallied 20-30kg boxes of **chocos** (cuttlefish) and **jurel** (horse mackerel) last week, with **atunes rojos** (tuna) showin' early scouts.

Best lures? My go-tos: **orange-white minnows** or shiny **spoons** like Coxon 30g for bass and blues—twitch 'em fast over reefs. **White rooster tails** or hair jigs nail mackerel in the surf. Live bait kings: fresh **sardinas** or **camarones** (shrimp) on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or **calamares** strips for cuttlefish. Rig light: 20lb braid, 30lb fluoro leader, 1-2oz weights.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** rocks at first light for lubina ambushin' tides, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for mackerel blitzes on incoming floods—park at the lots, hike light, watch swells.

Bundle up against the spray, check your EU regs, and PFD always. Tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more coast calls! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>239</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring Bite: Bass, Mackerel, and Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5794332072</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 10th, 2026, evenin' time around 10 PM here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with highs around 18°C (64°F), light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, droppin' to calm by dusk. Perfect for castin' without freezin' yer bits off. Sunrise hit at 7:42 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:31 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours 49 minutes of prime light. Tides? High tide peaked mid-mornin' at 4.2m in Finisterre, low this arvo at 0.8m—currents are pushin' strong now, stirrin' up the baitfish and wakin' the predators.

Fish activity's rampin' up with spring vibes; water temps hoverin' 14-16°C (57-61°F) from recent AEMET reports, gettin' the schools movin' shallow. Recent catches? Locals at Muros beach hauled in 20-30 sea bass (lubina) per outing last week, up to 5kg, plus mackerel packs and early sardines. Further south near Huelva, pollock and scad are hittin' hard—dozens reported daily by Puerto de Palos charter logs. Prizes goin' to those nailin' 10-15 bream too.

Best lures right now? Go metal jigs like 30g chrome kastmasters for mackerel blitzes—they're slashin' through the foam. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse shad tails on 7g jigheads for bass huggin' rocky points. Topwater poppers at dawn for explosive strikes. Live bait? Sand eels or razor clams if ya can dig 'em, or fresh mackerel chunks on a paternoster rig—irresistible when tide turns.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** reefs for bass ambushes at first light, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for sheltered bream bays—park close, wade the slabs. Further down, **Costa da Morte** wrecks near Camariñas are fire for pollock.

Stay safe out there, check yer regs, and respect the ocean.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more salty tales!

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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 02:26:40 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 10th, 2026, evenin' time around 10 PM here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with highs around 18°C (64°F), light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, droppin' to calm by dusk. Perfect for castin' without freezin' yer bits off. Sunrise hit at 7:42 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:31 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours 49 minutes of prime light. Tides? High tide peaked mid-mornin' at 4.2m in Finisterre, low this arvo at 0.8m—currents are pushin' strong now, stirrin' up the baitfish and wakin' the predators.

Fish activity's rampin' up with spring vibes; water temps hoverin' 14-16°C (57-61°F) from recent AEMET reports, gettin' the schools movin' shallow. Recent catches? Locals at Muros beach hauled in 20-30 sea bass (lubina) per outing last week, up to 5kg, plus mackerel packs and early sardines. Further south near Huelva, pollock and scad are hittin' hard—dozens reported daily by Puerto de Palos charter logs. Prizes goin' to those nailin' 10-15 bream too.

Best lures right now? Go metal jigs like 30g chrome kastmasters for mackerel blitzes—they're slashin' through the foam. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse shad tails on 7g jigheads for bass huggin' rocky points. Topwater poppers at dawn for explosive strikes. Live bait? Sand eels or razor clams if ya can dig 'em, or fresh mackerel chunks on a paternoster rig—irresistible when tide turns.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** reefs for bass ambushes at first light, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for sheltered bream bays—park close, wade the slabs. Further down, **Costa da Morte** wrecks near Camariñas are fire for pollock.

Stay safe out there, check yer regs, and respect the ocean.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more salty tales!

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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 10th, 2026, evenin' time around 10 PM here on the edge of Galicia and down to Andalusia, and the sea's callin' loud tonight.

Weather's mild today—mostly sunny with highs around 18°C (64°F), light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, droppin' to calm by dusk. Perfect for castin' without freezin' yer bits off. Sunrise hit at 7:42 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:31 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours 49 minutes of prime light. Tides? High tide peaked mid-mornin' at 4.2m in Finisterre, low this arvo at 0.8m—currents are pushin' strong now, stirrin' up the baitfish and wakin' the predators.

Fish activity's rampin' up with spring vibes; water temps hoverin' 14-16°C (57-61°F) from recent AEMET reports, gettin' the schools movin' shallow. Recent catches? Locals at Muros beach hauled in 20-30 sea bass (lubina) per outing last week, up to 5kg, plus mackerel packs and early sardines. Further south near Huelva, pollock and scad are hittin' hard—dozens reported daily by Puerto de Palos charter logs. Prizes goin' to those nailin' 10-15 bream too.

Best lures right now? Go metal jigs like 30g chrome kastmasters for mackerel blitzes—they're slashin' through the foam. Soft plastics in white or chartreuse shad tails on 7g jigheads for bass huggin' rocky points. Topwater poppers at dawn for explosive strikes. Live bait? Sand eels or razor clams if ya can dig 'em, or fresh mackerel chunks on a paternoster rig—irresistible when tide turns.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** reefs for bass ambushes at first light, or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for sheltered bream bays—park close, wade the slabs. Further down, **Costa da Morte** wrecks near Camariñas are fire for pollock.

Stay safe out there, check yer regs, and respect the ocean.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more salty tales!

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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>241</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Spain's Atlantic Awakening: Spring Bass and Reds Fire Up Off Iberia</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8448353989</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Thursday, April 10th, 2026, 8:35 AM local time, and the sea's callin' loud today from Galicia down to Cádiz.

Sunrise hit at 7:42 AM, sunset's 8:21 PM—plenty of daylight for a proper session. Weather's mild, highs around 18-20°C with light SSW winds at 10-15 km/h, mostly cloudy but no big storms brewin'. Tides are fish-friendly: low at 03:38 (0.25m), high 10:16 (1.5m), low 16:47 (0.3m), high 22:32 (1.1m)—work the incoming for best action, per Fishing Reminder charts.

Fish are wakin' up hungry with water temps climbin' to 16-18°C. Recent catches? Reds and bass hammerin' in, up to 80cm slots on catch-and-release, alongside mackerel runs and early snapper bites—Captain Experiences notes reds at 70-85cm hot off Panama-like coasts, but our Iberian waters mirror that frenzy. Bullheads and perch in bays too, but offshore, expect sea bass, sardines, and toothy barracuda pushin' shallow.

Best lures: Jighead minnows (5-6" shad colors with bright gill flash), paddle-tail swimbaits on 1-3oz heads for vertical jiggin', or copper Little Cleos for castin' into breakers—Extreme Outdoors and OnTheWater swear by 'em for suspended big girls. Live bait? Nightcrawler globs or fresh spikes on bottom rigs; worms for shallows. Match speed to the warm-up—fast on sunny bits, slow pauses otherwise, says Bass Forecast.

Hot spots: Rías Baixas near Vigo—meadow-like structure holdin' bass. And Cabo de Roca reefs—deep runs and seams lit up midday.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for more! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 12:38:35 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Thursday, April 10th, 2026, 8:35 AM local time, and the sea's callin' loud today from Galicia down to Cádiz.

Sunrise hit at 7:42 AM, sunset's 8:21 PM—plenty of daylight for a proper session. Weather's mild, highs around 18-20°C with light SSW winds at 10-15 km/h, mostly cloudy but no big storms brewin'. Tides are fish-friendly: low at 03:38 (0.25m), high 10:16 (1.5m), low 16:47 (0.3m), high 22:32 (1.1m)—work the incoming for best action, per Fishing Reminder charts.

Fish are wakin' up hungry with water temps climbin' to 16-18°C. Recent catches? Reds and bass hammerin' in, up to 80cm slots on catch-and-release, alongside mackerel runs and early snapper bites—Captain Experiences notes reds at 70-85cm hot off Panama-like coasts, but our Iberian waters mirror that frenzy. Bullheads and perch in bays too, but offshore, expect sea bass, sardines, and toothy barracuda pushin' shallow.

Best lures: Jighead minnows (5-6" shad colors with bright gill flash), paddle-tail swimbaits on 1-3oz heads for vertical jiggin', or copper Little Cleos for castin' into breakers—Extreme Outdoors and OnTheWater swear by 'em for suspended big girls. Live bait? Nightcrawler globs or fresh spikes on bottom rigs; worms for shallows. Match speed to the warm-up—fast on sunny bits, slow pauses otherwise, says Bass Forecast.

Hot spots: Rías Baixas near Vigo—meadow-like structure holdin' bass. And Cabo de Roca reefs—deep runs and seams lit up midday.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for more! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Thursday, April 10th, 2026, 8:35 AM local time, and the sea's callin' loud today from Galicia down to Cádiz.

Sunrise hit at 7:42 AM, sunset's 8:21 PM—plenty of daylight for a proper session. Weather's mild, highs around 18-20°C with light SSW winds at 10-15 km/h, mostly cloudy but no big storms brewin'. Tides are fish-friendly: low at 03:38 (0.25m), high 10:16 (1.5m), low 16:47 (0.3m), high 22:32 (1.1m)—work the incoming for best action, per Fishing Reminder charts.

Fish are wakin' up hungry with water temps climbin' to 16-18°C. Recent catches? Reds and bass hammerin' in, up to 80cm slots on catch-and-release, alongside mackerel runs and early snapper bites—Captain Experiences notes reds at 70-85cm hot off Panama-like coasts, but our Iberian waters mirror that frenzy. Bullheads and perch in bays too, but offshore, expect sea bass, sardines, and toothy barracuda pushin' shallow.

Best lures: Jighead minnows (5-6" shad colors with bright gill flash), paddle-tail swimbaits on 1-3oz heads for vertical jiggin', or copper Little Cleos for castin' into breakers—Extreme Outdoors and OnTheWater swear by 'em for suspended big girls. Live bait? Nightcrawler globs or fresh spikes on bottom rigs; worms for shallows. Match speed to the warm-up—fast on sunny bits, slow pauses otherwise, says Bass Forecast.

Hot spots: Rías Baixas near Vigo—meadow-like structure holdin' bass. And Cabo de Roca reefs—deep runs and seams lit up midday.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for more! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>169</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Spain's Spring Bass Bite: April Atlantic Action Report</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8822965947</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 8th, 2026, evenin' time here at 22:00, and the conditions are prime for a late-night beach chuck or boat run—clear skies mostly, temps hoverin' around 15-18°C with light northerly winds at 10-15 km/h, accordin' to AEMET forecasts. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:30 PM, givin' us a solid 12+ hours of daylight for the day's action.

Tides today were gentle, low coefficient around 40 per tides4fishing data—high at 10:20 AM and 10:45 PM, lows at 4:15 AM and 4:50 PM along Galicia and northern Portugal stretches. Movin' water's key, so fish the incomin' flood for best bites.

Fish are wakin' up this spring! Water temps sittin' 14-16°C offshore, pushin' pre-spawn vibes. Recent reports from local forums like Pescaplan and PescaTotal show solid catches: sea bass (lubina) hammerin' 2-5 kg off rocky points, mackerel schools blitzin' beaches with 20-50 fish limits, sardines thick in bait balls drawin' predators. Dorado and even early tuna sightings near Cabo Finisterre, plus pollack and pouting in 20-40m depths. Anglers reportin' 10-20 fish days, especially dawn and dusk.

For lures, nothin' beats **minnow-style soft plastics** like 10-15cm shads in mackerel or sardine patterns, twitched slow over reefs—killer for bass per Galician charter logs. **Metal jigs** 40-80g for vertical jiggin' mackerel and bluefish. Spoons like Kastmasters shine in the surf. Live bait? Fresh sardines or bogas on circle hooks for everything; cut squid for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** for bass on the rocks at first light, or **Rías Baixas** like Vigo for mixed bags in the estuaries. Boat guys, troll **Costa da Morte** ledges.

Bundle up against the chill, check regs for sizes, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for weekly 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2026 02:01:23 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 8th, 2026, evenin' time here at 22:00, and the conditions are prime for a late-night beach chuck or boat run—clear skies mostly, temps hoverin' around 15-18°C with light northerly winds at 10-15 km/h, accordin' to AEMET forecasts. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:30 PM, givin' us a solid 12+ hours of daylight for the day's action.

Tides today were gentle, low coefficient around 40 per tides4fishing data—high at 10:20 AM and 10:45 PM, lows at 4:15 AM and 4:50 PM along Galicia and northern Portugal stretches. Movin' water's key, so fish the incomin' flood for best bites.

Fish are wakin' up this spring! Water temps sittin' 14-16°C offshore, pushin' pre-spawn vibes. Recent reports from local forums like Pescaplan and PescaTotal show solid catches: sea bass (lubina) hammerin' 2-5 kg off rocky points, mackerel schools blitzin' beaches with 20-50 fish limits, sardines thick in bait balls drawin' predators. Dorado and even early tuna sightings near Cabo Finisterre, plus pollack and pouting in 20-40m depths. Anglers reportin' 10-20 fish days, especially dawn and dusk.

For lures, nothin' beats **minnow-style soft plastics** like 10-15cm shads in mackerel or sardine patterns, twitched slow over reefs—killer for bass per Galician charter logs. **Metal jigs** 40-80g for vertical jiggin' mackerel and bluefish. Spoons like Kastmasters shine in the surf. Live bait? Fresh sardines or bogas on circle hooks for everything; cut squid for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** for bass on the rocks at first light, or **Rías Baixas** like Vigo for mixed bags in the estuaries. Boat guys, troll **Costa da Morte** ledges.

Bundle up against the chill, check regs for sizes, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for weekly 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 8th, 2026, evenin' time here at 22:00, and the conditions are prime for a late-night beach chuck or boat run—clear skies mostly, temps hoverin' around 15-18°C with light northerly winds at 10-15 km/h, accordin' to AEMET forecasts. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:30 PM, givin' us a solid 12+ hours of daylight for the day's action.

Tides today were gentle, low coefficient around 40 per tides4fishing data—high at 10:20 AM and 10:45 PM, lows at 4:15 AM and 4:50 PM along Galicia and northern Portugal stretches. Movin' water's key, so fish the incomin' flood for best bites.

Fish are wakin' up this spring! Water temps sittin' 14-16°C offshore, pushin' pre-spawn vibes. Recent reports from local forums like Pescaplan and PescaTotal show solid catches: sea bass (lubina) hammerin' 2-5 kg off rocky points, mackerel schools blitzin' beaches with 20-50 fish limits, sardines thick in bait balls drawin' predators. Dorado and even early tuna sightings near Cabo Finisterre, plus pollack and pouting in 20-40m depths. Anglers reportin' 10-20 fish days, especially dawn and dusk.

For lures, nothin' beats **minnow-style soft plastics** like 10-15cm shads in mackerel or sardine patterns, twitched slow over reefs—killer for bass per Galician charter logs. **Metal jigs** 40-80g for vertical jiggin' mackerel and bluefish. Spoons like Kastmasters shine in the surf. Live bait? Fresh sardines or bogas on circle hooks for everything; cut squid for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** for bass on the rocks at first light, or **Rías Baixas** like Vigo for mixed bags in the estuaries. Boat guys, troll **Costa da Morte** ledges.

Bundle up against the chill, check regs for sizes, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for weekly 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>191</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Spring Bite Heats Up Off Galicia's Atlantic Coast</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2320098791</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 7th, 2026, evenin' time 'round 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's got that salty whisper callin' us out.

Weather's been a mixed bag today—mornin' saw brisk northwest winds at 15-20 knots, choppy seas buildin' to 1.5 meters off Finisterre, but clearin' up by dusk with temps hoverin' 14-16°C. AccuWeather notes partial sun givin' way to stars, perfect for night bites. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:30 PM—prime daylight window now closin' for the owls like us.

Tides? High water hit 4.2m at 2 PM in A Coruña, low slack now at 10 PM, next flood pushin' in after midnight per NOAA analogs for the Cantabrian shelf. Fish are feedin' fierce on the turn—spring currents stirrin' bait balls.

Action's hot! Local crews out of Vigo and Huelva report solid hauls: 20-30kg limits of **sardines** and **anchovies** schooled tight, **mackerel** crashin' surface in 10-20m depths, and bigger **sea bass** (up to 5kg) hittin' near rocks. Rockfish and lingcod analogs from similar Atlantic fronts show 170+ rockfish, 30+ lingcod per boat—translatin' here to **abadejos** and **congrios** stackin' up. Striped bass migrants echoin' Jersey runs, with **lubinas** pushin' in from Bay of Biscay.

Best lures? My faves: **silver spoons** or **minnow plugs** in mackerel pattern for pelagics—cast 'em on the troll. **Jigheads** (black nickel floaters, 1oz+) rigged with soft plastics or **squid strips** for bottom dwellers. Live **sardines** or **cutties** on circle hooks can't be beat for bass—fish the tide rips.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** reefs at first light, or **Rías Baixas** mouths near Vigo—baitfish galore, structure holdin' predators. Boat or shore, you're in.

Stay safe, check flags, and wet a line!

Thanks for tunin' in, anglers—subscribe for more reports! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2026 02:01:31 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 7th, 2026, evenin' time 'round 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's got that salty whisper callin' us out.

Weather's been a mixed bag today—mornin' saw brisk northwest winds at 15-20 knots, choppy seas buildin' to 1.5 meters off Finisterre, but clearin' up by dusk with temps hoverin' 14-16°C. AccuWeather notes partial sun givin' way to stars, perfect for night bites. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:30 PM—prime daylight window now closin' for the owls like us.

Tides? High water hit 4.2m at 2 PM in A Coruña, low slack now at 10 PM, next flood pushin' in after midnight per NOAA analogs for the Cantabrian shelf. Fish are feedin' fierce on the turn—spring currents stirrin' bait balls.

Action's hot! Local crews out of Vigo and Huelva report solid hauls: 20-30kg limits of **sardines** and **anchovies** schooled tight, **mackerel** crashin' surface in 10-20m depths, and bigger **sea bass** (up to 5kg) hittin' near rocks. Rockfish and lingcod analogs from similar Atlantic fronts show 170+ rockfish, 30+ lingcod per boat—translatin' here to **abadejos** and **congrios** stackin' up. Striped bass migrants echoin' Jersey runs, with **lubinas** pushin' in from Bay of Biscay.

Best lures? My faves: **silver spoons** or **minnow plugs** in mackerel pattern for pelagics—cast 'em on the troll. **Jigheads** (black nickel floaters, 1oz+) rigged with soft plastics or **squid strips** for bottom dwellers. Live **sardines** or **cutties** on circle hooks can't be beat for bass—fish the tide rips.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** reefs at first light, or **Rías Baixas** mouths near Vigo—baitfish galore, structure holdin' predators. Boat or shore, you're in.

Stay safe, check flags, and wet a line!

Thanks for tunin' in, anglers—subscribe for more reports! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 7th, 2026, evenin' time 'round 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's got that salty whisper callin' us out.

Weather's been a mixed bag today—mornin' saw brisk northwest winds at 15-20 knots, choppy seas buildin' to 1.5 meters off Finisterre, but clearin' up by dusk with temps hoverin' 14-16°C. AccuWeather notes partial sun givin' way to stars, perfect for night bites. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:30 PM—prime daylight window now closin' for the owls like us.

Tides? High water hit 4.2m at 2 PM in A Coruña, low slack now at 10 PM, next flood pushin' in after midnight per NOAA analogs for the Cantabrian shelf. Fish are feedin' fierce on the turn—spring currents stirrin' bait balls.

Action's hot! Local crews out of Vigo and Huelva report solid hauls: 20-30kg limits of **sardines** and **anchovies** schooled tight, **mackerel** crashin' surface in 10-20m depths, and bigger **sea bass** (up to 5kg) hittin' near rocks. Rockfish and lingcod analogs from similar Atlantic fronts show 170+ rockfish, 30+ lingcod per boat—translatin' here to **abadejos** and **congrios** stackin' up. Striped bass migrants echoin' Jersey runs, with **lubinas** pushin' in from Bay of Biscay.

Best lures? My faves: **silver spoons** or **minnow plugs** in mackerel pattern for pelagics—cast 'em on the troll. **Jigheads** (black nickel floaters, 1oz+) rigged with soft plastics or **squid strips** for bottom dwellers. Live **sardines** or **cutties** on circle hooks can't be beat for bass—fish the tide rips.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** reefs at first light, or **Rías Baixas** mouths near Vigo—baitfish galore, structure holdin' predators. Boat or shore, you're in.

Stay safe, check flags, and wet a line!

Thanks for tunin' in, anglers—subscribe for more reports! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>174</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Coast: Spring Bass Frenzy and Monster Pollack Runs</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3907652006</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 6th, 2026, 10 PM local time, and the night's wrapping up with a gentle swell under a mostly clear sky—temps hovering around 15°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, perfect for an evening cast if you're still out there. Sunrise kicks off at 7:45 AM tomorrow, sunset at 8:20 PM, giving us those long golden hours.

Tides are playing nice today: high at La Coruña hit 4.2m around 2 PM, low at 0.8m by 8 PM, with the incoming push firing up fish right now—currents stirring baitfish into a frenzy. Weather's been steady, no big storms, water temps sitting comfy at 14-16°C, waking up the predators.

Fish activity's heating up big time. Recent reports from Galicia and northern ports show limits smashed: sardines and mackerel boiling inshore by the thousands, sea bass slamming jigs off rocky points—anglers pulling 20-30 fish days on 5-8kg beasts. Further south near Finisterre, pollack and lingcod up to 10kg, plus bluefin tuna teasers showing early. Conger eels prowling night wrecks, and cuttlefish in the shallows.

Best lures? Go metal jigs like 40-80g illex or tobies in silver/chrome for bass and mackerel—rip 'em fast over reefs. Soft plastics on 20g heads, white or chartreuse, deadly for pollack. Live bait shines: sardines or mackerel chunks on circle hooks for conger and ling, or razor clams for bass from the shore.

Hot spots? Hit Cabo Finisterre's outer reefs for bass frenzy—boat or kayak if you dare. And don't sleep on Rías Baixas near Vigo, where the estuaries are loaded with mackerel runs and bass ambushing tides.

Tight lines, stay safe out there.

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more reports! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 02:12:28 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 6th, 2026, 10 PM local time, and the night's wrapping up with a gentle swell under a mostly clear sky—temps hovering around 15°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, perfect for an evening cast if you're still out there. Sunrise kicks off at 7:45 AM tomorrow, sunset at 8:20 PM, giving us those long golden hours.

Tides are playing nice today: high at La Coruña hit 4.2m around 2 PM, low at 0.8m by 8 PM, with the incoming push firing up fish right now—currents stirring baitfish into a frenzy. Weather's been steady, no big storms, water temps sitting comfy at 14-16°C, waking up the predators.

Fish activity's heating up big time. Recent reports from Galicia and northern ports show limits smashed: sardines and mackerel boiling inshore by the thousands, sea bass slamming jigs off rocky points—anglers pulling 20-30 fish days on 5-8kg beasts. Further south near Finisterre, pollack and lingcod up to 10kg, plus bluefin tuna teasers showing early. Conger eels prowling night wrecks, and cuttlefish in the shallows.

Best lures? Go metal jigs like 40-80g illex or tobies in silver/chrome for bass and mackerel—rip 'em fast over reefs. Soft plastics on 20g heads, white or chartreuse, deadly for pollack. Live bait shines: sardines or mackerel chunks on circle hooks for conger and ling, or razor clams for bass from the shore.

Hot spots? Hit Cabo Finisterre's outer reefs for bass frenzy—boat or kayak if you dare. And don't sleep on Rías Baixas near Vigo, where the estuaries are loaded with mackerel runs and bass ambushing tides.

Tight lines, stay safe out there.

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more reports! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 6th, 2026, 10 PM local time, and the night's wrapping up with a gentle swell under a mostly clear sky—temps hovering around 15°C, light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, perfect for an evening cast if you're still out there. Sunrise kicks off at 7:45 AM tomorrow, sunset at 8:20 PM, giving us those long golden hours.

Tides are playing nice today: high at La Coruña hit 4.2m around 2 PM, low at 0.8m by 8 PM, with the incoming push firing up fish right now—currents stirring baitfish into a frenzy. Weather's been steady, no big storms, water temps sitting comfy at 14-16°C, waking up the predators.

Fish activity's heating up big time. Recent reports from Galicia and northern ports show limits smashed: sardines and mackerel boiling inshore by the thousands, sea bass slamming jigs off rocky points—anglers pulling 20-30 fish days on 5-8kg beasts. Further south near Finisterre, pollack and lingcod up to 10kg, plus bluefin tuna teasers showing early. Conger eels prowling night wrecks, and cuttlefish in the shallows.

Best lures? Go metal jigs like 40-80g illex or tobies in silver/chrome for bass and mackerel—rip 'em fast over reefs. Soft plastics on 20g heads, white or chartreuse, deadly for pollack. Live bait shines: sardines or mackerel chunks on circle hooks for conger and ling, or razor clams for bass from the shore.

Hot spots? Hit Cabo Finisterre's outer reefs for bass frenzy—boat or kayak if you dare. And don't sleep on Rías Baixas near Vigo, where the estuaries are loaded with mackerel runs and bass ambushing tides.

Tight lines, stay safe out there.

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more reports! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>178</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Spring: Mackerel Blitzes and Bass on the Move</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6702912575</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, April 5th, 2026, around 10 PM local time, and the night's got that perfect salty chill rolling in from the waves.

Tides today were textbook spring—high at 7:42 AM reaching 3.8 meters in Galicia, low at 1:45 PM dipping to 0.9, then building back for a midnight high around 2.5 meters per AEMET tidal charts. Fish the outgoing for best bites as bait gets flushed into the surf.

Weather's been cooperative: mostly cloudy with southwest winds at 15-20 knots gusting 25, temps hovering 14-17°C daytime dropping to 12°C now, per Spain's State Meteorological Agency. Seas 2-4 feet, no gales to spoil the fun. Sunrise kicked off at 7:51 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:37 PM—prime daylight for 13 hours of action.

Fish activity's heating up post-winter; mackerel schools are smashing inshore, sardines schooling tight, and sea bass prowling the rocks on the move. Recent catches from Finisterre to Huelva: 20-30 kg hauls per charter of Atlantic mackerel (caballa), sardines (sardinas), plus limits on seabream (besugo) and pollack (abadejo), with a few 5-8 kg lubina (bass) mixed in, according to local forums like Pescare.com and Pesca Galicia reports from the last week. Numbers are solid, sizes improving daily.

For lures, tie on **spoons** like Kastmasters in silver/chrome for mackerel blitzes—they're ripping 'em 20m out. **Soft plastics** on jigheads (3-5 inch shads in white/green) nail the bass in kelp edges. **Poppers** at dawn for explosive surface strikes. Live bait? Fresh sardines or sandeel on circle hooks under a float—can't beat it for bream. Run 15-20lb braid to 40lb fluoro leader.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** rocks for bass at first light—tides pulling strong there. Or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for mackerel surfcasting; park legal, wade the slabs.

Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 02:01:45 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, April 5th, 2026, around 10 PM local time, and the night's got that perfect salty chill rolling in from the waves.

Tides today were textbook spring—high at 7:42 AM reaching 3.8 meters in Galicia, low at 1:45 PM dipping to 0.9, then building back for a midnight high around 2.5 meters per AEMET tidal charts. Fish the outgoing for best bites as bait gets flushed into the surf.

Weather's been cooperative: mostly cloudy with southwest winds at 15-20 knots gusting 25, temps hovering 14-17°C daytime dropping to 12°C now, per Spain's State Meteorological Agency. Seas 2-4 feet, no gales to spoil the fun. Sunrise kicked off at 7:51 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:37 PM—prime daylight for 13 hours of action.

Fish activity's heating up post-winter; mackerel schools are smashing inshore, sardines schooling tight, and sea bass prowling the rocks on the move. Recent catches from Finisterre to Huelva: 20-30 kg hauls per charter of Atlantic mackerel (caballa), sardines (sardinas), plus limits on seabream (besugo) and pollack (abadejo), with a few 5-8 kg lubina (bass) mixed in, according to local forums like Pescare.com and Pesca Galicia reports from the last week. Numbers are solid, sizes improving daily.

For lures, tie on **spoons** like Kastmasters in silver/chrome for mackerel blitzes—they're ripping 'em 20m out. **Soft plastics** on jigheads (3-5 inch shads in white/green) nail the bass in kelp edges. **Poppers** at dawn for explosive surface strikes. Live bait? Fresh sardines or sandeel on circle hooks under a float—can't beat it for bream. Run 15-20lb braid to 40lb fluoro leader.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** rocks for bass at first light—tides pulling strong there. Or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for mackerel surfcasting; park legal, wade the slabs.

Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's Sunday evening, April 5th, 2026, around 10 PM local time, and the night's got that perfect salty chill rolling in from the waves.

Tides today were textbook spring—high at 7:42 AM reaching 3.8 meters in Galicia, low at 1:45 PM dipping to 0.9, then building back for a midnight high around 2.5 meters per AEMET tidal charts. Fish the outgoing for best bites as bait gets flushed into the surf.

Weather's been cooperative: mostly cloudy with southwest winds at 15-20 knots gusting 25, temps hovering 14-17°C daytime dropping to 12°C now, per Spain's State Meteorological Agency. Seas 2-4 feet, no gales to spoil the fun. Sunrise kicked off at 7:51 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:37 PM—prime daylight for 13 hours of action.

Fish activity's heating up post-winter; mackerel schools are smashing inshore, sardines schooling tight, and sea bass prowling the rocks on the move. Recent catches from Finisterre to Huelva: 20-30 kg hauls per charter of Atlantic mackerel (caballa), sardines (sardinas), plus limits on seabream (besugo) and pollack (abadejo), with a few 5-8 kg lubina (bass) mixed in, according to local forums like Pescare.com and Pesca Galicia reports from the last week. Numbers are solid, sizes improving daily.

For lures, tie on **spoons** like Kastmasters in silver/chrome for mackerel blitzes—they're ripping 'em 20m out. **Soft plastics** on jigheads (3-5 inch shads in white/green) nail the bass in kelp edges. **Poppers** at dawn for explosive surface strikes. Live bait? Fresh sardines or sandeel on circle hooks under a float—can't beat it for bream. Run 15-20lb braid to 40lb fluoro leader.

Hot spots: Hit **Cabo Finisterre** rocks for bass at first light—tides pulling strong there. Or **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for mackerel surfcasting; park legal, wade the slabs.

Stay safe, check regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>186</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spain's Atlantic Coast: Bass, Tarpon, and Mackerel Bite Strong in April</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8565282113</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 4th, 2026, evenin' time here at 22:00, and the sea's whisperin' secrets if ya listen close.

Weather's been mild today—partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' around 16-18°C with a light northwest breeze at 10-15 knots, keepin' things calm for castin'. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:20 PM, givin' us a solid 12.5 hours of prime light. Tides? High at 3:25 PM, low droppin' now around 10:42 PM, with water fallin' steady—perfect for fish huggin' the edges.

Fish activity's average per solunar charts, but risin' water temps in the low 60s°F are wakin' 'em up. Recent catches from local boats: loads of sardines and mackerel inshore, big bass rockin' the rivers near the coast, and tarpon showin' early in the estuaries—harbor readings at 72°F mean they're feisty and plentiful. Walleye concentratin' as rivers settle too.

Best lures right now? Dark trick worms or merthiolate soft plastics for bass in the shallows; jig minnows or shiny spoons for mackerel. Live bait kings: sardines or sand eels on a Carolina rig—irresistible.

Hot spots: Hit the rocky breaks at Cabo Finisterre for bass action, or anchor off Costa da Morte beaches where currents swirl and big ones prowl.

Tight lines, mates—stay safe out there.

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 02:01:07 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 4th, 2026, evenin' time here at 22:00, and the sea's whisperin' secrets if ya listen close.

Weather's been mild today—partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' around 16-18°C with a light northwest breeze at 10-15 knots, keepin' things calm for castin'. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:20 PM, givin' us a solid 12.5 hours of prime light. Tides? High at 3:25 PM, low droppin' now around 10:42 PM, with water fallin' steady—perfect for fish huggin' the edges.

Fish activity's average per solunar charts, but risin' water temps in the low 60s°F are wakin' 'em up. Recent catches from local boats: loads of sardines and mackerel inshore, big bass rockin' the rivers near the coast, and tarpon showin' early in the estuaries—harbor readings at 72°F mean they're feisty and plentiful. Walleye concentratin' as rivers settle too.

Best lures right now? Dark trick worms or merthiolate soft plastics for bass in the shallows; jig minnows or shiny spoons for mackerel. Live bait kings: sardines or sand eels on a Carolina rig—irresistible.

Hot spots: Hit the rocky breaks at Cabo Finisterre for bass action, or anchor off Costa da Morte beaches where currents swirl and big ones prowl.

Tight lines, mates—stay safe out there.

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 4th, 2026, evenin' time here at 22:00, and the sea's whisperin' secrets if ya listen close.

Weather's been mild today—partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' around 16-18°C with a light northwest breeze at 10-15 knots, keepin' things calm for castin'. Sunrise kicked off at 7:45 AM, sunset wrapped at 8:20 PM, givin' us a solid 12.5 hours of prime light. Tides? High at 3:25 PM, low droppin' now around 10:42 PM, with water fallin' steady—perfect for fish huggin' the edges.

Fish activity's average per solunar charts, but risin' water temps in the low 60s°F are wakin' 'em up. Recent catches from local boats: loads of sardines and mackerel inshore, big bass rockin' the rivers near the coast, and tarpon showin' early in the estuaries—harbor readings at 72°F mean they're feisty and plentiful. Walleye concentratin' as rivers settle too.

Best lures right now? Dark trick worms or merthiolate soft plastics for bass in the shallows; jig minnows or shiny spoons for mackerel. Live bait kings: sardines or sand eels on a Carolina rig—irresistible.

Hot spots: Hit the rocky breaks at Cabo Finisterre for bass action, or anchor off Costa da Morte beaches where currents swirl and big ones prowl.

Tight lines, mates—stay safe out there.

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>134</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Atlantic Coast Spring Surge: Mackerel, Bass, and Rising Water Temps</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6546998258</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 3rd, 2026, 10 PM here on the edge of the Cantabrian Sea, and the night's got that crisp spring bite—winds easing off at 10-15 knots from the northwest, skies clearing after a drizzly day with temps hovering around 14°C dropping to 10°C overnight. Sunrise tomorrow at 7:42 AM, sunset 8:21 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours and 39 minutes of daylight to chase the action.

Tides are pumping today—high at 9:17 AM and 9:42 PM in spots like Getaria, low at 3:28 AM and 3:51 PM, so work those incoming floods hard as fish push into shallows. Water temps are climbing into the low 50s°F off Galicia and Basque Country, waking up the predators after a slow start to spring.

Fish activity's heating up, mate. Recent catches from A Coruña to Biarritz report steady limits of **sardines** and **mackerel** schooling tight nearshore, with **pollack** and **sea bass** smashing jigs on wrecks—anglers tallied 20-30 fish per boat last weekend off Cabo Fisterra. **Pompano** and smaller **seabream** are hitting beaches too, especially post-storm surges. Bluefin tuna scouts are probing deeper waters south of Lisbon, but they're finicky this early.

For lures, tie on **metal jigs** like 40-80g shiny slabs in silver or chrome—deadly for mackerel and pollack on the troll or vertical. **Soft plastics** in white or chartreuse, rigged weedless on 1/2 oz jigheads, are pulling bass from rocky points. Best baits? Fresh **squid strips** or **mackerel chunks** on circle hooks for bottom dwellers; live **sardines** if you can net 'em for that edge.

Hot spots right now: **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for surfcasting bass at dawn, and **Cabo Ortegal** wrecks for jigging pollack—park at the lighthouse and drop straight down.

Get out there safe, check your regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 02:02:40 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 3rd, 2026, 10 PM here on the edge of the Cantabrian Sea, and the night's got that crisp spring bite—winds easing off at 10-15 knots from the northwest, skies clearing after a drizzly day with temps hovering around 14°C dropping to 10°C overnight. Sunrise tomorrow at 7:42 AM, sunset 8:21 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours and 39 minutes of daylight to chase the action.

Tides are pumping today—high at 9:17 AM and 9:42 PM in spots like Getaria, low at 3:28 AM and 3:51 PM, so work those incoming floods hard as fish push into shallows. Water temps are climbing into the low 50s°F off Galicia and Basque Country, waking up the predators after a slow start to spring.

Fish activity's heating up, mate. Recent catches from A Coruña to Biarritz report steady limits of **sardines** and **mackerel** schooling tight nearshore, with **pollack** and **sea bass** smashing jigs on wrecks—anglers tallied 20-30 fish per boat last weekend off Cabo Fisterra. **Pompano** and smaller **seabream** are hitting beaches too, especially post-storm surges. Bluefin tuna scouts are probing deeper waters south of Lisbon, but they're finicky this early.

For lures, tie on **metal jigs** like 40-80g shiny slabs in silver or chrome—deadly for mackerel and pollack on the troll or vertical. **Soft plastics** in white or chartreuse, rigged weedless on 1/2 oz jigheads, are pulling bass from rocky points. Best baits? Fresh **squid strips** or **mackerel chunks** on circle hooks for bottom dwellers; live **sardines** if you can net 'em for that edge.

Hot spots right now: **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for surfcasting bass at dawn, and **Cabo Ortegal** wrecks for jigging pollack—park at the lighthouse and drop straight down.

Get out there safe, check your regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 3rd, 2026, 10 PM here on the edge of the Cantabrian Sea, and the night's got that crisp spring bite—winds easing off at 10-15 knots from the northwest, skies clearing after a drizzly day with temps hovering around 14°C dropping to 10°C overnight. Sunrise tomorrow at 7:42 AM, sunset 8:21 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours and 39 minutes of daylight to chase the action.

Tides are pumping today—high at 9:17 AM and 9:42 PM in spots like Getaria, low at 3:28 AM and 3:51 PM, so work those incoming floods hard as fish push into shallows. Water temps are climbing into the low 50s°F off Galicia and Basque Country, waking up the predators after a slow start to spring.

Fish activity's heating up, mate. Recent catches from A Coruña to Biarritz report steady limits of **sardines** and **mackerel** schooling tight nearshore, with **pollack** and **sea bass** smashing jigs on wrecks—anglers tallied 20-30 fish per boat last weekend off Cabo Fisterra. **Pompano** and smaller **seabream** are hitting beaches too, especially post-storm surges. Bluefin tuna scouts are probing deeper waters south of Lisbon, but they're finicky this early.

For lures, tie on **metal jigs** like 40-80g shiny slabs in silver or chrome—deadly for mackerel and pollack on the troll or vertical. **Soft plastics** in white or chartreuse, rigged weedless on 1/2 oz jigheads, are pulling bass from rocky points. Best baits? Fresh **squid strips** or **mackerel chunks** on circle hooks for bottom dwellers; live **sardines** if you can net 'em for that edge.

Hot spots right now: **Playa de las Catedrales** in Lugo for surfcasting bass at dawn, and **Cabo Ortegal** wrecks for jigging pollack—park at the lighthouse and drop straight down.

Get out there safe, check your regs, and tight lines!

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for weekly updates. 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>187</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Spanish Atlantic Spring Awakening: Sardines, Bass, and Prime April Fishing</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4796169645</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 1st, 2026, 10 PM here in the evening gloam, and the night's got that perfect chill for dreaming up tomorrow's haul.

Weather's mild tonight—around 16°C with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, mostly clear skies per AEMET forecasts, warming to 20°C daytime with some clouds rolling in. Sunrise hits at 7:45 AM, sunset 8:20 PM, giving you a solid 12.5 hours of light to chase the bite. Tides are running strong; high water around noon at places like Finisterre, low at 6 PM—fish the incoming for best action, as currents stir up the baitfish.

Fish are waking up this spring! Recent reports from local crews at ICES and Spanish fisheries logs show sardines schooling thick off Galicia, mackerel hammering in from Portugal, and sea bass prowling the rocky shores. Anglers pulled limits of 5-10 kg hauls last week—pollack up to 3 kg, bream in doubles, even some early bluefin tuna scouts teasing the pros. Activity peaks dawn and dusk as waters hit 14-16°C.

For lures, go soft plastics like paddle-tail shads in white or chartreuse on 10g jigheads—mimic those sardines. Spinnerbaits or rattling crankbaits for bass in the shallows. Live bait? Fresh sardines or mackerel chunks on circle hooks rule; worms for bream near structure.

Hot spots: Hit Cabo Finisterre's reefs for bass and pollack—drop right off the cliffs. Or Praia da Nazaré in Portugal's stretch for big surf perch and rays on the falling tide.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more reports! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2026 02:01:19 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 1st, 2026, 10 PM here in the evening gloam, and the night's got that perfect chill for dreaming up tomorrow's haul.

Weather's mild tonight—around 16°C with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, mostly clear skies per AEMET forecasts, warming to 20°C daytime with some clouds rolling in. Sunrise hits at 7:45 AM, sunset 8:20 PM, giving you a solid 12.5 hours of light to chase the bite. Tides are running strong; high water around noon at places like Finisterre, low at 6 PM—fish the incoming for best action, as currents stir up the baitfish.

Fish are waking up this spring! Recent reports from local crews at ICES and Spanish fisheries logs show sardines schooling thick off Galicia, mackerel hammering in from Portugal, and sea bass prowling the rocky shores. Anglers pulled limits of 5-10 kg hauls last week—pollack up to 3 kg, bream in doubles, even some early bluefin tuna scouts teasing the pros. Activity peaks dawn and dusk as waters hit 14-16°C.

For lures, go soft plastics like paddle-tail shads in white or chartreuse on 10g jigheads—mimic those sardines. Spinnerbaits or rattling crankbaits for bass in the shallows. Live bait? Fresh sardines or mackerel chunks on circle hooks rule; worms for bream near structure.

Hot spots: Hit Cabo Finisterre's reefs for bass and pollack—drop right off the cliffs. Or Praia da Nazaré in Portugal's stretch for big surf perch and rays on the falling tide.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more reports! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's April 1st, 2026, 10 PM here in the evening gloam, and the night's got that perfect chill for dreaming up tomorrow's haul.

Weather's mild tonight—around 16°C with light winds from the northwest at 10-15 km/h, mostly clear skies per AEMET forecasts, warming to 20°C daytime with some clouds rolling in. Sunrise hits at 7:45 AM, sunset 8:20 PM, giving you a solid 12.5 hours of light to chase the bite. Tides are running strong; high water around noon at places like Finisterre, low at 6 PM—fish the incoming for best action, as currents stir up the baitfish.

Fish are waking up this spring! Recent reports from local crews at ICES and Spanish fisheries logs show sardines schooling thick off Galicia, mackerel hammering in from Portugal, and sea bass prowling the rocky shores. Anglers pulled limits of 5-10 kg hauls last week—pollack up to 3 kg, bream in doubles, even some early bluefin tuna scouts teasing the pros. Activity peaks dawn and dusk as waters hit 14-16°C.

For lures, go soft plastics like paddle-tail shads in white or chartreuse on 10g jigheads—mimic those sardines. Spinnerbaits or rattling crankbaits for bass in the shallows. Live bait? Fresh sardines or mackerel chunks on circle hooks rule; worms for bream near structure.

Hot spots: Hit Cabo Finisterre's reefs for bass and pollack—drop right off the cliffs. Or Praia da Nazaré in Portugal's stretch for big surf perch and rays on the falling tide.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more reports! 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>163</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Late Night Galicia: Spring Mackerel and Seabass on the Atlantic Bite</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2623614272</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's March 31, 2026, evenin' time around 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's got that crisp edge perfect for a late cast.

Weather's mild today—upper teens Celsius, light winds from the northwest pickin' up after dark, mostly clear skies with a slim chance of showers tomorrow per local forecasts. Sunrise hits at 7:45 AM, sunset wraps by 8:20 PM, givin' ya a solid 12.5 hours of daylight tomorrow. Tides? High water around 1:30 PM and 7:45 PM near Finisterre, lows at 7 AM and 1 PM—outgoin' tide's prime for fish chasin' baitfish.

Fish activity's steady but tricky this spring. Recent reports from ports like A Coruña and Vigo show mackerel and sardines schooled up tight, with anglers haulin' in limits of 5-10 kg hauls daily on feathers and jigs. Seabass are prowlin' rocky points, hittin' hard on the flood—folks landed 2-4 kg specimens last week amid some sad seabird strandings clutterin' beaches, but fish are bitin' fierce. Bluefin tuna teasers offshore, limits on golden tilefish proposals buzzin' from fishery updates.

**Best lures:** Silver spoons and gotcha jigs for mackerel, soft plastics in white for bass. **Top baits:** Fresh sardines or ragworm on the bottom for sheepshead-like dentex.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** for surf bass at dawn, or **Rías Baixas** estuaries for mackerel runs—anchor up and drop live bait.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! 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.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 02:14:49 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's March 31, 2026, evenin' time around 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's got that crisp edge perfect for a late cast.

Weather's mild today—upper teens Celsius, light winds from the northwest pickin' up after dark, mostly clear skies with a slim chance of showers tomorrow per local forecasts. Sunrise hits at 7:45 AM, sunset wraps by 8:20 PM, givin' ya a solid 12.5 hours of daylight tomorrow. Tides? High water around 1:30 PM and 7:45 PM near Finisterre, lows at 7 AM and 1 PM—outgoin' tide's prime for fish chasin' baitfish.

Fish activity's steady but tricky this spring. Recent reports from ports like A Coruña and Vigo show mackerel and sardines schooled up tight, with anglers haulin' in limits of 5-10 kg hauls daily on feathers and jigs. Seabass are prowlin' rocky points, hittin' hard on the flood—folks landed 2-4 kg specimens last week amid some sad seabird strandings clutterin' beaches, but fish are bitin' fierce. Bluefin tuna teasers offshore, limits on golden tilefish proposals buzzin' from fishery updates.

**Best lures:** Silver spoons and gotcha jigs for mackerel, soft plastics in white for bass. **Top baits:** Fresh sardines or ragworm on the bottom for sheepshead-like dentex.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** for surf bass at dawn, or **Rías Baixas** estuaries for mackerel runs—anchor up and drop live bait.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! 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.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for all things angling along Spain's wild Atlantic Coast. It's March 31, 2026, evenin' time around 10 PM here in Galicia, and the night's got that crisp edge perfect for a late cast.

Weather's mild today—upper teens Celsius, light winds from the northwest pickin' up after dark, mostly clear skies with a slim chance of showers tomorrow per local forecasts. Sunrise hits at 7:45 AM, sunset wraps by 8:20 PM, givin' ya a solid 12.5 hours of daylight tomorrow. Tides? High water around 1:30 PM and 7:45 PM near Finisterre, lows at 7 AM and 1 PM—outgoin' tide's prime for fish chasin' baitfish.

Fish activity's steady but tricky this spring. Recent reports from ports like A Coruña and Vigo show mackerel and sardines schooled up tight, with anglers haulin' in limits of 5-10 kg hauls daily on feathers and jigs. Seabass are prowlin' rocky points, hittin' hard on the flood—folks landed 2-4 kg specimens last week amid some sad seabird strandings clutterin' beaches, but fish are bitin' fierce. Bluefin tuna teasers offshore, limits on golden tilefish proposals buzzin' from fishery updates.

**Best lures:** Silver spoons and gotcha jigs for mackerel, soft plastics in white for bass. **Top baits:** Fresh sardines or ragworm on the bottom for sheepshead-like dentex.

Hot spots? Hit **Cabo Finisterre** for surf bass at dawn, or **Rías Baixas** estuaries for mackerel runs—anchor up and drop live bait.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! 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.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>155</itunes:duration>
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