Spring Coastal Fishing Chaos: Windy Days and Unpredictable Catches
Let me tell you, spring on the Guangdong coast is wild—short, moody, and never what it seems. One minute it’s sunny enough to burn your cheeks, the next? A gusty wind rolls in out of nowhere, turning the air cool enough to make you reach for a jacket. I’ve learned the hard way: skip the wind chill, and you’ll end up with a headache worse than a bad fishing day. But hey, weekends are for fishing, right? Even if the weather’s being a drama queen, you don’t waste a chance to cast a line.
So I texted my buddy, grabbed my gear, and hit the road. No time to overthink—wind or no wind, we were fishing. When we pulled up to the shore, the first thing we saw was a lure angler yanking a dark, thrashing fish out of the water. “Nice start!” I yelled. Good vibes, good omens—this had to be our day.

Setting Up Shop: Finding Shelter in the Wind
We hauled our stuff to a spot with shade and a little wind block—nothing fancy, but better than fighting gusts that’d turn our casts into wild swings. The sun was still high, so the shade was a godsend, but the waves? They didn’t get the memo to calm down. Small swells lapped at the shore, and even our sheltered spot had a light chop. “Better than the other side,” my buddy said, nodding at the bigger waves crashing across the bay. Fair enough—we’d take what we could get.

Time to rig up. I stuck with my go-to setup: 5.4m Wushuang Li rod, 2lb mainline, 1.2lb fluorocarbon leader, size 3 Iseama hooks. Float? Big Fish King, adjusted to flat water with a 4-eye depth. Bait? The usual trio—soft, sticky dough that’s worked before. No need to reinvent the wheel when the wind’s already doing that for us.



The First Bite (and the First Disaster)
I cast out, and the float bobbed gently in the chop. Fishing’s all about patience, right? So I settled in, slow-casting to build a bait cloud. Ten minutes in, the float jiggled—then jumped up. I jerked the rod… and felt nothing. Wait, no—one side of my leader was gone. Snapped clean. Only one culprit here: blowfish. Those little devils have teeth like razors, and they love chomping through light line.
Lesson learned. I swapped the fluorocarbon for 4lb braided leader and a size 4 barbless Wolf hook—tough enough to handle whatever the blowfish threw at us. First cast back? Bam. A tiny blowfish popped up, all puffed and annoyed. “Cute,” I said, dropping it in a bucket. “But you’re still a pest.”

And they kept coming. One after another, tiny blowfish, each more determined to steal my bait than the last. But hey, at least we weren’t blanking. Sort of.


Small Fish Takeover: The Milk Bream Menace
Then the milk bream showed up. Oh, those little guys. They’re like the toddlers of the fishing world—hyper, noisy, and always stealing snacks. Smaller than my thumb, they’d nibble the bait until it was gone, never committing to a real bite. I’d see the float dance, jerk the rod, and pull up nothing but a bare hook. Annoying? You bet. Worse than whitebait? Maybe. At least whitebait don’t tease you with half-bites.
But even with the chaos, we caught a few. A decent blowfish here, a tiny bream there. Nothing big, but fishing’s about the moments, right? The sun on your back, the sound of the waves, the occasional “ooh” when a fish hits.

And that lure angler? Still killing it. He landed another dark fish, bigger than the first. “Showoff,” my buddy muttered, but we were both jealous. Meanwhile, our handlines were pulling up nothing but tiny fry. “Great,” I thought. “We’re the comedy relief out here.”







Sunset, Cool Air, and a Big Fish Story (That Wasn’t Ours)
As the sun dipped low, the wind picked up a little, and the air turned cool—nice for us, not so nice for the fish. We were still pulling up tiny stuff when a guy from the nearby cleanup boat yelled over. “Hey, you guys see that big silver fish? Jumped right into our boat!” He held up a huge silver carp—must’ve been 10 pounds, easy. “Gave it to that guy over there,” he said, nodding at a fisherman grinning with the fish. I stared. “Why would a carp jump into a boat? Did it lose a bet?” My buddy laughed. “Maybe it’s tired of your bait.”
We kept casting, but the fish were still small. Then—surprise! A tiny tilapia. “Wow,” I said. “Remember when these were everywhere? Now they’re rare as hen’s teeth. Guess the American fish are outcompeting the African ones.” (Tilapia are African, right? Don’t quote me, but that’s what I thought.)










Night Falls, and the Big Fish Tease
When it got dark, we swapped our floats for glow-in-the-dark ones. My buddy had a few near-misses—rod bent, line screaming, then nothing. “Must’ve been a big one,” he said, frustrated. I swapped my hook to a size 4 Iseama, bigger bait, and settled in to wait. Patience, right? That’s what all the fishing shows say.
Then—finally! My float slowly sank. I jerked the rod, and felt a solid tug. “Got one!” I yelled. A short fight, and I pulled up a small carp. “Well, it’s not the 10-pounder we wanted,” I said, dropping it in the bucket. “But it’s a carp.”







Last Cast, Last Fish
It was getting late, so we decided to call it a day—after one last cast. I loaded up a big bait, cast out, and waited. Five minutes later, the glow float bobs. I jerk, and feel a nice weight. “Final fish!” I yelled, reeling it in. A small but decent one—perfect for a last catch.

We packed up quickly, tired but happy. No big game, but we had fun. That’s the thing about fishing, right? You don’t do it for the trophies—you do it for the wind in your hair, the sound of the waves, and the stupid little moments that make you laugh. Like when a blowfish puffs up in your hand, or a carp jumps into a boat for no reason. Those are the memories that stick.


Next time? We’ll bring bigger hooks, heavier line, and maybe a better luck charm. But for now? I’m just glad we went. Even with the wind, the blowfish, and the tiny milk bream. Fishing’s never perfect—but that’s what makes it perfect, right?
