Tue
23 Jun
Activity
Moon Phase
1st quarter
Moonrise
12:39pm
Major Windows
6:43am – 8:43am
6:22pm – 8:22pm
Minor Windows
12:10am – 2:10am
11:39am – 1:39pm
Fishing Forecast Location
Today's Geelong fishing forecast is based on the current solunar and weather signals. Low light conditions may improve feeding activity.
Updated local time
Moon Phase
1st Quarter
Estimated Fish Feeding Activity
39%
Possible bite intensity is 39%, suggesting quiet fishing conditions.
Daily Timing
Sampled indicators for Geelong place conditions in the quiet band at 39% potential bite intensity.
Solunar Score Today
39% Potential Bite (Feeding) Intensity
Major 1
06:43 – 08:43
Centre · 07:43
Strength · 50.1%
Underfoot transit major
Major 2
18:22 – 20:22
Centre · 19:22
Strength · 90.7%
Overhead transit major
Minor 1
00:10 – 02:10
Centre · 01:10
Strength · 43.7%
Moonset minor
Minor 2
11:39 – 13:39
Centre · 12:39
Strength · 41.7%
Moonrise minor
7 Day Solunar Forecast
Compare daily bite activity, major feeding windows and moon conditions to help plan upcoming fishing sessions.
Weather
Conditions here can shift quickly through the day, so use this as the broad weather picture alongside the separate wind and pressure sections below.
Right now
Mainly Clear
13.0°C
Today
Maximum
15.1°C
Minimum
7.6°C
Rain
0.0 mm
Pressure
Pressure is most useful when it shows movement. A stable, rising, or falling trend can add context to the rest of today’s fishing forecast.
Right now
Interpretation
Pressure trend is still building from recent samples. Current pressure is available, but there needs to be more readings before it can be interpreted.
Pressure is only one signal. Wind, tide, solunar timing, water movement, and local structure still matter.
Recent readings build the pressure trend used for interpretation.
Wind
Wind direction and strength can change how exposed a location feels, especially around open water, beaches, piers, and headlands.
Right now
Current speed
9.8 km/h
Direction
W
Today max
19.7 km/h
Reading the wind
Wind direction and strength can affect comfort, casting, and exposure around this location.
Wind gusts can be stronger than the average wind speed, so it's worth checking the gust forecast if you're planning to fish from an exposed location or need to know about potential changes in conditions.
Even modest wind can affect comfort and casting, especially where the water is exposed.
The marker shows the current wind direction, while the daily outlook below shows whether conditions are likely to build or ease over the coming days.
Marine Conditions
Marine forecasts are guidance only. Conditions can change quickly on exposed water.
Current marine state
Current wave
0.98 m
Max wave
0.98 m
Wave period
10.25 s
Swell
0.96 m
Wind wave
0.28 m
Water temp
13.1 C
Marine interpretation
Sampled marine conditions suggest a fairly manageable sea state.
Marine caution
Higher waves suggest a conservative approach, especially in exposed areas. Forecast wave heights are averages rather than peak conditions. Individual waves may exceed the forecast height at times. Wind and local chop can quickly affect comfort and control. Wave period around 11.40 s can influence how conditions feel on the water. Conditions in open water can change quickly, so keep checking throughout the session.
Water temperature
Water temperature is around 13.1 C, making immersion a more significant factor to plan for. Cool or cold water can affect grip, coordination, and swimming ability. Wind and rough water can increase the impact of an accidental immersion.
Check local marine warnings, ramps, vessel limits and current conditions before heading out.
Fishing Reports
Recent catch activity for this location.
Reports analysed
3
This year
2
This season
0
Species mentioned
2
Reported species
Reports in Geelong are spread across a range of species, with Snapper, Australian Salmon and Flathead among the names that come up most.
Regional reports can draw from several nearby waters, so the chart should be read as a broad guide.
Based on regional Getfished fishing report species data.
* Note that report summaries will sometimes display the same species under different names. This is because they are being reported that way. This is intentional.
Share of the displayed top 2 species mentions for this location.
Plenty of different bait show up here, though blue bait, squid and pipis still turn up regularly.
Worth staying flexible, because the reports are not all pointing one way.
Built from all-time reported bait mentions: 210 mentions across 18 distinct bait entries.
Share of the displayed top 2 bait mentions.
Geelong is a Corio Bay fishing area with strong land-based, kayak and boat access close to town. Boat fishers can launch from St Helens, which has floating pontoons, or Limeburners, which has toilets and a fish cleaning table. From these ramps, anglers can work the inner harbour, the north side of Corio Bay and broader Bellarine water. Shore access is a major part of the location, with Cunningham Pier, Rippleside Pier, Wangim Walk, Limeburners Jetty, St Helen’s rock walls and other waterfront structures giving fishers options without a boat.
The semi-industrial shoreline is important because it creates deep water, hard structure and fish-attracting lights. Cunningham Pier reaches about 350 metres into Corio Bay and gives access to deeper water, while Wangim Walk runs about 440 metres and puts anglers over productive pylon and mud-bottom ground. Westerly weather can make sheltered inner-harbour options useful, and Point Henry offers protection while allowing deeper channel edges to be explored. Snapper activity is tied to the warmer months from about October to April, with dawn, dusk and tide changes worth considering. High tide can bring pinkies into reach in summer, while low tide can suit flathead.
For land-based fishing, the practical pattern is to use the structure rather than stay in one place. Pylons, rock walls, lit pier edges, mud bottom, sandy flats and depth changes all fish differently. Dropping lightly weighted baits or soft plastics beside pylons can suit bream and pinkie snapper, while casting across mud or sand is more relevant for flathead. Around jetties and piers, baits such as pilchard, squid, silver whiting, chicken, prawns, pipis and mussels are supported options, with paternoster or running sinker rigs adjusted to wind, tide and casting distance. Take care at night, when eels, scorpionfish, stingrays and other unwanted catches are more likely; avoid handling unfamiliar fish.
No. Because a forecast cannot truthfully guarantee whether fish are biting at a specific spot right now. Getfished shows the current fishing conditions instead: tide movement, solunar timing, weather, wind, pressure, marine conditions and fising report, derived, species history.
Use this information to make informed decisions about where to fish, and to compare conditions across nearby locations. We hope you enjoy using Getfished to find your next great fishing spot!
| Latitude | -38.1471 |
|---|---|
| Longitude | 144.3607
View on Google Maps |
| Nearest city | Melbourne |
| Distance | 73.61 km |
| Bays | Port phillip bay Corio bay |
| Rivers | Barwon river |
| Best Times | Dawn and dusk |
Region Locations
Possible bite intensity is 39%, suggesting quiet fishing conditions.
Air 13 C
Pressure 1025 hPa
Water 13.1 C
Sunrise 7:39am
Sunset 5:09pm
Updated 23 Jun 4:59pm
Showing 1–6
Fishing report summaries are derived from Getfished’s structured fishing report database system. More information on this on how we collect and structure fishing report data can be found on our Fishing reports information.
Forecasts are based on the Getfished Meteorological and Solunar Forecasting System, which combines data from the BOM, and other sources. Our custom software systems use these inputs to establish solunar, tides and other forecasts for fishing conditions.
For more information on our systems and data sources please see our Datasources page. You can also Contact us for more information or details on commercial reuse.