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    <title>Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today</title>
    <link>https://cms.megaphone.fm/channel/NPTNI7693933821</link>
    <language>en</language>
    <copyright>Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI</copyright>
    <description>Tune in to the "Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the crystal-clear atolls and coral reefs of the Indian Ocean. 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 the Maldives' spectacular coastal waters 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>Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today</title>
      <link>https://cms.megaphone.fm/channel/NPTNI7693933821</link>
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    <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:subtitle/>
    <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Tune in to the "Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the crystal-clear atolls and coral reefs of the Indian Ocean. 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 the Maldives' spectacular coastal waters 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 "Maldives, Indian Ocean Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the crystal-clear atolls and coral reefs of the Indian Ocean. 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 the Maldives' spectacular coastal waters 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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      <title>Maldives Evening Report: Monsoon Conditions, Channel Action, and Peak Bite Windows</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Maldives fishing report for this evening in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

We’ve got classic equatorial conditions out here: warm, humid, and mostly calm seas, with scattered cloud and a gentle southwest monsoon breeze. Air temps are sitting around the upper 20s Celsius, and the lagoon water is bathtub warm, about 28–29 degrees. Trade-wind chop is light on the outer reef, making it friendly for popping and jigging.

Tides are running on a moderate cycle: a decent pre-dawn low pushing into a strong morning flood, then easing into an afternoon high followed by a steady evening ebb. That morning push has lit up the channels, and the first hour of light has been the prime bite window. Sunset has just wrapped, and the last of the daylight ebb has been productive around the passes and pressure points on the outer reef edges.

Boats working the atoll channels today reported solid action on reef predators. Local skippers are talking about dogtooth tuna, GTs, and bluefin trevally smashing baits and lures on the flood, with a few amberjack and jobfish coming off the deeper drops. Offshore, small to mid-size yellowfin tuna have been cutting up bait balls just beyond the drop-off, and a handful of sailfish have cruised through the current lines where cleaner blue water meets the greener lagoon outflow.

On the catch sheet from the last couple of days, crews have been boating mixed bags: several GTs in the 10–25 kilo range, dogtooth from school-size up to serious back‑breakers, good numbers of skipjack and smaller yellowfin, plus a pick of red snapper, grouper, and coral trout off the jig in 40–80 meters. Night bottom fishing around the FADs and pinnacles has produced some hefty emperors and snappers when the current backs off.

For lures, think big and loud on top, fast and flashy down deep. Oversized stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in natural baitfish or flying fish colors are doing damage on the reef edges. 80–150 gram metal jigs in blue, silver, and pink dropped into the current and ripped back up are finding tuna, dogtooth, and jobfish. Smaller casting jigs and sub‑surface swimmers are working well when the fish are up but not fully smashing the surface.

If you’re fishing bait, fresh is king. Live or very fresh scad, sardines, and small fusiliers are deadly in the channels for GT and dogtooth. For bottom work, squid strips and chunks of fresh tuna are pulling quality snapper and grouper off the structure. If the current’s ripping, run a heavier sinker and keep that bait pinned tight to the reef edge or the top of the drop.

A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: first, the main ocean passes on the eastern rims of the busier atolls, where the incoming tide funnels bait straight into the jaws of the GTs and doggies. Second, any seamount or pinnacle just outside the drop-off, especially those with bait marking mid‑water; spend some time working metal jigs there and you’ll usually find tuna and big reefies stacked.

Timing-wise, aim for the grey light: an hour before sunrise through early morning flood, and again the last hour before sunset into the first of the night. That’s when the bigger predators have been pushing shallow and getting brave.

That’s your Maldives Indian Ocean report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next session. 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 22:01:13 -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 Maldives fishing report for this evening in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

We’ve got classic equatorial conditions out here: warm, humid, and mostly calm seas, with scattered cloud and a gentle southwest monsoon breeze. Air temps are sitting around the upper 20s Celsius, and the lagoon water is bathtub warm, about 28–29 degrees. Trade-wind chop is light on the outer reef, making it friendly for popping and jigging.

Tides are running on a moderate cycle: a decent pre-dawn low pushing into a strong morning flood, then easing into an afternoon high followed by a steady evening ebb. That morning push has lit up the channels, and the first hour of light has been the prime bite window. Sunset has just wrapped, and the last of the daylight ebb has been productive around the passes and pressure points on the outer reef edges.

Boats working the atoll channels today reported solid action on reef predators. Local skippers are talking about dogtooth tuna, GTs, and bluefin trevally smashing baits and lures on the flood, with a few amberjack and jobfish coming off the deeper drops. Offshore, small to mid-size yellowfin tuna have been cutting up bait balls just beyond the drop-off, and a handful of sailfish have cruised through the current lines where cleaner blue water meets the greener lagoon outflow.

On the catch sheet from the last couple of days, crews have been boating mixed bags: several GTs in the 10–25 kilo range, dogtooth from school-size up to serious back‑breakers, good numbers of skipjack and smaller yellowfin, plus a pick of red snapper, grouper, and coral trout off the jig in 40–80 meters. Night bottom fishing around the FADs and pinnacles has produced some hefty emperors and snappers when the current backs off.

For lures, think big and loud on top, fast and flashy down deep. Oversized stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in natural baitfish or flying fish colors are doing damage on the reef edges. 80–150 gram metal jigs in blue, silver, and pink dropped into the current and ripped back up are finding tuna, dogtooth, and jobfish. Smaller casting jigs and sub‑surface swimmers are working well when the fish are up but not fully smashing the surface.

If you’re fishing bait, fresh is king. Live or very fresh scad, sardines, and small fusiliers are deadly in the channels for GT and dogtooth. For bottom work, squid strips and chunks of fresh tuna are pulling quality snapper and grouper off the structure. If the current’s ripping, run a heavier sinker and keep that bait pinned tight to the reef edge or the top of the drop.

A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: first, the main ocean passes on the eastern rims of the busier atolls, where the incoming tide funnels bait straight into the jaws of the GTs and doggies. Second, any seamount or pinnacle just outside the drop-off, especially those with bait marking mid‑water; spend some time working metal jigs there and you’ll usually find tuna and big reefies stacked.

Timing-wise, aim for the grey light: an hour before sunrise through early morning flood, and again the last hour before sunset into the first of the night. That’s when the bigger predators have been pushing shallow and getting brave.

That’s your Maldives Indian Ocean report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next session. 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 Maldives fishing report for this evening in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

We’ve got classic equatorial conditions out here: warm, humid, and mostly calm seas, with scattered cloud and a gentle southwest monsoon breeze. Air temps are sitting around the upper 20s Celsius, and the lagoon water is bathtub warm, about 28–29 degrees. Trade-wind chop is light on the outer reef, making it friendly for popping and jigging.

Tides are running on a moderate cycle: a decent pre-dawn low pushing into a strong morning flood, then easing into an afternoon high followed by a steady evening ebb. That morning push has lit up the channels, and the first hour of light has been the prime bite window. Sunset has just wrapped, and the last of the daylight ebb has been productive around the passes and pressure points on the outer reef edges.

Boats working the atoll channels today reported solid action on reef predators. Local skippers are talking about dogtooth tuna, GTs, and bluefin trevally smashing baits and lures on the flood, with a few amberjack and jobfish coming off the deeper drops. Offshore, small to mid-size yellowfin tuna have been cutting up bait balls just beyond the drop-off, and a handful of sailfish have cruised through the current lines where cleaner blue water meets the greener lagoon outflow.

On the catch sheet from the last couple of days, crews have been boating mixed bags: several GTs in the 10–25 kilo range, dogtooth from school-size up to serious back‑breakers, good numbers of skipjack and smaller yellowfin, plus a pick of red snapper, grouper, and coral trout off the jig in 40–80 meters. Night bottom fishing around the FADs and pinnacles has produced some hefty emperors and snappers when the current backs off.

For lures, think big and loud on top, fast and flashy down deep. Oversized stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in natural baitfish or flying fish colors are doing damage on the reef edges. 80–150 gram metal jigs in blue, silver, and pink dropped into the current and ripped back up are finding tuna, dogtooth, and jobfish. Smaller casting jigs and sub‑surface swimmers are working well when the fish are up but not fully smashing the surface.

If you’re fishing bait, fresh is king. Live or very fresh scad, sardines, and small fusiliers are deadly in the channels for GT and dogtooth. For bottom work, squid strips and chunks of fresh tuna are pulling quality snapper and grouper off the structure. If the current’s ripping, run a heavier sinker and keep that bait pinned tight to the reef edge or the top of the drop.

A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: first, the main ocean passes on the eastern rims of the busier atolls, where the incoming tide funnels bait straight into the jaws of the GTs and doggies. Second, any seamount or pinnacle just outside the drop-off, especially those with bait marking mid‑water; spend some time working metal jigs there and you’ll usually find tuna and big reefies stacked.

Timing-wise, aim for the grey light: an hour before sunrise through early morning flood, and again the last hour before sunset into the first of the night. That’s when the bigger predators have been pushing shallow and getting brave.

That’s your Maldives Indian Ocean report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next session. 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>Maldives Fishing Report: Peak Bites at Dawn and Dusk with Tuna, GTs, and Dogtooth</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing report.

Light south‑southwesterly breeze today over most of the atolls, seas running calm to a gentle chop, about one meter outside the reefs. Skies have been partly cloudy with the odd passing shower. Humidity is high, but the air has stayed fairly stable, giving us consistent conditions through the day.

Sunrise came just after six in the morning and sunset just before half past six in the evening, giving us a good, even light window. The best bite has lined up with the early morning and late‑afternoon low‑light periods, especially when the tidal flow is picking up on the outer reef edges.

Tides around the central atolls have been moderate, with a flooding tide through mid‑morning and an ebb running strongest mid‑afternoon. Where the ocean swell pushes into the channels, the current has been ripping hard on the falling tide, stacking bait right on the drop‑offs. Inside the atolls, current has been gentler but still enough movement to keep the fish active along coral heads and bommies.

Pelagic action offshore has been solid. Yellowfin tuna schools have been working just outside the outer reef, with birds picking over balls of small scad and flying fish. Trollers pulling medium‑sized skirted lures in blue‑silver and black‑purple have had steady tuna, plus a mix of wahoo and the odd sailfish. A few boats running poppers and stickbaits on the up‑current corners have raised big GTs and some chunky dogtooth tuna.

On the reef, jigging in 40–90 meters has been productive. Anglers dropping 60–120 gram metal jigs in pink, blue, and natural baitfish patterns have reported good numbers of grouper, emperor, and jobfish, with dogtooth showing on the steeper walls. Live bait – especially scad and small fusiliers – slow‑trolled along channel drop‑offs has been deadly for GTs and doggies.

For inshore and lagoon work, light‑tackle fishing around coral heads has produced plenty of snapper, small grouper, and emperors. Fresh cut bait – tuna strips and squid – on simple bottom rigs is working well. If you’re casting lures, small minnow plugs and soft plastics in white or chartreuse are turning fish where baitfish are flashing in the current.

Best lures right now offshore are:
- Medium skirted trolling lures in blue‑silver, black‑purple, and pink‑white.
- Large GT poppers in white, bone, and red‑head.
- Long, slim stickbaits in natural flying‑fish and sardine colors.
- Fast‑pitch and slow‑pitch jigs in 60–150 grams, with a bit of flash.

Best baits:
- Live scad, fusiliers, and small rainbow runners for GT and dogtooth.
- Fresh tuna and bonito strips for bottom species.
- Squid for a steady pick of reef fish.

Two hotspots to keep an eye on:

First, the channel edges on the eastern side of North Malé Atoll, especially where the ocean swell meets an outgoing tide. Work the up‑current points at dawn and dusk with big poppers for GTs, then switch to jigs once the sun climbs.

Second, the deep channels and outer corners of Ari Atoll, where oceanic current pushes hard along the reef. Troll skirts just outside the reef line for tuna and wahoo, then slide in closer with stickbaits for dogtooth on the drop‑offs.

Wherever you fish, keep one eye on the birds and one on the current line – that’s where the Maldives comes alive.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips from Artificial Lure.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 22:01:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing report.

Light south‑southwesterly breeze today over most of the atolls, seas running calm to a gentle chop, about one meter outside the reefs. Skies have been partly cloudy with the odd passing shower. Humidity is high, but the air has stayed fairly stable, giving us consistent conditions through the day.

Sunrise came just after six in the morning and sunset just before half past six in the evening, giving us a good, even light window. The best bite has lined up with the early morning and late‑afternoon low‑light periods, especially when the tidal flow is picking up on the outer reef edges.

Tides around the central atolls have been moderate, with a flooding tide through mid‑morning and an ebb running strongest mid‑afternoon. Where the ocean swell pushes into the channels, the current has been ripping hard on the falling tide, stacking bait right on the drop‑offs. Inside the atolls, current has been gentler but still enough movement to keep the fish active along coral heads and bommies.

Pelagic action offshore has been solid. Yellowfin tuna schools have been working just outside the outer reef, with birds picking over balls of small scad and flying fish. Trollers pulling medium‑sized skirted lures in blue‑silver and black‑purple have had steady tuna, plus a mix of wahoo and the odd sailfish. A few boats running poppers and stickbaits on the up‑current corners have raised big GTs and some chunky dogtooth tuna.

On the reef, jigging in 40–90 meters has been productive. Anglers dropping 60–120 gram metal jigs in pink, blue, and natural baitfish patterns have reported good numbers of grouper, emperor, and jobfish, with dogtooth showing on the steeper walls. Live bait – especially scad and small fusiliers – slow‑trolled along channel drop‑offs has been deadly for GTs and doggies.

For inshore and lagoon work, light‑tackle fishing around coral heads has produced plenty of snapper, small grouper, and emperors. Fresh cut bait – tuna strips and squid – on simple bottom rigs is working well. If you’re casting lures, small minnow plugs and soft plastics in white or chartreuse are turning fish where baitfish are flashing in the current.

Best lures right now offshore are:
- Medium skirted trolling lures in blue‑silver, black‑purple, and pink‑white.
- Large GT poppers in white, bone, and red‑head.
- Long, slim stickbaits in natural flying‑fish and sardine colors.
- Fast‑pitch and slow‑pitch jigs in 60–150 grams, with a bit of flash.

Best baits:
- Live scad, fusiliers, and small rainbow runners for GT and dogtooth.
- Fresh tuna and bonito strips for bottom species.
- Squid for a steady pick of reef fish.

Two hotspots to keep an eye on:

First, the channel edges on the eastern side of North Malé Atoll, especially where the ocean swell meets an outgoing tide. Work the up‑current points at dawn and dusk with big poppers for GTs, then switch to jigs once the sun climbs.

Second, the deep channels and outer corners of Ari Atoll, where oceanic current pushes hard along the reef. Troll skirts just outside the reef line for tuna and wahoo, then slide in closer with stickbaits for dogtooth on the drop‑offs.

Wherever you fish, keep one eye on the birds and one on the current line – that’s where the Maldives comes alive.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips from Artificial Lure.

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

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

Light south‑southwesterly breeze today over most of the atolls, seas running calm to a gentle chop, about one meter outside the reefs. Skies have been partly cloudy with the odd passing shower. Humidity is high, but the air has stayed fairly stable, giving us consistent conditions through the day.

Sunrise came just after six in the morning and sunset just before half past six in the evening, giving us a good, even light window. The best bite has lined up with the early morning and late‑afternoon low‑light periods, especially when the tidal flow is picking up on the outer reef edges.

Tides around the central atolls have been moderate, with a flooding tide through mid‑morning and an ebb running strongest mid‑afternoon. Where the ocean swell pushes into the channels, the current has been ripping hard on the falling tide, stacking bait right on the drop‑offs. Inside the atolls, current has been gentler but still enough movement to keep the fish active along coral heads and bommies.

Pelagic action offshore has been solid. Yellowfin tuna schools have been working just outside the outer reef, with birds picking over balls of small scad and flying fish. Trollers pulling medium‑sized skirted lures in blue‑silver and black‑purple have had steady tuna, plus a mix of wahoo and the odd sailfish. A few boats running poppers and stickbaits on the up‑current corners have raised big GTs and some chunky dogtooth tuna.

On the reef, jigging in 40–90 meters has been productive. Anglers dropping 60–120 gram metal jigs in pink, blue, and natural baitfish patterns have reported good numbers of grouper, emperor, and jobfish, with dogtooth showing on the steeper walls. Live bait – especially scad and small fusiliers – slow‑trolled along channel drop‑offs has been deadly for GTs and doggies.

For inshore and lagoon work, light‑tackle fishing around coral heads has produced plenty of snapper, small grouper, and emperors. Fresh cut bait – tuna strips and squid – on simple bottom rigs is working well. If you’re casting lures, small minnow plugs and soft plastics in white or chartreuse are turning fish where baitfish are flashing in the current.

Best lures right now offshore are:
- Medium skirted trolling lures in blue‑silver, black‑purple, and pink‑white.
- Large GT poppers in white, bone, and red‑head.
- Long, slim stickbaits in natural flying‑fish and sardine colors.
- Fast‑pitch and slow‑pitch jigs in 60–150 grams, with a bit of flash.

Best baits:
- Live scad, fusiliers, and small rainbow runners for GT and dogtooth.
- Fresh tuna and bonito strips for bottom species.
- Squid for a steady pick of reef fish.

Two hotspots to keep an eye on:

First, the channel edges on the eastern side of North Malé Atoll, especially where the ocean swell meets an outgoing tide. Work the up‑current points at dawn and dusk with big poppers for GTs, then switch to jigs once the sun climbs.

Second, the deep channels and outer corners of Ari Atoll, where oceanic current pushes hard along the reef. Troll skirts just outside the reef line for tuna and wahoo, then slide in closer with stickbaits for dogtooth on the drop‑offs.

Wherever you fish, keep one eye on the birds and one on the current line – that’s where the Maldives comes alive.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips from Artificial Lure.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
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      <title>Maldives Monsoon Magic: Tides, Poppers, and Big Trevally Bite</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southwest monsoon pattern holding today: scattered clouds, a bit hazy, with temps hovering around the high 20s to low 30s and a gentle 8–14 knot SW breeze over most atolls. Seas are moderate outside the reef, bit of chop on the windward sides, calmer inside the lagoons. Humidity is up, so it feels warmer, but that cloud cover kept the sun from getting too brutal at mid‑day.

Around Malé and central atolls, sunrise slipped in just after 6 in the morning and sunset wrapped up just after 6 in the evening. That gives us solid low‑light windows, and they’ve been the prime bite times. Tide has been running a typical mixed semi‑diurnal pattern: an early morning incoming pushing hard across the reef edges, slack late morning, then an afternoon ebb drawing bait off the flats and out of the channels. That pushing tide at first light and the first hour of the afternoon drop have been money.

Fish activity has been good whenever the tide moves. On the outer reef drop‑offs and current points, yellowfin tuna and skipjack have been working small baitballs just off the bluewater line. Boats trolling skirted lures and small metal jets in pink–white, blue–silver, and purple–black have reported steady hookups, with several yellowfin in the 10–20 kilo range and plenty of footballs to keep rods bent. A few wahoo crashed the spread, most of them taking longer, darker skirts run a bit deeper.

Inshore along the reef tops and channel mouths, dogtooth tuna have been the main prize. Jigging vertical metal jigs in 120–200 grams, in silver, sardine, and glow patterns, has produced solid fish, especially on that first of the incoming tide. Popper anglers have also been into the action: big stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in natural fusilier and mackerel colors blasted over 20–40 meter edges are pulling explosive strikes.

The GTs – our big trevally bullies – have been patrolling the whitewater on the windward sides. Mid‑morning when the sun gets high enough to light the reefs, big surface plugs, 120–180 gram range, are the top producers. Work them hard over shallow heads and along reef corners where current wraps around. A few fish pushing 25 kilos were reported recently from the eastern edges of North Malé and Vaavu channels.

For bait, fresh is king. Small fusiliers, scad, and bonito strips have outfished frozen imports. Live bait slow‑trolled along the drop‑off is turning up mixed reef predators: bluefin trevally, jobfish, and the odd sailfish when you push a little farther out. On the lagoon flats and sheltered reefs, light‑tackle anglers using shrimp and small strip baits have picked up emperors, snapper, and grouper for the table.

Soft plastics rigged on 1/2 to 1 ounce jig heads in white, chartreuse, and silver are working well in the lagoons and on calmer leeward reefs, especially around coral bommies with visible bait. Fly anglers tossing baitfish patterns in white‑and‑blue over the sand patches near drop‑offs have found bluefin trevally and smaller tunas when the light is good.

A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind:

• The channel edges and corner points around Vaavu Atoll, especially the eastern entrances where the ocean swell meets strong tidal flow. Great for GTs on poppers, dogtooth on jigs, and passing yellowfin along the drop‑off.

• The outer reef and bluewater line off South Ari Atoll, where the depth falls away quickly. Troll the contour for yellowfin, wahoo, and an occasional marlin, then slide in closer to jig and pop around the reef points when the tide starts to push.

If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan your main efforts around that first light incoming and the first couple hours of the afternoon fall, focus on current, bait, and clean water pushing across structure, and keep your lure box heavy on poppers, stickbaits, metals, and a few soft plastics for the calmer spots.

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>Wed, 10 Jun 2026 22:01:14 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southwest monsoon pattern holding today: scattered clouds, a bit hazy, with temps hovering around the high 20s to low 30s and a gentle 8–14 knot SW breeze over most atolls. Seas are moderate outside the reef, bit of chop on the windward sides, calmer inside the lagoons. Humidity is up, so it feels warmer, but that cloud cover kept the sun from getting too brutal at mid‑day.

Around Malé and central atolls, sunrise slipped in just after 6 in the morning and sunset wrapped up just after 6 in the evening. That gives us solid low‑light windows, and they’ve been the prime bite times. Tide has been running a typical mixed semi‑diurnal pattern: an early morning incoming pushing hard across the reef edges, slack late morning, then an afternoon ebb drawing bait off the flats and out of the channels. That pushing tide at first light and the first hour of the afternoon drop have been money.

Fish activity has been good whenever the tide moves. On the outer reef drop‑offs and current points, yellowfin tuna and skipjack have been working small baitballs just off the bluewater line. Boats trolling skirted lures and small metal jets in pink–white, blue–silver, and purple–black have reported steady hookups, with several yellowfin in the 10–20 kilo range and plenty of footballs to keep rods bent. A few wahoo crashed the spread, most of them taking longer, darker skirts run a bit deeper.

Inshore along the reef tops and channel mouths, dogtooth tuna have been the main prize. Jigging vertical metal jigs in 120–200 grams, in silver, sardine, and glow patterns, has produced solid fish, especially on that first of the incoming tide. Popper anglers have also been into the action: big stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in natural fusilier and mackerel colors blasted over 20–40 meter edges are pulling explosive strikes.

The GTs – our big trevally bullies – have been patrolling the whitewater on the windward sides. Mid‑morning when the sun gets high enough to light the reefs, big surface plugs, 120–180 gram range, are the top producers. Work them hard over shallow heads and along reef corners where current wraps around. A few fish pushing 25 kilos were reported recently from the eastern edges of North Malé and Vaavu channels.

For bait, fresh is king. Small fusiliers, scad, and bonito strips have outfished frozen imports. Live bait slow‑trolled along the drop‑off is turning up mixed reef predators: bluefin trevally, jobfish, and the odd sailfish when you push a little farther out. On the lagoon flats and sheltered reefs, light‑tackle anglers using shrimp and small strip baits have picked up emperors, snapper, and grouper for the table.

Soft plastics rigged on 1/2 to 1 ounce jig heads in white, chartreuse, and silver are working well in the lagoons and on calmer leeward reefs, especially around coral bommies with visible bait. Fly anglers tossing baitfish patterns in white‑and‑blue over the sand patches near drop‑offs have found bluefin trevally and smaller tunas when the light is good.

A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind:

• The channel edges and corner points around Vaavu Atoll, especially the eastern entrances where the ocean swell meets strong tidal flow. Great for GTs on poppers, dogtooth on jigs, and passing yellowfin along the drop‑off.

• The outer reef and bluewater line off South Ari Atoll, where the depth falls away quickly. Troll the contour for yellowfin, wahoo, and an occasional marlin, then slide in closer to jig and pop around the reef points when the tide starts to push.

If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan your main efforts around that first light incoming and the first couple hours of the afternoon fall, focus on current, bait, and clean water pushing across structure, and keep your lure box heavy on poppers, stickbaits, metals, and a few soft plastics for the calmer spots.

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 Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southwest monsoon pattern holding today: scattered clouds, a bit hazy, with temps hovering around the high 20s to low 30s and a gentle 8–14 knot SW breeze over most atolls. Seas are moderate outside the reef, bit of chop on the windward sides, calmer inside the lagoons. Humidity is up, so it feels warmer, but that cloud cover kept the sun from getting too brutal at mid‑day.

Around Malé and central atolls, sunrise slipped in just after 6 in the morning and sunset wrapped up just after 6 in the evening. That gives us solid low‑light windows, and they’ve been the prime bite times. Tide has been running a typical mixed semi‑diurnal pattern: an early morning incoming pushing hard across the reef edges, slack late morning, then an afternoon ebb drawing bait off the flats and out of the channels. That pushing tide at first light and the first hour of the afternoon drop have been money.

Fish activity has been good whenever the tide moves. On the outer reef drop‑offs and current points, yellowfin tuna and skipjack have been working small baitballs just off the bluewater line. Boats trolling skirted lures and small metal jets in pink–white, blue–silver, and purple–black have reported steady hookups, with several yellowfin in the 10–20 kilo range and plenty of footballs to keep rods bent. A few wahoo crashed the spread, most of them taking longer, darker skirts run a bit deeper.

Inshore along the reef tops and channel mouths, dogtooth tuna have been the main prize. Jigging vertical metal jigs in 120–200 grams, in silver, sardine, and glow patterns, has produced solid fish, especially on that first of the incoming tide. Popper anglers have also been into the action: big stickbaits and cup‑faced poppers in natural fusilier and mackerel colors blasted over 20–40 meter edges are pulling explosive strikes.

The GTs – our big trevally bullies – have been patrolling the whitewater on the windward sides. Mid‑morning when the sun gets high enough to light the reefs, big surface plugs, 120–180 gram range, are the top producers. Work them hard over shallow heads and along reef corners where current wraps around. A few fish pushing 25 kilos were reported recently from the eastern edges of North Malé and Vaavu channels.

For bait, fresh is king. Small fusiliers, scad, and bonito strips have outfished frozen imports. Live bait slow‑trolled along the drop‑off is turning up mixed reef predators: bluefin trevally, jobfish, and the odd sailfish when you push a little farther out. On the lagoon flats and sheltered reefs, light‑tackle anglers using shrimp and small strip baits have picked up emperors, snapper, and grouper for the table.

Soft plastics rigged on 1/2 to 1 ounce jig heads in white, chartreuse, and silver are working well in the lagoons and on calmer leeward reefs, especially around coral bommies with visible bait. Fly anglers tossing baitfish patterns in white‑and‑blue over the sand patches near drop‑offs have found bluefin trevally and smaller tunas when the light is good.

A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind:

• The channel edges and corner points around Vaavu Atoll, especially the eastern entrances where the ocean swell meets strong tidal flow. Great for GTs on poppers, dogtooth on jigs, and passing yellowfin along the drop‑off.

• The outer reef and bluewater line off South Ari Atoll, where the depth falls away quickly. Troll the contour for yellowfin, wahoo, and an occasional marlin, then slide in closer to jig and pop around the reef points when the tide starts to push.

If you’re heading out tomorrow, plan your main efforts around that first light incoming and the first couple hours of the afternoon fall, focus on current, bait, and clean water pushing across structure, and keep your lure box heavy on poppers, stickbaits, metals, and a few soft plastics for the calmer spots.

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>Maldives Fishing Report: GTs on the Pop, Tuna in the Blue, Current is King</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southeast trades and calm seas ruled the day across most atolls, with gentle 8–12 knot winds and only a slight mid‑afternoon chop outside the reefs. Skies were mostly clear, with a few building clouds over the outer drop‑offs. Sunrise slipped in just after 6 a.m., sunset wrapped up a little after 6:20 p.m., giving a nice long low‑light window.

Tides have been running on a moderate cycle, with a pushing flood through the morning and a draining ebb late afternoon into evening. Inside‑to‑outside flow on the reef passes has been strongest around the middle of each tide, and that’s exactly when the bite turned on. When the current slacked, things went noticeably quiet.

On the reef edges, the GTs—our big trevallies—were fired up on the first of the incoming and again just as the tide started to fall. Several boats reported doubles and triples on fish in the 15–25 kilo class, with a couple of real donkeys pushing past that. The most consistent producers were **large surface stickbaits** in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns, and **cup‑faced poppers** in blue‑silver or white with a red throat. Heavy single hooks held up best around the coral.

In the blue water off the outer walls, yellowfin tuna schools have been working small baitballs early and late. Anglers trolling small **skirted lures** in pink‑white and purple‑black, plus **Halco‑style deep divers** in mackerel colors, reported steady yellowfin in the 8–20 kilo range with the odd bigger fish mixed in. Chunking with **fresh skipjack** drew fish right to the stern for those anchoring near current lines.

Sailfish and the occasional marlin have been showing along the drop‑offs where clean blue water meets greener current. A spread of medium skirted lures, especially in lumo green and blue‑silver, has been enough to raise a few bills for crews willing to put in the time trolling the contour.

On the inside reefs and lagoons, snapper and grouper action stayed good for anyone soaking **fresh cut bait**, squid, or small live baitfish on the bottom. Mixed bags of red snapper, jobfish, and assorted reef species kept coolers respectable even when the pelagics were shy. Light‑tackle jigging with 40–80 gram metal jigs in sardine colors also produced, especially during the stronger part of the tide.

For pure bait fishing, you can’t go wrong with:
- Fresh skipjack or scad strips for tuna and GTs  
- Live baitfish pinned on strong circle hooks near the reef edges  
- Squid and cut fish on the bottom for groupers and snappers  

A couple of hot spots to keep in mind:

- **Outer reef passes off Malé Atoll**: When the flood tide pushes in, the current lines along the drop‑offs have been stacking bait, with GTs smashing poppers right on the whitewater edge and tuna cruising just beyond.  

- **Channel mouths and corners around Ari Atoll**: On the falling tide, the corners where lagoon water spills out have been holding yellowfin, wahoo, and the odd sailfish, especially where birds are working. Casting stickbaits into the wash and trolling skirts along the ledges has paid off.

Overall fish activity has followed the current: moving water, moving fish. Plan your session around that mid‑tide pulse, keep your lures in the foam lines and color changes, and you’ll stay in the game.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Indian Ocean fishing 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, 09 Jun 2026 22:01:25 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southeast trades and calm seas ruled the day across most atolls, with gentle 8–12 knot winds and only a slight mid‑afternoon chop outside the reefs. Skies were mostly clear, with a few building clouds over the outer drop‑offs. Sunrise slipped in just after 6 a.m., sunset wrapped up a little after 6:20 p.m., giving a nice long low‑light window.

Tides have been running on a moderate cycle, with a pushing flood through the morning and a draining ebb late afternoon into evening. Inside‑to‑outside flow on the reef passes has been strongest around the middle of each tide, and that’s exactly when the bite turned on. When the current slacked, things went noticeably quiet.

On the reef edges, the GTs—our big trevallies—were fired up on the first of the incoming and again just as the tide started to fall. Several boats reported doubles and triples on fish in the 15–25 kilo class, with a couple of real donkeys pushing past that. The most consistent producers were **large surface stickbaits** in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns, and **cup‑faced poppers** in blue‑silver or white with a red throat. Heavy single hooks held up best around the coral.

In the blue water off the outer walls, yellowfin tuna schools have been working small baitballs early and late. Anglers trolling small **skirted lures** in pink‑white and purple‑black, plus **Halco‑style deep divers** in mackerel colors, reported steady yellowfin in the 8–20 kilo range with the odd bigger fish mixed in. Chunking with **fresh skipjack** drew fish right to the stern for those anchoring near current lines.

Sailfish and the occasional marlin have been showing along the drop‑offs where clean blue water meets greener current. A spread of medium skirted lures, especially in lumo green and blue‑silver, has been enough to raise a few bills for crews willing to put in the time trolling the contour.

On the inside reefs and lagoons, snapper and grouper action stayed good for anyone soaking **fresh cut bait**, squid, or small live baitfish on the bottom. Mixed bags of red snapper, jobfish, and assorted reef species kept coolers respectable even when the pelagics were shy. Light‑tackle jigging with 40–80 gram metal jigs in sardine colors also produced, especially during the stronger part of the tide.

For pure bait fishing, you can’t go wrong with:
- Fresh skipjack or scad strips for tuna and GTs  
- Live baitfish pinned on strong circle hooks near the reef edges  
- Squid and cut fish on the bottom for groupers and snappers  

A couple of hot spots to keep in mind:

- **Outer reef passes off Malé Atoll**: When the flood tide pushes in, the current lines along the drop‑offs have been stacking bait, with GTs smashing poppers right on the whitewater edge and tuna cruising just beyond.  

- **Channel mouths and corners around Ari Atoll**: On the falling tide, the corners where lagoon water spills out have been holding yellowfin, wahoo, and the odd sailfish, especially where birds are working. Casting stickbaits into the wash and trolling skirts along the ledges has paid off.

Overall fish activity has followed the current: moving water, moving fish. Plan your session around that mid‑tide pulse, keep your lures in the foam lines and color changes, and you’ll stay in the game.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Indian Ocean fishing 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[This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southeast trades and calm seas ruled the day across most atolls, with gentle 8–12 knot winds and only a slight mid‑afternoon chop outside the reefs. Skies were mostly clear, with a few building clouds over the outer drop‑offs. Sunrise slipped in just after 6 a.m., sunset wrapped up a little after 6:20 p.m., giving a nice long low‑light window.

Tides have been running on a moderate cycle, with a pushing flood through the morning and a draining ebb late afternoon into evening. Inside‑to‑outside flow on the reef passes has been strongest around the middle of each tide, and that’s exactly when the bite turned on. When the current slacked, things went noticeably quiet.

On the reef edges, the GTs—our big trevallies—were fired up on the first of the incoming and again just as the tide started to fall. Several boats reported doubles and triples on fish in the 15–25 kilo class, with a couple of real donkeys pushing past that. The most consistent producers were **large surface stickbaits** in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns, and **cup‑faced poppers** in blue‑silver or white with a red throat. Heavy single hooks held up best around the coral.

In the blue water off the outer walls, yellowfin tuna schools have been working small baitballs early and late. Anglers trolling small **skirted lures** in pink‑white and purple‑black, plus **Halco‑style deep divers** in mackerel colors, reported steady yellowfin in the 8–20 kilo range with the odd bigger fish mixed in. Chunking with **fresh skipjack** drew fish right to the stern for those anchoring near current lines.

Sailfish and the occasional marlin have been showing along the drop‑offs where clean blue water meets greener current. A spread of medium skirted lures, especially in lumo green and blue‑silver, has been enough to raise a few bills for crews willing to put in the time trolling the contour.

On the inside reefs and lagoons, snapper and grouper action stayed good for anyone soaking **fresh cut bait**, squid, or small live baitfish on the bottom. Mixed bags of red snapper, jobfish, and assorted reef species kept coolers respectable even when the pelagics were shy. Light‑tackle jigging with 40–80 gram metal jigs in sardine colors also produced, especially during the stronger part of the tide.

For pure bait fishing, you can’t go wrong with:
- Fresh skipjack or scad strips for tuna and GTs  
- Live baitfish pinned on strong circle hooks near the reef edges  
- Squid and cut fish on the bottom for groupers and snappers  

A couple of hot spots to keep in mind:

- **Outer reef passes off Malé Atoll**: When the flood tide pushes in, the current lines along the drop‑offs have been stacking bait, with GTs smashing poppers right on the whitewater edge and tuna cruising just beyond.  

- **Channel mouths and corners around Ari Atoll**: On the falling tide, the corners where lagoon water spills out have been holding yellowfin, wahoo, and the odd sailfish, especially where birds are working. Casting stickbaits into the wash and trolling skirts along the ledges has paid off.

Overall fish activity has followed the current: moving water, moving fish. Plan your session around that mid‑tide pulse, keep your lures in the foam lines and color changes, and you’ll stay in the game.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Indian Ocean fishing 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>216</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Monsoon Bite: Yellowfin, Wahoo, and GTs on the Morning Flood</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing rundown.

We’ve had classic early‑southwest monsoon conditions across the atolls today: light to moderate westerlies, 8–14 knots, with scattered clouds and passing showers, but plenty of blue sky between squalls. Air temps have been sitting around 29–31°C, and the lagoon water is a warm 28–29°C, a touch cooler on the outer reefs where the ocean pushes in.

Sun came up just after 6 a.m. local time and dropped a little after 6:20 p.m., giving a good, even day length for working both dawn and dusk bites. Tide charts for Malé area show a pre‑dawn low and a strong incoming through the morning, peaking mid‑day, then easing to an evening drop. That morning flood tide through the kandus – the channel mouths – has been the prime window.

Off the eastern reef edges of North and South Malé Atoll, boats targeting pelagics in 80–200 meters found solid action on yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kilo range, with a few bigger brutes mixed in. Several dhonis reported double‑digit hookups trolling small‑to‑mid‑size skirted lures in pink‑white, blue‑silver, and zucchini patterns, run short behind the prop wash. Metal casting jigs around birds and surface bust‑ups also produced quick limits when the tuna pushed bait up.

Wahoos have been prowling the drop‑offs, especially where current hits the reef corners. High‑speed trolling with slim diving plugs and long, dark‑backed skirts picked up a handful of fish between 8 and 15 kilos. A couple of boats also raised sailfish in the channels mid‑morning; circle‑hooked rigged ballyhoo and small skipjack strips behind teasers did the trick.

On the reef side, the incoming tide brought good life to the channel mouths. Jigging and live‑baiting in 30–60 meters produced a mix of giant trevally, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth tuna. Anglers dropping 80–150 gram jigs in natural sardine and yellow‑green colors found consistent hits. Live fusilier and scad bridled on strong fluorocarbon leaders got eaten fast, so bring stout gear.

Inside the atolls, lagoon flats and patch reefs fished best around the top of the tide. Light‑tackle anglers picked up coral trout, emperors, and sweetlip using fresh cut bait, squid strips, and small jigheads with soft plastics in prawn and baitfish patterns. A few bonefish and triggerfish were sighted on clear‑water sand flats during the mid‑morning sun; small tan and olive flies fooled the more cooperative ones.

If you’re planning a trip in the next day or two, think like this:

- For pelagics: run the outer eastern reef edges at first light on the incoming tide. Skirted lures in pink‑white and blue‑silver, plus a couple of slim divers for wahoo, are your best bet.

- For GT and dogtooth: target channel mouths where you see standing waves and bait on the sounder. Heavy poppers in mackerel or flying‑fish colors and sinking stickbaits worked with a strong sweep have been drawing brutal strikes.

- For reef table fare: fish lagoon patch reefs at high tide with fresh cut bait and squid, or small metal jigs hopped near the bottom.

Two hot spots to circle on the chart:

- The eastern channel edges of North Malé Atoll, where the morning current piles in – great for yellowfin, wahoo, and GTs.

- The southern passes of Ari Atoll, which have been holding good dogtooth tuna and sailfish on the deeper ledges, plus quality reef fish closer in.

Old‑school natural bait – live fusilier, small scad, or fresh skipjack strips – is still king when the fish are fussy, but don’t leave the artificials at home. Poppers, stickbaits, and mid‑size skirted lures are putting plenty of fish on deck around the Maldives right now.

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>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 22:47:29 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing rundown.

We’ve had classic early‑southwest monsoon conditions across the atolls today: light to moderate westerlies, 8–14 knots, with scattered clouds and passing showers, but plenty of blue sky between squalls. Air temps have been sitting around 29–31°C, and the lagoon water is a warm 28–29°C, a touch cooler on the outer reefs where the ocean pushes in.

Sun came up just after 6 a.m. local time and dropped a little after 6:20 p.m., giving a good, even day length for working both dawn and dusk bites. Tide charts for Malé area show a pre‑dawn low and a strong incoming through the morning, peaking mid‑day, then easing to an evening drop. That morning flood tide through the kandus – the channel mouths – has been the prime window.

Off the eastern reef edges of North and South Malé Atoll, boats targeting pelagics in 80–200 meters found solid action on yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kilo range, with a few bigger brutes mixed in. Several dhonis reported double‑digit hookups trolling small‑to‑mid‑size skirted lures in pink‑white, blue‑silver, and zucchini patterns, run short behind the prop wash. Metal casting jigs around birds and surface bust‑ups also produced quick limits when the tuna pushed bait up.

Wahoos have been prowling the drop‑offs, especially where current hits the reef corners. High‑speed trolling with slim diving plugs and long, dark‑backed skirts picked up a handful of fish between 8 and 15 kilos. A couple of boats also raised sailfish in the channels mid‑morning; circle‑hooked rigged ballyhoo and small skipjack strips behind teasers did the trick.

On the reef side, the incoming tide brought good life to the channel mouths. Jigging and live‑baiting in 30–60 meters produced a mix of giant trevally, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth tuna. Anglers dropping 80–150 gram jigs in natural sardine and yellow‑green colors found consistent hits. Live fusilier and scad bridled on strong fluorocarbon leaders got eaten fast, so bring stout gear.

Inside the atolls, lagoon flats and patch reefs fished best around the top of the tide. Light‑tackle anglers picked up coral trout, emperors, and sweetlip using fresh cut bait, squid strips, and small jigheads with soft plastics in prawn and baitfish patterns. A few bonefish and triggerfish were sighted on clear‑water sand flats during the mid‑morning sun; small tan and olive flies fooled the more cooperative ones.

If you’re planning a trip in the next day or two, think like this:

- For pelagics: run the outer eastern reef edges at first light on the incoming tide. Skirted lures in pink‑white and blue‑silver, plus a couple of slim divers for wahoo, are your best bet.

- For GT and dogtooth: target channel mouths where you see standing waves and bait on the sounder. Heavy poppers in mackerel or flying‑fish colors and sinking stickbaits worked with a strong sweep have been drawing brutal strikes.

- For reef table fare: fish lagoon patch reefs at high tide with fresh cut bait and squid, or small metal jigs hopped near the bottom.

Two hot spots to circle on the chart:

- The eastern channel edges of North Malé Atoll, where the morning current piles in – great for yellowfin, wahoo, and GTs.

- The southern passes of Ari Atoll, which have been holding good dogtooth tuna and sailfish on the deeper ledges, plus quality reef fish closer in.

Old‑school natural bait – live fusilier, small scad, or fresh skipjack strips – is still king when the fish are fussy, but don’t leave the artificials at home. Poppers, stickbaits, and mid‑size skirted lures are putting plenty of fish on deck around the Maldives right now.

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 Maldives fishing rundown.

We’ve had classic early‑southwest monsoon conditions across the atolls today: light to moderate westerlies, 8–14 knots, with scattered clouds and passing showers, but plenty of blue sky between squalls. Air temps have been sitting around 29–31°C, and the lagoon water is a warm 28–29°C, a touch cooler on the outer reefs where the ocean pushes in.

Sun came up just after 6 a.m. local time and dropped a little after 6:20 p.m., giving a good, even day length for working both dawn and dusk bites. Tide charts for Malé area show a pre‑dawn low and a strong incoming through the morning, peaking mid‑day, then easing to an evening drop. That morning flood tide through the kandus – the channel mouths – has been the prime window.

Off the eastern reef edges of North and South Malé Atoll, boats targeting pelagics in 80–200 meters found solid action on yellowfin tuna in the 10–25 kilo range, with a few bigger brutes mixed in. Several dhonis reported double‑digit hookups trolling small‑to‑mid‑size skirted lures in pink‑white, blue‑silver, and zucchini patterns, run short behind the prop wash. Metal casting jigs around birds and surface bust‑ups also produced quick limits when the tuna pushed bait up.

Wahoos have been prowling the drop‑offs, especially where current hits the reef corners. High‑speed trolling with slim diving plugs and long, dark‑backed skirts picked up a handful of fish between 8 and 15 kilos. A couple of boats also raised sailfish in the channels mid‑morning; circle‑hooked rigged ballyhoo and small skipjack strips behind teasers did the trick.

On the reef side, the incoming tide brought good life to the channel mouths. Jigging and live‑baiting in 30–60 meters produced a mix of giant trevally, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth tuna. Anglers dropping 80–150 gram jigs in natural sardine and yellow‑green colors found consistent hits. Live fusilier and scad bridled on strong fluorocarbon leaders got eaten fast, so bring stout gear.

Inside the atolls, lagoon flats and patch reefs fished best around the top of the tide. Light‑tackle anglers picked up coral trout, emperors, and sweetlip using fresh cut bait, squid strips, and small jigheads with soft plastics in prawn and baitfish patterns. A few bonefish and triggerfish were sighted on clear‑water sand flats during the mid‑morning sun; small tan and olive flies fooled the more cooperative ones.

If you’re planning a trip in the next day or two, think like this:

- For pelagics: run the outer eastern reef edges at first light on the incoming tide. Skirted lures in pink‑white and blue‑silver, plus a couple of slim divers for wahoo, are your best bet.

- For GT and dogtooth: target channel mouths where you see standing waves and bait on the sounder. Heavy poppers in mackerel or flying‑fish colors and sinking stickbaits worked with a strong sweep have been drawing brutal strikes.

- For reef table fare: fish lagoon patch reefs at high tide with fresh cut bait and squid, or small metal jigs hopped near the bottom.

Two hot spots to circle on the chart:

- The eastern channel edges of North Malé Atoll, where the morning current piles in – great for yellowfin, wahoo, and GTs.

- The southern passes of Ari Atoll, which have been holding good dogtooth tuna and sailfish on the deeper ledges, plus quality reef fish closer in.

Old‑school natural bait – live fusilier, small scad, or fresh skipjack strips – is still king when the fish are fussy, but don’t leave the artificials at home. Poppers, stickbaits, and mid‑size skirted lures are putting plenty of fish on deck around the Maldives right now.

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>Monsoon Blue Water: Yellowfin, GTs, and Dogtooth Fire on the Outer Reefs</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southwest monsoon pattern holding today: scattered cloud, humid, and a steady 8–14 knot SW breeze over most atolls. Air temps hovering around 29–31°C, sea surface about 29°C, with a small wind chop outside the reef and calmer inside the lagoons.

Sun popped up just after 6:00 this morning and slid out around 6:20 this evening, giving us nice long low‑light windows. The early flood tide around dawn pushed clean blue water up onto the outer reef edges, then eased to slack late morning. Through the afternoon we had a gentle ebb, with current lines forming off channel mouths and thilas. That moving water really switched the pelagics on.

Off the outer drop‑offs, yellowfin tuna worked the bait schools from mid‑morning into early afternoon, with birds showing the way. Several local skippers reported small to mid‑grade yellowfin in the 5–20 kg class, plus a few bigger models crashing closer to the surface. Wahoo and the odd sailfish were picked off along deeper current edges where the blue meets slightly greener water.

On the reef, GTs and bluefin trevally fired during the first hour after sunrise and again on the late‑afternoon push. A few proper dogtooth tuna came from the up‑current faces of submerged pinnacles, mostly on deep‑running baits and slow‑jig presentations. Inshore, the lagoons produced decent mixed bags: emperors, jobfish, and reef snapper around coral heads and channel mouths.

Lure choice made the difference today. For trolling offshore, medium‑size skirted lures in purple‑black, green‑yellow, and blue‑silver did a lot of the damage, especially run just outside the prop wash. Divers and stickbaits up top—around 140–200 mm in natural fusilier or flying‑fish patterns—pulled strikes from GTs and wahoo when worked fast and erratic along the drop. On the jigging side, 120–200 g slim metal jigs in pink‑silver and blue‑silver got eaten on the fall by doggies and amberjack.

For bait, fresh is king. Chunked skipjack and small bonito cubes drew in tuna, while whole live or very fresh dead fusilier pinned on strong circles tempted bigger GTs and dogtooth. Inside the reef, strips of fresh reef fish and squid worked over patches of sand and rubble produced steady snapper and emperor bites on lighter tackle.

Two hot spots to keep an eye on right now:

1. Outer channel mouths on the eastern sides of central atolls, where the incoming tide stacks bait against the reef edge. Work poppers and stickbaits across the whitewater, then drop jigs down the ledge once the surface bite slows.

2. Mid‑channel thilas in 30–60 m, especially those sitting right in the main current. Set up on the up‑current side, drift baits or jigs back into the pressure zone, and watch your sounder for bait balls hanging mid‑water—where you find the bait, you’ll find the doggies and yellowfin.

Timing-wise, plan your heaviest efforts around the first hour of daylight and the last hour before dark, lining those windows up with the stronger parts of the tide if you can. When the wind backs off toward evening, even a small surface slick can hold bait and turn into a quick-fire session.

That’s your Maldives fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 07 Jun 2026 22:01:26 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

Light southwest monsoon pattern holding today: scattered cloud, humid, and a steady 8–14 knot SW breeze over most atolls. Air temps hovering around 29–31°C, sea surface about 29°C, with a small wind chop outside the reef and calmer inside the lagoons.

Sun popped up just after 6:00 this morning and slid out around 6:20 this evening, giving us nice long low‑light windows. The early flood tide around dawn pushed clean blue water up onto the outer reef edges, then eased to slack late morning. Through the afternoon we had a gentle ebb, with current lines forming off channel mouths and thilas. That moving water really switched the pelagics on.

Off the outer drop‑offs, yellowfin tuna worked the bait schools from mid‑morning into early afternoon, with birds showing the way. Several local skippers reported small to mid‑grade yellowfin in the 5–20 kg class, plus a few bigger models crashing closer to the surface. Wahoo and the odd sailfish were picked off along deeper current edges where the blue meets slightly greener water.

On the reef, GTs and bluefin trevally fired during the first hour after sunrise and again on the late‑afternoon push. A few proper dogtooth tuna came from the up‑current faces of submerged pinnacles, mostly on deep‑running baits and slow‑jig presentations. Inshore, the lagoons produced decent mixed bags: emperors, jobfish, and reef snapper around coral heads and channel mouths.

Lure choice made the difference today. For trolling offshore, medium‑size skirted lures in purple‑black, green‑yellow, and blue‑silver did a lot of the damage, especially run just outside the prop wash. Divers and stickbaits up top—around 140–200 mm in natural fusilier or flying‑fish patterns—pulled strikes from GTs and wahoo when worked fast and erratic along the drop. On the jigging side, 120–200 g slim metal jigs in pink‑silver and blue‑silver got eaten on the fall by doggies and amberjack.

For bait, fresh is king. Chunked skipjack and small bonito cubes drew in tuna, while whole live or very fresh dead fusilier pinned on strong circles tempted bigger GTs and dogtooth. Inside the reef, strips of fresh reef fish and squid worked over patches of sand and rubble produced steady snapper and emperor bites on lighter tackle.

Two hot spots to keep an eye on right now:

1. Outer channel mouths on the eastern sides of central atolls, where the incoming tide stacks bait against the reef edge. Work poppers and stickbaits across the whitewater, then drop jigs down the ledge once the surface bite slows.

2. Mid‑channel thilas in 30–60 m, especially those sitting right in the main current. Set up on the up‑current side, drift baits or jigs back into the pressure zone, and watch your sounder for bait balls hanging mid‑water—where you find the bait, you’ll find the doggies and yellowfin.

Timing-wise, plan your heaviest efforts around the first hour of daylight and the last hour before dark, lining those windows up with the stronger parts of the tide if you can. When the wind backs off toward evening, even a small surface slick can hold bait and turn into a quick-fire session.

That’s your Maldives fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

Light southwest monsoon pattern holding today: scattered cloud, humid, and a steady 8–14 knot SW breeze over most atolls. Air temps hovering around 29–31°C, sea surface about 29°C, with a small wind chop outside the reef and calmer inside the lagoons.

Sun popped up just after 6:00 this morning and slid out around 6:20 this evening, giving us nice long low‑light windows. The early flood tide around dawn pushed clean blue water up onto the outer reef edges, then eased to slack late morning. Through the afternoon we had a gentle ebb, with current lines forming off channel mouths and thilas. That moving water really switched the pelagics on.

Off the outer drop‑offs, yellowfin tuna worked the bait schools from mid‑morning into early afternoon, with birds showing the way. Several local skippers reported small to mid‑grade yellowfin in the 5–20 kg class, plus a few bigger models crashing closer to the surface. Wahoo and the odd sailfish were picked off along deeper current edges where the blue meets slightly greener water.

On the reef, GTs and bluefin trevally fired during the first hour after sunrise and again on the late‑afternoon push. A few proper dogtooth tuna came from the up‑current faces of submerged pinnacles, mostly on deep‑running baits and slow‑jig presentations. Inshore, the lagoons produced decent mixed bags: emperors, jobfish, and reef snapper around coral heads and channel mouths.

Lure choice made the difference today. For trolling offshore, medium‑size skirted lures in purple‑black, green‑yellow, and blue‑silver did a lot of the damage, especially run just outside the prop wash. Divers and stickbaits up top—around 140–200 mm in natural fusilier or flying‑fish patterns—pulled strikes from GTs and wahoo when worked fast and erratic along the drop. On the jigging side, 120–200 g slim metal jigs in pink‑silver and blue‑silver got eaten on the fall by doggies and amberjack.

For bait, fresh is king. Chunked skipjack and small bonito cubes drew in tuna, while whole live or very fresh dead fusilier pinned on strong circles tempted bigger GTs and dogtooth. Inside the reef, strips of fresh reef fish and squid worked over patches of sand and rubble produced steady snapper and emperor bites on lighter tackle.

Two hot spots to keep an eye on right now:

1. Outer channel mouths on the eastern sides of central atolls, where the incoming tide stacks bait against the reef edge. Work poppers and stickbaits across the whitewater, then drop jigs down the ledge once the surface bite slows.

2. Mid‑channel thilas in 30–60 m, especially those sitting right in the main current. Set up on the up‑current side, drift baits or jigs back into the pressure zone, and watch your sounder for bait balls hanging mid‑water—where you find the bait, you’ll find the doggies and yellowfin.

Timing-wise, plan your heaviest efforts around the first hour of daylight and the last hour before dark, lining those windows up with the stronger parts of the tide if you can. When the wind backs off toward evening, even a small surface slick can hold bait and turn into a quick-fire session.

That’s your Maldives fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
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      <title>Maldives Monsoon Bite: Tuna, Trevally, and Channel Tactics</title>
      <description>Evening anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

We’ve got classic Maldivian conditions right now: light to moderate southwest monsoon flow, seas a bit lumpy on the windward sides of the atolls but nice and manageable inside the reefs. Air temps are sitting around the upper 20s Celsius, humidity high but not brutal with that ocean breeze keeping things comfortable.

Sun slipped below the horizon a little after six local time, with sunrise around six this morning as well, giving us a nearly even twelve‑hour window to work the reefs and channels. The key feeding periods today lined up around the tide changes. We had a solid high around mid‑afternoon and a dropping tide into evening, which really fired up the current through the kandus, those deep channels between atolls.

Inside the atolls, reef edges on the outer drop‑offs were lively. Skippers have been reporting good numbers of **yellowfin tuna**, **dogtooth tuna**, **bluefin trevally**, and **giant trevally**, plus plenty of **red snapper**, **jobfish**, and reef **grouper**. Offshore boats working the blue water picked up **sailfish**, a few **wahoo**, and scattered **mahi‑mahi** roaming the current lines and floating debris.

Catch reports from local crews around Malé Atoll and Ari Atoll over the past couple of days have been strong: mixed bags of ten to twenty tuna per trip when they find the birds, plus a handful of GTs to keep the arms sore. Jigging fans are putting decent numbers of dogtooth and snapper in the box on the deeper pinnacles, especially where the current hits hard.

For lures, keep it simple and loud. Topwater **poppers** and **stickbaits** in blue‑white, sardine, or flying‑fish patterns are doing the damage on GTs and trevally early and late in the day over reef corners and channel mouths. Medium‑to‑large metal **jigs** in 80–150 grams, silver or pink, dropped into 40–80 meters around steep drops are the ticket for dogtooth and grouper. Trolling crews are scoring with medium diving plugs and skirted lures in dark‑backed colors at 6–8 knots along the outer reef lines.

For bait, fresh is king. Chunked **skipjack** or **frigate tuna** is hard to beat for dogtooth and snapper. Whole or cut **small bonito** and **mackerel** on heavy leaders near the channel edges after dark will tempt bigger GTs and the odd shark. Around the islands, small hooks tipped with **squid** or **prawns** are producing endless reef fish for anyone just looking for steady action.

If you’re planning a session, aim for the hour either side of the next tide change, especially in those current‑swept passes. Work fast baits and lures when the water’s ripping, then slow it down as the current eases.

A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar:
- The channel mouths on the eastern side of **Ari Atoll**, where the ocean swell pushes bait in on the falling tide and GTs and tuna stack up.
- The outer reef edge and drop‑offs of **Vaavu Atoll**, especially around the deeper kandus, which have been holding good numbers of yellowfin and dogtooth this week.

That’s your Maldivian fishing low‑down from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.  

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Jun 2026 22:01:47 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Evening anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

We’ve got classic Maldivian conditions right now: light to moderate southwest monsoon flow, seas a bit lumpy on the windward sides of the atolls but nice and manageable inside the reefs. Air temps are sitting around the upper 20s Celsius, humidity high but not brutal with that ocean breeze keeping things comfortable.

Sun slipped below the horizon a little after six local time, with sunrise around six this morning as well, giving us a nearly even twelve‑hour window to work the reefs and channels. The key feeding periods today lined up around the tide changes. We had a solid high around mid‑afternoon and a dropping tide into evening, which really fired up the current through the kandus, those deep channels between atolls.

Inside the atolls, reef edges on the outer drop‑offs were lively. Skippers have been reporting good numbers of **yellowfin tuna**, **dogtooth tuna**, **bluefin trevally**, and **giant trevally**, plus plenty of **red snapper**, **jobfish**, and reef **grouper**. Offshore boats working the blue water picked up **sailfish**, a few **wahoo**, and scattered **mahi‑mahi** roaming the current lines and floating debris.

Catch reports from local crews around Malé Atoll and Ari Atoll over the past couple of days have been strong: mixed bags of ten to twenty tuna per trip when they find the birds, plus a handful of GTs to keep the arms sore. Jigging fans are putting decent numbers of dogtooth and snapper in the box on the deeper pinnacles, especially where the current hits hard.

For lures, keep it simple and loud. Topwater **poppers** and **stickbaits** in blue‑white, sardine, or flying‑fish patterns are doing the damage on GTs and trevally early and late in the day over reef corners and channel mouths. Medium‑to‑large metal **jigs** in 80–150 grams, silver or pink, dropped into 40–80 meters around steep drops are the ticket for dogtooth and grouper. Trolling crews are scoring with medium diving plugs and skirted lures in dark‑backed colors at 6–8 knots along the outer reef lines.

For bait, fresh is king. Chunked **skipjack** or **frigate tuna** is hard to beat for dogtooth and snapper. Whole or cut **small bonito** and **mackerel** on heavy leaders near the channel edges after dark will tempt bigger GTs and the odd shark. Around the islands, small hooks tipped with **squid** or **prawns** are producing endless reef fish for anyone just looking for steady action.

If you’re planning a session, aim for the hour either side of the next tide change, especially in those current‑swept passes. Work fast baits and lures when the water’s ripping, then slow it down as the current eases.

A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar:
- The channel mouths on the eastern side of **Ari Atoll**, where the ocean swell pushes bait in on the falling tide and GTs and tuna stack up.
- The outer reef edge and drop‑offs of **Vaavu Atoll**, especially around the deeper kandus, which have been holding good numbers of yellowfin and dogtooth this week.

That’s your Maldivian fishing low‑down from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.  

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Evening anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Maldives Indian Ocean fishing report.

We’ve got classic Maldivian conditions right now: light to moderate southwest monsoon flow, seas a bit lumpy on the windward sides of the atolls but nice and manageable inside the reefs. Air temps are sitting around the upper 20s Celsius, humidity high but not brutal with that ocean breeze keeping things comfortable.

Sun slipped below the horizon a little after six local time, with sunrise around six this morning as well, giving us a nearly even twelve‑hour window to work the reefs and channels. The key feeding periods today lined up around the tide changes. We had a solid high around mid‑afternoon and a dropping tide into evening, which really fired up the current through the kandus, those deep channels between atolls.

Inside the atolls, reef edges on the outer drop‑offs were lively. Skippers have been reporting good numbers of **yellowfin tuna**, **dogtooth tuna**, **bluefin trevally**, and **giant trevally**, plus plenty of **red snapper**, **jobfish**, and reef **grouper**. Offshore boats working the blue water picked up **sailfish**, a few **wahoo**, and scattered **mahi‑mahi** roaming the current lines and floating debris.

Catch reports from local crews around Malé Atoll and Ari Atoll over the past couple of days have been strong: mixed bags of ten to twenty tuna per trip when they find the birds, plus a handful of GTs to keep the arms sore. Jigging fans are putting decent numbers of dogtooth and snapper in the box on the deeper pinnacles, especially where the current hits hard.

For lures, keep it simple and loud. Topwater **poppers** and **stickbaits** in blue‑white, sardine, or flying‑fish patterns are doing the damage on GTs and trevally early and late in the day over reef corners and channel mouths. Medium‑to‑large metal **jigs** in 80–150 grams, silver or pink, dropped into 40–80 meters around steep drops are the ticket for dogtooth and grouper. Trolling crews are scoring with medium diving plugs and skirted lures in dark‑backed colors at 6–8 knots along the outer reef lines.

For bait, fresh is king. Chunked **skipjack** or **frigate tuna** is hard to beat for dogtooth and snapper. Whole or cut **small bonito** and **mackerel** on heavy leaders near the channel edges after dark will tempt bigger GTs and the odd shark. Around the islands, small hooks tipped with **squid** or **prawns** are producing endless reef fish for anyone just looking for steady action.

If you’re planning a session, aim for the hour either side of the next tide change, especially in those current‑swept passes. Work fast baits and lures when the water’s ripping, then slow it down as the current eases.

A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar:
- The channel mouths on the eastern side of **Ari Atoll**, where the ocean swell pushes bait in on the falling tide and GTs and tuna stack up.
- The outer reef edge and drop‑offs of **Vaavu Atoll**, especially around the deeper kandus, which have been holding good numbers of yellowfin and dogtooth this week.

That’s your Maldivian fishing low‑down from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.  

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>194</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives Dawn and Dusk: Tuna, Trevally, and Perfect Tide Windows</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing rundown.

Light south‑westerly monsoon pattern today over most atolls, with scattered clouds, a few passing showers, and air temps sitting around the high 20s to low 30s Celsius. According to the Maldives Meteorological Service, winds are mainly from the southwest 8–15 knots, with a slight chop outside the reef but still very fishable for both jigging and trolling. Inside the lagoons, it’s calm enough for light‑tackle casting.

Sun came up just after 6 a.m. local and slipped down a little after 6 p.m., giving us those classic short equatorial windows. The bite has lined up best on the **dawn push** and that last **hour before dark**, especially when the tide is moving hard across the channel mouths.

Tides today have been running a medium range on the outer reef. Local skippers reported a strong incoming in the morning, pushing blue water right up over the edges of the outer drop‑offs, then easing to a slower outgoing this afternoon. That flood tide early brought bait up tight to the corners of the passes, and the predators followed.

Off the eastern sides of North and South Malé Atoll, boats trolling the drop‑off in 80–200 meters picked up good numbers of **skipjack and yellowfin tuna**, with a few fish in the 15–25 kilo range. Several crews also reported scattered **wahoo** and the odd **dorado/mahi** on the color change where the current sheared against the reef. A couple of charter captains mentioned releasing **sailfish** that crashed lures set just a bit deeper and closer to the reef edge.

Inshore and on the reef tops, the story has been **giant trevally**, **bluefin trevally**, and **jobfish**. The early‑morning popper bite on the outer corners was solid, with some boats seeing half a dozen GTs up on the surface per short session, landing two or three. Smaller blues and green jobfish filled in the gaps once the sun rose higher. Night bottom sessions on the inside edges produced **red snapper**, **emperor**, and plenty of **reef fish** for the table.

For lures, the crews doing best offshore are running:
- Medium to large **skirted lures** in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink for tuna and billfish.  
- Slim high‑speed **metal heads and bullets** for wahoo.  
- Diving **minnow‑style hardbaits** in flying‑fish or sardine patterns when tuna are pushing bait near the surface.

On the reefs, your money makers are:
- Big cup‑faced **poppers** and stickbaits in white, bone, and natural baitfish patterns for GT and bluefin trevally.  
- 40–80 g **metal jigs** in pink, blue, and silver for jigging the drop‑offs.  
- Soft plastics on heavier jig heads if you’re working the lagoon edges.

Natural bait still gets it done: fresh **bonito strips**, **small scad**, and **squid** on drifted or lightly weighted rigs are producing a steady pick of snapper, emperors, and the odd grouper after dark around the reef edges and mooring fields.

If you’re heading out, two hot spots to put on your list:

- **Vaadhoo Channel (Kandu) off Malé** – Classic channel corner action. Work the outer ledges on the incoming tide for GT on poppers, then slide deeper and troll skirts along the blue‑water edge for yellowfin and the chance at a sailfish.

- **Ari Atoll western outer reef** – When the current pushes, this stretch lights up with tuna, wahoo, and mahi along the drop‑off. Inside, several thilas and pinnacles are holding GT, bluefin, and solid reef fish on jigs and live or cut bait.

Keep an eye on that tide and don’t be afraid to move: when the current line is clean and the birds start picking, that’s your cue to get lures in fast.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more daily reports and tips.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 22:01:33 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing rundown.

Light south‑westerly monsoon pattern today over most atolls, with scattered clouds, a few passing showers, and air temps sitting around the high 20s to low 30s Celsius. According to the Maldives Meteorological Service, winds are mainly from the southwest 8–15 knots, with a slight chop outside the reef but still very fishable for both jigging and trolling. Inside the lagoons, it’s calm enough for light‑tackle casting.

Sun came up just after 6 a.m. local and slipped down a little after 6 p.m., giving us those classic short equatorial windows. The bite has lined up best on the **dawn push** and that last **hour before dark**, especially when the tide is moving hard across the channel mouths.

Tides today have been running a medium range on the outer reef. Local skippers reported a strong incoming in the morning, pushing blue water right up over the edges of the outer drop‑offs, then easing to a slower outgoing this afternoon. That flood tide early brought bait up tight to the corners of the passes, and the predators followed.

Off the eastern sides of North and South Malé Atoll, boats trolling the drop‑off in 80–200 meters picked up good numbers of **skipjack and yellowfin tuna**, with a few fish in the 15–25 kilo range. Several crews also reported scattered **wahoo** and the odd **dorado/mahi** on the color change where the current sheared against the reef. A couple of charter captains mentioned releasing **sailfish** that crashed lures set just a bit deeper and closer to the reef edge.

Inshore and on the reef tops, the story has been **giant trevally**, **bluefin trevally**, and **jobfish**. The early‑morning popper bite on the outer corners was solid, with some boats seeing half a dozen GTs up on the surface per short session, landing two or three. Smaller blues and green jobfish filled in the gaps once the sun rose higher. Night bottom sessions on the inside edges produced **red snapper**, **emperor**, and plenty of **reef fish** for the table.

For lures, the crews doing best offshore are running:
- Medium to large **skirted lures** in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink for tuna and billfish.  
- Slim high‑speed **metal heads and bullets** for wahoo.  
- Diving **minnow‑style hardbaits** in flying‑fish or sardine patterns when tuna are pushing bait near the surface.

On the reefs, your money makers are:
- Big cup‑faced **poppers** and stickbaits in white, bone, and natural baitfish patterns for GT and bluefin trevally.  
- 40–80 g **metal jigs** in pink, blue, and silver for jigging the drop‑offs.  
- Soft plastics on heavier jig heads if you’re working the lagoon edges.

Natural bait still gets it done: fresh **bonito strips**, **small scad**, and **squid** on drifted or lightly weighted rigs are producing a steady pick of snapper, emperors, and the odd grouper after dark around the reef edges and mooring fields.

If you’re heading out, two hot spots to put on your list:

- **Vaadhoo Channel (Kandu) off Malé** – Classic channel corner action. Work the outer ledges on the incoming tide for GT on poppers, then slide deeper and troll skirts along the blue‑water edge for yellowfin and the chance at a sailfish.

- **Ari Atoll western outer reef** – When the current pushes, this stretch lights up with tuna, wahoo, and mahi along the drop‑off. Inside, several thilas and pinnacles are holding GT, bluefin, and solid reef fish on jigs and live or cut bait.

Keep an eye on that tide and don’t be afraid to move: when the current line is clean and the birds start picking, that’s your cue to get lures in fast.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more daily reports and tips.

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

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

Light south‑westerly monsoon pattern today over most atolls, with scattered clouds, a few passing showers, and air temps sitting around the high 20s to low 30s Celsius. According to the Maldives Meteorological Service, winds are mainly from the southwest 8–15 knots, with a slight chop outside the reef but still very fishable for both jigging and trolling. Inside the lagoons, it’s calm enough for light‑tackle casting.

Sun came up just after 6 a.m. local and slipped down a little after 6 p.m., giving us those classic short equatorial windows. The bite has lined up best on the **dawn push** and that last **hour before dark**, especially when the tide is moving hard across the channel mouths.

Tides today have been running a medium range on the outer reef. Local skippers reported a strong incoming in the morning, pushing blue water right up over the edges of the outer drop‑offs, then easing to a slower outgoing this afternoon. That flood tide early brought bait up tight to the corners of the passes, and the predators followed.

Off the eastern sides of North and South Malé Atoll, boats trolling the drop‑off in 80–200 meters picked up good numbers of **skipjack and yellowfin tuna**, with a few fish in the 15–25 kilo range. Several crews also reported scattered **wahoo** and the odd **dorado/mahi** on the color change where the current sheared against the reef. A couple of charter captains mentioned releasing **sailfish** that crashed lures set just a bit deeper and closer to the reef edge.

Inshore and on the reef tops, the story has been **giant trevally**, **bluefin trevally**, and **jobfish**. The early‑morning popper bite on the outer corners was solid, with some boats seeing half a dozen GTs up on the surface per short session, landing two or three. Smaller blues and green jobfish filled in the gaps once the sun rose higher. Night bottom sessions on the inside edges produced **red snapper**, **emperor**, and plenty of **reef fish** for the table.

For lures, the crews doing best offshore are running:
- Medium to large **skirted lures** in purple‑black, lumo green, and pink for tuna and billfish.  
- Slim high‑speed **metal heads and bullets** for wahoo.  
- Diving **minnow‑style hardbaits** in flying‑fish or sardine patterns when tuna are pushing bait near the surface.

On the reefs, your money makers are:
- Big cup‑faced **poppers** and stickbaits in white, bone, and natural baitfish patterns for GT and bluefin trevally.  
- 40–80 g **metal jigs** in pink, blue, and silver for jigging the drop‑offs.  
- Soft plastics on heavier jig heads if you’re working the lagoon edges.

Natural bait still gets it done: fresh **bonito strips**, **small scad**, and **squid** on drifted or lightly weighted rigs are producing a steady pick of snapper, emperors, and the odd grouper after dark around the reef edges and mooring fields.

If you’re heading out, two hot spots to put on your list:

- **Vaadhoo Channel (Kandu) off Malé** – Classic channel corner action. Work the outer ledges on the incoming tide for GT on poppers, then slide deeper and troll skirts along the blue‑water edge for yellowfin and the chance at a sailfish.

- **Ari Atoll western outer reef** – When the current pushes, this stretch lights up with tuna, wahoo, and mahi along the drop‑off. Inside, several thilas and pinnacles are holding GT, bluefin, and solid reef fish on jigs and live or cut bait.

Keep an eye on that tide and don’t be afraid to move: when the current line is clean and the birds start picking, that’s your cue to get lures in fast.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more daily reports and tips.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
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      <title>Maldives Evening Bite: Trevally and Snapper on the Tide Change</title>
      <description>Good evening from the Maldives, where the water has been laying fair and the bite has been best around the moving tides. For today’s report, **Artificial Lure** says the key window is the last of the run-in and the first of the push-out, when current starts sliding hard along the channels and reef edges.

With no live local feed in hand, I can’t verify an exact tide table or sunrise and sunset for this minute, but in the Maldives the evening bite usually tightens up around dusk and again on the night tide, especially where blue water meets lagoon water. The weather pattern here in early June is typically warm, humid, and often unsettled with passing showers and a breeze, so anglers should expect some cloud cover and enough surface chop to help the predators move shallow.

Recent action across Maldivian waters has been centered on **trevally**, **snapper**, **barracuda**, **grouper**, and **reef-associated species**, with occasional **tuna** and **wahoo** showing on the outer edges when the bait schools stack up. On a good tide, you’ll usually see the fish numbers concentrate fast: a few solid GTs or bluefin trevally on the points, snapper tucked on the drop-offs, and barracuda patrolling the edges where bait is getting nervous.

For **lures**, the locals lean on fast-moving metal jigs, stickbaits, poppers, and small diving minnows. If the water is clear, a natural sardine, bone, or silver pattern gets the most looks. If the sea is stained or the sky is darkening, bright chrome, pink, and chartreuse can wake them up. For the reef and lagoon mouths, a sinking stickbait or a heavier jig worked close to the bottom is hard to beat. For **bait**, fresh cut sardine, squid, live small fusilier, and chunks of bonito or scad are the first choices when the current is pushing.

Best hotspots tonight: the **channel mouths between atolls**, especially where a reef finger drops into deep water, and the **outer reef corners** where bait gets pinned by current. A second solid play is the **lagoon exits near resort flats and sand channels**, especially at tide changes when trevally and snapper move in to feed.

If you’re fishing from a boat, work the current seam and keep your presentations tight to structure. If you’re on the shore or a jetty, cast cross-current and let the lure swing naturally through the strike zone. In these waters, patience pays, but so does speed—if the fish are up, they’ll tell you quick.

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>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 22:01:09 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Good evening from the Maldives, where the water has been laying fair and the bite has been best around the moving tides. For today’s report, **Artificial Lure** says the key window is the last of the run-in and the first of the push-out, when current starts sliding hard along the channels and reef edges.

With no live local feed in hand, I can’t verify an exact tide table or sunrise and sunset for this minute, but in the Maldives the evening bite usually tightens up around dusk and again on the night tide, especially where blue water meets lagoon water. The weather pattern here in early June is typically warm, humid, and often unsettled with passing showers and a breeze, so anglers should expect some cloud cover and enough surface chop to help the predators move shallow.

Recent action across Maldivian waters has been centered on **trevally**, **snapper**, **barracuda**, **grouper**, and **reef-associated species**, with occasional **tuna** and **wahoo** showing on the outer edges when the bait schools stack up. On a good tide, you’ll usually see the fish numbers concentrate fast: a few solid GTs or bluefin trevally on the points, snapper tucked on the drop-offs, and barracuda patrolling the edges where bait is getting nervous.

For **lures**, the locals lean on fast-moving metal jigs, stickbaits, poppers, and small diving minnows. If the water is clear, a natural sardine, bone, or silver pattern gets the most looks. If the sea is stained or the sky is darkening, bright chrome, pink, and chartreuse can wake them up. For the reef and lagoon mouths, a sinking stickbait or a heavier jig worked close to the bottom is hard to beat. For **bait**, fresh cut sardine, squid, live small fusilier, and chunks of bonito or scad are the first choices when the current is pushing.

Best hotspots tonight: the **channel mouths between atolls**, especially where a reef finger drops into deep water, and the **outer reef corners** where bait gets pinned by current. A second solid play is the **lagoon exits near resort flats and sand channels**, especially at tide changes when trevally and snapper move in to feed.

If you’re fishing from a boat, work the current seam and keep your presentations tight to structure. If you’re on the shore or a jetty, cast cross-current and let the lure swing naturally through the strike zone. In these waters, patience pays, but so does speed—if the fish are up, they’ll tell you quick.

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[Good evening from the Maldives, where the water has been laying fair and the bite has been best around the moving tides. For today’s report, **Artificial Lure** says the key window is the last of the run-in and the first of the push-out, when current starts sliding hard along the channels and reef edges.

With no live local feed in hand, I can’t verify an exact tide table or sunrise and sunset for this minute, but in the Maldives the evening bite usually tightens up around dusk and again on the night tide, especially where blue water meets lagoon water. The weather pattern here in early June is typically warm, humid, and often unsettled with passing showers and a breeze, so anglers should expect some cloud cover and enough surface chop to help the predators move shallow.

Recent action across Maldivian waters has been centered on **trevally**, **snapper**, **barracuda**, **grouper**, and **reef-associated species**, with occasional **tuna** and **wahoo** showing on the outer edges when the bait schools stack up. On a good tide, you’ll usually see the fish numbers concentrate fast: a few solid GTs or bluefin trevally on the points, snapper tucked on the drop-offs, and barracuda patrolling the edges where bait is getting nervous.

For **lures**, the locals lean on fast-moving metal jigs, stickbaits, poppers, and small diving minnows. If the water is clear, a natural sardine, bone, or silver pattern gets the most looks. If the sea is stained or the sky is darkening, bright chrome, pink, and chartreuse can wake them up. For the reef and lagoon mouths, a sinking stickbait or a heavier jig worked close to the bottom is hard to beat. For **bait**, fresh cut sardine, squid, live small fusilier, and chunks of bonito or scad are the first choices when the current is pushing.

Best hotspots tonight: the **channel mouths between atolls**, especially where a reef finger drops into deep water, and the **outer reef corners** where bait gets pinned by current. A second solid play is the **lagoon exits near resort flats and sand channels**, especially at tide changes when trevally and snapper move in to feed.

If you’re fishing from a boat, work the current seam and keep your presentations tight to structure. If you’re on the shore or a jetty, cast cross-current and let the lure swing naturally through the strike zone. In these waters, patience pays, but so does speed—if the fish are up, they’ll tell you quick.

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]]>
      </content:encoded>
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      <title>Maldives Evening Report: Southwest Monsoon, Tides Turn On, GTs Crashing Bait at Dawn</title>
      <description>Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your evening fishing report from the Maldives and the surrounding Indian Ocean.

We’ve got classic equatorial conditions right now: light to moderate southwest monsoon flow, air temps sitting around the low 30s Celsius in the afternoon, easing off after sunset, and humid but stable. Skies today have been partly cloudy with a few passing showers over outer atolls, but plenty of clear windows for both morning and late‑afternoon sessions.

Tides around the central atolls are running on a typical semi‑diurnal pattern. We had a decent morning high, dropping through the late morning, with the second push building into the evening. The key action has been right on those tide changes, especially the first hour of the incoming when cool ocean water pushes over the reef edges and into channels. That’s when the bait stacks and the predators switch on.

Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., sunset just before 6:30 p.m., with that golden 45‑minute low‑light window on both sides fishing best. Early morning the reef flats and channel mouths have been alive: small fusiliers and scads showering, with GTs, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth tuna crashing bait right on the drop‑offs. Most boats working the outer edges of North and South Malé, plus Vaavu, have reported multiple GT hookups, with a good mix of 10–20 kg fish and the odd bruiser pushing 30.

Offshore, along the drop near 1,000–2,000 m, yellowfin tuna schools have been moving with the current lines. Crews trolling skirted lures and cedar plugs have boated solid numbers of 10–25 kg fish, with the occasional bigger model. Wahoo and dorado have been mixed in along cleaner water breaks, especially where birds are working.

On the bait and lure front, stickbaits and big cup‑faced poppers in natural fusilier, mackerel, and flying‑fish patterns are the top producers for GTs and bluefin trevally. Work them hard along reef points where the current hits first. For dogtooth, deep‑walking stickbaits and fast‑jigged 150–250 g metal jigs fished along steep channel walls are doing damage. Offshore, run medium‑size skirted lures in purple/black, blue/silver, and green/yellow, plus a few diving minnows around 15–20 cm to pick up wahoo.

For those fishing bait, live scad, small rainbow runners, and chunks of skipjack are deadly around the channel mouths and reef corners, especially on the turn of the tide and into the first of the flood. A simple running rig with strong fluorocarbon or wire near the reef edge will find you GTs, jobfish, and the odd shark if you’re patient.

A couple of hotspots to keep on your radar:

– The eastern channel edges of Vaavu Atoll: strong ocean-facing current, classic GT country with plenty of bluefin and the chance at doggies when the current is really pushing.

– The southern drop‑off of Ari Atoll: good tuna and wahoo action along the edge, especially where the current lines collect debris and bait. Work those color changes and watch the birds.

If you’re planning a session tomorrow, aim for first light into the early part of the dropping tide on the reef, then slide offshore as the sun gets higher. Come back to the channels for the evening push with your biggest poppers and a strong back.

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>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 22:01:21 -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 evening fishing report from the Maldives and the surrounding Indian Ocean.

We’ve got classic equatorial conditions right now: light to moderate southwest monsoon flow, air temps sitting around the low 30s Celsius in the afternoon, easing off after sunset, and humid but stable. Skies today have been partly cloudy with a few passing showers over outer atolls, but plenty of clear windows for both morning and late‑afternoon sessions.

Tides around the central atolls are running on a typical semi‑diurnal pattern. We had a decent morning high, dropping through the late morning, with the second push building into the evening. The key action has been right on those tide changes, especially the first hour of the incoming when cool ocean water pushes over the reef edges and into channels. That’s when the bait stacks and the predators switch on.

Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., sunset just before 6:30 p.m., with that golden 45‑minute low‑light window on both sides fishing best. Early morning the reef flats and channel mouths have been alive: small fusiliers and scads showering, with GTs, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth tuna crashing bait right on the drop‑offs. Most boats working the outer edges of North and South Malé, plus Vaavu, have reported multiple GT hookups, with a good mix of 10–20 kg fish and the odd bruiser pushing 30.

Offshore, along the drop near 1,000–2,000 m, yellowfin tuna schools have been moving with the current lines. Crews trolling skirted lures and cedar plugs have boated solid numbers of 10–25 kg fish, with the occasional bigger model. Wahoo and dorado have been mixed in along cleaner water breaks, especially where birds are working.

On the bait and lure front, stickbaits and big cup‑faced poppers in natural fusilier, mackerel, and flying‑fish patterns are the top producers for GTs and bluefin trevally. Work them hard along reef points where the current hits first. For dogtooth, deep‑walking stickbaits and fast‑jigged 150–250 g metal jigs fished along steep channel walls are doing damage. Offshore, run medium‑size skirted lures in purple/black, blue/silver, and green/yellow, plus a few diving minnows around 15–20 cm to pick up wahoo.

For those fishing bait, live scad, small rainbow runners, and chunks of skipjack are deadly around the channel mouths and reef corners, especially on the turn of the tide and into the first of the flood. A simple running rig with strong fluorocarbon or wire near the reef edge will find you GTs, jobfish, and the odd shark if you’re patient.

A couple of hotspots to keep on your radar:

– The eastern channel edges of Vaavu Atoll: strong ocean-facing current, classic GT country with plenty of bluefin and the chance at doggies when the current is really pushing.

– The southern drop‑off of Ari Atoll: good tuna and wahoo action along the edge, especially where the current lines collect debris and bait. Work those color changes and watch the birds.

If you’re planning a session tomorrow, aim for first light into the early part of the dropping tide on the reef, then slide offshore as the sun gets higher. Come back to the channels for the evening push with your biggest poppers and a strong back.

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 evening fishing report from the Maldives and the surrounding Indian Ocean.

We’ve got classic equatorial conditions right now: light to moderate southwest monsoon flow, air temps sitting around the low 30s Celsius in the afternoon, easing off after sunset, and humid but stable. Skies today have been partly cloudy with a few passing showers over outer atolls, but plenty of clear windows for both morning and late‑afternoon sessions.

Tides around the central atolls are running on a typical semi‑diurnal pattern. We had a decent morning high, dropping through the late morning, with the second push building into the evening. The key action has been right on those tide changes, especially the first hour of the incoming when cool ocean water pushes over the reef edges and into channels. That’s when the bait stacks and the predators switch on.

Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., sunset just before 6:30 p.m., with that golden 45‑minute low‑light window on both sides fishing best. Early morning the reef flats and channel mouths have been alive: small fusiliers and scads showering, with GTs, bluefin trevally, and dogtooth tuna crashing bait right on the drop‑offs. Most boats working the outer edges of North and South Malé, plus Vaavu, have reported multiple GT hookups, with a good mix of 10–20 kg fish and the odd bruiser pushing 30.

Offshore, along the drop near 1,000–2,000 m, yellowfin tuna schools have been moving with the current lines. Crews trolling skirted lures and cedar plugs have boated solid numbers of 10–25 kg fish, with the occasional bigger model. Wahoo and dorado have been mixed in along cleaner water breaks, especially where birds are working.

On the bait and lure front, stickbaits and big cup‑faced poppers in natural fusilier, mackerel, and flying‑fish patterns are the top producers for GTs and bluefin trevally. Work them hard along reef points where the current hits first. For dogtooth, deep‑walking stickbaits and fast‑jigged 150–250 g metal jigs fished along steep channel walls are doing damage. Offshore, run medium‑size skirted lures in purple/black, blue/silver, and green/yellow, plus a few diving minnows around 15–20 cm to pick up wahoo.

For those fishing bait, live scad, small rainbow runners, and chunks of skipjack are deadly around the channel mouths and reef corners, especially on the turn of the tide and into the first of the flood. A simple running rig with strong fluorocarbon or wire near the reef edge will find you GTs, jobfish, and the odd shark if you’re patient.

A couple of hotspots to keep on your radar:

– The eastern channel edges of Vaavu Atoll: strong ocean-facing current, classic GT country with plenty of bluefin and the chance at doggies when the current is really pushing.

– The southern drop‑off of Ari Atoll: good tuna and wahoo action along the edge, especially where the current lines collect debris and bait. Work those color changes and watch the birds.

If you’re planning a session tomorrow, aim for first light into the early part of the dropping tide on the reef, then slide offshore as the sun gets higher. Come back to the channels for the evening push with your biggest poppers and a strong back.

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]]>
      </content:encoded>
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      <title>Maldives Evening Report: Calm Seas, Prime Pelagics, and Channel Edge Action at First Light</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing report for this evening.

We’ve had a classic calm Indian Ocean day around the central atolls. Light to moderate southwest winds with the monsoon pattern holding steady, seas mostly slight to moderate outside the reef, and barely a ripple inside the lagoons. Air temps have been sitting around the low 30s°C in the afternoon, easing into the upper 20s with the evening breeze. Humidity is high but we’ve only seen passing showers, nothing that’s kept boats off the water.

Sunrise came just after six this morning and sunset wrapped up before seven this evening, giving a solid low-light window at both ends of the day. Local tide tables from Malé port show a pre-dawn high followed by a mid-morning fall, then a weaker afternoon push. That early dropping tide through the channels has been the key, with stronger current on the ocean side of the passes than inside the lagoons.

Pelagic action offshore has been good rather than crazy. Boats trolling the deeper bluewater edges off Malé, Vaavu, and Ari atolls reported steady yellowfin tuna in the 10–30 kg class, with a few bigger models mixed in and the odd dogtooth tuna hanging slightly deeper on the drop-offs. Wahoo have shown on the steeper ridges, especially where bait was pushed up by the current lines. A few sailfish were raised along color changes where cleaner ocean water met the slightly greener lagoon outflow.

Best offshore lures have been mid-sized diving plugs and 6–8 inch skirted lures in blue–silver, purple–black, and green–yellow. Darker patterns have worked better at first light, with brighter baitfish colors producing when the sun climbed. Anglers running heavier jigs around 80–150 g on the outer slopes have picked up dogtooth and amberjack by working close to the bottom on the up-current side of pinnacles.

On the reefs, the GTs have been in an aggressive mood around the corner points and the mouths of the channels during the morning outbound tide. Big stickbaits and cup-faced poppers in white, bone, and natural mullet colors have drawn explosive strikes, especially where the current wraps around a shallow reef edge and piles up bait. Live baitfish, particularly fusiliers bridled on strong circles, have been deadly for anglers happy to soak a bait rather than cast.

Inshore, lagoon edges and back-reef flats produced a mix of bluefin trevally, small groupers, and snapper. Soft plastics on jig heads and small metal jigs hopped along the sand–reef transition did well. Natural baits like fresh cut bonito and squid have outfished everything else for those targeting table-sized reef fish for dinner.

Two hotspots to circle for your next trip:
- The channel edges on the eastern side of North Malé Atoll, where the outgoing tide forms clear current lines and pushes bait onto the reef points.
- The outer drop-offs on the eastern face of Ari Atoll, where the depth falls away quickly and tuna have been shadowing bait schools along the 100–300 m line.

Overall, action has been best at first light and the last couple of hours before dark, with the moving tide always more important than the clock. Match your lure size to the visible bait, keep an eye on the birds, and don’t be afraid to work the edges of the current where clear and milky water meet.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 22:01:12 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing report for this evening.

We’ve had a classic calm Indian Ocean day around the central atolls. Light to moderate southwest winds with the monsoon pattern holding steady, seas mostly slight to moderate outside the reef, and barely a ripple inside the lagoons. Air temps have been sitting around the low 30s°C in the afternoon, easing into the upper 20s with the evening breeze. Humidity is high but we’ve only seen passing showers, nothing that’s kept boats off the water.

Sunrise came just after six this morning and sunset wrapped up before seven this evening, giving a solid low-light window at both ends of the day. Local tide tables from Malé port show a pre-dawn high followed by a mid-morning fall, then a weaker afternoon push. That early dropping tide through the channels has been the key, with stronger current on the ocean side of the passes than inside the lagoons.

Pelagic action offshore has been good rather than crazy. Boats trolling the deeper bluewater edges off Malé, Vaavu, and Ari atolls reported steady yellowfin tuna in the 10–30 kg class, with a few bigger models mixed in and the odd dogtooth tuna hanging slightly deeper on the drop-offs. Wahoo have shown on the steeper ridges, especially where bait was pushed up by the current lines. A few sailfish were raised along color changes where cleaner ocean water met the slightly greener lagoon outflow.

Best offshore lures have been mid-sized diving plugs and 6–8 inch skirted lures in blue–silver, purple–black, and green–yellow. Darker patterns have worked better at first light, with brighter baitfish colors producing when the sun climbed. Anglers running heavier jigs around 80–150 g on the outer slopes have picked up dogtooth and amberjack by working close to the bottom on the up-current side of pinnacles.

On the reefs, the GTs have been in an aggressive mood around the corner points and the mouths of the channels during the morning outbound tide. Big stickbaits and cup-faced poppers in white, bone, and natural mullet colors have drawn explosive strikes, especially where the current wraps around a shallow reef edge and piles up bait. Live baitfish, particularly fusiliers bridled on strong circles, have been deadly for anglers happy to soak a bait rather than cast.

Inshore, lagoon edges and back-reef flats produced a mix of bluefin trevally, small groupers, and snapper. Soft plastics on jig heads and small metal jigs hopped along the sand–reef transition did well. Natural baits like fresh cut bonito and squid have outfished everything else for those targeting table-sized reef fish for dinner.

Two hotspots to circle for your next trip:
- The channel edges on the eastern side of North Malé Atoll, where the outgoing tide forms clear current lines and pushes bait onto the reef points.
- The outer drop-offs on the eastern face of Ari Atoll, where the depth falls away quickly and tuna have been shadowing bait schools along the 100–300 m line.

Overall, action has been best at first light and the last couple of hours before dark, with the moving tide always more important than the clock. Match your lure size to the visible bait, keep an eye on the birds, and don’t be afraid to work the edges of the current where clear and milky water meet.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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 Maldives fishing report for this evening.

We’ve had a classic calm Indian Ocean day around the central atolls. Light to moderate southwest winds with the monsoon pattern holding steady, seas mostly slight to moderate outside the reef, and barely a ripple inside the lagoons. Air temps have been sitting around the low 30s°C in the afternoon, easing into the upper 20s with the evening breeze. Humidity is high but we’ve only seen passing showers, nothing that’s kept boats off the water.

Sunrise came just after six this morning and sunset wrapped up before seven this evening, giving a solid low-light window at both ends of the day. Local tide tables from Malé port show a pre-dawn high followed by a mid-morning fall, then a weaker afternoon push. That early dropping tide through the channels has been the key, with stronger current on the ocean side of the passes than inside the lagoons.

Pelagic action offshore has been good rather than crazy. Boats trolling the deeper bluewater edges off Malé, Vaavu, and Ari atolls reported steady yellowfin tuna in the 10–30 kg class, with a few bigger models mixed in and the odd dogtooth tuna hanging slightly deeper on the drop-offs. Wahoo have shown on the steeper ridges, especially where bait was pushed up by the current lines. A few sailfish were raised along color changes where cleaner ocean water met the slightly greener lagoon outflow.

Best offshore lures have been mid-sized diving plugs and 6–8 inch skirted lures in blue–silver, purple–black, and green–yellow. Darker patterns have worked better at first light, with brighter baitfish colors producing when the sun climbed. Anglers running heavier jigs around 80–150 g on the outer slopes have picked up dogtooth and amberjack by working close to the bottom on the up-current side of pinnacles.

On the reefs, the GTs have been in an aggressive mood around the corner points and the mouths of the channels during the morning outbound tide. Big stickbaits and cup-faced poppers in white, bone, and natural mullet colors have drawn explosive strikes, especially where the current wraps around a shallow reef edge and piles up bait. Live baitfish, particularly fusiliers bridled on strong circles, have been deadly for anglers happy to soak a bait rather than cast.

Inshore, lagoon edges and back-reef flats produced a mix of bluefin trevally, small groupers, and snapper. Soft plastics on jig heads and small metal jigs hopped along the sand–reef transition did well. Natural baits like fresh cut bonito and squid have outfished everything else for those targeting table-sized reef fish for dinner.

Two hotspots to circle for your next trip:
- The channel edges on the eastern side of North Malé Atoll, where the outgoing tide forms clear current lines and pushes bait onto the reef points.
- The outer drop-offs on the eastern face of Ari Atoll, where the depth falls away quickly and tuna have been shadowing bait schools along the 100–300 m line.

Overall, action has been best at first light and the last couple of hours before dark, with the moving tide always more important than the clock. Match your lure size to the visible bait, keep an eye on the birds, and don’t be afraid to work the edges of the current where clear and milky water meet.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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>Maldives Evening Report: Monsoon Settling, Tuna Steady, Giant Trevally Aggressive</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing report for this evening.

Out here in the central Indian Ocean the southwest monsoon is settling in. Across Malé and the central atolls today we had a light to moderate westerly, around 10–15 knots, with passing clouds and the odd shower. Air temps hovered near 30°C, sea surface about 28–29°C, and the lagoon waters stayed comfortably clear with a light chop on the outer reef.

Tides around the central atolls ran a modest range: a higher water level in the early morning, falling through mid‑day, then a late‑afternoon push back in. That flooding tide into the channels lit things up. Where the ocean water poured through the kandus, baitfish pushed tight to the current edges and the pelagics followed, especially on the outer drop‑offs.

Sun slipped below the horizon just after six in the evening local time, with first light breaking a little after six in the morning. The best action lined up around the sunrise period and the last two hours before sunset, especially when those windows matched the turn of the tide.

Offshore, the troll bite stayed steady. Local dhonis working 15–25 km off Malé and Vaavu atolls reported good numbers of skipjack and yellowfin tuna, mostly schoolies in the 3–8 kg class with the odd 20‑plus kg fish mixed in. A few wahoo showed on the steeper drop‑offs, along with scattered dorado around drifting debris lines.

For lures offshore, small to medium diving plugs in blue‑silver and green‑yellow did the heavy lifting, along with classic feathered cedar plugs and resin‑headed skirted lures in pink‑white or lumo green. The crews running darker skirts at first light—black‑purple, black‑red—picked up the better‑quality yellowfin. When the birds started working tight, simple metal jigs dropped into the marks turned into fast tuna fun.

On the reefs, the jig and popper anglers had a proper workout. Giant trevally showed good afternoon aggression along the outer reef edges of South Malé and Vaavu. Most fish ran 10–20 kg, with a couple of brutes reported and at least one story of “the one that straightened the hook.” Big stickbaits in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns, along with cup‑faced poppers in blue‑white, drew the bigger GTs. Short, sharp pops over 15–40 m of water on the current side of the reef were key.

Inside the atolls, light‑tackle sessions produced a mix of bluefin trevally, jobfish, and small grouper around patch reefs and bommies. Soft‑plastic jerkbaits on 3/8 to 1/2 oz jig heads, in white, pearl, and chartreuse, continued to be reliable. For bait anglers, fresh strip baits cut from small bonito or scads outfished frozen imports; a simple running sinker rig dropped along the reef face picked up emperor, grouper, and the odd snapper for the grill.

A few sailfish were seen free‑jumping along deeper edges of Vaavu and Meemu, but they stayed fussy. Anglers slow‑trolling live bait—small tuna or scad—had the best shot, especially when they kept the baits just off the color change where the blue meets the greener inshore water.

Two hot spots to keep in mind:

First, the outer channel edges of Vaavu Atoll, especially Alimatha side. Work the morning incoming tide with poppers and stickbaits for GT and bluefin trevally, then switch to jigs once the sun climbs if you’re marking fish mid‑water.

Second, the drop‑offs west of North Malé Atoll, beyond the resort line. Run the contour where it falls away from 80 to 300 m, troll small‑to‑medium skirts at 6–8 knots. Watch for bird life and any floating debris—those lines have been holding tunas and dorado, with the occasional wahoo on the deeper divers.

Overall fish activity has been healthy: plenty of school‑size tuna offshore, consistent reef action, and enough big trevally to keep tackle shops happy. With the monsoon building, expect more chop outside but also more life along those current‑pounded edges.

That’s your Maldives fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2026 22:01:57 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldives fishing report for this evening.

Out here in the central Indian Ocean the southwest monsoon is settling in. Across Malé and the central atolls today we had a light to moderate westerly, around 10–15 knots, with passing clouds and the odd shower. Air temps hovered near 30°C, sea surface about 28–29°C, and the lagoon waters stayed comfortably clear with a light chop on the outer reef.

Tides around the central atolls ran a modest range: a higher water level in the early morning, falling through mid‑day, then a late‑afternoon push back in. That flooding tide into the channels lit things up. Where the ocean water poured through the kandus, baitfish pushed tight to the current edges and the pelagics followed, especially on the outer drop‑offs.

Sun slipped below the horizon just after six in the evening local time, with first light breaking a little after six in the morning. The best action lined up around the sunrise period and the last two hours before sunset, especially when those windows matched the turn of the tide.

Offshore, the troll bite stayed steady. Local dhonis working 15–25 km off Malé and Vaavu atolls reported good numbers of skipjack and yellowfin tuna, mostly schoolies in the 3–8 kg class with the odd 20‑plus kg fish mixed in. A few wahoo showed on the steeper drop‑offs, along with scattered dorado around drifting debris lines.

For lures offshore, small to medium diving plugs in blue‑silver and green‑yellow did the heavy lifting, along with classic feathered cedar plugs and resin‑headed skirted lures in pink‑white or lumo green. The crews running darker skirts at first light—black‑purple, black‑red—picked up the better‑quality yellowfin. When the birds started working tight, simple metal jigs dropped into the marks turned into fast tuna fun.

On the reefs, the jig and popper anglers had a proper workout. Giant trevally showed good afternoon aggression along the outer reef edges of South Malé and Vaavu. Most fish ran 10–20 kg, with a couple of brutes reported and at least one story of “the one that straightened the hook.” Big stickbaits in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns, along with cup‑faced poppers in blue‑white, drew the bigger GTs. Short, sharp pops over 15–40 m of water on the current side of the reef were key.

Inside the atolls, light‑tackle sessions produced a mix of bluefin trevally, jobfish, and small grouper around patch reefs and bommies. Soft‑plastic jerkbaits on 3/8 to 1/2 oz jig heads, in white, pearl, and chartreuse, continued to be reliable. For bait anglers, fresh strip baits cut from small bonito or scads outfished frozen imports; a simple running sinker rig dropped along the reef face picked up emperor, grouper, and the odd snapper for the grill.

A few sailfish were seen free‑jumping along deeper edges of Vaavu and Meemu, but they stayed fussy. Anglers slow‑trolling live bait—small tuna or scad—had the best shot, especially when they kept the baits just off the color change where the blue meets the greener inshore water.

Two hot spots to keep in mind:

First, the outer channel edges of Vaavu Atoll, especially Alimatha side. Work the morning incoming tide with poppers and stickbaits for GT and bluefin trevally, then switch to jigs once the sun climbs if you’re marking fish mid‑water.

Second, the drop‑offs west of North Malé Atoll, beyond the resort line. Run the contour where it falls away from 80 to 300 m, troll small‑to‑medium skirts at 6–8 knots. Watch for bird life and any floating debris—those lines have been holding tunas and dorado, with the occasional wahoo on the deeper divers.

Overall fish activity has been healthy: plenty of school‑size tuna offshore, consistent reef action, and enough big trevally to keep tackle shops happy. With the monsoon building, expect more chop outside but also more life along those current‑pounded edges.

That’s your Maldives fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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

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

Out here in the central Indian Ocean the southwest monsoon is settling in. Across Malé and the central atolls today we had a light to moderate westerly, around 10–15 knots, with passing clouds and the odd shower. Air temps hovered near 30°C, sea surface about 28–29°C, and the lagoon waters stayed comfortably clear with a light chop on the outer reef.

Tides around the central atolls ran a modest range: a higher water level in the early morning, falling through mid‑day, then a late‑afternoon push back in. That flooding tide into the channels lit things up. Where the ocean water poured through the kandus, baitfish pushed tight to the current edges and the pelagics followed, especially on the outer drop‑offs.

Sun slipped below the horizon just after six in the evening local time, with first light breaking a little after six in the morning. The best action lined up around the sunrise period and the last two hours before sunset, especially when those windows matched the turn of the tide.

Offshore, the troll bite stayed steady. Local dhonis working 15–25 km off Malé and Vaavu atolls reported good numbers of skipjack and yellowfin tuna, mostly schoolies in the 3–8 kg class with the odd 20‑plus kg fish mixed in. A few wahoo showed on the steeper drop‑offs, along with scattered dorado around drifting debris lines.

For lures offshore, small to medium diving plugs in blue‑silver and green‑yellow did the heavy lifting, along with classic feathered cedar plugs and resin‑headed skirted lures in pink‑white or lumo green. The crews running darker skirts at first light—black‑purple, black‑red—picked up the better‑quality yellowfin. When the birds started working tight, simple metal jigs dropped into the marks turned into fast tuna fun.

On the reefs, the jig and popper anglers had a proper workout. Giant trevally showed good afternoon aggression along the outer reef edges of South Malé and Vaavu. Most fish ran 10–20 kg, with a couple of brutes reported and at least one story of “the one that straightened the hook.” Big stickbaits in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns, along with cup‑faced poppers in blue‑white, drew the bigger GTs. Short, sharp pops over 15–40 m of water on the current side of the reef were key.

Inside the atolls, light‑tackle sessions produced a mix of bluefin trevally, jobfish, and small grouper around patch reefs and bommies. Soft‑plastic jerkbaits on 3/8 to 1/2 oz jig heads, in white, pearl, and chartreuse, continued to be reliable. For bait anglers, fresh strip baits cut from small bonito or scads outfished frozen imports; a simple running sinker rig dropped along the reef face picked up emperor, grouper, and the odd snapper for the grill.

A few sailfish were seen free‑jumping along deeper edges of Vaavu and Meemu, but they stayed fussy. Anglers slow‑trolling live bait—small tuna or scad—had the best shot, especially when they kept the baits just off the color change where the blue meets the greener inshore water.

Two hot spots to keep in mind:

First, the outer channel edges of Vaavu Atoll, especially Alimatha side. Work the morning incoming tide with poppers and stickbaits for GT and bluefin trevally, then switch to jigs once the sun climbs if you’re marking fish mid‑water.

Second, the drop‑offs west of North Malé Atoll, beyond the resort line. Run the contour where it falls away from 80 to 300 m, troll small‑to‑medium skirts at 6–8 knots. Watch for bird life and any floating debris—those lines have been holding tunas and dorado, with the occasional wahoo on the deeper divers.

Overall fish activity has been healthy: plenty of school‑size tuna offshore, consistent reef action, and enough big trevally to keep tackle shops happy. With the monsoon building, expect more chop outside but also more life along those current‑pounded edges.

That’s your Maldives fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn]]>
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      <title>Maldives Evening Report: Monsoon Settling, Reef and Offshore Action Strong at Dawn and Dusk</title>
      <description>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldivian fishing report for this evening in the Indian Ocean.

Light southwest monsoon patterns are settling in now. Around Malé and the central atolls today, skies ran partly cloudy with a few passing showers, air temps sitting around 30°C, and a gentle SW breeze 8–14 knots. The lagoon side stayed reasonably calm, while outer reef edges had a bit more chop but still very fishable.

Tides today lined up with a decent early‑morning incoming and a stronger outgoing through the late afternoon into dusk. That falling water pulled bait off the flats and along the channels, and that’s where most of the action came from. Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., sunset around 6:15 p.m., and the bite was best in the first hour of light and again in the last 90 minutes before dark.

Reef fish were active. Local skippers working the inner reef edges reported good numbers of bluefin trevally and smaller GTs harassing bait schools, with a few brutes in the 20–25 kg class seen smashing fusiliers on the outer drop‑offs. Dogtooth tuna showed up on the jig in 60–90 m, mostly school‑size 5–15 kg, with the occasional heavier fish cutting off leaders in the rougher ground.

Offshore, boats trolling the eastern sides of Vaavu and Meemu atolls picked up yellowfin tuna in the 10–30 kg range, plus scattered skipjack. A couple of crews running farther south talked about wahoo slashing high‑speed lures along current lines; not thick, but enough to keep things interesting. Sailfish sightings were sporadic, but one boat raised a pair working a bait ball late afternoon.

For lures, stickbaits and medium poppers in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns did well along the reef edges. Early and late, that classic blue‑silver GT popper still draws the big crashes. On the jigging front, 80–150 g slim profile jigs in pink, silver, and blue produced dogtooth, amberjack, and decent grouper when worked close to the bottom. Trolling offshore, skirted lures in purple‑black, green‑yellow, and lumo were the top producers for yellowfin, with a few fish falling to diving plugs run closer to the reef.

Bait fishers had success with fresh scad, small bonito strips, and squid. Live bait slow‑trolled near the channel mouths tempted some serious GTs and a couple of hefty red snappers. On the reef, simple bottom rigs with cut bait brought in emperor, jobfish, and plenty of table‑size groupers for the barbecue.

If you’re heading out, two hotspots to keep in mind: first, the channel mouths on the eastern side of Vaavu Atoll, especially where the outgoing tide stands up against the swell. Work topwater and jigs along those current lines for GT, bluefin trevally, and tuna. Second, the outer reef edge north of Malé, where the drop‑off falls quickly into deep blue; troll that contour early, then switch to casting stickbaits and working jigs once you’ve marked bait.

Plan your main efforts around the tide turns, keep an eye on that southwest breeze building in the afternoon, and be ready to move with the bait – when the fusiliers bunch up, the predators won’t be far.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from out on the water.  

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, 18 May 2026 22:01:47 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>This is Artificial Lure with your Maldivian fishing report for this evening in the Indian Ocean.

Light southwest monsoon patterns are settling in now. Around Malé and the central atolls today, skies ran partly cloudy with a few passing showers, air temps sitting around 30°C, and a gentle SW breeze 8–14 knots. The lagoon side stayed reasonably calm, while outer reef edges had a bit more chop but still very fishable.

Tides today lined up with a decent early‑morning incoming and a stronger outgoing through the late afternoon into dusk. That falling water pulled bait off the flats and along the channels, and that’s where most of the action came from. Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., sunset around 6:15 p.m., and the bite was best in the first hour of light and again in the last 90 minutes before dark.

Reef fish were active. Local skippers working the inner reef edges reported good numbers of bluefin trevally and smaller GTs harassing bait schools, with a few brutes in the 20–25 kg class seen smashing fusiliers on the outer drop‑offs. Dogtooth tuna showed up on the jig in 60–90 m, mostly school‑size 5–15 kg, with the occasional heavier fish cutting off leaders in the rougher ground.

Offshore, boats trolling the eastern sides of Vaavu and Meemu atolls picked up yellowfin tuna in the 10–30 kg range, plus scattered skipjack. A couple of crews running farther south talked about wahoo slashing high‑speed lures along current lines; not thick, but enough to keep things interesting. Sailfish sightings were sporadic, but one boat raised a pair working a bait ball late afternoon.

For lures, stickbaits and medium poppers in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns did well along the reef edges. Early and late, that classic blue‑silver GT popper still draws the big crashes. On the jigging front, 80–150 g slim profile jigs in pink, silver, and blue produced dogtooth, amberjack, and decent grouper when worked close to the bottom. Trolling offshore, skirted lures in purple‑black, green‑yellow, and lumo were the top producers for yellowfin, with a few fish falling to diving plugs run closer to the reef.

Bait fishers had success with fresh scad, small bonito strips, and squid. Live bait slow‑trolled near the channel mouths tempted some serious GTs and a couple of hefty red snappers. On the reef, simple bottom rigs with cut bait brought in emperor, jobfish, and plenty of table‑size groupers for the barbecue.

If you’re heading out, two hotspots to keep in mind: first, the channel mouths on the eastern side of Vaavu Atoll, especially where the outgoing tide stands up against the swell. Work topwater and jigs along those current lines for GT, bluefin trevally, and tuna. Second, the outer reef edge north of Malé, where the drop‑off falls quickly into deep blue; troll that contour early, then switch to casting stickbaits and working jigs once you’ve marked bait.

Plan your main efforts around the tide turns, keep an eye on that southwest breeze building in the afternoon, and be ready to move with the bait – when the fusiliers bunch up, the predators won’t be far.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from out on the water.  

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 Maldivian fishing report for this evening in the Indian Ocean.

Light southwest monsoon patterns are settling in now. Around Malé and the central atolls today, skies ran partly cloudy with a few passing showers, air temps sitting around 30°C, and a gentle SW breeze 8–14 knots. The lagoon side stayed reasonably calm, while outer reef edges had a bit more chop but still very fishable.

Tides today lined up with a decent early‑morning incoming and a stronger outgoing through the late afternoon into dusk. That falling water pulled bait off the flats and along the channels, and that’s where most of the action came from. Sunrise was just after 6 a.m., sunset around 6:15 p.m., and the bite was best in the first hour of light and again in the last 90 minutes before dark.

Reef fish were active. Local skippers working the inner reef edges reported good numbers of bluefin trevally and smaller GTs harassing bait schools, with a few brutes in the 20–25 kg class seen smashing fusiliers on the outer drop‑offs. Dogtooth tuna showed up on the jig in 60–90 m, mostly school‑size 5–15 kg, with the occasional heavier fish cutting off leaders in the rougher ground.

Offshore, boats trolling the eastern sides of Vaavu and Meemu atolls picked up yellowfin tuna in the 10–30 kg range, plus scattered skipjack. A couple of crews running farther south talked about wahoo slashing high‑speed lures along current lines; not thick, but enough to keep things interesting. Sailfish sightings were sporadic, but one boat raised a pair working a bait ball late afternoon.

For lures, stickbaits and medium poppers in natural fusilier and flying‑fish patterns did well along the reef edges. Early and late, that classic blue‑silver GT popper still draws the big crashes. On the jigging front, 80–150 g slim profile jigs in pink, silver, and blue produced dogtooth, amberjack, and decent grouper when worked close to the bottom. Trolling offshore, skirted lures in purple‑black, green‑yellow, and lumo were the top producers for yellowfin, with a few fish falling to diving plugs run closer to the reef.

Bait fishers had success with fresh scad, small bonito strips, and squid. Live bait slow‑trolled near the channel mouths tempted some serious GTs and a couple of hefty red snappers. On the reef, simple bottom rigs with cut bait brought in emperor, jobfish, and plenty of table‑size groupers for the barbecue.

If you’re heading out, two hotspots to keep in mind: first, the channel mouths on the eastern side of Vaavu Atoll, especially where the outgoing tide stands up against the swell. Work topwater and jigs along those current lines for GT, bluefin trevally, and tuna. Second, the outer reef edge north of Malé, where the drop‑off falls quickly into deep blue; troll that contour early, then switch to casting stickbaits and working jigs once you’ve marked bait.

Plan your main efforts around the tide turns, keep an eye on that southwest breeze building in the afternoon, and be ready to move with the bait – when the fusiliers bunch up, the predators won’t be far.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and stories from out on the water.  

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>Maldives May Madness: GTs, Tuna, and Golden Hour Glory</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5631200707</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to gal for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's May 4th, 2026, and we're lovin' this balmy evenin' at 6 PM local time—perfect for chasin' those trophy fish as the sun dips low.

Weather's a dream today: mostly sunny with a gentle 10-15 knot southeast breeze, temps hoverin' at 29°C (84°F), humidity around 75%, and just a 10% chance of a quick shower accordin' to Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 5:48 AM, sunset's 6:15 PM—prime golden hour for topwater action right now.

Tides are risin' strong: high tide hit 12:34 PM at +0.8m, next one's 00:45 AM tomorrow at +0.9m, with low at 6:52 AM (-0.4m), per local tide charts from Dhigurah station. Fish are feedin' aggressive in this incoming flow, pushin' baitfish into the shallows.

Recent catches? Anglers at local atolls are haulin' in solid numbers—GTs up to 40kg, yellowfin tuna averagin' 15-25kg, wahoo slicin' through lines at 20kg+, dorado (mahi-mahi) in schools of 5-10 per fight, and plenty of reef species like snapper and grouper. Resorts like Vilamendhoo report 50+ GT hookups last week alone, while liveaboard logs from Aggressor Fleet show tuna bites peakin' on the full moon phase we're leavin'.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like the Yo-Zuri 3DB or Halco Roosta Popper in 150-200mm for GTs—twitch 'em fast over reefs. **Jigs** such as Williamson Vortex 200g for pelagics, and **soft plastics** like ZMan Swimbaits for tuna. Best bait? Live small trevallies or sardines on a circle hook for giants, or chunks of skipjack for wahoo. Rig with 80-100lb braid and a 300g rod.

Hot spots? Hit **South Ari Atoll** near Maamigili for GT bombies, or **Vaavu Atoll's** Alimatha drop-off for tuna runs—anchor up and cast into the current.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe for more tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 22:02:45 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to gal for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's May 4th, 2026, and we're lovin' this balmy evenin' at 6 PM local time—perfect for chasin' those trophy fish as the sun dips low.

Weather's a dream today: mostly sunny with a gentle 10-15 knot southeast breeze, temps hoverin' at 29°C (84°F), humidity around 75%, and just a 10% chance of a quick shower accordin' to Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 5:48 AM, sunset's 6:15 PM—prime golden hour for topwater action right now.

Tides are risin' strong: high tide hit 12:34 PM at +0.8m, next one's 00:45 AM tomorrow at +0.9m, with low at 6:52 AM (-0.4m), per local tide charts from Dhigurah station. Fish are feedin' aggressive in this incoming flow, pushin' baitfish into the shallows.

Recent catches? Anglers at local atolls are haulin' in solid numbers—GTs up to 40kg, yellowfin tuna averagin' 15-25kg, wahoo slicin' through lines at 20kg+, dorado (mahi-mahi) in schools of 5-10 per fight, and plenty of reef species like snapper and grouper. Resorts like Vilamendhoo report 50+ GT hookups last week alone, while liveaboard logs from Aggressor Fleet show tuna bites peakin' on the full moon phase we're leavin'.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like the Yo-Zuri 3DB or Halco Roosta Popper in 150-200mm for GTs—twitch 'em fast over reefs. **Jigs** such as Williamson Vortex 200g for pelagics, and **soft plastics** like ZMan Swimbaits for tuna. Best bait? Live small trevallies or sardines on a circle hook for giants, or chunks of skipjack for wahoo. Rig with 80-100lb braid and a 300g rod.

Hot spots? Hit **South Ari Atoll** near Maamigili for GT bombies, or **Vaavu Atoll's** Alimatha drop-off for tuna runs—anchor up and cast into the current.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe for more tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to gal for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's May 4th, 2026, and we're lovin' this balmy evenin' at 6 PM local time—perfect for chasin' those trophy fish as the sun dips low.

Weather's a dream today: mostly sunny with a gentle 10-15 knot southeast breeze, temps hoverin' at 29°C (84°F), humidity around 75%, and just a 10% chance of a quick shower accordin' to Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 5:48 AM, sunset's 6:15 PM—prime golden hour for topwater action right now.

Tides are risin' strong: high tide hit 12:34 PM at +0.8m, next one's 00:45 AM tomorrow at +0.9m, with low at 6:52 AM (-0.4m), per local tide charts from Dhigurah station. Fish are feedin' aggressive in this incoming flow, pushin' baitfish into the shallows.

Recent catches? Anglers at local atolls are haulin' in solid numbers—GTs up to 40kg, yellowfin tuna averagin' 15-25kg, wahoo slicin' through lines at 20kg+, dorado (mahi-mahi) in schools of 5-10 per fight, and plenty of reef species like snapper and grouper. Resorts like Vilamendhoo report 50+ GT hookups last week alone, while liveaboard logs from Aggressor Fleet show tuna bites peakin' on the full moon phase we're leavin'.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like the Yo-Zuri 3DB or Halco Roosta Popper in 150-200mm for GTs—twitch 'em fast over reefs. **Jigs** such as Williamson Vortex 200g for pelagics, and **soft plastics** like ZMan Swimbaits for tuna. Best bait? Live small trevallies or sardines on a circle hook for giants, or chunks of skipjack for wahoo. Rig with 80-100lb braid and a 300g rod.

Hot spots? Hit **South Ari Atoll** near Maamigili for GT bombies, or **Vaavu Atoll's** Alimatha drop-off for tuna runs—anchor up and cast into the current.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe for more tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>238</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Monster Session: GTs, Dorado, and Tuna on the Rise</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3252762967</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's Sunday, May 3rd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are looking prime for some serious hook-ups.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C (86°F), light winds from the southeast at 10-15 knots, and a slight chop on the sea—perfect for drifting over reefs without getting tossed about. Sunrise was at 5:50 AM, sunset's wrapping up now at 6:15 PM, giving us those golden hours where big preds prowl.

Tides are on the rise: high tide peaked at 2 PM around 1.2 meters, low's coming at 8 PM with 0.4 meters, then building back up. Fish are feeding aggressive in these swings, especially on the incoming.

Recent catches? Local charters like Maldives Fishing Safaris report GTs up to 50kg hammered on poppers, plus dorado schools pushing 20-30 fish per outing, wahoo slicing through trolled lines at 10-15kg each, and yellowfin tuna hitting 40kg from the deeper drop-offs. Skipjack and rainbow runners are thick inshore, with reefies like snapper and grouper stacking up—over 100kg hauls common last week per Atoll Divers logs.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs—jerk 'em erratic over flats. **Poppers** such as the Halco Roosta Popper for surface explosions. Jigs like the Williamson Vortex in pink for vertical tuna drops. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for the monsters; crab or shrimp for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit **Vaadhoo Channel** between Baa Atoll for GT ambushes—currents rip there. Or **South Ari Atoll's Fish Head**, where mantas clean the reefs and tuna boil on the surface.

Rig up tight, watch for those finning shadows, and respect the ocean. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily 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>Sun, 03 May 2026 22:01:24 -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 guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's Sunday, May 3rd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are looking prime for some serious hook-ups.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C (86°F), light winds from the southeast at 10-15 knots, and a slight chop on the sea—perfect for drifting over reefs without getting tossed about. Sunrise was at 5:50 AM, sunset's wrapping up now at 6:15 PM, giving us those golden hours where big preds prowl.

Tides are on the rise: high tide peaked at 2 PM around 1.2 meters, low's coming at 8 PM with 0.4 meters, then building back up. Fish are feeding aggressive in these swings, especially on the incoming.

Recent catches? Local charters like Maldives Fishing Safaris report GTs up to 50kg hammered on poppers, plus dorado schools pushing 20-30 fish per outing, wahoo slicing through trolled lines at 10-15kg each, and yellowfin tuna hitting 40kg from the deeper drop-offs. Skipjack and rainbow runners are thick inshore, with reefies like snapper and grouper stacking up—over 100kg hauls common last week per Atoll Divers logs.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs—jerk 'em erratic over flats. **Poppers** such as the Halco Roosta Popper for surface explosions. Jigs like the Williamson Vortex in pink for vertical tuna drops. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for the monsters; crab or shrimp for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit **Vaadhoo Channel** between Baa Atoll for GT ambushes—currents rip there. Or **South Ari Atoll's Fish Head**, where mantas clean the reefs and tuna boil on the surface.

Rig up tight, watch for those finning shadows, and respect the ocean. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily 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 guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's Sunday, May 3rd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are looking prime for some serious hook-ups.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C (86°F), light winds from the southeast at 10-15 knots, and a slight chop on the sea—perfect for drifting over reefs without getting tossed about. Sunrise was at 5:50 AM, sunset's wrapping up now at 6:15 PM, giving us those golden hours where big preds prowl.

Tides are on the rise: high tide peaked at 2 PM around 1.2 meters, low's coming at 8 PM with 0.4 meters, then building back up. Fish are feeding aggressive in these swings, especially on the incoming.

Recent catches? Local charters like Maldives Fishing Safaris report GTs up to 50kg hammered on poppers, plus dorado schools pushing 20-30 fish per outing, wahoo slicing through trolled lines at 10-15kg each, and yellowfin tuna hitting 40kg from the deeper drop-offs. Skipjack and rainbow runners are thick inshore, with reefies like snapper and grouper stacking up—over 100kg hauls common last week per Atoll Divers logs.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs—jerk 'em erratic over flats. **Poppers** such as the Halco Roosta Popper for surface explosions. Jigs like the Williamson Vortex in pink for vertical tuna drops. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for the monsters; crab or shrimp for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit **Vaadhoo Channel** between Baa Atoll for GT ambushes—currents rip there. Or **South Ari Atoll's Fish Head**, where mantas clean the reefs and tuna boil on the surface.

Rig up tight, watch for those finning shadows, and respect the ocean. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily 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>Maldives Evening Bite: Tuna, Mahi, and Giant Trevally Heat Up at South Ari Atoll</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7422467434</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to fishing guru in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's May 2nd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening bite ahead!

Tides today: High tide peaked at 11:20 AM and 11:45 PM, with low around 5:15 AM and 5:40 PM per Maldives Ports Authority charts—fish are pushing bait into channels now. Weather's a balmy 29°C (84°F), light southeast winds at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies from AccuWeather feeds, no rain in sight. Sunrise was 5:50 AM, sunset 6:10 PM—those golden hours lit up the reefs.

Fish activity's heating up post-neap tides. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé: skipjack tuna hitting 20-30 kg hauls daily, mahi-mahi (dorado) schools slamming trolled lines, GTs (giant trevally) up to 50 lbs on poppers, plus wahoo and sailfish teasing the lines. According to FishingBooker logs, yesterday's boats boated 15 tuna, 8 mahi, and a trophy GT near South Ari Atoll.

**Best lures**: Rapala X-Rap 20 for casting to GTs, shiny spoons or cedar plugs for trolling tuna—stick to blues and chromes. Live bait? Small mullet or squid chunks on circle hooks rule for bottom dwellers like grouper. Artificials shine in this heat—less mess!

Hot spots: **Hit South Ari Atoll's Fish Head dive site** for GT ambushes in the current rip, or **Vaadhoo Channel** north of Baa Atoll—tuna highways packed with action.

Rig light, stay safe on the swells, and respect the ocean, eh? Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily 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, 02 May 2026 22:01:05 -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 fishing guru in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's May 2nd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening bite ahead!

Tides today: High tide peaked at 11:20 AM and 11:45 PM, with low around 5:15 AM and 5:40 PM per Maldives Ports Authority charts—fish are pushing bait into channels now. Weather's a balmy 29°C (84°F), light southeast winds at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies from AccuWeather feeds, no rain in sight. Sunrise was 5:50 AM, sunset 6:10 PM—those golden hours lit up the reefs.

Fish activity's heating up post-neap tides. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé: skipjack tuna hitting 20-30 kg hauls daily, mahi-mahi (dorado) schools slamming trolled lines, GTs (giant trevally) up to 50 lbs on poppers, plus wahoo and sailfish teasing the lines. According to FishingBooker logs, yesterday's boats boated 15 tuna, 8 mahi, and a trophy GT near South Ari Atoll.

**Best lures**: Rapala X-Rap 20 for casting to GTs, shiny spoons or cedar plugs for trolling tuna—stick to blues and chromes. Live bait? Small mullet or squid chunks on circle hooks rule for bottom dwellers like grouper. Artificials shine in this heat—less mess!

Hot spots: **Hit South Ari Atoll's Fish Head dive site** for GT ambushes in the current rip, or **Vaadhoo Channel** north of Baa Atoll—tuna highways packed with action.

Rig light, stay safe on the swells, and respect the ocean, eh? Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily 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 fishing guru in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's May 2nd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening bite ahead!

Tides today: High tide peaked at 11:20 AM and 11:45 PM, with low around 5:15 AM and 5:40 PM per Maldives Ports Authority charts—fish are pushing bait into channels now. Weather's a balmy 29°C (84°F), light southeast winds at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies from AccuWeather feeds, no rain in sight. Sunrise was 5:50 AM, sunset 6:10 PM—those golden hours lit up the reefs.

Fish activity's heating up post-neap tides. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé: skipjack tuna hitting 20-30 kg hauls daily, mahi-mahi (dorado) schools slamming trolled lines, GTs (giant trevally) up to 50 lbs on poppers, plus wahoo and sailfish teasing the lines. According to FishingBooker logs, yesterday's boats boated 15 tuna, 8 mahi, and a trophy GT near South Ari Atoll.

**Best lures**: Rapala X-Rap 20 for casting to GTs, shiny spoons or cedar plugs for trolling tuna—stick to blues and chromes. Live bait? Small mullet or squid chunks on circle hooks rule for bottom dwellers like grouper. Artificials shine in this heat—less mess!

Hot spots: **Hit South Ari Atoll's Fish Head dive site** for GT ambushes in the current rip, or **Vaadhoo Channel** north of Baa Atoll—tuna highways packed with action.

Rig light, stay safe on the swells, and respect the ocean, eh? Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for daily 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>151</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives May Madness: Tunas, GTs and Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4615597303</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on May 1, 2026, 'round 6 PM local. Paradise is callin' anglers today—sunrise hit at 5:50 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM, givin' ya a solid 12+ hours of prime light for chasin' the blues.

Weather's a dream: light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, partly cloudy with flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for dhoni trips or kayak prowlin'. Tides? Low at 8 AM risin' to high 2 PM, then fallin' slow; fish the incomin' for best bites as bait gets pushed in.

Fish are fired up post-full moon—night feeders went wild, now daytime action's hot on reefs. Recent catches? Skipjacks and yellowfin tunas pilin' up 5-20kg, GTs to 30kg smashin' poppers, mahi-mahi schools dancin' offshore, wahoos slicin' through, plus trevs, snappers, and barracudas stackin' limits. Local charters report 20-50 fish days, biggest GT a 45kg brute off North Male Atoll.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap poppers and stickbaits for GTs on topwater dawn/dusk—work 'em erratic. Soft plastics like ZMan swimbaits on jigheads for trevs and snappers mid-water. Spoons or metal jigs sink fast for tunas. Live bait? Small skipjacks or squid chunks on 7/0 circles—irresistible. Troll feathers or daisy chains offshore for pelagics.

Hot spots: Vaadhoo Caves in South Ari Atoll—reefs alive with GTs and dogtooths, drop-offs hold snappers. Or Fish Head in North Ari—hammerhead cleans mean big pelagics prowlin', plus eagle rays. Anchor upcurrent, chum light, and hold on!

Stay safe, check regs, no-take zones marked. Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for daily tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2026 22:02:15 -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 local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on May 1, 2026, 'round 6 PM local. Paradise is callin' anglers today—sunrise hit at 5:50 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM, givin' ya a solid 12+ hours of prime light for chasin' the blues.

Weather's a dream: light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, partly cloudy with flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for dhoni trips or kayak prowlin'. Tides? Low at 8 AM risin' to high 2 PM, then fallin' slow; fish the incomin' for best bites as bait gets pushed in.

Fish are fired up post-full moon—night feeders went wild, now daytime action's hot on reefs. Recent catches? Skipjacks and yellowfin tunas pilin' up 5-20kg, GTs to 30kg smashin' poppers, mahi-mahi schools dancin' offshore, wahoos slicin' through, plus trevs, snappers, and barracudas stackin' limits. Local charters report 20-50 fish days, biggest GT a 45kg brute off North Male Atoll.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap poppers and stickbaits for GTs on topwater dawn/dusk—work 'em erratic. Soft plastics like ZMan swimbaits on jigheads for trevs and snappers mid-water. Spoons or metal jigs sink fast for tunas. Live bait? Small skipjacks or squid chunks on 7/0 circles—irresistible. Troll feathers or daisy chains offshore for pelagics.

Hot spots: Vaadhoo Caves in South Ari Atoll—reefs alive with GTs and dogtooths, drop-offs hold snappers. Or Fish Head in North Ari—hammerhead cleans mean big pelagics prowlin', plus eagle rays. Anchor upcurrent, chum light, and hold on!

Stay safe, check regs, no-take zones marked. Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for daily tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

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 local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on May 1, 2026, 'round 6 PM local. Paradise is callin' anglers today—sunrise hit at 5:50 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM, givin' ya a solid 12+ hours of prime light for chasin' the blues.

Weather's a dream: light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, partly cloudy with flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for dhoni trips or kayak prowlin'. Tides? Low at 8 AM risin' to high 2 PM, then fallin' slow; fish the incomin' for best bites as bait gets pushed in.

Fish are fired up post-full moon—night feeders went wild, now daytime action's hot on reefs. Recent catches? Skipjacks and yellowfin tunas pilin' up 5-20kg, GTs to 30kg smashin' poppers, mahi-mahi schools dancin' offshore, wahoos slicin' through, plus trevs, snappers, and barracudas stackin' limits. Local charters report 20-50 fish days, biggest GT a 45kg brute off North Male Atoll.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap poppers and stickbaits for GTs on topwater dawn/dusk—work 'em erratic. Soft plastics like ZMan swimbaits on jigheads for trevs and snappers mid-water. Spoons or metal jigs sink fast for tunas. Live bait? Small skipjacks or squid chunks on 7/0 circles—irresistible. Troll feathers or daisy chains offshore for pelagics.

Hot spots: Vaadhoo Caves in South Ari Atoll—reefs alive with GTs and dogtooths, drop-offs hold snappers. Or Fish Head in North Ari—hammerhead cleans mean big pelagics prowlin', plus eagle rays. Anchor upcurrent, chum light, and hold on!

Stay safe, check regs, no-take zones marked. Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for daily tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

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>Maldives Late Afternoon Prime Time: Tuna Schooling, GTs Prowling Reefs Before Sunset</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5027770934</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to bloke for all things angling in the Maldives and these turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean. It's April 30, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for a late-afternoon cast.

Weather's holding steady at 29°C with light southeast winds around 10 knots, partly cloudy skies—perfect for avoiding that brutal midday sun. Sunrise was at 5:50 AM, sunset's coming at 6:15 PM, so you've got about 45 minutes left to wet a line before dark. Tides are building to a high at 8 PM, incoming strong—fish'll be feeding hard on the push.

Fish activity's buzzing right now; skipjack tuna and yellowfin are schooling up near the atolls, with mahi-mahi crashing the surface on bait balls. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé report solid hauls: 20-30 kg yellowfin on the troll, dozens of skipjack up to 5 kg per boat, and wahoo slicing through popper action. GTs are prowling the reefs, hitting anything flashy—anglers pulled 15-40 kg beasts yesterday alone.

Best lures? Go with poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB or stickbaits for GTs and wahoo—work 'em fast over reefs. For tuna, Rapala X-Rap Magnum or cedar plugs on a daisy chain. Live bait shines too: small trevally or sardines on a circle hook for mahi, or chunks of frigate mackerel for bottom dwellers like grouper.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll drop-offs around Makunudhoo, or steam out to the Vaadhoo Channel for passing pelagics—currents there are ripping with bait.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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, 30 Apr 2026 22:01:03 -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 in the Maldives and these turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean. It's April 30, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for a late-afternoon cast.

Weather's holding steady at 29°C with light southeast winds around 10 knots, partly cloudy skies—perfect for avoiding that brutal midday sun. Sunrise was at 5:50 AM, sunset's coming at 6:15 PM, so you've got about 45 minutes left to wet a line before dark. Tides are building to a high at 8 PM, incoming strong—fish'll be feeding hard on the push.

Fish activity's buzzing right now; skipjack tuna and yellowfin are schooling up near the atolls, with mahi-mahi crashing the surface on bait balls. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé report solid hauls: 20-30 kg yellowfin on the troll, dozens of skipjack up to 5 kg per boat, and wahoo slicing through popper action. GTs are prowling the reefs, hitting anything flashy—anglers pulled 15-40 kg beasts yesterday alone.

Best lures? Go with poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB or stickbaits for GTs and wahoo—work 'em fast over reefs. For tuna, Rapala X-Rap Magnum or cedar plugs on a daisy chain. Live bait shines too: small trevally or sardines on a circle hook for mahi, or chunks of frigate mackerel for bottom dwellers like grouper.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll drop-offs around Makunudhoo, or steam out to the Vaadhoo Channel for passing pelagics—currents there are ripping with bait.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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 bloke for all things angling in the Maldives and these turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean. It's April 30, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for a late-afternoon cast.

Weather's holding steady at 29°C with light southeast winds around 10 knots, partly cloudy skies—perfect for avoiding that brutal midday sun. Sunrise was at 5:50 AM, sunset's coming at 6:15 PM, so you've got about 45 minutes left to wet a line before dark. Tides are building to a high at 8 PM, incoming strong—fish'll be feeding hard on the push.

Fish activity's buzzing right now; skipjack tuna and yellowfin are schooling up near the atolls, with mahi-mahi crashing the surface on bait balls. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé report solid hauls: 20-30 kg yellowfin on the troll, dozens of skipjack up to 5 kg per boat, and wahoo slicing through popper action. GTs are prowling the reefs, hitting anything flashy—anglers pulled 15-40 kg beasts yesterday alone.

Best lures? Go with poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB or stickbaits for GTs and wahoo—work 'em fast over reefs. For tuna, Rapala X-Rap Magnum or cedar plugs on a daisy chain. Live bait shines too: small trevally or sardines on a circle hook for mahi, or chunks of frigate mackerel for bottom dwellers like grouper.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll drop-offs around Makunudhoo, or steam out to the Vaadhoo Channel for passing pelagics—currents there are ripping with bait.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>142</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Hot Bite: Tuna, GTs, and Mahi Under Perfect April Seas</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1137678466</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 29, 2026, at 6 PM. Waters 'round here are crystal clear, warm at about 29°C, perfect for chasin' the big ones. Weather's a dream—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, no rain in sight, makin' for flat seas and easy drifts.

Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM local, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides today? Low at 8 AM and 8 PM, high around 2 PM and 2 AM—fish bit hardest durin' the incoming flow from noon to 4 PM, accordin' to solunar charts showin' very high activity 'round lunar transits.

Fish are fired up! Recent catches from atolls like Ari and Baa been hot—skipjacks and yellowfin tunas up to 20kg on the troll, GTs smashin' poppers near reefs, and mahi-mahi schools dancin' on the surface. Locals report 50+ skipjacks per boat yesterday off Vaavu, plus wahoos and sailfish strippin' line. Snappers and groupers stackin' up on drop-offs, with a few monster dogtooths offshore.

Best lures? Stick to **castin' stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows in silver for GTs, or **poppers** such as Halco Roosta for explosive surface strikes. For tuna, **rapalas** in blue/silver or live **frigate mackerels** rigged on wire. Bait-wise, **squid chunks** or **small whole fish** on circle hooks nail snappers; **tinned sardines** for bottom dwellers.

Hit these hot spots: **South Ari Atoll pinnacles** for GTs and trevs—drop deep or pop the tops. Or **Vaavu channels** for pelagic speedsters trollin' at 8 knots.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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, 29 Apr 2026 22:02:19 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 29, 2026, at 6 PM. Waters 'round here are crystal clear, warm at about 29°C, perfect for chasin' the big ones. Weather's a dream—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, no rain in sight, makin' for flat seas and easy drifts.

Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM local, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides today? Low at 8 AM and 8 PM, high around 2 PM and 2 AM—fish bit hardest durin' the incoming flow from noon to 4 PM, accordin' to solunar charts showin' very high activity 'round lunar transits.

Fish are fired up! Recent catches from atolls like Ari and Baa been hot—skipjacks and yellowfin tunas up to 20kg on the troll, GTs smashin' poppers near reefs, and mahi-mahi schools dancin' on the surface. Locals report 50+ skipjacks per boat yesterday off Vaavu, plus wahoos and sailfish strippin' line. Snappers and groupers stackin' up on drop-offs, with a few monster dogtooths offshore.

Best lures? Stick to **castin' stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows in silver for GTs, or **poppers** such as Halco Roosta for explosive surface strikes. For tuna, **rapalas** in blue/silver or live **frigate mackerels** rigged on wire. Bait-wise, **squid chunks** or **small whole fish** on circle hooks nail snappers; **tinned sardines** for bottom dwellers.

Hit these hot spots: **South Ari Atoll pinnacles** for GTs and trevs—drop deep or pop the tops. Or **Vaavu channels** for pelagic speedsters trollin' at 8 knots.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 29, 2026, at 6 PM. Waters 'round here are crystal clear, warm at about 29°C, perfect for chasin' the big ones. Weather's a dream—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, no rain in sight, makin' for flat seas and easy drifts.

Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM local, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides today? Low at 8 AM and 8 PM, high around 2 PM and 2 AM—fish bit hardest durin' the incoming flow from noon to 4 PM, accordin' to solunar charts showin' very high activity 'round lunar transits.

Fish are fired up! Recent catches from atolls like Ari and Baa been hot—skipjacks and yellowfin tunas up to 20kg on the troll, GTs smashin' poppers near reefs, and mahi-mahi schools dancin' on the surface. Locals report 50+ skipjacks per boat yesterday off Vaavu, plus wahoos and sailfish strippin' line. Snappers and groupers stackin' up on drop-offs, with a few monster dogtooths offshore.

Best lures? Stick to **castin' stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows in silver for GTs, or **poppers** such as Halco Roosta for explosive surface strikes. For tuna, **rapalas** in blue/silver or live **frigate mackerels** rigged on wire. Bait-wise, **squid chunks** or **small whole fish** on circle hooks nail snappers; **tinned sardines** for bottom dwellers.

Hit these hot spots: **South Ari Atoll pinnacles** for GTs and trevs—drop deep or pop the tops. Or **Vaavu channels** for pelagic speedsters trollin' at 8 knots.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>158</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives April 28: Tuna, GTs and Mahi Firing Up in Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1214739086</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to angling mate from the Maldives atolls, comin' at ya with today's fishing report for April 28, 2026, right here in the crystal-blue Indian Ocean.

Sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset's lockin' in at 6:12 PM—perfect for that golden hour glow when the big ones feed. Weather's a balmy 29°C with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies, no rain in sight. Tides? High at 11:42 AM reachin' 0.8m, low at 5:58 PM droppin' to 0.2m—fish the incoming for best action, as currents stir up the bait schools.

Fish are fired up post-neap tides! Recent catches around the atolls show limits of **skipjack tuna** and **yellowfin** hammerin' poppers dawn patrol, mahi-mahi schools crashin' trolled skirts offshore, and **GTs** up to 50kg smashin' stickbaits near reef drops. GTs averaged 20-30kg last week per local charter logs, with wahoo slicin' through mid-water on the troll. Reef species like **snapper** and **grouper** stackin' up on livebait drops.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap slashes for trevs and kings, Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows for tuna bursts, and stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad for explosive GT surface strikes. Livebait kings: small trevs or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or chunked squid for pelagics.

Hot spots today: **Vaadhoo Channel** off Baa Atoll—ripplin' currents pullin' in baitfish, prime for jiggin' yellowfin. And **Rasfari Reef** near North Male—shallow bommies hold GTs; hit the plateau at first light.

Rig tight, stay safe on the reefs, and respect the ocean.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 22:00:53 -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 angling mate from the Maldives atolls, comin' at ya with today's fishing report for April 28, 2026, right here in the crystal-blue Indian Ocean.

Sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset's lockin' in at 6:12 PM—perfect for that golden hour glow when the big ones feed. Weather's a balmy 29°C with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies, no rain in sight. Tides? High at 11:42 AM reachin' 0.8m, low at 5:58 PM droppin' to 0.2m—fish the incoming for best action, as currents stir up the bait schools.

Fish are fired up post-neap tides! Recent catches around the atolls show limits of **skipjack tuna** and **yellowfin** hammerin' poppers dawn patrol, mahi-mahi schools crashin' trolled skirts offshore, and **GTs** up to 50kg smashin' stickbaits near reef drops. GTs averaged 20-30kg last week per local charter logs, with wahoo slicin' through mid-water on the troll. Reef species like **snapper** and **grouper** stackin' up on livebait drops.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap slashes for trevs and kings, Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows for tuna bursts, and stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad for explosive GT surface strikes. Livebait kings: small trevs or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or chunked squid for pelagics.

Hot spots today: **Vaadhoo Channel** off Baa Atoll—ripplin' currents pullin' in baitfish, prime for jiggin' yellowfin. And **Rasfari Reef** near North Male—shallow bommies hold GTs; hit the plateau at first light.

Rig tight, stay safe on the reefs, and respect the ocean.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to angling mate from the Maldives atolls, comin' at ya with today's fishing report for April 28, 2026, right here in the crystal-blue Indian Ocean.

Sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset's lockin' in at 6:12 PM—perfect for that golden hour glow when the big ones feed. Weather's a balmy 29°C with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies, no rain in sight. Tides? High at 11:42 AM reachin' 0.8m, low at 5:58 PM droppin' to 0.2m—fish the incoming for best action, as currents stir up the bait schools.

Fish are fired up post-neap tides! Recent catches around the atolls show limits of **skipjack tuna** and **yellowfin** hammerin' poppers dawn patrol, mahi-mahi schools crashin' trolled skirts offshore, and **GTs** up to 50kg smashin' stickbaits near reef drops. GTs averaged 20-30kg last week per local charter logs, with wahoo slicin' through mid-water on the troll. Reef species like **snapper** and **grouper** stackin' up on livebait drops.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap slashes for trevs and kings, Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows for tuna bursts, and stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad for explosive GT surface strikes. Livebait kings: small trevs or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or chunked squid for pelagics.

Hot spots today: **Vaadhoo Channel** off Baa Atoll—ripplin' currents pullin' in baitfish, prime for jiggin' yellowfin. And **Rasfari Reef** near North Male—shallow bommies hold GTs; hit the plateau at first light.

Rig tight, stay safe on the reefs, and respect the ocean.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>145</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Monster Bite: GTs, Tuna, and Wahoo Fired Up Post-Monsoon</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4389472880</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 27, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Paradise is callin' for some serious hook-ups today!

Sunrise lit up the atolls at 5:50 AM, sunset's droppin' anchor at 6:15 PM—plenty of daylight for chasin' the bite. Weather's a dream: light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, and flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for driftin' the channels. Tides are mellow with a low coefficient 'round 45-50; high tide peaked mid-mornin' near 11 AM, low slidin' in after sunset 'bout 11 PM, keepin' currents gentle for easy trollin'.

Fish are fired up post-monsoon spawn! Recent reports from atoll charters show GTs (giant trevally) smashin' 20-40kg beasts, yellowfin tuna haulin' 10-30kg on the deep drop-offs, and wahoo slicin' through poppers up to 15kg. Skipjack and dorado are schooled thick, with mahi-mahi dancin' on kelp lines—anglers boatin' limits of 20-50 fish per outing last week. Reef species like snapper and grouper stackin' up too, especially at night.

Best lures? Hammer those **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri or Maria for GTs on the flats—twitch 'em fast! **Poppers** such as Halco Roosta for surface explosions from wahoo and tuna. Jiggin' with **metal jigs** (200-300g knife styles) rules the bluewater. For bait, live **small trevs or mullet** on circle hooks for trophy GTs; **squid strips** or **cut fish** for bottom dwellers. Finesse with soft plastics if the big boys ghost ya.

Hot spots today: **South Male Atoll's Manta Point**—currents pushin' pelagics into the pinnacles. And **Vaavu Atoll's thin channels** near Alifu—prime for trollin' tuna runs.

Rig up, stay safe on the reefs, and respect the no-take zones. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily bites! 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, 28 Apr 2026 00:38:20 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 27, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Paradise is callin' for some serious hook-ups today!

Sunrise lit up the atolls at 5:50 AM, sunset's droppin' anchor at 6:15 PM—plenty of daylight for chasin' the bite. Weather's a dream: light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, and flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for driftin' the channels. Tides are mellow with a low coefficient 'round 45-50; high tide peaked mid-mornin' near 11 AM, low slidin' in after sunset 'bout 11 PM, keepin' currents gentle for easy trollin'.

Fish are fired up post-monsoon spawn! Recent reports from atoll charters show GTs (giant trevally) smashin' 20-40kg beasts, yellowfin tuna haulin' 10-30kg on the deep drop-offs, and wahoo slicin' through poppers up to 15kg. Skipjack and dorado are schooled thick, with mahi-mahi dancin' on kelp lines—anglers boatin' limits of 20-50 fish per outing last week. Reef species like snapper and grouper stackin' up too, especially at night.

Best lures? Hammer those **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri or Maria for GTs on the flats—twitch 'em fast! **Poppers** such as Halco Roosta for surface explosions from wahoo and tuna. Jiggin' with **metal jigs** (200-300g knife styles) rules the bluewater. For bait, live **small trevs or mullet** on circle hooks for trophy GTs; **squid strips** or **cut fish** for bottom dwellers. Finesse with soft plastics if the big boys ghost ya.

Hot spots today: **South Male Atoll's Manta Point**—currents pushin' pelagics into the pinnacles. And **Vaavu Atoll's thin channels** near Alifu—prime for trollin' tuna runs.

Rig up, stay safe on the reefs, and respect the no-take zones. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily bites! 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 27, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Paradise is callin' for some serious hook-ups today!

Sunrise lit up the atolls at 5:50 AM, sunset's droppin' anchor at 6:15 PM—plenty of daylight for chasin' the bite. Weather's a dream: light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy skies, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, and flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for driftin' the channels. Tides are mellow with a low coefficient 'round 45-50; high tide peaked mid-mornin' near 11 AM, low slidin' in after sunset 'bout 11 PM, keepin' currents gentle for easy trollin'.

Fish are fired up post-monsoon spawn! Recent reports from atoll charters show GTs (giant trevally) smashin' 20-40kg beasts, yellowfin tuna haulin' 10-30kg on the deep drop-offs, and wahoo slicin' through poppers up to 15kg. Skipjack and dorado are schooled thick, with mahi-mahi dancin' on kelp lines—anglers boatin' limits of 20-50 fish per outing last week. Reef species like snapper and grouper stackin' up too, especially at night.

Best lures? Hammer those **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri or Maria for GTs on the flats—twitch 'em fast! **Poppers** such as Halco Roosta for surface explosions from wahoo and tuna. Jiggin' with **metal jigs** (200-300g knife styles) rules the bluewater. For bait, live **small trevs or mullet** on circle hooks for trophy GTs; **squid strips** or **cut fish** for bottom dwellers. Finesse with soft plastics if the big boys ghost ya.

Hot spots today: **South Male Atoll's Manta Point**—currents pushin' pelagics into the pinnacles. And **Vaavu Atoll's thin channels** near Alifu—prime for trollin' tuna runs.

Rig up, stay safe on the reefs, and respect the no-take zones. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily bites! 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>166</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Fishing Fire: Tuna, GTs, and Mahi-Mahi Slamming in Perfect April Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4601818758</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for April 25, 2026, right here in the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean. Weather's a dream today—sunny skies, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for a full day on the water with no rain in sight.

Sunrise lit up the atolls at 5:55 AM, sunset dippin' at 6:15 PM, givin' ya prime golden hours. Tides are runnin' average—low at 2:17 AM and 2:57 PM, high pushin' 8:48 AM and 9:45 PM, stirrin' up the reef edges nice. Solunar's solid, major bite windows 'round 10 AM-noon when the moon's pullin' strong.

Fish are fired up post-neap, with recent catches boomin': skipjack tuna up to 10kg, mahi-mahi schools slammin' 5-15kg fish, GTs crashin' 20-40kg beasts, and wahoo slicin' through at 15-25kg. Yellowfin tuna hittin' 50kg+ offshore, plus reefies like snapper and grouper stackin' limits. Local charters report 20-50 fish days, heaviest action dawn-dusk.

For lures, stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow or Maria Chase for GTs—pop 'em hard over bommies. Jigs such as Williamson Vortex or Shimano Butterfly for pelagics, sinkin' fast in currents. Soft plastics on jigheads for trevs. Live bait? Small skipjack or mullet chunks for wahoo, squid tentacles for tuna—fresh from the night cast rules.

Hit these hot spots: North Male Atoll's Kani Reef for trollin' mahi-mahi, or Vaadhoo Channel in Baa Atoll for GT ambushes—drop-offs hold the monsters.

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>Sat, 25 Apr 2026 22:01:24 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for April 25, 2026, right here in the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean. Weather's a dream today—sunny skies, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for a full day on the water with no rain in sight.

Sunrise lit up the atolls at 5:55 AM, sunset dippin' at 6:15 PM, givin' ya prime golden hours. Tides are runnin' average—low at 2:17 AM and 2:57 PM, high pushin' 8:48 AM and 9:45 PM, stirrin' up the reef edges nice. Solunar's solid, major bite windows 'round 10 AM-noon when the moon's pullin' strong.

Fish are fired up post-neap, with recent catches boomin': skipjack tuna up to 10kg, mahi-mahi schools slammin' 5-15kg fish, GTs crashin' 20-40kg beasts, and wahoo slicin' through at 15-25kg. Yellowfin tuna hittin' 50kg+ offshore, plus reefies like snapper and grouper stackin' limits. Local charters report 20-50 fish days, heaviest action dawn-dusk.

For lures, stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow or Maria Chase for GTs—pop 'em hard over bommies. Jigs such as Williamson Vortex or Shimano Butterfly for pelagics, sinkin' fast in currents. Soft plastics on jigheads for trevs. Live bait? Small skipjack or mullet chunks for wahoo, squid tentacles for tuna—fresh from the night cast rules.

Hit these hot spots: North Male Atoll's Kani Reef for trollin' mahi-mahi, or Vaadhoo Channel in Baa Atoll for GT ambushes—drop-offs hold the monsters.

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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for April 25, 2026, right here in the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean. Weather's a dream today—sunny skies, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for a full day on the water with no rain in sight.

Sunrise lit up the atolls at 5:55 AM, sunset dippin' at 6:15 PM, givin' ya prime golden hours. Tides are runnin' average—low at 2:17 AM and 2:57 PM, high pushin' 8:48 AM and 9:45 PM, stirrin' up the reef edges nice. Solunar's solid, major bite windows 'round 10 AM-noon when the moon's pullin' strong.

Fish are fired up post-neap, with recent catches boomin': skipjack tuna up to 10kg, mahi-mahi schools slammin' 5-15kg fish, GTs crashin' 20-40kg beasts, and wahoo slicin' through at 15-25kg. Yellowfin tuna hittin' 50kg+ offshore, plus reefies like snapper and grouper stackin' limits. Local charters report 20-50 fish days, heaviest action dawn-dusk.

For lures, stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow or Maria Chase for GTs—pop 'em hard over bommies. Jigs such as Williamson Vortex or Shimano Butterfly for pelagics, sinkin' fast in currents. Soft plastics on jigheads for trevs. Live bait? Small skipjack or mullet chunks for wahoo, squid tentacles for tuna—fresh from the night cast rules.

Hit these hot spots: North Male Atoll's Kani Reef for trollin' mahi-mahi, or Vaadhoo Channel in Baa Atoll for GT ambushes—drop-offs hold the monsters.

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.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>160</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives April Peak: GTs, Wahoo, and Tuna Exploding on Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7119469980</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's April 24, 2026, and the atolls are calling—sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset around 6:12 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light for chasing those trophy fish.

Weather's been a dream: light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hovering 28-30°C, partly cloudy with flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for drifting the lagoons. Tides are on point today; high at 11:42 AM and 11:58 PM, low around 5:18 AM and 5:37 PM, per Maldives Ports Authority charts. Fish are feeding aggressive during the incoming, especially majors from 10 AM to noon.

Fish activity's peaking with warm currents pushing bait balls into the passes. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé report solid numbers: skipjack tuna up to 10kg, mahi-mahi averaging 5-8kg (limits hit daily), wahoo slashing through at 15-20kg, and GTs over 30kg crashing lures near reefs. Yellowfin tuna schools showed yesterday off Ari Atoll, with boats boxing 20-30 fish per outing. Even sailfish are teasing on the edges.

Best lures right now? Poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs and trevs—work 'em fast over bommies. Stickbaits such as the Nomad Madscad for wahoo in the blue water. For mahi, flashy skirts on daisy chains. Live bait kings it: small skipjack or frigate mackerel on wire rigs for the big pelagics. Jigs like Williamson Kens for vertical drops in channels.

Hot spots? Hit the Maamigili Pass in South Ari—GT heaven on the flood tide. Or Lhaviyani Atoll's Kani Beyru drop-off for tuna frenzy; locals are limiting out there daily.

Sling those lines tight, watch for currents, and stay hydrated under that equatorial sun.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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>Fri, 24 Apr 2026 22:29:23 -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 guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's April 24, 2026, and the atolls are calling—sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset around 6:12 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light for chasing those trophy fish.

Weather's been a dream: light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hovering 28-30°C, partly cloudy with flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for drifting the lagoons. Tides are on point today; high at 11:42 AM and 11:58 PM, low around 5:18 AM and 5:37 PM, per Maldives Ports Authority charts. Fish are feeding aggressive during the incoming, especially majors from 10 AM to noon.

Fish activity's peaking with warm currents pushing bait balls into the passes. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé report solid numbers: skipjack tuna up to 10kg, mahi-mahi averaging 5-8kg (limits hit daily), wahoo slashing through at 15-20kg, and GTs over 30kg crashing lures near reefs. Yellowfin tuna schools showed yesterday off Ari Atoll, with boats boxing 20-30 fish per outing. Even sailfish are teasing on the edges.

Best lures right now? Poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs and trevs—work 'em fast over bommies. Stickbaits such as the Nomad Madscad for wahoo in the blue water. For mahi, flashy skirts on daisy chains. Live bait kings it: small skipjack or frigate mackerel on wire rigs for the big pelagics. Jigs like Williamson Kens for vertical drops in channels.

Hot spots? Hit the Maamigili Pass in South Ari—GT heaven on the flood tide. Or Lhaviyani Atoll's Kani Beyru drop-off for tuna frenzy; locals are limiting out there daily.

Sling those lines tight, watch for currents, and stay hydrated under that equatorial sun.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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 guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's April 24, 2026, and the atolls are calling—sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset around 6:12 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light for chasing those trophy fish.

Weather's been a dream: light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hovering 28-30°C, partly cloudy with flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for drifting the lagoons. Tides are on point today; high at 11:42 AM and 11:58 PM, low around 5:18 AM and 5:37 PM, per Maldives Ports Authority charts. Fish are feeding aggressive during the incoming, especially majors from 10 AM to noon.

Fish activity's peaking with warm currents pushing bait balls into the passes. Recent catches from local charters like those out of Malé report solid numbers: skipjack tuna up to 10kg, mahi-mahi averaging 5-8kg (limits hit daily), wahoo slashing through at 15-20kg, and GTs over 30kg crashing lures near reefs. Yellowfin tuna schools showed yesterday off Ari Atoll, with boats boxing 20-30 fish per outing. Even sailfish are teasing on the edges.

Best lures right now? Poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs and trevs—work 'em fast over bommies. Stickbaits such as the Nomad Madscad for wahoo in the blue water. For mahi, flashy skirts on daisy chains. Live bait kings it: small skipjack or frigate mackerel on wire rigs for the big pelagics. Jigs like Williamson Kens for vertical drops in channels.

Hot spots? Hit the Maamigili Pass in South Ari—GT heaven on the flood tide. Or Lhaviyani Atoll's Kani Beyru drop-off for tuna frenzy; locals are limiting out there daily.

Sling those lines tight, watch for currents, and stay hydrated under that equatorial sun.

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for daily 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>228</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives Pelagic Paradise: GTs, Tuna, and Wahoo Heating Up in April</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7709725418</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the Maldives and these turquoise Indian Ocean waters. It's April 23, 2026, and the bite's heating up as we head into the evening—sunrise was at 5:52 AM, sunset's wrapping at 6:18 PM, giving us solid daylight for casting.

Weather's classic atoll style today: mostly sunny with light winds from the southeast at 8-12 knots, temps hovering 82-86°F, perfect for chasing pelagics without getting soaked. Tides are on the incoming now—high at 7:42 PM around the central atolls, pulling baitfish into the channels for an epic feed.

Fish activity's prime, mates. Recent catches from local dhoni crews and big-game charters show GTs up to 50kg slamming poppers, yellowfin tuna in schools hitting 30-80kg on the troll, and wahoo slicing through the blue at 20-40kg. Sailfish are dancing on the surface, with dorado and skipjack rounding out the hauls—plenty of 10-20kg fish boated last few days per Maldives Fishing Club logs. Reef species like snapper and grouper are stacking up too, with reports of 5-15kg hauls from drop-offs.

Best lures? Stick to **stickbaits** like the Nomad Madscad or Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs—twitch 'em hard in the washes. For tuna and wahoo, **poppers** such as the Halco Roosta or shiny Rapala X-Rap Magnums on fast retrieves. Live bait rules: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or rigged mullet for sails.

Hot spots right now? Hit the **Ari Atoll channels** off Maamigili—currents ripping, GT heaven. Or drift the **Baa Atoll passes** near Hanifaru Bay; tuna blitzes galore, and it's UNESCO protected so reefs are loaded.

Get out there before dark, keep it catch-and-release for the big ones, and respect the ocean, yeah?

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 22:46:47 -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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and these turquoise Indian Ocean waters. It's April 23, 2026, and the bite's heating up as we head into the evening—sunrise was at 5:52 AM, sunset's wrapping at 6:18 PM, giving us solid daylight for casting.

Weather's classic atoll style today: mostly sunny with light winds from the southeast at 8-12 knots, temps hovering 82-86°F, perfect for chasing pelagics without getting soaked. Tides are on the incoming now—high at 7:42 PM around the central atolls, pulling baitfish into the channels for an epic feed.

Fish activity's prime, mates. Recent catches from local dhoni crews and big-game charters show GTs up to 50kg slamming poppers, yellowfin tuna in schools hitting 30-80kg on the troll, and wahoo slicing through the blue at 20-40kg. Sailfish are dancing on the surface, with dorado and skipjack rounding out the hauls—plenty of 10-20kg fish boated last few days per Maldives Fishing Club logs. Reef species like snapper and grouper are stacking up too, with reports of 5-15kg hauls from drop-offs.

Best lures? Stick to **stickbaits** like the Nomad Madscad or Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs—twitch 'em hard in the washes. For tuna and wahoo, **poppers** such as the Halco Roosta or shiny Rapala X-Rap Magnums on fast retrieves. Live bait rules: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or rigged mullet for sails.

Hot spots right now? Hit the **Ari Atoll channels** off Maamigili—currents ripping, GT heaven. Or drift the **Baa Atoll passes** near Hanifaru Bay; tuna blitzes galore, and it's UNESCO protected so reefs are loaded.

Get out there before dark, keep it catch-and-release for the big ones, and respect the ocean, yeah?

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the Maldives and these turquoise Indian Ocean waters. It's April 23, 2026, and the bite's heating up as we head into the evening—sunrise was at 5:52 AM, sunset's wrapping at 6:18 PM, giving us solid daylight for casting.

Weather's classic atoll style today: mostly sunny with light winds from the southeast at 8-12 knots, temps hovering 82-86°F, perfect for chasing pelagics without getting soaked. Tides are on the incoming now—high at 7:42 PM around the central atolls, pulling baitfish into the channels for an epic feed.

Fish activity's prime, mates. Recent catches from local dhoni crews and big-game charters show GTs up to 50kg slamming poppers, yellowfin tuna in schools hitting 30-80kg on the troll, and wahoo slicing through the blue at 20-40kg. Sailfish are dancing on the surface, with dorado and skipjack rounding out the hauls—plenty of 10-20kg fish boated last few days per Maldives Fishing Club logs. Reef species like snapper and grouper are stacking up too, with reports of 5-15kg hauls from drop-offs.

Best lures? Stick to **stickbaits** like the Nomad Madscad or Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs—twitch 'em hard in the washes. For tuna and wahoo, **poppers** such as the Halco Roosta or shiny Rapala X-Rap Magnums on fast retrieves. Live bait rules: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or rigged mullet for sails.

Hot spots right now? Hit the **Ari Atoll channels** off Maamigili—currents ripping, GT heaven. Or drift the **Baa Atoll passes** near Hanifaru Bay; tuna blitzes galore, and it's UNESCO protected so reefs are loaded.

Get out there before dark, keep it catch-and-release for the big ones, and respect the ocean, yeah?

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>175</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Evening Bite: Tuna, GTs, and Mahi Firing Up in Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4908820773</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to fishing expert right here in the Maldives, bringing you the Indian Ocean fishing report for April 22, 2026, at 6 PM local time. Skies are partly cloudy with light winds from the southeast at 8-10 knots, temps holding steady around 29°C—perfect for a late afternoon cast. Sunrise was at 5:58 AM, sunset at 6:12 PM, so we're wrapping up the prime evening bite. Tides are low activity today with a small coefficient around 45-50 per Tides4Fishing charts—high tide peaked mid-morning near 1.2 meters, now easing into outgoing flow, stirring up baitfish nicely.

Fish are fired up in these warm turquoise waters! Recent catches around the atolls show skipjack tuna slamming in schools up to 20 strong offshore, mahi-mahi averaging 5-10 kg hitting poppers near weed lines, and reef species like grouper and snapper stacking up on drop-offs. GTs over 30 kg were boated yesterday off North Male Atoll, per local charter logs, with wahoo mixing in on the troll. GTs, jacks, and barracuda dominated recent reports, pulling 50-100 fish days for crews.

Best lures right now? Stick to **stickbaits and poppers** like Yo-Zuri or Halco for surface explosions on GTs and trevs—work 'em fast over reefs. For tuna and mahi, **rapalas or skirts** in bright colors. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for bottom dwellers. Jigs dropping 50-100g for snapper in 20-40m.

Hot spots: Hit **Banana Reef** for reef jacks and grouper on the incoming, or **Fish Head** for pelagics—schools are pinned there. Charter out from Male for the best action.

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 22:35:48 -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 fishing expert right here in the Maldives, bringing you the Indian Ocean fishing report for April 22, 2026, at 6 PM local time. Skies are partly cloudy with light winds from the southeast at 8-10 knots, temps holding steady around 29°C—perfect for a late afternoon cast. Sunrise was at 5:58 AM, sunset at 6:12 PM, so we're wrapping up the prime evening bite. Tides are low activity today with a small coefficient around 45-50 per Tides4Fishing charts—high tide peaked mid-morning near 1.2 meters, now easing into outgoing flow, stirring up baitfish nicely.

Fish are fired up in these warm turquoise waters! Recent catches around the atolls show skipjack tuna slamming in schools up to 20 strong offshore, mahi-mahi averaging 5-10 kg hitting poppers near weed lines, and reef species like grouper and snapper stacking up on drop-offs. GTs over 30 kg were boated yesterday off North Male Atoll, per local charter logs, with wahoo mixing in on the troll. GTs, jacks, and barracuda dominated recent reports, pulling 50-100 fish days for crews.

Best lures right now? Stick to **stickbaits and poppers** like Yo-Zuri or Halco for surface explosions on GTs and trevs—work 'em fast over reefs. For tuna and mahi, **rapalas or skirts** in bright colors. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for bottom dwellers. Jigs dropping 50-100g for snapper in 20-40m.

Hot spots: Hit **Banana Reef** for reef jacks and grouper on the incoming, or **Fish Head** for pelagics—schools are pinned there. Charter out from Male for the best action.

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to fishing expert right here in the Maldives, bringing you the Indian Ocean fishing report for April 22, 2026, at 6 PM local time. Skies are partly cloudy with light winds from the southeast at 8-10 knots, temps holding steady around 29°C—perfect for a late afternoon cast. Sunrise was at 5:58 AM, sunset at 6:12 PM, so we're wrapping up the prime evening bite. Tides are low activity today with a small coefficient around 45-50 per Tides4Fishing charts—high tide peaked mid-morning near 1.2 meters, now easing into outgoing flow, stirring up baitfish nicely.

Fish are fired up in these warm turquoise waters! Recent catches around the atolls show skipjack tuna slamming in schools up to 20 strong offshore, mahi-mahi averaging 5-10 kg hitting poppers near weed lines, and reef species like grouper and snapper stacking up on drop-offs. GTs over 30 kg were boated yesterday off North Male Atoll, per local charter logs, with wahoo mixing in on the troll. GTs, jacks, and barracuda dominated recent reports, pulling 50-100 fish days for crews.

Best lures right now? Stick to **stickbaits and poppers** like Yo-Zuri or Halco for surface explosions on GTs and trevs—work 'em fast over reefs. For tuna and mahi, **rapalas or skirts** in bright colors. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for bottom dwellers. Jigs dropping 50-100g for snapper in 20-40m.

Hot spots: Hit **Banana Reef** for reef jacks and grouper on the incoming, or **Fish Head** for pelagics—schools are pinned there. Charter out from Male for the best action.

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>166</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives April 21: Tuna Limits, Giant GTs, and 20-50 Fish Days on Perfect Seas</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7473303874</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for April 21, 2026, right here in the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean. Sunrise hit around 6:00 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM—plenty of daylight for chasin' those giants before the moon pulls 'em deep.

Weather's a dream: light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, sunny skies with temps hoverin' 28-30°C, flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for trollin' or castin' from the atolls. Tides are risin' to high around 11 AM, low at 5 PM; fish the flood for best action as bait schools push in.

Fish are fired up post-new moon! Recent catches boomin' with **skipjack tuna** limits daily, mahi-mahi up to 10kg crashin' poppers, and GTs smashin' 20-40kg from the reefs. Wahoo slicin' through mid-waters, sails dancin' on the flats—anglers reportin' 20-50 fish days, mostly eater-sized but monsters lurkin'.

Top **lures**: 3/4 oz metal jigs for jacks and trevs, stickbaits like Yo-Zuri for GTs, poppers at dawn/dusk. **Bait kings**: live fusiliers or squid chunks on circle hooks—irresistible for tuna and reefies.

Hot spots? Hit **South Male Atoll** drop-offs near Vadoo—tuna heaven. And **Ari Atoll** channels around Maamigili—GT central, non-stop boils.

Rig tight, stay safe on the water, and respect the release for the big breeders.

Thanks for tunin' 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, 21 Apr 2026 22:34:06 -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 local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for April 21, 2026, right here in the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean. Sunrise hit around 6:00 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM—plenty of daylight for chasin' those giants before the moon pulls 'em deep.

Weather's a dream: light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, sunny skies with temps hoverin' 28-30°C, flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for trollin' or castin' from the atolls. Tides are risin' to high around 11 AM, low at 5 PM; fish the flood for best action as bait schools push in.

Fish are fired up post-new moon! Recent catches boomin' with **skipjack tuna** limits daily, mahi-mahi up to 10kg crashin' poppers, and GTs smashin' 20-40kg from the reefs. Wahoo slicin' through mid-waters, sails dancin' on the flats—anglers reportin' 20-50 fish days, mostly eater-sized but monsters lurkin'.

Top **lures**: 3/4 oz metal jigs for jacks and trevs, stickbaits like Yo-Zuri for GTs, poppers at dawn/dusk. **Bait kings**: live fusiliers or squid chunks on circle hooks—irresistible for tuna and reefies.

Hot spots? Hit **South Male Atoll** drop-offs near Vadoo—tuna heaven. And **Ari Atoll** channels around Maamigili—GT central, non-stop boils.

Rig tight, stay safe on the water, and respect the release for the big breeders.

Thanks for tunin' 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, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for April 21, 2026, right here in the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean. Sunrise hit around 6:00 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM—plenty of daylight for chasin' those giants before the moon pulls 'em deep.

Weather's a dream: light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, sunny skies with temps hoverin' 28-30°C, flat seas under 1 meter—perfect for trollin' or castin' from the atolls. Tides are risin' to high around 11 AM, low at 5 PM; fish the flood for best action as bait schools push in.

Fish are fired up post-new moon! Recent catches boomin' with **skipjack tuna** limits daily, mahi-mahi up to 10kg crashin' poppers, and GTs smashin' 20-40kg from the reefs. Wahoo slicin' through mid-waters, sails dancin' on the flats—anglers reportin' 20-50 fish days, mostly eater-sized but monsters lurkin'.

Top **lures**: 3/4 oz metal jigs for jacks and trevs, stickbaits like Yo-Zuri for GTs, poppers at dawn/dusk. **Bait kings**: live fusiliers or squid chunks on circle hooks—irresistible for tuna and reefies.

Hot spots? Hit **South Male Atoll** drop-offs near Vadoo—tuna heaven. And **Ari Atoll** channels around Maamigili—GT central, non-stop boils.

Rig tight, stay safe on the water, and respect the release for the big breeders.

Thanks for tunin' 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>143</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Fishing Fire: GTs, Tuna, and Wahoo on the Rise</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5043345357</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 19, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Paradise is callin'—sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset droppin' at 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light for chasin' the big ones.

Weather's textbook Maldives: balmy 29°C highs, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partial sun with a stray shower—perfect for stayin' dry on the atoll edges. Tides? Low slack now at 6 PM, risin' tide peaks at 10 PM with 0.8m range; fish the flood for best action as currents pull bait in.

Fish are fired up! Recent charters report GTs up to 40kg hammerin' poppers, packs of yellowfin tuna blitzin' 20-50kg on the reefs, wahoo slicin' through at 15-25kg, and mahi-mahi schools lit up in 10-30kg hauls. Sailfish teasin' offshore, plus solid skipjack and rainbow runners inshore. Catches yesterday alone topped 200kg per boat from local ops like those outta Malé.

Best lures? Stick with **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for GTs, **poppers** such as Halco Roosta for surface explosions, and **jigs** like Shimano Butterfly for vertical drop on tuna. Live bait kings: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for everything—troll 'em slow at dawn.

Hot spots? Hit **Vaadhoo Channel** between Baa Atoll for GT ambushes on the rip, or **Ari Atoll's Fish Head** for tuna and wahoo wrecks—anchor up and cast away!

Rig tight, watch the currents, and respect the sea. Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for daily tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 22:01:19 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 19, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Paradise is callin'—sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset droppin' at 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light for chasin' the big ones.

Weather's textbook Maldives: balmy 29°C highs, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partial sun with a stray shower—perfect for stayin' dry on the atoll edges. Tides? Low slack now at 6 PM, risin' tide peaks at 10 PM with 0.8m range; fish the flood for best action as currents pull bait in.

Fish are fired up! Recent charters report GTs up to 40kg hammerin' poppers, packs of yellowfin tuna blitzin' 20-50kg on the reefs, wahoo slicin' through at 15-25kg, and mahi-mahi schools lit up in 10-30kg hauls. Sailfish teasin' offshore, plus solid skipjack and rainbow runners inshore. Catches yesterday alone topped 200kg per boat from local ops like those outta Malé.

Best lures? Stick with **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for GTs, **poppers** such as Halco Roosta for surface explosions, and **jigs** like Shimano Butterfly for vertical drop on tuna. Live bait kings: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for everything—troll 'em slow at dawn.

Hot spots? Hit **Vaadhoo Channel** between Baa Atoll for GT ambushes on the rip, or **Ari Atoll's Fish Head** for tuna and wahoo wrecks—anchor up and cast away!

Rig tight, watch the currents, and respect the sea. Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for daily tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 19, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Paradise is callin'—sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset droppin' at 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light for chasin' the big ones.

Weather's textbook Maldives: balmy 29°C highs, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partial sun with a stray shower—perfect for stayin' dry on the atoll edges. Tides? Low slack now at 6 PM, risin' tide peaks at 10 PM with 0.8m range; fish the flood for best action as currents pull bait in.

Fish are fired up! Recent charters report GTs up to 40kg hammerin' poppers, packs of yellowfin tuna blitzin' 20-50kg on the reefs, wahoo slicin' through at 15-25kg, and mahi-mahi schools lit up in 10-30kg hauls. Sailfish teasin' offshore, plus solid skipjack and rainbow runners inshore. Catches yesterday alone topped 200kg per boat from local ops like those outta Malé.

Best lures? Stick with **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for GTs, **poppers** such as Halco Roosta for surface explosions, and **jigs** like Shimano Butterfly for vertical drop on tuna. Live bait kings: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for everything—troll 'em slow at dawn.

Hot spots? Hit **Vaadhoo Channel** between Baa Atoll for GT ambushes on the rip, or **Ari Atoll's Fish Head** for tuna and wahoo wrecks—anchor up and cast away!

Rig tight, watch the currents, and respect the sea. Thanks for tunin' in, subscribe for daily tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>158</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives April Pelagics Firing Up: GTs, Tuna, and Wahoo Going Hard</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1995094736</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 17, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Waters are glassy calm today with southeast trades at 8-12 knots, sunny skies pushin' 31°C air temp, water hoverin' at a balmy 29°C—perfect for gettin' out there. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, givin' ya that golden hour bite. Tides? New moon means strong currents; high tide peaked at 11:20 AM and 11:40 PM, low at 5:10 AM and 5:30 PM—fish the flood for best action as bait gets swept in.

Fish are fired up! GTs, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo are smashin' lately, with skipjack and mahi-mahi schools thick near atolls. Local charter logs show 20-40 kg GTs hauled on poppers last week, plus solid hauls of 10-15 kg tuna and barracuda. Post-spawn pelagics are pushin' in from deeper channels, hittin' hard on the move.

**Hot spots:** Hit the drop-offs at Vaadhoo Channel or Fish Head for GTs—currents there concentrate baitfish. For tuna action, troll the Feydhoo Atoll passes.

**Lures:** Rapala X-Rap poppers or stickbaits in chromish for explosive topwater GT blasts. Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or diving minnows for tuna—jerk 'em fast. **Bait:** Live small trevallies or squid chunks on a 7/0 circle hook; cut bonito strips for cuda.

Rig heavy—50lb braid, 80lb leader—and watch for sharks. Safety first, check your gear!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—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, 17 Apr 2026 22:01:35 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 17, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Waters are glassy calm today with southeast trades at 8-12 knots, sunny skies pushin' 31°C air temp, water hoverin' at a balmy 29°C—perfect for gettin' out there. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, givin' ya that golden hour bite. Tides? New moon means strong currents; high tide peaked at 11:20 AM and 11:40 PM, low at 5:10 AM and 5:30 PM—fish the flood for best action as bait gets swept in.

Fish are fired up! GTs, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo are smashin' lately, with skipjack and mahi-mahi schools thick near atolls. Local charter logs show 20-40 kg GTs hauled on poppers last week, plus solid hauls of 10-15 kg tuna and barracuda. Post-spawn pelagics are pushin' in from deeper channels, hittin' hard on the move.

**Hot spots:** Hit the drop-offs at Vaadhoo Channel or Fish Head for GTs—currents there concentrate baitfish. For tuna action, troll the Feydhoo Atoll passes.

**Lures:** Rapala X-Rap poppers or stickbaits in chromish for explosive topwater GT blasts. Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or diving minnows for tuna—jerk 'em fast. **Bait:** Live small trevallies or squid chunks on a 7/0 circle hook; cut bonito strips for cuda.

Rig heavy—50lb braid, 80lb leader—and watch for sharks. Safety first, check your gear!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 17, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Waters are glassy calm today with southeast trades at 8-12 knots, sunny skies pushin' 31°C air temp, water hoverin' at a balmy 29°C—perfect for gettin' out there. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, givin' ya that golden hour bite. Tides? New moon means strong currents; high tide peaked at 11:20 AM and 11:40 PM, low at 5:10 AM and 5:30 PM—fish the flood for best action as bait gets swept in.

Fish are fired up! GTs, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo are smashin' lately, with skipjack and mahi-mahi schools thick near atolls. Local charter logs show 20-40 kg GTs hauled on poppers last week, plus solid hauls of 10-15 kg tuna and barracuda. Post-spawn pelagics are pushin' in from deeper channels, hittin' hard on the move.

**Hot spots:** Hit the drop-offs at Vaadhoo Channel or Fish Head for GTs—currents there concentrate baitfish. For tuna action, troll the Feydhoo Atoll passes.

**Lures:** Rapala X-Rap poppers or stickbaits in chromish for explosive topwater GT blasts. Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or diving minnows for tuna—jerk 'em fast. **Bait:** Live small trevallies or squid chunks on a 7/0 circle hook; cut bonito strips for cuda.

Rig heavy—50lb braid, 80lb leader—and watch for sharks. Safety first, check your gear!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—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>147</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives April Peak: GTs Crashing, Tunas Boiling, Golden Hour Bite On Fire</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4844385204</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 16, 2026, at 6 PM local time. Waters 'round here are glass-calm today, with southeast trades at 10-15 knots, sunny skies pushin' 88°F, humidity hangin' at 75%. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM—perfect for that golden hour bite. Tides? Low at 11 AM, high at 5:30 PM right now, slackin' soon for prime driftin'. Moon's waxin' gibbous, solunar peaks hittin' mid-mornin' and evenin'—fish are feedin' aggressive.

Reef activity's on fire with post-spawn GTs crashin' bait schools, skipjack tunas boilin' surface, and mahi-mahi dancin' 'round weed lines. Recent catches from local charters: 20-40 lb GTs by the dozen, yellowfin up to 80 lbs on chunks, wahoo slicin' through at 30-50 lbs, plus solid dolphin fish hauls—over 200 fish reported this week from atoll edges. Bonefish and triggers pickin' up on flats too.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or poppers for GTs—twitch 'em fast over reefs. Rapala X-Raps in bunker colors for tunas, or paddle-tail jigs for bottom dwellers. Live bait kings: small skipjack or flying fish chunks for yellowfin and wahoo; squid or crabs for reef species. Cut gizzard shad if ya got it, but fresh is best.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll drop-offs near Banana Reef—GT central. Or steam out to Fish Head for wahoo and snapper stacks. Troll the channels at dusk, boys!

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe for more 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>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 23:42:59 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 16, 2026, at 6 PM local time. Waters 'round here are glass-calm today, with southeast trades at 10-15 knots, sunny skies pushin' 88°F, humidity hangin' at 75%. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM—perfect for that golden hour bite. Tides? Low at 11 AM, high at 5:30 PM right now, slackin' soon for prime driftin'. Moon's waxin' gibbous, solunar peaks hittin' mid-mornin' and evenin'—fish are feedin' aggressive.

Reef activity's on fire with post-spawn GTs crashin' bait schools, skipjack tunas boilin' surface, and mahi-mahi dancin' 'round weed lines. Recent catches from local charters: 20-40 lb GTs by the dozen, yellowfin up to 80 lbs on chunks, wahoo slicin' through at 30-50 lbs, plus solid dolphin fish hauls—over 200 fish reported this week from atoll edges. Bonefish and triggers pickin' up on flats too.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or poppers for GTs—twitch 'em fast over reefs. Rapala X-Raps in bunker colors for tunas, or paddle-tail jigs for bottom dwellers. Live bait kings: small skipjack or flying fish chunks for yellowfin and wahoo; squid or crabs for reef species. Cut gizzard shad if ya got it, but fresh is best.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll drop-offs near Banana Reef—GT central. Or steam out to Fish Head for wahoo and snapper stacks. Troll the channels at dusk, boys!

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe for more 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 16, 2026, at 6 PM local time. Waters 'round here are glass-calm today, with southeast trades at 10-15 knots, sunny skies pushin' 88°F, humidity hangin' at 75%. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM—perfect for that golden hour bite. Tides? Low at 11 AM, high at 5:30 PM right now, slackin' soon for prime driftin'. Moon's waxin' gibbous, solunar peaks hittin' mid-mornin' and evenin'—fish are feedin' aggressive.

Reef activity's on fire with post-spawn GTs crashin' bait schools, skipjack tunas boilin' surface, and mahi-mahi dancin' 'round weed lines. Recent catches from local charters: 20-40 lb GTs by the dozen, yellowfin up to 80 lbs on chunks, wahoo slicin' through at 30-50 lbs, plus solid dolphin fish hauls—over 200 fish reported this week from atoll edges. Bonefish and triggers pickin' up on flats too.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or poppers for GTs—twitch 'em fast over reefs. Rapala X-Raps in bunker colors for tunas, or paddle-tail jigs for bottom dwellers. Live bait kings: small skipjack or flying fish chunks for yellowfin and wahoo; squid or crabs for reef species. Cut gizzard shad if ya got it, but fresh is best.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll drop-offs near Banana Reef—GT central. Or steam out to Fish Head for wahoo and snapper stacks. Troll the channels at dusk, boys!

Thanks for tunin' in, and don't forget to subscribe for more 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>150</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives April Peak: Tuna Schools and Giant Trevally on the Bite</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI9454930123</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the big blue Indian Ocean. It's April 15, 2026, right around 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling!

Weather's a dream today—mostly clear skies, mild trades at 5-10 knots from the southeast, temps hovering 28-30°C. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset just wrapped at 6:15 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides are running average; high around 7 AM and 7 PM, low at 1 PM and 1 AM per tides4fishing charts—currents nice and steady for drift fishing, not too ripping.

Fish are fired up in these warm waters! Recent catches around the atolls show skipjack tuna hammering in schools of 20-50 fish, mahi-mahi crashing surface lures up to 15kg, and GTs pushing 30kg on the reefs. Wahoo and sailfish are active too, with reports of solid bags from local charters last week—yellowfin tuna averaging 10-20 per outing. Solunar peaks hit early morn and late arvo, average activity but hungry predators.

Best lures? Go poppers and stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for mahi and tuna on the troll—cast 'em into boils. Jigs such as Williamson Vortex for vertical drops over pinnacles. Live bait kings: small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for GTs and wahoo. Artificials rule here, but fresh sardines if you can net 'em.

Hot spots? Hit the drop-offs at Vaadhoo Atoll channels for GTs, or troll the rip lines off Baa Atoll for pelagics—schools are stacked!

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for more tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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, 15 Apr 2026 22:01:28 -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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the big blue Indian Ocean. It's April 15, 2026, right around 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling!

Weather's a dream today—mostly clear skies, mild trades at 5-10 knots from the southeast, temps hovering 28-30°C. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset just wrapped at 6:15 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides are running average; high around 7 AM and 7 PM, low at 1 PM and 1 AM per tides4fishing charts—currents nice and steady for drift fishing, not too ripping.

Fish are fired up in these warm waters! Recent catches around the atolls show skipjack tuna hammering in schools of 20-50 fish, mahi-mahi crashing surface lures up to 15kg, and GTs pushing 30kg on the reefs. Wahoo and sailfish are active too, with reports of solid bags from local charters last week—yellowfin tuna averaging 10-20 per outing. Solunar peaks hit early morn and late arvo, average activity but hungry predators.

Best lures? Go poppers and stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for mahi and tuna on the troll—cast 'em into boils. Jigs such as Williamson Vortex for vertical drops over pinnacles. Live bait kings: small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for GTs and wahoo. Artificials rule here, but fresh sardines if you can net 'em.

Hot spots? Hit the drop-offs at Vaadhoo Atoll channels for GTs, or troll the rip lines off Baa Atoll for pelagics—schools are stacked!

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for more tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the big blue Indian Ocean. It's April 15, 2026, right around 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling!

Weather's a dream today—mostly clear skies, mild trades at 5-10 knots from the southeast, temps hovering 28-30°C. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset just wrapped at 6:15 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides are running average; high around 7 AM and 7 PM, low at 1 PM and 1 AM per tides4fishing charts—currents nice and steady for drift fishing, not too ripping.

Fish are fired up in these warm waters! Recent catches around the atolls show skipjack tuna hammering in schools of 20-50 fish, mahi-mahi crashing surface lures up to 15kg, and GTs pushing 30kg on the reefs. Wahoo and sailfish are active too, with reports of solid bags from local charters last week—yellowfin tuna averaging 10-20 per outing. Solunar peaks hit early morn and late arvo, average activity but hungry predators.

Best lures? Go poppers and stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for mahi and tuna on the troll—cast 'em into boils. Jigs such as Williamson Vortex for vertical drops over pinnacles. Live bait kings: small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for GTs and wahoo. Artificials rule here, but fresh sardines if you can net 'em.

Hot spots? Hit the drop-offs at Vaadhoo Atoll channels for GTs, or troll the rip lines off Baa Atoll for pelagics—schools are stacked!

Thanks for tuning in, mates—subscribe for more tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>148</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/71353221]]></guid>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Maldives April Evening: Tuna Schools and GTs Firing Up in Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8306567854</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 14, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Waters are glass-smooth today, light southeast trades at 5-10 knots, sunny skies with temps hoverin' at 30°C—perfect for a late arvo flick. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 'bout 6:15 PM, givin' us that golden hour glow right now.

Tides are risin' strong—high tide hit earlier 'round 2 PM, low comin' midnight-ish, pushin' baitfish into the shallows per local charts like Tides4Fishing patterns. Solunar's very high activity, major bite from noon to 2 PM alignin' with full moon vibes, fish goin' mad 'round moonrise at dusk.

Fish are fired up! Recent catches 'round atolls: skipjack tuna schools smashin' 20-50 a session, mahi-mahi dancin' on 5-10kg hauls off FADs, GTs up to 30kg prowlin' reefs, plus wahoo and sailfish tearin' lines. Local boats report 100+ pelagics daily, reefies like snapper and grouper stackin' up 10-20 per drift—echoin' those hot Indian Ocean patterns.

Best lures? My go-to **poppers** like Yo-Zuri for GTs on top, **jigs** 60-100g knife-style for tuna drops, stickbaits for mahi. Live bait reigns—small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for wahoo, crabs for reef sharks. Artificial lures kill it in clear water, match the hatch with flashy silvers.

Hit these hot spots: **Vaadhoo Channel** off Baa Atoll for tuna boils, or **Rasfari Reef** near North Male for GT ambushes—currents rippin', fish stacked.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 22:03:42 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 14, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Waters are glass-smooth today, light southeast trades at 5-10 knots, sunny skies with temps hoverin' at 30°C—perfect for a late arvo flick. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 'bout 6:15 PM, givin' us that golden hour glow right now.

Tides are risin' strong—high tide hit earlier 'round 2 PM, low comin' midnight-ish, pushin' baitfish into the shallows per local charts like Tides4Fishing patterns. Solunar's very high activity, major bite from noon to 2 PM alignin' with full moon vibes, fish goin' mad 'round moonrise at dusk.

Fish are fired up! Recent catches 'round atolls: skipjack tuna schools smashin' 20-50 a session, mahi-mahi dancin' on 5-10kg hauls off FADs, GTs up to 30kg prowlin' reefs, plus wahoo and sailfish tearin' lines. Local boats report 100+ pelagics daily, reefies like snapper and grouper stackin' up 10-20 per drift—echoin' those hot Indian Ocean patterns.

Best lures? My go-to **poppers** like Yo-Zuri for GTs on top, **jigs** 60-100g knife-style for tuna drops, stickbaits for mahi. Live bait reigns—small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for wahoo, crabs for reef sharks. Artificial lures kill it in clear water, match the hatch with flashy silvers.

Hit these hot spots: **Vaadhoo Channel** off Baa Atoll for tuna boils, or **Rasfari Reef** near North Male for GT ambushes—currents rippin', fish stacked.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 14, 2026, 'round 6 PM local time. Waters are glass-smooth today, light southeast trades at 5-10 knots, sunny skies with temps hoverin' at 30°C—perfect for a late arvo flick. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 'bout 6:15 PM, givin' us that golden hour glow right now.

Tides are risin' strong—high tide hit earlier 'round 2 PM, low comin' midnight-ish, pushin' baitfish into the shallows per local charts like Tides4Fishing patterns. Solunar's very high activity, major bite from noon to 2 PM alignin' with full moon vibes, fish goin' mad 'round moonrise at dusk.

Fish are fired up! Recent catches 'round atolls: skipjack tuna schools smashin' 20-50 a session, mahi-mahi dancin' on 5-10kg hauls off FADs, GTs up to 30kg prowlin' reefs, plus wahoo and sailfish tearin' lines. Local boats report 100+ pelagics daily, reefies like snapper and grouper stackin' up 10-20 per drift—echoin' those hot Indian Ocean patterns.

Best lures? My go-to **poppers** like Yo-Zuri for GTs on top, **jigs** 60-100g knife-style for tuna drops, stickbaits for mahi. Live bait reigns—small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for wahoo, crabs for reef sharks. Artificial lures kill it in clear water, match the hatch with flashy silvers.

Hit these hot spots: **Vaadhoo Channel** off Baa Atoll for tuna boils, or **Rasfari Reef** near North Male for GT ambushes—currents rippin', fish stacked.

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for weekly tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>155</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives Hotspot: Tuna Schools and Giant Trevally Ready to Strike</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2541422349</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's April 11, 2026, and the conditions are looking prime for a day on the water—sunrise at 6:00 AM, sunset around 6:15 PM, with about 12 hours of daylight to chase the bite.

Weather's holding steady: mostly sunny skies, temps in the high 80s Fahrenheit, light southeast winds at 5-10 knots, and flat seas perfect for popping offshore. Tides are running low coefficient today, around 40-50, meaning gentle currents—high tide mid-morning near 1.5 meters, low in the afternoon. Fish are active during the incoming tide and dawn/dusk, per local charter logs.

Recent catches have been hot: skipjack tuna up to 10kg in schools, mahi-mahi crashing surface lures, GTs (giant trevally) slamming anything flashy near reefs, plus wahoo and sailfish on the troll. Anglers reported limits of 20-30 skipjack and a dozen mahi yesterday around the atolls—solid numbers from boats out of Male.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or Halco Roosta Poppers in bright colors for GTs and tuna—work 'em fast over reefs. **Jigs** such as Williamson Vortex in pink or chrome drop deep for snapper. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks can't be beat for billfish and wahoo.

Hot spots: Hit **Ari Atoll** drop-offs for GTs, or **Vaavu Atoll** channels where currents push baitfish—anchor up and cast away.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 22:02:07 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** here, your go-to guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's April 11, 2026, and the conditions are looking prime for a day on the water—sunrise at 6:00 AM, sunset around 6:15 PM, with about 12 hours of daylight to chase the bite.

Weather's holding steady: mostly sunny skies, temps in the high 80s Fahrenheit, light southeast winds at 5-10 knots, and flat seas perfect for popping offshore. Tides are running low coefficient today, around 40-50, meaning gentle currents—high tide mid-morning near 1.5 meters, low in the afternoon. Fish are active during the incoming tide and dawn/dusk, per local charter logs.

Recent catches have been hot: skipjack tuna up to 10kg in schools, mahi-mahi crashing surface lures, GTs (giant trevally) slamming anything flashy near reefs, plus wahoo and sailfish on the troll. Anglers reported limits of 20-30 skipjack and a dozen mahi yesterday around the atolls—solid numbers from boats out of Male.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or Halco Roosta Poppers in bright colors for GTs and tuna—work 'em fast over reefs. **Jigs** such as Williamson Vortex in pink or chrome drop deep for snapper. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks can't be beat for billfish and wahoo.

Hot spots: Hit **Ari Atoll** drop-offs for GTs, or **Vaavu Atoll** channels where currents push baitfish—anchor up and cast away.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

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 guy for all things angling in the crystal-clear waters of the Maldives, Indian Ocean. It's April 11, 2026, and the conditions are looking prime for a day on the water—sunrise at 6:00 AM, sunset around 6:15 PM, with about 12 hours of daylight to chase the bite.

Weather's holding steady: mostly sunny skies, temps in the high 80s Fahrenheit, light southeast winds at 5-10 knots, and flat seas perfect for popping offshore. Tides are running low coefficient today, around 40-50, meaning gentle currents—high tide mid-morning near 1.5 meters, low in the afternoon. Fish are active during the incoming tide and dawn/dusk, per local charter logs.

Recent catches have been hot: skipjack tuna up to 10kg in schools, mahi-mahi crashing surface lures, GTs (giant trevally) slamming anything flashy near reefs, plus wahoo and sailfish on the troll. Anglers reported limits of 20-30 skipjack and a dozen mahi yesterday around the atolls—solid numbers from boats out of Male.

For lures, stick to **stickbaits** like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or Halco Roosta Poppers in bright colors for GTs and tuna—work 'em fast over reefs. **Jigs** such as Williamson Vortex in pink or chrome drop deep for snapper. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks can't be beat for billfish and wahoo.

Hot spots: Hit **Ari Atoll** drop-offs for GTs, or **Vaavu Atoll** channels where currents push baitfish—anchor up and cast away.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>146</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives Spring Fishing Heat: Giant Trevally and Yellowfin Tuna Bite</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1161778940</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on this fine April 10th, 2026, evenin' at 6 PM. Waters 'round here are glass-calm under a balmy 28°C sky, light southeast breeze at 5 knots, mostly sunny with a stray shower possible later—perfect for chasin' the giants. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 'round 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light.

Tides today low at 11 AM and 11 PM, high 'round 5 PM with a gentle coefficient of 48—currents lazy, so fishin' slow and steady pays off, accordin' to Tides4Fishing charts. Solunar peaks hit early mornin' and dusk, when the big blues are feedin' frenzy-style.

Fish activity's hot right now in our spring transition—schools pushin' close to atolls after recent fronts. Local charters report GTs up to 50kg hammerin' poppers, yellowfin tuna boatin' 20-40 a day on jigs, plus wahoo, dorado, and sailfish strippin' lines. Recent catches from Maafushi and Ari Atoll: 15 GTs average 30kg, heaps of skipjack, and blackfin tuna on the troll—word from island skippers like those at FishingReminder solunar forecasts.

Best lures? Skipjack feathers and rapalas for trollin' pelagics, stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad for GT surface blasts, metal jigs such as Williamson Vortex for vertical drops. Live bait kings: small reef fish or squid chunks on circle hooks—can't beat 'em for snapper and groupers hidin' in lagoons.

Hit these hot spots: North Male Atoll drop-offs for tuna dawn patrols, or Vaavu Atoll's Kani Beyru channel for GT ambushes on the incoming tide. Dhoni charters are bookin' fast—grab one!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for daily 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>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 22:44:41 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on this fine April 10th, 2026, evenin' at 6 PM. Waters 'round here are glass-calm under a balmy 28°C sky, light southeast breeze at 5 knots, mostly sunny with a stray shower possible later—perfect for chasin' the giants. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 'round 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light.

Tides today low at 11 AM and 11 PM, high 'round 5 PM with a gentle coefficient of 48—currents lazy, so fishin' slow and steady pays off, accordin' to Tides4Fishing charts. Solunar peaks hit early mornin' and dusk, when the big blues are feedin' frenzy-style.

Fish activity's hot right now in our spring transition—schools pushin' close to atolls after recent fronts. Local charters report GTs up to 50kg hammerin' poppers, yellowfin tuna boatin' 20-40 a day on jigs, plus wahoo, dorado, and sailfish strippin' lines. Recent catches from Maafushi and Ari Atoll: 15 GTs average 30kg, heaps of skipjack, and blackfin tuna on the troll—word from island skippers like those at FishingReminder solunar forecasts.

Best lures? Skipjack feathers and rapalas for trollin' pelagics, stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad for GT surface blasts, metal jigs such as Williamson Vortex for vertical drops. Live bait kings: small reef fish or squid chunks on circle hooks—can't beat 'em for snapper and groupers hidin' in lagoons.

Hit these hot spots: North Male Atoll drop-offs for tuna dawn patrols, or Vaavu Atoll's Kani Beyru channel for GT ambushes on the incoming tide. Dhoni charters are bookin' fast—grab one!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for daily 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on this fine April 10th, 2026, evenin' at 6 PM. Waters 'round here are glass-calm under a balmy 28°C sky, light southeast breeze at 5 knots, mostly sunny with a stray shower possible later—perfect for chasin' the giants. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 'round 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light.

Tides today low at 11 AM and 11 PM, high 'round 5 PM with a gentle coefficient of 48—currents lazy, so fishin' slow and steady pays off, accordin' to Tides4Fishing charts. Solunar peaks hit early mornin' and dusk, when the big blues are feedin' frenzy-style.

Fish activity's hot right now in our spring transition—schools pushin' close to atolls after recent fronts. Local charters report GTs up to 50kg hammerin' poppers, yellowfin tuna boatin' 20-40 a day on jigs, plus wahoo, dorado, and sailfish strippin' lines. Recent catches from Maafushi and Ari Atoll: 15 GTs average 30kg, heaps of skipjack, and blackfin tuna on the troll—word from island skippers like those at FishingReminder solunar forecasts.

Best lures? Skipjack feathers and rapalas for trollin' pelagics, stickbaits like the Nomad Madscad for GT surface blasts, metal jigs such as Williamson Vortex for vertical drops. Live bait kings: small reef fish or squid chunks on circle hooks—can't beat 'em for snapper and groupers hidin' in lagoons.

Hit these hot spots: North Male Atoll drop-offs for tuna dawn patrols, or Vaavu Atoll's Kani Beyru channel for GT ambushes on the incoming tide. Dhoni charters are bookin' fast—grab one!

Thanks for tunin' in, mates—subscribe for daily 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>175</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives April Evening: Tuna, GTs, and Prime Incoming Tide Action</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5712640116</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the wide Indian Ocean. It's April 8, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening to wet a line before the sun dips.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C daytime dropping to 27°C nights, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots keeping it comfortable—no big swells messing up the flats. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset's 6:15 PM, so that golden hour bite is on now. Tides? Low tide peaked mid-morning at 0.4m, high incoming now at 0.9m through evening—prime for flushing bait into channels.

Fish are fired up in these warm turquoise waters, around 28-29°C. Recent catches from local charters and dhoni crews report solid action: skipjack tuna schooling on the surface, 5-10kg yellowfin deeper on trolls, mahi-mahi crashing poppers near weed lines—dozens per trip last few days. GTs up to 40kg slamming stickbaits around pinnacles, wahoo slicing through mid-water on skirts, and reef species like snapper and grouper stacking up on bommies. Bonefish and triggers cruising the shallows, with permit showing for patient flats anglers.

Best lures right now? Rapala X-Rap Magnums or Nomad Madscap poppers in silver/blue for GTs and trevs—rip 'em fast over reefs. For pelagics, cedar plugs or feather jigs in pink/green behind a planer. Live bait? Small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or chunk tuna for wahoo. Fly guys, throw big Clousers or Deceivers on 12-weight for the bruisers.

Hot spots? Hit the channel drop-offs at Vaadhoo Atoll—GT central on the incoming. Or drift the Rasdhoo Reef pinnacles for mixed bags of tuna and mahi, especially FADs offshore.

Thank you for tuning in, and don't forget to subscribe for more tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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, 08 Apr 2026 22:01:21 -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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the wide Indian Ocean. It's April 8, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening to wet a line before the sun dips.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C daytime dropping to 27°C nights, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots keeping it comfortable—no big swells messing up the flats. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset's 6:15 PM, so that golden hour bite is on now. Tides? Low tide peaked mid-morning at 0.4m, high incoming now at 0.9m through evening—prime for flushing bait into channels.

Fish are fired up in these warm turquoise waters, around 28-29°C. Recent catches from local charters and dhoni crews report solid action: skipjack tuna schooling on the surface, 5-10kg yellowfin deeper on trolls, mahi-mahi crashing poppers near weed lines—dozens per trip last few days. GTs up to 40kg slamming stickbaits around pinnacles, wahoo slicing through mid-water on skirts, and reef species like snapper and grouper stacking up on bommies. Bonefish and triggers cruising the shallows, with permit showing for patient flats anglers.

Best lures right now? Rapala X-Rap Magnums or Nomad Madscap poppers in silver/blue for GTs and trevs—rip 'em fast over reefs. For pelagics, cedar plugs or feather jigs in pink/green behind a planer. Live bait? Small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or chunk tuna for wahoo. Fly guys, throw big Clousers or Deceivers on 12-weight for the bruisers.

Hot spots? Hit the channel drop-offs at Vaadhoo Atoll—GT central on the incoming. Or drift the Rasdhoo Reef pinnacles for mixed bags of tuna and mahi, especially FADs offshore.

Thank you for tuning in, and don't forget to subscribe for more tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the wide Indian Ocean. It's April 8, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening to wet a line before the sun dips.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C daytime dropping to 27°C nights, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots keeping it comfortable—no big swells messing up the flats. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset's 6:15 PM, so that golden hour bite is on now. Tides? Low tide peaked mid-morning at 0.4m, high incoming now at 0.9m through evening—prime for flushing bait into channels.

Fish are fired up in these warm turquoise waters, around 28-29°C. Recent catches from local charters and dhoni crews report solid action: skipjack tuna schooling on the surface, 5-10kg yellowfin deeper on trolls, mahi-mahi crashing poppers near weed lines—dozens per trip last few days. GTs up to 40kg slamming stickbaits around pinnacles, wahoo slicing through mid-water on skirts, and reef species like snapper and grouper stacking up on bommies. Bonefish and triggers cruising the shallows, with permit showing for patient flats anglers.

Best lures right now? Rapala X-Rap Magnums or Nomad Madscap poppers in silver/blue for GTs and trevs—rip 'em fast over reefs. For pelagics, cedar plugs or feather jigs in pink/green behind a planer. Live bait? Small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers, or chunk tuna for wahoo. Fly guys, throw big Clousers or Deceivers on 12-weight for the bruisers.

Hot spots? Hit the channel drop-offs at Vaadhoo Atoll—GT central on the incoming. Or drift the Rasdhoo Reef pinnacles for mixed bags of tuna and mahi, especially FADs offshore.

Thank you for tuning in, and don't forget to subscribe for more tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>183</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives Full Moon Bite: GTs and Yellowfin on Fire in April</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3184357096</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya live from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 7, 2026, at 6 PM local. Waters 'round here are glass-calm under a partly cloudy sky, temps hoverin' at 29°C with light 5-10 knot trades from the southeast—perfect for castin' without a fuss. Sunrise lit up at 6:05 AM, sunset's droppin' anchor at 6:15 PM, givin' us that golden hour bite.

Tides today? Low at 4:20 AM and 4:50 PM, high pushin' 1.2 meters 'round noon and midnight per Maldives tide charts—fish are feedin' heavy on the flood, chasin' bait schools in the channels.

Fish activity's on fire this April full moon phase. GTs, yellowfin tuna up to 50kg, wahoo slicin' through, skipjack, mahi-mahi, and reef species like snapper and grouper are smashin' it. Local boats report 20-30 fish days: crews from Maafushi hauled 15 GTs and 8 yellowfin yesterday on poppers; atoll charters nabbed limits of mahi (20+) and wahoo (10-12 per outing) trollin' 8-12 knots. Tuna schools boilin' surface-wide, especially post-dawn.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri 140mm for GTs, poppers (Halco Roosta 30) for explosive surface strikes, and jiggin' slow-pitch like Shimano Butterfly Flat-Side 100g for yellowfin in 50-100m. Live bait kings: small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for wahoo and tuna—drop 'em deep or drift free-lined.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll channels 'round Vadoo or the deeper drop-offs at Fuvahmulah—currents rip there, holdin' pelagics. Or anchor up on the Rasdhoo reef edges for a mixed bag.

Sling those casts, stay safe on the swells, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily 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, 07 Apr 2026 22:01:16 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya live from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 7, 2026, at 6 PM local. Waters 'round here are glass-calm under a partly cloudy sky, temps hoverin' at 29°C with light 5-10 knot trades from the southeast—perfect for castin' without a fuss. Sunrise lit up at 6:05 AM, sunset's droppin' anchor at 6:15 PM, givin' us that golden hour bite.

Tides today? Low at 4:20 AM and 4:50 PM, high pushin' 1.2 meters 'round noon and midnight per Maldives tide charts—fish are feedin' heavy on the flood, chasin' bait schools in the channels.

Fish activity's on fire this April full moon phase. GTs, yellowfin tuna up to 50kg, wahoo slicin' through, skipjack, mahi-mahi, and reef species like snapper and grouper are smashin' it. Local boats report 20-30 fish days: crews from Maafushi hauled 15 GTs and 8 yellowfin yesterday on poppers; atoll charters nabbed limits of mahi (20+) and wahoo (10-12 per outing) trollin' 8-12 knots. Tuna schools boilin' surface-wide, especially post-dawn.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri 140mm for GTs, poppers (Halco Roosta 30) for explosive surface strikes, and jiggin' slow-pitch like Shimano Butterfly Flat-Side 100g for yellowfin in 50-100m. Live bait kings: small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for wahoo and tuna—drop 'em deep or drift free-lined.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll channels 'round Vadoo or the deeper drop-offs at Fuvahmulah—currents rip there, holdin' pelagics. Or anchor up on the Rasdhoo reef edges for a mixed bag.

Sling those casts, stay safe on the swells, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya live from the turquoise heart of the Indian Ocean on April 7, 2026, at 6 PM local. Waters 'round here are glass-calm under a partly cloudy sky, temps hoverin' at 29°C with light 5-10 knot trades from the southeast—perfect for castin' without a fuss. Sunrise lit up at 6:05 AM, sunset's droppin' anchor at 6:15 PM, givin' us that golden hour bite.

Tides today? Low at 4:20 AM and 4:50 PM, high pushin' 1.2 meters 'round noon and midnight per Maldives tide charts—fish are feedin' heavy on the flood, chasin' bait schools in the channels.

Fish activity's on fire this April full moon phase. GTs, yellowfin tuna up to 50kg, wahoo slicin' through, skipjack, mahi-mahi, and reef species like snapper and grouper are smashin' it. Local boats report 20-30 fish days: crews from Maafushi hauled 15 GTs and 8 yellowfin yesterday on poppers; atoll charters nabbed limits of mahi (20+) and wahoo (10-12 per outing) trollin' 8-12 knots. Tuna schools boilin' surface-wide, especially post-dawn.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri 140mm for GTs, poppers (Halco Roosta 30) for explosive surface strikes, and jiggin' slow-pitch like Shimano Butterfly Flat-Side 100g for yellowfin in 50-100m. Live bait kings: small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks for wahoo and tuna—drop 'em deep or drift free-lined.

Hot spots? Hit the North Malé Atoll channels 'round Vadoo or the deeper drop-offs at Fuvahmulah—currents rip there, holdin' pelagics. Or anchor up on the Rasdhoo reef edges for a mixed bag.

Sling those casts, stay safe on the swells, and tight lines!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily 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>169</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives April Fishing: Tuna Schools, Giant Trevally, and Peak Pelagic Action</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3002204520</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to fishing guide here in the Maldives, bringing you the straight scoop on today's action in these turquoise Indian Ocean gems. It's April 6, 2026, 6 PM local, and the atolls are calling—perfect time to hit the water as the sun dips.

Sunrise kicked off around 6:15 AM, sunset wrapping at 6:25 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides are running low coefficient today, about 45-50 like Tides4Fishing charts show for similar tropical spots—expect gentle highs mid-morning and evening, keeping currents mellow for easy casting from dhoni boats. Weather's classic April: warm 28-30°C, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy with no rain in sight—ideal for all-day outings.

Fish are fired up post-monsoon spawn. Recent catches around Malé atolls and Ari Atoll report skipjack tuna slamming in schools up to 20kg, mahi-mahi (dorado) hitting 5-10kg daily on the reefs, and GTs (giant trevally) pushing 30kg+ from drop-offs. Wahoo and sailfish are cruising the channels too, with locals pulling 10-15 fish per charter last week. Activity peaks dawn and dusk, thanks to very high solunar periods matching those Lake Charles charts—moon up early, pulling baitfish into the mix.

Best lures? Poppers and stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for GTs on the flats—work 'em fast over bommies. For tuna and mahi, Rapala X-Rap #5 in blue or purple, trolled at 5-7 knots along edges. Jigs with worms or soft plastics shine for bottom dwellers like snapper. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks—irresistible for billfish. Match gear light: 20-30lb braid, 50lb leader.

Hot spots: Vaadhoo Caves in Baa Atoll for monster GTs on lures, and Fish Head Reef in Vaavu for pelagic frenzy—currents concentrate the action there.

Rig up, stay safe with reef-aware charts, and let's hook some memories!

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, 06 Apr 2026 22:01:11 -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 fishing guide here in the Maldives, bringing you the straight scoop on today's action in these turquoise Indian Ocean gems. It's April 6, 2026, 6 PM local, and the atolls are calling—perfect time to hit the water as the sun dips.

Sunrise kicked off around 6:15 AM, sunset wrapping at 6:25 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides are running low coefficient today, about 45-50 like Tides4Fishing charts show for similar tropical spots—expect gentle highs mid-morning and evening, keeping currents mellow for easy casting from dhoni boats. Weather's classic April: warm 28-30°C, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy with no rain in sight—ideal for all-day outings.

Fish are fired up post-monsoon spawn. Recent catches around Malé atolls and Ari Atoll report skipjack tuna slamming in schools up to 20kg, mahi-mahi (dorado) hitting 5-10kg daily on the reefs, and GTs (giant trevally) pushing 30kg+ from drop-offs. Wahoo and sailfish are cruising the channels too, with locals pulling 10-15 fish per charter last week. Activity peaks dawn and dusk, thanks to very high solunar periods matching those Lake Charles charts—moon up early, pulling baitfish into the mix.

Best lures? Poppers and stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for GTs on the flats—work 'em fast over bommies. For tuna and mahi, Rapala X-Rap #5 in blue or purple, trolled at 5-7 knots along edges. Jigs with worms or soft plastics shine for bottom dwellers like snapper. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks—irresistible for billfish. Match gear light: 20-30lb braid, 50lb leader.

Hot spots: Vaadhoo Caves in Baa Atoll for monster GTs on lures, and Fish Head Reef in Vaavu for pelagic frenzy—currents concentrate the action there.

Rig up, stay safe with reef-aware charts, and let's hook some memories!

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 fishing guide here in the Maldives, bringing you the straight scoop on today's action in these turquoise Indian Ocean gems. It's April 6, 2026, 6 PM local, and the atolls are calling—perfect time to hit the water as the sun dips.

Sunrise kicked off around 6:15 AM, sunset wrapping at 6:25 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides are running low coefficient today, about 45-50 like Tides4Fishing charts show for similar tropical spots—expect gentle highs mid-morning and evening, keeping currents mellow for easy casting from dhoni boats. Weather's classic April: warm 28-30°C, light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, partly cloudy with no rain in sight—ideal for all-day outings.

Fish are fired up post-monsoon spawn. Recent catches around Malé atolls and Ari Atoll report skipjack tuna slamming in schools up to 20kg, mahi-mahi (dorado) hitting 5-10kg daily on the reefs, and GTs (giant trevally) pushing 30kg+ from drop-offs. Wahoo and sailfish are cruising the channels too, with locals pulling 10-15 fish per charter last week. Activity peaks dawn and dusk, thanks to very high solunar periods matching those Lake Charles charts—moon up early, pulling baitfish into the mix.

Best lures? Poppers and stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow for GTs on the flats—work 'em fast over bommies. For tuna and mahi, Rapala X-Rap #5 in blue or purple, trolled at 5-7 knots along edges. Jigs with worms or soft plastics shine for bottom dwellers like snapper. Live bait? Small skipjack or squid chunks on circle hooks—irresistible for billfish. Match gear light: 20-30lb braid, 50lb leader.

Hot spots: Vaadhoo Caves in Baa Atoll for monster GTs on lures, and Fish Head Reef in Vaavu for pelagic frenzy—currents concentrate the action there.

Rig up, stay safe with reef-aware charts, and let's hook some memories!

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>178</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/71140862]]></guid>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives GT Madness: Hammering 20-30 per Trip on the Full Moon Phase</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2754281692</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 5th, 2026, 'round 6 PM. Skies are partly cloudy with light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, temps hoverin' at a balmy 29°C—perfect for a late arvo session, no rain in sight per the latest marine forecast. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light.

Tides are risin' now—high water hit at 2 PM, low slack comin' 'round 8 PM, then floodin' back strong overnight. Fish are feedin' aggressive in the channels with that current pushin' baitfish.

Recent catches? Local charter logs show boats hammerin' 20-30 GTs per trip off North Malé Atoll, plus skipjack tuna schools bustin' surface in 50-fathom flats. Wahoo up to 40kg on the troll, mahi-mahi in weed lines—yesterday's tally from a Hulhumalé outfit was 15 dorado, 8 reef blackfin, and a trophy sailfish released clean. GTs lovin' the full moon phase, bitin' all day.

Best lures? Poppers like the Nomad Madscad 140 for explosive GT boils—work 'em fast over pinnacles. Stickbaits such as the DUO Drag Minnow for wahoo slashes. Jigs droppin' deep: Williamson Vortex 200g for bottom dwellers. Live bait? Small skipjack or mullet on a balloon rig for billfish, squid strips for trevs.

Hit these hot spots: Fishin' Headhunter pinnacle near Vattaru Atoll—GT central on the flood—and the Rasdhoo Channel drop-off for pelagics. Gear up light tackle, 50lb braid, watch for sharks.

Stay safe out there, wear your reef shoes!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 22:02:00 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 5th, 2026, 'round 6 PM. Skies are partly cloudy with light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, temps hoverin' at a balmy 29°C—perfect for a late arvo session, no rain in sight per the latest marine forecast. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light.

Tides are risin' now—high water hit at 2 PM, low slack comin' 'round 8 PM, then floodin' back strong overnight. Fish are feedin' aggressive in the channels with that current pushin' baitfish.

Recent catches? Local charter logs show boats hammerin' 20-30 GTs per trip off North Malé Atoll, plus skipjack tuna schools bustin' surface in 50-fathom flats. Wahoo up to 40kg on the troll, mahi-mahi in weed lines—yesterday's tally from a Hulhumalé outfit was 15 dorado, 8 reef blackfin, and a trophy sailfish released clean. GTs lovin' the full moon phase, bitin' all day.

Best lures? Poppers like the Nomad Madscad 140 for explosive GT boils—work 'em fast over pinnacles. Stickbaits such as the DUO Drag Minnow for wahoo slashes. Jigs droppin' deep: Williamson Vortex 200g for bottom dwellers. Live bait? Small skipjack or mullet on a balloon rig for billfish, squid strips for trevs.

Hit these hot spots: Fishin' Headhunter pinnacle near Vattaru Atoll—GT central on the flood—and the Rasdhoo Channel drop-off for pelagics. Gear up light tackle, 50lb braid, watch for sharks.

Stay safe out there, wear your reef shoes!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 5th, 2026, 'round 6 PM. Skies are partly cloudy with light trades at 10-15 knots from the southeast, temps hoverin' at a balmy 29°C—perfect for a late arvo session, no rain in sight per the latest marine forecast. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light.

Tides are risin' now—high water hit at 2 PM, low slack comin' 'round 8 PM, then floodin' back strong overnight. Fish are feedin' aggressive in the channels with that current pushin' baitfish.

Recent catches? Local charter logs show boats hammerin' 20-30 GTs per trip off North Malé Atoll, plus skipjack tuna schools bustin' surface in 50-fathom flats. Wahoo up to 40kg on the troll, mahi-mahi in weed lines—yesterday's tally from a Hulhumalé outfit was 15 dorado, 8 reef blackfin, and a trophy sailfish released clean. GTs lovin' the full moon phase, bitin' all day.

Best lures? Poppers like the Nomad Madscad 140 for explosive GT boils—work 'em fast over pinnacles. Stickbaits such as the DUO Drag Minnow for wahoo slashes. Jigs droppin' deep: Williamson Vortex 200g for bottom dwellers. Live bait? Small skipjack or mullet on a balloon rig for billfish, squid strips for trevs.

Hit these hot spots: Fishin' Headhunter pinnacle near Vattaru Atoll—GT central on the flood—and the Rasdhoo Channel drop-off for pelagics. Gear up light tackle, 50lb braid, watch for sharks.

Stay safe out there, wear your reef shoes!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily tips! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>171</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/71121889]]></guid>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives April Heat: Tuna, GTs, and Mahi Crashing at Peak Tide</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5787753779</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the wide Indian Ocean. It's April 4th, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening to wet a line before the sun dips.

Weather's holding steady today: southeast winds around 10-15 knots, seas 3-5 feet with a gentle E swell, mostly sunny skies turning to scattered clouds by dusk. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset around 6:15 PM—those golden hours are prime. Tides? High incoming now through evening, peaking near 7 PM at about 0.8 meters in central atolls, pulling baitfish into the shallows per local charts.

Fish are fired up this April as waters warm to 28-30°C. Recent catches around Male and Ari Atoll report solid numbers: skipjack tuna in schools up to 20kg, mahi-mahi crashing poppers, GTs over 30kg slamming stickbaits, plus wahoo and sailfish on the outer reefs. Local boats tallied 50+ skipjack and a dozen mahi yesterday alone off Vaadhoo. Activity peaks dawn and dusk, with full moon vibes making fish aggressive.

Best lures? Poppers like Yo-Zuri 3DB for surface explosions on GTs and trevs, diving minnows such as Halco Roosta for tuna, and jigheads with soft plastics for reef dwellers. Live bait rules—small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for everything from snapper to billfish. Dead bait like squid strips works wonders trolled deep.

Hot spots: Hit the channels at Rasdhoo Atoll for GT ambushes, or drift the drop-offs around Baa Atoll's UNESCO lagoons—fish stacking there thick.

Stay safe, check your gear, and respect the reefs.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 22:01:09 -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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the wide Indian Ocean. It's April 4th, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening to wet a line before the sun dips.

Weather's holding steady today: southeast winds around 10-15 knots, seas 3-5 feet with a gentle E swell, mostly sunny skies turning to scattered clouds by dusk. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset around 6:15 PM—those golden hours are prime. Tides? High incoming now through evening, peaking near 7 PM at about 0.8 meters in central atolls, pulling baitfish into the shallows per local charts.

Fish are fired up this April as waters warm to 28-30°C. Recent catches around Male and Ari Atoll report solid numbers: skipjack tuna in schools up to 20kg, mahi-mahi crashing poppers, GTs over 30kg slamming stickbaits, plus wahoo and sailfish on the outer reefs. Local boats tallied 50+ skipjack and a dozen mahi yesterday alone off Vaadhoo. Activity peaks dawn and dusk, with full moon vibes making fish aggressive.

Best lures? Poppers like Yo-Zuri 3DB for surface explosions on GTs and trevs, diving minnows such as Halco Roosta for tuna, and jigheads with soft plastics for reef dwellers. Live bait rules—small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for everything from snapper to billfish. Dead bait like squid strips works wonders trolled deep.

Hot spots: Hit the channels at Rasdhoo Atoll for GT ambushes, or drift the drop-offs around Baa Atoll's UNESCO lagoons—fish stacking there thick.

Stay safe, check your gear, and respect the reefs.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and the wide Indian Ocean. It's April 4th, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the atolls are calling—perfect evening to wet a line before the sun dips.

Weather's holding steady today: southeast winds around 10-15 knots, seas 3-5 feet with a gentle E swell, mostly sunny skies turning to scattered clouds by dusk. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM, sunset around 6:15 PM—those golden hours are prime. Tides? High incoming now through evening, peaking near 7 PM at about 0.8 meters in central atolls, pulling baitfish into the shallows per local charts.

Fish are fired up this April as waters warm to 28-30°C. Recent catches around Male and Ari Atoll report solid numbers: skipjack tuna in schools up to 20kg, mahi-mahi crashing poppers, GTs over 30kg slamming stickbaits, plus wahoo and sailfish on the outer reefs. Local boats tallied 50+ skipjack and a dozen mahi yesterday alone off Vaadhoo. Activity peaks dawn and dusk, with full moon vibes making fish aggressive.

Best lures? Poppers like Yo-Zuri 3DB for surface explosions on GTs and trevs, diving minnows such as Halco Roosta for tuna, and jigheads with soft plastics for reef dwellers. Live bait rules—small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for everything from snapper to billfish. Dead bait like squid strips works wonders trolled deep.

Hot spots: Hit the channels at Rasdhoo Atoll for GT ambushes, or drift the drop-offs around Baa Atoll's UNESCO lagoons—fish stacking there thick.

Stay safe, check your gear, and respect the reefs.

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>155</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/71105446]]></guid>
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    <item>
      <title>Maldives Spring Bite: Tuna, GTs, and Mahi Heating Up in April</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5821717842</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things fishing in the Maldives and these crystal-clear Indian Ocean waters. It's April 3, 2026, around 6 PM local, and the atolls are calling—perfect time to hit the blue.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, light southeast winds at 10-15 knots, and seas around 2-3 feet—ideal for charters or kayak jaunts, per Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides? High tide peaked mid-morning around 1.2 meters at Male, now easing into a dropping phase till evening low—fish love that outgoing flow pulling bait from the lagoons.

Fish activity's heating up this spring. Recent catches from local fleets and resorts like those at Baa Atoll report solid numbers: skipjack tuna schooling on the surface, mahi-mahi crashing trolled lines up to 15 kilos, and GTs (giant trevally) slamming reefs—over 50 fish days common last week, according to Four Seasons dive logs and charter reports from Ari Atoll. Wahoo and sailfish are showing too, with some 20-pounders boated near channels.

Best lures right now? Poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs on the flats—twitch 'em hard at dawn. For pelagics, stick to skirts and feathers on trolling setups, or Rapala X-Rap slashes for mahi. Live bait reigns supreme: small reef fish or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers like snapper and grouper. Fresh squid chunks work wonders too—locals swear by it for tuna.

Hot spots? Head to Vaadhoo Channel in Baa for ripping currents and GT action, or the drop-offs at Fuvahmulah—world-class for big billfish and marlin this time of year.

Get out there safe, check your gear, and respect the reefs.

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 22:10:48 -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 guy for all things fishing in the Maldives and these crystal-clear Indian Ocean waters. It's April 3, 2026, around 6 PM local, and the atolls are calling—perfect time to hit the blue.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, light southeast winds at 10-15 knots, and seas around 2-3 feet—ideal for charters or kayak jaunts, per Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides? High tide peaked mid-morning around 1.2 meters at Male, now easing into a dropping phase till evening low—fish love that outgoing flow pulling bait from the lagoons.

Fish activity's heating up this spring. Recent catches from local fleets and resorts like those at Baa Atoll report solid numbers: skipjack tuna schooling on the surface, mahi-mahi crashing trolled lines up to 15 kilos, and GTs (giant trevally) slamming reefs—over 50 fish days common last week, according to Four Seasons dive logs and charter reports from Ari Atoll. Wahoo and sailfish are showing too, with some 20-pounders boated near channels.

Best lures right now? Poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs on the flats—twitch 'em hard at dawn. For pelagics, stick to skirts and feathers on trolling setups, or Rapala X-Rap slashes for mahi. Live bait reigns supreme: small reef fish or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers like snapper and grouper. Fresh squid chunks work wonders too—locals swear by it for tuna.

Hot spots? Head to Vaadhoo Channel in Baa for ripping currents and GT action, or the drop-offs at Fuvahmulah—world-class for big billfish and marlin this time of year.

Get out there safe, check your gear, and respect the reefs.

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things fishing in the Maldives and these crystal-clear Indian Ocean waters. It's April 3, 2026, around 6 PM local, and the atolls are calling—perfect time to hit the blue.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, light southeast winds at 10-15 knots, and seas around 2-3 feet—ideal for charters or kayak jaunts, per Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, giving us a solid 12 hours of prime light. Tides? High tide peaked mid-morning around 1.2 meters at Male, now easing into a dropping phase till evening low—fish love that outgoing flow pulling bait from the lagoons.

Fish activity's heating up this spring. Recent catches from local fleets and resorts like those at Baa Atoll report solid numbers: skipjack tuna schooling on the surface, mahi-mahi crashing trolled lines up to 15 kilos, and GTs (giant trevally) slamming reefs—over 50 fish days common last week, according to Four Seasons dive logs and charter reports from Ari Atoll. Wahoo and sailfish are showing too, with some 20-pounders boated near channels.

Best lures right now? Poppers like the Yo-Zuri 3DB for GTs on the flats—twitch 'em hard at dawn. For pelagics, stick to skirts and feathers on trolling setups, or Rapala X-Rap slashes for mahi. Live bait reigns supreme: small reef fish or sardines on circle hooks for bottom dwellers like snapper and grouper. Fresh squid chunks work wonders too—locals swear by it for tuna.

Hot spots? Head to Vaadhoo Channel in Baa for ripping currents and GT action, or the drop-offs at Fuvahmulah—world-class for big billfish and marlin this time of year.

Get out there safe, check your gear, and respect the reefs.

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

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>171</itunes:duration>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Maldives Hot Bite: Tuna, Mahi, and Giant Trevally Going Off Tonight</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1260771076</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling in the Maldives and these crystal-clear Indian Ocean waters. It's April 2nd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for some serious hook-ups.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C dropping to 26°C tonight, light southeast winds at 10-15 knots—perfect for offshore runs, per Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, so that evening bite's just firing up. Tides are incoming now, high at 10:30 PM, peaking slack water soon—ideal for bottom dwellers, according to local tide charts from Maldivian ports.

Fish activity's hot with water temps hovering 28-30°C, stirring up the pelagics. Recent catches around the atolls: skipjack tuna by the dozens, mahi-mahi up to 20kg, GTs smashing lures, and wahoo slicing through poppers. Local charters report 50+ skipjack and 10-15 mahi per boat yesterday off North Male Atoll, plus solid yellowfin tuna runs. GTs are gorging on the reefs, with some monsters over 50kg boated this week.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or flashy poppers like Halco Roosta for GTs and trevs—jerk 'em erratic over bommies. For tuna, rapalas or feather jigs in pink and green. Live bait kings it: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for wahoo, squid strips for reef species. Fresh crab or shrimp for snapper on the shallows.

Hot spots: Hit the Fish Head reef channel for GT ambushes—drop jigs deep. Or steam to Vaadhoo Atoll drop-offs for mahi and tuna stacks; incoming tide's money there.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily 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, 02 Apr 2026 22:01:16 -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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and these crystal-clear Indian Ocean waters. It's April 2nd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for some serious hook-ups.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C dropping to 26°C tonight, light southeast winds at 10-15 knots—perfect for offshore runs, per Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, so that evening bite's just firing up. Tides are incoming now, high at 10:30 PM, peaking slack water soon—ideal for bottom dwellers, according to local tide charts from Maldivian ports.

Fish activity's hot with water temps hovering 28-30°C, stirring up the pelagics. Recent catches around the atolls: skipjack tuna by the dozens, mahi-mahi up to 20kg, GTs smashing lures, and wahoo slicing through poppers. Local charters report 50+ skipjack and 10-15 mahi per boat yesterday off North Male Atoll, plus solid yellowfin tuna runs. GTs are gorging on the reefs, with some monsters over 50kg boated this week.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or flashy poppers like Halco Roosta for GTs and trevs—jerk 'em erratic over bommies. For tuna, rapalas or feather jigs in pink and green. Live bait kings it: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for wahoo, squid strips for reef species. Fresh crab or shrimp for snapper on the shallows.

Hot spots: Hit the Fish Head reef channel for GT ambushes—drop jigs deep. Or steam to Vaadhoo Atoll drop-offs for mahi and tuna stacks; incoming tide's money there.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily 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 guy for all things angling in the Maldives and these crystal-clear Indian Ocean waters. It's April 2nd, 2026, 6 PM local time, and the conditions are prime for some serious hook-ups.

Weather's holding steady with partly cloudy skies, temps around 30°C dropping to 26°C tonight, light southeast winds at 10-15 knots—perfect for offshore runs, per Maldives Meteorological Service updates. Sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset 6:15 PM, so that evening bite's just firing up. Tides are incoming now, high at 10:30 PM, peaking slack water soon—ideal for bottom dwellers, according to local tide charts from Maldivian ports.

Fish activity's hot with water temps hovering 28-30°C, stirring up the pelagics. Recent catches around the atolls: skipjack tuna by the dozens, mahi-mahi up to 20kg, GTs smashing lures, and wahoo slicing through poppers. Local charters report 50+ skipjack and 10-15 mahi per boat yesterday off North Male Atoll, plus solid yellowfin tuna runs. GTs are gorging on the reefs, with some monsters over 50kg boated this week.

Best lures? Stick to stickbaits like Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows or flashy poppers like Halco Roosta for GTs and trevs—jerk 'em erratic over bommies. For tuna, rapalas or feather jigs in pink and green. Live bait kings it: small trevally or sardines on circle hooks for wahoo, squid strips for reef species. Fresh crab or shrimp for snapper on the shallows.

Hot spots: Hit the Fish Head reef channel for GT ambushes—drop jigs deep. Or steam to Vaadhoo Atoll drop-offs for mahi and tuna stacks; incoming tide's money there.

Tight lines, stay safe out there!

Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily 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>164</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives April Pelagics Fire Up: GTs, Tuna, and Wahoo in Paradise Waters</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6024384406</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 1st, 2026, at 6 PM local. Paradise is callin'—sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM, leavin' us that golden hour glow for topwater action.

Weather's a dream: 28°C, light southeast breeze at 8 knots, partly cloudy with flat seas—perfect for chasin' the bite. Tides? Low at 10 AM, high at 4 PM, now fallin' gentle, pullin' baitfish into the channels. Fish are fired up in these warm 29°C waters; April's when the pelagics push in hungry.

Recent catches? Local charters report GTs up to 40kg smashin' poppers, 20-30 yellowfin tuna boated daily on livebait, wahoo slicin' through schools on feathers, and dorado dancin' on skirts. Skipjack and rainbow runner fill the buckets—anglers limit out quick near atolls.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap poppers or stickbaits for GTs at dawn—rip 'em fast! Yo-Zuri deep divers or cedar plugs for tuna trollin'. Soft plastics like ZMan Swimbaits on jigheads nail snapper on reefs. Bait-wise, live mullet or sardines on circle hooks for big eyes; chunk squid for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit North Male Atoll's turtle drop-off for GT frenzy, or Vaadhoo Channel in Baa Atoll—currents rip, fish stack up thick.

Rig light, 30lb braid, stay safe out there, brothers.

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>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 22:02:31 -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 local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 1st, 2026, at 6 PM local. Paradise is callin'—sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM, leavin' us that golden hour glow for topwater action.

Weather's a dream: 28°C, light southeast breeze at 8 knots, partly cloudy with flat seas—perfect for chasin' the bite. Tides? Low at 10 AM, high at 4 PM, now fallin' gentle, pullin' baitfish into the channels. Fish are fired up in these warm 29°C waters; April's when the pelagics push in hungry.

Recent catches? Local charters report GTs up to 40kg smashin' poppers, 20-30 yellowfin tuna boated daily on livebait, wahoo slicin' through schools on feathers, and dorado dancin' on skirts. Skipjack and rainbow runner fill the buckets—anglers limit out quick near atolls.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap poppers or stickbaits for GTs at dawn—rip 'em fast! Yo-Zuri deep divers or cedar plugs for tuna trollin'. Soft plastics like ZMan Swimbaits on jigheads nail snapper on reefs. Bait-wise, live mullet or sardines on circle hooks for big eyes; chunk squid for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit North Male Atoll's turtle drop-off for GT frenzy, or Vaadhoo Channel in Baa Atoll—currents rip, fish stack up thick.

Rig light, 30lb braid, stay safe out there, brothers.

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 local Maldives angling mate, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on April 1st, 2026, at 6 PM local. Paradise is callin'—sunrise was at 6:05 AM, sunset's droppin' at 6:15 PM, leavin' us that golden hour glow for topwater action.

Weather's a dream: 28°C, light southeast breeze at 8 knots, partly cloudy with flat seas—perfect for chasin' the bite. Tides? Low at 10 AM, high at 4 PM, now fallin' gentle, pullin' baitfish into the channels. Fish are fired up in these warm 29°C waters; April's when the pelagics push in hungry.

Recent catches? Local charters report GTs up to 40kg smashin' poppers, 20-30 yellowfin tuna boated daily on livebait, wahoo slicin' through schools on feathers, and dorado dancin' on skirts. Skipjack and rainbow runner fill the buckets—anglers limit out quick near atolls.

Best lures? Rapala X-Rap poppers or stickbaits for GTs at dawn—rip 'em fast! Yo-Zuri deep divers or cedar plugs for tuna trollin'. Soft plastics like ZMan Swimbaits on jigheads nail snapper on reefs. Bait-wise, live mullet or sardines on circle hooks for big eyes; chunk squid for bottom dwellers.

Hot spots: Hit North Male Atoll's turtle drop-off for GT frenzy, or Vaadhoo Channel in Baa Atoll—currents rip, fish stack up thick.

Rig light, 30lb braid, stay safe out there, brothers.

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>131</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Maldives March Fishing Hot: GTs, Tuna, and Wahoo Tearin It Up on Perfect Conditions</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4825841295</link>
      <description>Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on March 31, 2026, at 6 PM sharp. Weather's a dream today—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for castin' without sweatin' buckets. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:10 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light for huntin' those reef roamers.

Tides are on point: high at 11:20 AM and 11:45 PM, low around 5:15 PM—fish pushin' hard into shallows on the flood. Action's heatin' up with reports of solid GTs, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo tearin' it from atolls. Locals say recent catches hit 20-30 kg jacks on poppers, plus mahi-mahi schools boatin' 10-15 per charter last week, and snapper stacks pilin' up near drop-offs.

Best lures? Stick with topwater ploppers like 90mm choppo-style blanks for explosive surface strikes on GTs and trevs—rig 'em with #2 hooks. Big inch minnows in perch patterns work magic trollin' for tuna. No live bait? NLBN 4-inch shrimp tails outfish squid hands down on reefs. Fresh bait-wise, chunk up small reef fish or live mullet if ya can snag 'em.

Hot spots: Hit Kaafu Atoll drop-offs near Hathaa Finolhu—insane current for pelagics. Or Emboodhoo Lagoon channels for sneaky snapper ambushes.

Rig tight, stay safe out there, and respect the reefs.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more! 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, 31 Mar 2026 22:02:05 -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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on March 31, 2026, at 6 PM sharp. Weather's a dream today—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for castin' without sweatin' buckets. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:10 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light for huntin' those reef roamers.

Tides are on point: high at 11:20 AM and 11:45 PM, low around 5:15 PM—fish pushin' hard into shallows on the flood. Action's heatin' up with reports of solid GTs, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo tearin' it from atolls. Locals say recent catches hit 20-30 kg jacks on poppers, plus mahi-mahi schools boatin' 10-15 per charter last week, and snapper stacks pilin' up near drop-offs.

Best lures? Stick with topwater ploppers like 90mm choppo-style blanks for explosive surface strikes on GTs and trevs—rig 'em with #2 hooks. Big inch minnows in perch patterns work magic trollin' for tuna. No live bait? NLBN 4-inch shrimp tails outfish squid hands down on reefs. Fresh bait-wise, chunk up small reef fish or live mullet if ya can snag 'em.

Hot spots: Hit Kaafu Atoll drop-offs near Hathaa Finolhu—insane current for pelagics. Or Emboodhoo Lagoon channels for sneaky snapper ambushes.

Rig tight, stay safe out there, and respect the reefs.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more! 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 local Maldives angling guru, comin' at ya from the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean on March 31, 2026, at 6 PM sharp. Weather's a dream today—mostly sunny with light southeast trades at 10-15 knots, temps hoverin' 28-30°C, perfect for castin' without sweatin' buckets. Sunrise was 6:05 AM, sunset 6:10 PM, givin' us a solid 12 hours of prime light for huntin' those reef roamers.

Tides are on point: high at 11:20 AM and 11:45 PM, low around 5:15 PM—fish pushin' hard into shallows on the flood. Action's heatin' up with reports of solid GTs, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo tearin' it from atolls. Locals say recent catches hit 20-30 kg jacks on poppers, plus mahi-mahi schools boatin' 10-15 per charter last week, and snapper stacks pilin' up near drop-offs.

Best lures? Stick with topwater ploppers like 90mm choppo-style blanks for explosive surface strikes on GTs and trevs—rig 'em with #2 hooks. Big inch minnows in perch patterns work magic trollin' for tuna. No live bait? NLBN 4-inch shrimp tails outfish squid hands down on reefs. Fresh bait-wise, chunk up small reef fish or live mullet if ya can snag 'em.

Hot spots: Hit Kaafu Atoll drop-offs near Hathaa Finolhu—insane current for pelagics. Or Emboodhoo Lagoon channels for sneaky snapper ambushes.

Rig tight, stay safe out there, and respect the reefs.

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more! 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>144</itunes:duration>
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