Artificial Lure here with your Croatia coast fishing report for Wednesday evening, June 10. Along the Adriatic, the tide is *mixed and modest* rather than dramatic, so the bite is usually driven more by light, wind, and current breaks than by big tidal swings. Since I don’t have live fetched marine data in this session, I’d treat the evening into first light as the prime window and fish the edges, points, and harbor mouths where bait gets pushed. The weather along the coast is the big decider tonight: when the sea lays down and the northwesterly settles, the clear water usually tightens the feed, while a warm onshore breeze can wake up bream, leerfish, and bonito around the surface chop. In June, sunrise comes early and sunset runs late, so you’ve got a long workable day, with the first hour of light and the last hour before dark giving you the best shot at predators pushing shallow. What’s been showing recently in these waters is the usual early-summer mix: sea bass, gilthead seabream, dentex, saddled bream, mackerel, and the occasional bluefish or leerfish close to structure and bait. On a good evening, local anglers can pick up a few quality fish rather than a pile of them, and the action often comes in short windows when sardines or anchovies show. For lures, I’d lean on slim metal jigs, small casting minnows, and soft plastics worked slow for sea bass and bluefish, then a slightly heavier jig or minnow around deeper rock edges for dentex and amberjack country. If the water is clear, natural baitfish colors usually outfish bright paint. If it’s a bit dirty or windy, go with something louder and more reflective. For bait, the old reliable is fresh sardine, strips of squid, shrimp, and live or fresh-cut mullet where that’s allowed and practical. For seabream, a neat bait presentation near bottom still wins more often than not. If I were picking a couple of hot spots, I’d focus on: - Harbor mouths and ferry channels where bait stacks up at dusk - Rocky points and drop-offs on islands and peninsulas with a current seam Around the Croatian coast, that means working the edges of Split’s channel water, Zadar’s harbor approaches, the island passes around Hvar and Brač, and the rock-and-bluewater edges near Makarska and the Kvarner side when bait is present. The key is to fish where the water changes color, speed, or depth. Best bet tonight: fish light, stay mobile, and keep one rod ready for a surface strike and another near the bottom. The sea off Croatia often rewards patience, but when the feed turns on, it turns on fast. Thanks for tuning in, and 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