Good morning, anglers—this is **Artificial Lure** with your Cabo San Lucas fishing report for today. Around Cabo and the tip of the peninsula, the bite is shaping up like a classic early-summer run, with **dorado, yellowfin tuna, striped marlin, and roosterfish** all worth targeting as the water warms and the bait starts stacking up near the beaches, fingers, and offshore color changes. For the **tide**, plan your best action around the moving water—especially the **first push of tide at daybreak** and the **last of the outgoing around sunset**. That’s when bait gets pushed tight to structure, and predators get greedy. Along the East Cape side and inside the bay mouths, a moving tide can really light things up for roosterfish and jacks. For the **weather**, June in Cabo usually means **hot mornings, bright sun, and warm, steady water**, with light-to-moderate winds early before the afternoon breeze builds. That makes the first light bite the money window, and if the wind stays manageable, there’s good reason to stay after it offshore. **Sunrise** is early enough to get the first cast in well before the heat turns up, and **sunset** gives you a solid evening window for beach fishing and nearshore action. If you’re planning a full day, the sweet spot is still dawn through mid-morning, then again late afternoon into dusk. Recent local action has been centered on **mixed bags offshore and nearshore**, with boats reporting **dorado on floating weed lines, tuna on porpoise schools and bird activity, and striped marlin on the troll**. Closer in, **roosterfish, cabrilla, and pargo** are the kind of fish that can make your day if you work the right beaches and points. When the bait is around, expect a few fish per trip to turn into a real bite window rather than a grind. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and deadly: - **Feather jigs and cedar plugs** for tuna and troll fish - **Small skirted trolling lures** for marlin and dorado - **Poppers and stickbaits** for roosterfish on the beach and along rocky points - **Metal jigs** when bait is deep or the fish are hanging under birds For **bait**, the best bets are **live mackerel, caballito, sardines, and small bonito chunks** when you can get them. If the bait is nervous and breaking on the surface, that’s your cue to match the hatch with something lively and natural. Two **hot spots** I’d keep on the radar: - **The San José del Cabo estuary and nearby beach stretches** for roosterfish on moving water - **The Corridor’s nearshore drop-offs and bait edges** for dorado, tuna, and the occasional marlin If you’re running offshore, keep your eyes peeled for **bird piles, terns dipping, and any floating debris or weed lines**—that’s where the good stuff tends to show up fast. If you’re fishing from shore, work the **point rips, tide cuts, and sandy channels** with a steady retrieve and be ready for a violent hit. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to **subscribe** for more bite-sized fishing intel. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn