What is the connections between The Moon and Fishing?

Last night, my bro and I went fishing and it was full moon. The tides were quite and the fishs aren’t biting? So it was a total wasted of excellent 2 hours.
Any one know what sup with the moon/fish together?

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

5 Responses to “What is the connections between The Moon and Fishing?”

  1. Grand Master Basser says:

    I get this kinda stuff confused, the only thing I know I’m sure of is what the moon and fishing have in common are tides. That’s all I can reckon of.

    Something about the moon’s gravitational pull on the earth or something, I dunno.

  2. BeachBum818 says:

    Your question should be whats the relation between the moon and tides, not fishing, but since fishing is related to tides but more so currents i estimate its relevant.

    A full and new moon makes dramatic tides, higher high tides and lower low tides than normal. Its called fishing for a reason, its not called catching. Ya just had a terrible night

  3. tobias says:

    tides bro. the moons gravitational pull brings the movable part os earth (fill up) closer to itself. the closer the moon the larger the tide; the larger the tide the more fish activity and more eating fish!

  4. beedsarefunak says:

    I live in SE Alaska where we have large tidal fluctuations during certain times of the year. I noticed that some types of fish will follow a high tide as they head up rivers to spawn and will mill around the bay at low tide until the next high tide. So fishing a river near salt fill up for salmon is more productive at high tide than low tide. And fishing by boat at the rivers mouth is more productive with an incoming and high tide.

    Fishing for halibut here is better at slack tide, since there is less current. Quick currants make it hard to keep your bait on the bottom.
    Here is a link about how tides affect fishing;
    http://www.articlealley.com/article_784957_32.html

  5. H R says:

    Unfortunately it’s not so simple, otherwise we would all be catching limits every time. Yes gravitational pull and tides are one factor but a more obvious consideration is visibility. Fish tend to feed much more voraciously at night during the full moon. But even this is simplification. The weather, the currents, all these factors intertwine to make what anglers call the “conditions”.

Leave a Reply