Reports
Sat fishing report....seasnake on lure!
Submitted by wadetolley on Sun, 2010-08-22 05:27Well its that time of the week when Claire and i have some days off from work together. So do you plan a nice romantic picnic...ahh bugger that...lets go fishin!
Hit the water at 0530, as we wanted to get a few drifts in at one of our close spots. Had to do this, before all the weekend fishers come out of the wood work from there offices..and follow you around as they cant find there own spots. It was a great morning on the water.
We did 2 drifts and i pulled up a nice goldie and Claire some saddle tail. We then took of up to Bustard.. one of the islands north, to have a poke around. Found some nice ground, but only trickie snapper where hanging out there. So with the bottom being quiet, we tied on the lures. It wasnt long until i had hooked up to something. Now there isnt to many people that can tell people they have caught a seasnake on lure, but today i ticked that off my list.
We then headed back south down to Conexion island, as the nor easter was starting to pick up. Claire was on skipper duties, and while she was trolling along, found a nice lump on the sounder, that was worth a fish. We stopped and pulled in the lures. Baited up and drifted Claires new secret spot. Well what do you know, Claire has hooked up onto a nice sized saddletail. As you will notice in the photo, we are about 100m from shore in 19m of water.
We then flicked some lures around some coral bombies, trying to find a trout for tea. Nothing was biting, so we decided to call it a day. We had a relaxing day out, and now all was left to do, is Claire to clean the fish....yes she has been trained!
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ASI groyne and rockingham yacht club jetty
Submitted by dhuking on Sun, 2010-08-22 01:03We went out chasing snapper in the middle of a storm.casted out big baits on a double hook rig mulie/squid.At the jetty we landed a big ray but then sat with baits out for bout 2 hours with nothing.Tthe bloke next to us was catching sum nice whiting on a small rig i didn't wanna downgrade though just for that chance of a snapper.Moved on to the ASI groyne kwinana but just got plauged with port jackson sharks for a bout 2 hours.Then it dropped off with not a bite for another hour and a half.Then we called it quits.Was perfect conditions to land 1 but i reckon if u manage to get a nice snapper off a beach or jetty in the sound your just 1 lucky son of a gun
Exmouth Greyband
Submitted by Adam Gallash on Sat, 2010-08-21 10:38We finally managed to get out to the deep spots after a gentleman hours start. (thanks to Jeff for not getting any evidence)
First drift and the counter on my electric reel said 360m (which had the battery die soon after). After about 20 minutes we finally got the bite we wanted and we knew we had found the cod hole. After 15 odd minutes of fighting each we had two floating behemoths to the surface and the high 5's began, considering we were fishing without a sounder that could go over 160m.
With the esky full we moved to another spot to try and find some rubies which proved to be uneventfull. We then did a little bit of trolling around for no luck and headed back to the original spot for one last drift to try and get Simmo a cod. With the south wester well and truly in we missed the spot but found a secondary mark which gave me the last fish of the day and with the electric reel out of battery, the arms and back got well and truly stretched on a nice 20kg fish.
Unfortunately it has to be a short report as I think I'm still hungover from Thursday nights squidding mission, lol. Now I'm looking forward to trying them on the plate as I've heard they are pretty good table fare.
Cheers,
Adam
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not fishing related,but political related at church
Submitted by joe amato on Fri, 2010-08-20 20:50i was at church tonight for my fathers memorial mass for his 3rd year anniversary with my family and friends doing my part on behalf of my mother.when mass had ended i discovered a certain political party ,the right to life party of western australia put flyers on every vehicle ,in the carpark,which i found very offensive,i called the after hours number,and the secretatary denied this,i told her it was rude to do political advertising in a church carpark,which in my opinion is a sacred place that should be free of political motives,not nice of that party,they deffinately wont get a vote by my family or friends
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Nebraska II - Day full of FUN
Submitted by Outlaw II on Wed, 2010-08-18 21:58
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Some of the boys from our Footy club thought it would be an awesome idea to do some fishing seeing as were unfortunate to end our season early by deciding not to play in the finals series. Rather than head out on a few smaller boats we decided to charter a vessel ourselves and make day out of it.
We decided on the boat Nebraska (www.nebraskacharters.com.au). as the vessel of choice. They were not only competitive on price but kept us uptodate with the weather and ensured us that we would bring home some fish.
The morning started early (we were able to dictate the time - to some extent- as we had the entire boat to ourselves). The plan was initially to head to direction bank and chase some snapper just on sunrise and then head to some deeper ground in and look for some dhuies.
The snapper were biting right on crew and most people were able to bring something over the side of the boat. Deckhand Steve was always keeping ready to assist with pulling fish in ensuring that nothing was lost at the final hurdle. Among the snapper we also managed to catch a few blackarse some thumping KG's and one of the biggest cuttlefish (4.2 kg) I have ever seen.
Once the sun came up we headed out wider in the search of that elusive Dhuie. Along the way we encountered numerous schools of sambos (we lost a few horses) which kept the boys entertained. Mid morning was when we caught our first only dhuie for the trip - a nice fish of around 6.5kg.
By no means did we set any records with what we caught but by the smiles on everyone's faces it wasnt hard to see that we had all enjoyed the day. Both the skipper and deckie were more than willing to assist in helping all on board catch a feed. If you are looking at doing something different at your sporting club or you work I would highly recommend Nebraska
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Jurien Bay - Part 3 - 9th Aug - A Rocky Epic Trip
Submitted by honsu chin on Wed, 2010-08-18 10:41Its my 2nd trip again to Jurien Bay in as many weeks. This time with the company of FreoBear, ChrisP and Flangies. Again all artificials and no bait trip but been a little more windy than the last trip, Whitey brought some bait just in case. Needless to say we rocked about a fair bit and the drift was a little fast for demersals, went chasing sambos to stretch out muscles out abit. Within a very short travelling time, we were into them. Out comes the silly gear (PE 2-3) and we were dancing around each other.
Later that morning the wind dropped abit and Whitey found us some demersals to play with. I got my first Baldie on jig which I was very pleased. One Blackass had about 4 or 5 goes on my Eupro Marugo jig and eventually hooked up. Very light coloured blackass (#3 pic below) Chris was going good with the sambos which seem to follow him everywhere but eventually got into some good fish. Freobear got abit inpatient with the jig, so he was the first with baits down but did get his fair share of good fish, pinkies and baldies. Flangies also got into a heap of sambos and pinkies on the McArthy plastics but his fish were not as EPIC this time round but nevertheless, still good fish.
This trip there was a fair few blackass (atleast 8) and baldies (atleast 6) caught. Only 4 or so Dhuies hit the deck, mostly around legal size. Whitey managed his first good Dhuie on jig (which I'll have to get that pic), at around 9-10kg.
All up was a good rocky trip and bloody good company and crew. Another BIG THANKS to Whitey and his deckie, Matt, for making it a great trip despite the weather. Definately a worthwhile trip for a repeat....AGAIN!!
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Weekend out on the tinny
Submitted by hlokk on Tue, 2010-08-17 16:09
Well, as some of you now know, I finally ended up getting a tinny (after a fair while of waiting).
Thar she is:
Well, as they say BOAT stands for Bring Out Another Thousand, and I've gone through that multiple times..... But at least I knew this coming in, and had planned for it. Especially all the 'optional' safety gear (EPIRB, VHF, offshore flares, sea rescue membership, backup battery). Anyways, constantly worry about money and you'll have no time for fun, so nevermind, off we go.
Woke up when still dark (and drizzly) on saturday and put the boat in the water. First time i've ever actually reversed a trailer but got it second go (albeit slowly).
Headed out to a snappery spot, but got there a little later than i'd have liked, and werent any fish there (except a wrasse that took a 7/0 circle).
Went to try some squid but friend was feeling a bit sea sick so had to head in. Dropped her back at home, then back to Hillarys for round 2:
No problems launching boat in water by myself, which was all good (again, hadnt dropped it in the water by myself before).
Headed out to a mates squid spot, but didnt have much luck. Tried some areas nearby and managed to get onto some good squid, so boat is now 'inked'.
Seems like a pretty good area and managed to land a few more squid including a beauty of about 25cm mantle length, and heavy as hell which i managed to snap some U/W shots of.
Picked up one or two more squid from the spot as well. Woulda got more squid if i'd been more attentive with the rods though (mucking around on the boat or the sounder/plotter). Looked up a few times to see both rods going off but too slow to get them before squid was off (might spool up one spool with mono perhaps...). Even had one jig come up with a squid tentacle chunk :p. Jigs were also weeding up a bit, so next time should get into a few more (as i get more organised with the boat.
Weather was nice, so decided to head outside the reefs. Picked a nice passage and headed out. Little bit of swell but no problems.
Managed to spot some nice ground on the way out though
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Once out, I headed for the inside of the three mile to see if I could find some whiting ground. Went over a school of fish on the way around, scrolled back, pressed mark, then drove over them, were still on the sounder, so scrolled back. Ok, they're are bearing 170, 15m back, and 5m deep, so I cast a rig out, let it sink, then two cranks and I was on. Unfortunately was just a wrasse, but at least the humminbird gave me some practice in case its some proper fish next time.
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Gave some areas a drift for more wrasse (marked on sounder as areas to avoid :p), and finally stumbled on some whiting ground. Got a few bites, but only managed one. No question I was on sand though. (not sure if that flare up is fish, or motor interference though)
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Didnt have much time, so had to head back to the ramp. Chucked the tuna skirts out but no luck (was only 10 min to the passage though). Very easy to put the boat on the trailer which was good. Only need to pull boat between rails, throw rope over bollard, then on trailer, very easy to pull boat up by hand, and even easier to winch. If i put the trailer in enough, I dont even need to hit the rollers and the boat floats above the first one and the rails square it up . Supposed to be drive on too, but didnt have a need for it.
Got checked by fisheries at the ramp though, who wanted to see catch and RFBL. Unfortunately didnt have my skippers ticket on me (easy to forget when its paper and on a desk of papers :p) and didnt come up in the system (too new) and same with my boat/trailer transfer costs (but at least the boat was in my name on the system :p). Was all ok, but delayed me a bit. Did manage to make it to a friends house with 2 min to spare though. Then out in the evening for another fish on his boat, but this is about a tinny, so moving on.
Plan was to hit Woodies and try a KG spot someone had given me. All hopes of getting there early were sidetracked by sleep and stopping by oceanside, but got the boat on the water by 11 :p.
Headed out to a sand whiting spot someone had given me, but mostly turned up blowies and only one sandy, so decided to hit the KG spot. Water was crystal clear and could see the bottom no problems. Had the perfect wind to drift too, but several drifts didnt produce any KG's unfortunately. Got some small skippy and small pinkie though.
Now, where's his daddy
Wind started to pick up slightly, so decided to head back (considering i was almost all the way to rotto :p). Figured, why not head down on the outside of carnac/GI instead of inside straight back to the ramp and try some sand whiting spots. Wasnt a lot of wind, but wasnt glassy either. Boat seemed to travel pretty well at 18 knots so stuck with that (would go up to about 24, but bit bumpy and motor felt less laboured at 18).
Dropped down on a whiting spot i'd fished with a friend (who'd given me the mark) and had bites straight away. Couple of drifts and i'd gotten a pretty good back of sandies for dinner. I think I drifted for something like 1nm and was getting bites the whole way, so its certainly a good area.
After that, sun was close to the horizon, so headed back in. Wind was up a bit more and getting a bit of spray, but not really much of a problem. During a periodic check behind me, I noticed there were small breakers either side of where I came through. Thought that was a bit odd as the chart plotter said all good (but you can still get breaks where you dont suspect looking at a chart), but turned out it was still showing start position not boat position, der. Though, of course, I had planned my trip through the gap on the plotter, lined up a mark and used that for directions, watched the water first, and of course kept a full eye out the whole time (back, front, sides), checked the depth and was going faster than the swell, so wasnt relying on my plotter anyways. Good thing I knew to not rely on a chartplotter beforehand, some lessons are always best learnt beforehand. Though, the swell wasnt big enough to worry anyways, but just serves as a reminder thats its good to go over proper procedure in your head first before heading out (which I did :p).
Tried a few drifts for squid and picked one or two up but was a little slow. Still, I had a good number of whiting in the esky, and there was still 5-6 squid between the two days, so headed back in at dusk to turn this:
into this
Managed to cover a fair few miles on both trips and get a feel for the boat and what to do, where to put stuff, etc, as well as getting a good feed, so a sucessful weekend out. Next time, get some KG's or tailor at one of the reefs (but not doing the later by myself or while theres any swell around...)
Now, whens the next weather window
Lessons learnt:
The motor steers better without the muffs on...
Put sea sickness tablets in first aid kit for deckies
Connecting nav light leads to positive terminal in a wet boat sucks, install some switches.
Dont leave knife on baitboard if you want to keep it on the baitboard :p
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The Day of the Black@ss
Submitted by timvb on Tue, 2010-08-17 15:57Went out on Sunday from Mindarie on Seabreeze's suggestion that the weather would be perfect - wrong....
We headed out to some spots that have been good in the past, though the sounder was very quiet and we didn't expect much. No-one got any really solid bites, though one drift produced a Dhu of 49.5cm, sooooo close!!!
The ground we were fishing must have been perfect habitat for black@ss, as we caught heaps and ended up keeping 3 - ranging from 35cm to 42cm which was the biggest I've ever caught. Not much else caught worth mentioning - though we got a decent queenie towards the end of the day (not the best photo).
Last drift of the day produced a 35cm foxfish, I felt a little bad keeping it given it was most likely older than me, but again had never caught one that size before.....
All in all still a good day out on the water, I quite like black@ss so was happy to get a good feed! The foxfish was excellent eating too!
Tim.
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My last 2 trips...
Submitted by TWITCHEMUP on Mon, 2010-08-16 23:15Here are some pics of my last 2 trips off the coast of Dongara trips were weekend before last and yesterday, I've been wanting to jig some plastics on some new ground I found 25kms south of town a few months back, the ground is in about 17 - 28m of water. I finally got the chance and these are the results, all fish were caught on a variety of SP's and all but a couple were realeased I'm hanging to get back out there again this weekend. Oh and if any one knows what the fish is in last 2 pics please let me know I have never seen or caught one before cheers.
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3 mile session today
Submitted by makai on Mon, 2010-08-16 17:46After doing some maintenance on the boat recently, my old man and I decided to give the old girl a run and drop a line out behind 3 mile at the same time. It was a leisurely start from Hillarys based on Seabreezes prediction of the easterly dropping off late morning. Well, they were wrong again weren't they! We had a north easterly at (my guess) 15-18knots from 9.30am until we headed in at 2.30pm. Was pretty sloppy out there. As usual, the wind dropped once we had the boat home and were washing it down - how often does that happen! No joy on the fish front. Plenty on the sounder, but only one undersized pinky and a few wrasse brought aboard for a fair bit of ground covered (couldn't help but cover a fair bit of ground at the speed we were drifting!). I had my old man at the wheel (he usually prefers me to skipper) and he was having some trouble putting us on our GPS marks with the wind as it was, and was busy concentrating on the plotter and while heading east, punched the bow of my 8m Pride through a really short, steep chop (only doing about 5 knots at the time). Lucky for me, Dad (not me) was under the partly unzipped "hatch" in the canopy and he copped about 10litres of icy water on his head. That will teach him to take the wheel!
Peter
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mindarie today
Submitted by grayzeee on Sun, 2010-08-15 21:31headed out around 9 30 with intention to fish back edge of d bank
very lumpy but felt it wasn't too bad
fished most of the day with bait, accounting for a couple of undersize dhueys and an undersize pinkie
ended up in 90 meters with good shows , but nothing on the chew , so decided on last ditch run back to some ground in the 40's that looked promising earl;ier.
sent down a 7 inch gulp on 1 oz jig head and got smashed. re rigged and round for another drift. 65cm dhuey. nice
so then decided to get the jig wet. using the 90 gram lighten , got hit very hard 3 or 4 times , but hook pulled each time. bugger!
thinking probably sambo's or something xos.
next time it's a no bait trip.
i have to keep telling myself while i'm out there , if it's not working , change something
Day out in the Prowler
Submitted by DazSamFishing on Sun, 2010-08-15 20:04Well we've clocked 10 hours since we've had the boat. Most of that time has been in search for some new ground. Luckily, today we stumbled across a nice patch whilst trolling for SBT's.
There was a reasonable show of fish, however, they weren't responding to soft plastics nor jigs. The bakers however, wanted anything.
So I decided to down size the gear & float some mulies on the drift whilst continuing to jig & flick plastics.
The light gear paid off. Sam scored her PB snapper taken on a floating mulie on 10lb, whereas, I was rewarded with a Dhu whilst also floating a mulie on 6lb squidding gear.
The Dhu had been tagged so we recorded the number & we'll call it in tomorrow. Unfortunately, we weren't carrying an esky as we didn't plan on taking any fish... more of another exploratory day on the water.
Daz.
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Saltist vs. Torium
Submitted by John_M on Sun, 2010-08-15 19:44Just gathering everyone's thoughts and opinions. In the market for one
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Quick Sunday morning fish!
Submitted by wadetolley on Sun, 2010-08-15 11:22Well had a bit of a sleep in this morning to 7am, then went and slipped the boat in. Headed north to Bartalumba Bay. Heaps of nice ground thru there, which everyone normally speeds past, on there way to the top of the island, to catch the big fish...so they say! Was a great morning once again wind wise, with just a 3 knot nor easter blowing. Went dark for a while, as the winds were pushing the fog from inland out to sea. Was weird seeing this out on the water, as it looked like some kind of super cell thunderstorm coming!
Casted plugs, poppers and slices around some likely looking spots. Had a couple of good hook ups from trout, but they smoked me into the coral a couple of times. So there is a couple of fish now with new halco peircings swimming around, hopefully they will not start a trend with there mates!
After a while i had had enough of casting, so i headed out to the middle of the bay. Cranked the tunes up and started cutting bog laps up and down some contour lines, until the sounder lit up with some action. Had a couple of drifts on this spot, which produced a nice saddletail and a golden snapper. I was amazed that the goldy had lost its spot already, as it is smaller than the ones i have caught in the past, which all had spots. Maybe..male/ female fish are different. Anyway headed home at 10am..time to clean the house up, after 10 days of fending for myself !
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Lovely day on the water
Submitted by wadetolley on Sat, 2010-08-14 15:45What does one do when he has some spare time on a saturday... go fishin! Well, the forcast was for bugger all wind and thats what we got. Was a great day on the water.
Went back to my goldy spot, to see if there was any action...but zip..nothing ..not a thing. Headed 6 mile north to Bustard Island. Lots of great ground around, but you just have to find a spot out of the current. Caught a couple of nice sized saddletail, but the fish were not biting very well on bait. So i reached into my tackle box..and pulled out some plastics. Now i have never fished plastics, so i was keen to give it a try. First up i hooked on a sp lure Ben Derecki, sent up to me with some knife jigs. I found some nice ground to drift over and sent the plastic fantastic down. Twitch here..couple of lifts there..let some line out....bang i got a fish!
Well it wasnt the biggest of fish, but it was my first on sp..and lets face it, things can only get better...and bigger! Unhooked the monster and sent the plastic fish attracting device down once again. Worked that sp like nothing you have ever seen, and bang i was on again...but it was bigger this time. Got the fish to the surface, which turned out to be some kind of trout/ cod ...if anyone knows what it is, please let me know. Anyhow had mint day on the water... tommorw im thinking ritcher plugs and trout!
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Lots of action, Sailfish and Marlin pics! Costa Rica Fishing Report July August 2010
Submitted by SailFishQuepos on Sat, 2010-08-14 04:20Here's a quick pick of me, the mate and the 32 foot Ocean Master named 'Stress Reeliever' we fish and love!
Fishing Reports:
August 6, 2010
Sailfish, Amberjacks and Snapers are the story of August so far. Usually in August there aren't that many sailfish around, as our season in November through May. I can only imagine how good the season will be this year having so many billfish in the off season! In addition to the unusually great billfishing, the bottom has been really hot! It has made trips super interesting because we have been bottom fishing in the mornings while we collect live bait, and then have been trolling in the afternoons for billfish. It has been pretty successful, and we have been averaging at least a sailfish per day, with tons and tons of other nice fish while we fish on the bottom.We had had many days of over 20 nice fish to the boat! We have also been seeing tons and tons of little Dorado coming through. That should mean by mid October, we will start having the bulls come in and everybody knows how great Dorado season is here! We've got the spinning reels all oiled up waiting for Dorado, and we are looking for people who like to hook one and then see how many we can have on at the same time. Last year, we had five on multiple times so this year we need to have a 6 at once! It's going to be an awesome winter here, I can't wait!
August 1, 2010
There has been some great fishing this July. The bottom fishing has been especially good, and there have been lots of Sails, Tuna and Dorado out. We have been spending the first half of our days hitting the bottom and racking up on reel time. There are a couple of spots that no matter what you drop down, you are hooked up to something. Lots of Amberjacks, quite a few Cuberas, and quite a few big red Snappers as well. We have been averaging 15-20 fish to the boat in the morning. In the afternoons, we have been filling up the tuna tubes with live bait and sail hunting. We are hooking at least one per trip, and there have been some Dorado out as well. We had a trip on the 2nd where instead of doing the bottom we went out looking for tuna and ended up with 20 YF in the 25-40 pound range. We ended that day with a sailfish as well. Not as many Marlin out as I thought, but plenty of everything else. Much better than the typical August, and I expect September to be good as well. Another great month of fishing here in Sunny and Oil-Free Costa Rica!
June 22, 2010
Sorry for the lack of reports. I pulled my boat out of the water to do some quick repairs and keep finding things I want to do. We've got her all polished up inside and out, new bottom paint, fixed some breaks in the tower, and freshened up the motor. I probably have about a week left, and man I miss the water! Since I have run over with the b.o.a.t. updates (Bring Out Another Thousand), I have been sending trips to different friends and the fishing has been pretty good. Lots of Marlin out, including the one caught above. Out on the 26 banks, there have been quite a few Wahoo. There have also been schools of Yellow fin that run through the area and about 3-4 times a week they have been coming across big schools. On some of the trips I sent out this week, they had a day this last week with 4 sails, and they also had a double Marlin day. Inshore has been slow, but should come back soon. I think it would be better if I had been out there, as I really enjoy hunting for Roosters! If you went out in the last couple of weeks with a boat from Quepos, from me or otherwise, email me your pictures and I'll stick em up here. Hopefully, I'll get this boat back in the water and I can get the camera going again! Overall fishing offshore has been good though, so if you're coming in on vacation and want to reel in something big for dinner, now's the time!
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Jurien Jigging
Submitted by Lamby on Fri, 2010-08-13 10:43Last Sunday we headed up to Jurien Bay to fish with Whitey and super deckie Matt. Our crew consisted of Chulditch (Adrian), Tiimmbo (Tim), Jiney (Ben) and a novice but mad keen Canadian mate of Tim and myself. Quick feed and a couple of beers down at the local resulted in a nice kip at the caravan park (basic caravan slept up to 8 and was cheap as chips) We also met up with Auslobster and his two young blokes down at the boat, unfortunately SE winds were strong, big swell and a strong current wreaked havoc for the day so its only a shortish write up.
The jiggers had to work over time to even keep close to the bottom, fish were there on the sounder but just didn't want to play due to the current most likely. Jiney took BOG efforts for the day with some nice baldies and a just legal dhuie, John's eldest son was red hot on the snaps but unfortunately they were all about 1cm off legal. Adrian hooked up to a thumper which took a scorching first run calling it initially for a sambo until he worked it well off the bottom then the characteristic dhuie lump of weight battle took place, mysteriously the leader gave way in the middle possibly gill raked or hit by another fish half way... poor bastard it was big!
Plan B was to piss off the Sambo's and that worked a treat, they were smashing us everywhere. I hooked up a decent one and thought I would really put the pe 3 outfit to the test locking up hard, wrong move she did a 90 degree turn under the boat as everyone else was hooked up. I could feel the braid rubbing despite backing off quick and ping she went, however it gave me the chance to run around with the camera and take pics whilst tying on a new leader.
Tiimbo, Auslobster & The Canadian hooked up
Whitey and Matt were kept busy taking good care of these beautiful fish for release, a few that looked too knackered were revived super quick with the deck wash and went down strong
John with one Sambo off a double header
One of Timbo's efforts
Loaded Up
Matt gave me one of his wind on leaders to punish that he has started making so I was back down quick after these pics locking up hard for a good battle
Jiney ya handbag can't you even lift up the Sambo up for a quick pic? even wearing the muscle tee? time to reapply your lip gloss sweetheart don't ever outfish me again
Cheers to Whitey & Matt as well as being top blokes it's a very professional outfit they run. The boat is geared up for fishing, big attention to detail that I haven't seen elsewhere. Pity we didn't score an 'Epic' trip but that's how it pans out and looking forward to heading up there again after discussing some other charter options with Matt.
Also thanks to Chulditch & Auslobster for coming along, again top blokes and it was great to meet you both
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Saturday Rockwalls
Submitted by Dicey on Fri, 2010-08-13 08:58Looks like tonight and saturdays gonna be the day to try fishing the rock walls for the big fishes cause tonight the wind will be SW 10-20mph and sat it will be more chilled out.
13kg Perth Metro Mulloway
Submitted by dannyg on Fri, 2010-08-13 08:03Hi Guys,
Was out fishing last night in the meto area off a certain rock wall, when at about 7.30- 8pm my line went off!, I had a dead scaly mackerel as bait. After 3 short runs the fish came in and was gaffed. It was my first mulloway - was definately alot of fun and am looking forward to eating it.
To all the doubters out there (and there seem to be many on this site) the fish was WEIGHED at 13kg, not just some estimation.
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Cervantes / Hill River LB Report
Submitted by buschy on Wed, 2010-08-11 23:55Went up to Cervantes and Hill River and Thursday night / Friday morning to celebrate the arrival of my first child - Daniel James. ("wetting the mulies head")
Arrived at the Cervantes service jetty to fairly murky water and a stiff southerly. Pretty typical conditions, however with the murky water the fish seemed to be off the bite. Burleying hard bought the herring and yellowtail on although it was patchy at best so after an hour or so we decided to head up to Hill River to setup camp for the night.
The gutter I normally fish had been drastically altered in the six weeks or so since my last visit. A massive amount of sand had been pulled from the beach creating a gutter close in, sandbar and another gutter at the edge of casting range. It looked fantastic for a fish with minimal weed around.
We fished the low tide until around 11:30pm with no joy. Not even a nibble from the pickers, despite plenty of burley and oil in the water.
4:30am greeted us with icy cold conditions, mist over the ocean and promise of a big mulla. The early hours of the morning had always produced the tailor at this spot - so I knew it was just a matter of time. 7am high tide and sunrise arrived, and still we had not had a single bite. After talking up this spot so much to Simmo Ryan, I feared the worst.
With first light I flicked out a few small mulie cubes on the little rod to see if the bread and butter fish were coming on. I was soon onto a juvenile flathead, one of the most beatiful fish I have ever seen - although it could not have been more than 15cm long. Soon after a decent mullet and hezza.
Simmo Ryan was getting increasingly dirty - more out of frustration having driven a few hours, fished many more and not had a single bite. Then all of a sudden the big rod went off and he was on. Line peeled off and he knew he was into something decent and after 10 minutes of patiently playing the fish, the knot gave out in the wash. If Simmo was dirty before...well, I reckon he was ready to kill now.
We were both ready to throw it in when the sun hit the water and there was a tap on my rod. Tailor! I knew it wasn't a big one, and this was confirmed with a bit of taildancing close in before shaking the hooks. Seconds later Simmo was in to a chopper and it was smiles all round.
Just moments later and another call of 'fish on!' from Simmo, then seconds later 'me too!'. A couple of 40cm choppers. We ending up landing 5 and dropping 3 ranging 36-42cm.
After a year or so of beach fishing, this was the first time I had got into multiple tailor so a big milestone for me and a great way to celebrate the birth of my boy! None of the big tailor we were hoping for but good to get away and catch a feed.
A quick reccy up to the river mouth where we flicked lures for black bream. Simmo had a run on the ecogear lure, which after being left on the roo bar now lies somewhere between Ellenbrook and Hill River. The rivermouth is currently closed and there is a lot of weed around. No blackies landed though.
Cheers,
Buschy
- 4 comments
- 2820 reads
Mandurah report
Submitted by beau on Sun, 2010-08-08 23:19Me and my mate benjo (goatlobster) headed down to mandurah with our rods and surfboards and bagged out on tailor and skippy off the rocks by midday. Drove 100m up the road to check the surf and while we were looking out at the waves something in the shallows caught my eye. A school of mullett, bout 15m out were flying out the water with what i was sure were salmon not too far behind their tails! We grabbed the rods out of the car and i was casting a richter plug and benjo was using a slice but after about 5mins with no more sightings we called it quits and grabbed the boards and paddled out.
In between sets i noticed small fish on the surface only 10m away and called them for gardies but wasnt 100% sure. Not too long after the water bubbled up bout 20m away and there were schools of gars flying everywhere and a school of salmon absolutely smashing them! We couldnt believed it, the salmon chased the gars so close to us, probly only 5m away!
After a while, a guy rocked up and started casting from the beach and after a couple casts his rod buckled over and we couldnt quite tell if he was onto a fish or snagged on the reef. While we were watching the fisho, this huge wave sneaked up on us and both of us got absolutely buckled! Thats when i saw the guy pull up a hefty salmon over the ledge and then we made the call to paddle in and grab the rods..
As we were running to the cars, all along the beach there were schools of salmon hitting the gardies and they were flying everywhere, every now and then a coulpe of salmon would cartwheel clean out of the water. Benjo hooked up not too long after on a slice but busted him off on the reef after a couple seconds. I had no hits on the popper and the other guy ended up getting another one.
I went back down to the same stretch of beach the next day, and couldnt see any schools. So went over to the groyne and the choppers were around in plague proportions. Caught about 15, 20-25cm fish in an hour, all on a gold 30g twisty. Went back to the beach and after a couple casts i hooked onto a good size salmon, around 5kgs, and got it right in until the very last ledge of reef snapped my 18lb line :( Ended up getting quite a few hits on the richter popper but couldnt hook-up as the whitewash was throwing the lure around all over the place.
Cant wait to head back down when the swell is 2m smaller maybe i'll actually be able to land some!
- 3 comments
- 1960 reads
Mornings Skippy
Submitted by John_M on Sun, 2010-08-08 12:38Couldn't help myself haha, went for another fish, for a few hours, from the metro rock wall. Landed my pb skippy on sp
- 7 comments
- 1828 reads
metro snapper and tailor
Submitted by John_M on Sat, 2010-08-07 20:32Hi all,
Went down for a fish last night down at my local spot, was pretty chuffed to pluck out yet another snapper for the year.
- 6 comments
- 1878 reads
exxie
Submitted by mitch on Sat, 2010-08-07 18:52spent the last 5 days in exxie . bloody towns full to the bream. got out fishing for two half days targeting bills on the west side ..... managed to raise only half a dozen with 4 hook ups and zero landed.. had a fat time with friends up from the yallingup area...so more grog was consunmed than actual fishing .. got a nice cobia of a whale shark and a 10 kgish yellow fin tuna while trolling for beakies as the only fish kept .was a great few days with old friends .
looking at the moon and tides for this week coming ..its gonna be a stoinka !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!GET OUT THERE
water temps still in the hight 24 c and got 6 good squid in the gulf in about a hour,,, ate them with a couple of local prawns and a few chunks of yellow fin YUMMO
cheers mitch
- 3 comments
- 1866 reads
Cuttlie and flathead plague
Submitted by sunshine on Sat, 2010-08-07 15:07Friday again proved to be a perfect day to have off as the wind was forcast at 12 knots SE easing by lunchtime to 5-8 knot easterlies so I again headed off to chase some metro dhuies with a mate along for company and as payback (forward) for house sitting for me in a couple of weeks time.
We again went and explored new territory again finding hard coral / limestone bottom in less than 50 metres showing clear evidence of caves - first drift resulted in a specimen black bum and several very large sargeant bakers which clearly indicated we are in the right sort of territory - well so we thought - the next few drifts resulted in umpteen cuttlefish takes, several hookups and even one lighting up next to the boat whilst trying to grap the legs of a mutton bird. Now that's something you don't see every day a brick brick red cuttlie almost grabbing the bird - pity would loved to have seen the outcome. And with the plague of cuttlies were a plague of sand flathead which despite their small size managed to hook themselves on just about any bait offered.
One really solid hook up had us calling it for a big dhuie but the speed and running ability had us calling for a sambo - wrong - a one and a half metre bronzie hit the surface after a spirited fight and, with the cuttlie plague just getting worse as conditions improved it looked like the dhuie hunt would draw a blank.
We made the call to head back to around 37metres to a spot we had marked in the way out as having a large aggregation of fish - checking it out they were still there so with little drift we positioned the boat over the colour and waited - one rod quickly took off and we called it for a dhuie only to reveal a pesky banjo shark - urrgghh what a disappointment - only to have the second of my rod's indicate some light attention - tightning up the fish went ballistic with strong runs and a never say die attitude of a typical sambo ( we were having one of them days in calling the wrong fish ) it even went and gave one final run when it saw the boat - had to be a sambo - wrong again - my run of metro dhuies continued as this one came aboard - around 8kgs but very satisfying all the same. So the house sitter finished up with fresh fish as well - a very satisfying end to a great day on the water
- 10 comments
- 2380 reads
Day in cockburn sound.
Submitted by moyster on Fri, 2010-08-06 16:55Put in about ten this morning and headed out to the first set of channel markers and the contour just west of the mole. Berleyed up for a while but nothing so we moved over to the bank, still nothing! Pretty quiet all round, and after some unsucsessfull spots opted for a squid out front of the power station. Three nice ones and one lost at the side of the boat.
By that time the doctor was in and after two more unsuccessful drifts, back to the ramp. With all the work done at the boat ramps retrieval was a breeze, the weather was great and even with a minimal catch we had a great day! Thanks Troy (blueboner) Yr a gentleman.
- 2 comments
- 2034 reads
South Beach
Submitted by Dicey on Fri, 2010-08-06 13:53Decided to go down and fish for stingray but no luck, started to berley up big time and a school of mullet came in and after that it was one of the best sights i seen 10-15 salmon going nuts ramming the mullet school in the air(like popping for GTS), they left as fast as they came unfortunately otherwise for sure would of got 1.
- 32 comments
- 2975 reads
cervantes today
Submitted by wicked game on Thu, 2010-08-05 19:32Got to the boat ramp or should i say beach to launch the boat at around 6:30. Headed out through the south passage towards one of my favourite spots in the 40's. First drop saw 2 little BB's come up, i quickly de-hooked them and let them swim another day. Second drift saw me get smoked by something big (problly a dhuie or baldie). So after a quick re-rig i was down again and hooked up straight away to a 55cm dhuie, he was in good health so i let him swim away aswell. The next drift i was on big time to what i first thought was a bigger dhuie only to be slightly dissapointed to see a 12kg sambo and a few of his mates coming up from the depths. After seeing the 4 or 5 other sambos coming up with him i got my light plastic rod out for the next drift and before i even hit the bottom i was on solid to a nice sambo. After landing another 6 sambos (and getting busted up by a few more) on the plastic i decided to try and find a table fish or two. I was at my next spot in no time thanks to the glassy conditions. I dropped my paternoster rig with 2 smallish squid on each hook to the bottom. Once again i was hooked up solid to a good fish that was peeling line of my tld. After a spirited fight i could see colour and a nice baldie was safley in the net. After dispatching him into the ice box i re-baited and set up for the next drift. This drop i had to wait a bit longer, maybe 30 seconds to get a decent bite and a good hook up to a fish with alot of head shakes. After a few minutes i had a good size pinkie on the surface, after a quick net shot he was bleed and put into the ice box with his mate. I then decided to leave that spot for another time as i had my quoter of 2 demersals. i headed to the back of the reef to do a quick troll before i made my way through the passage again. not long after i had the lures in the water the X-rap was hit solidly by a smallish mackie that was relesed quickly. i set the lures out again and after about ten minutes the X-rap got hit again by a good size fish. The ratchet was kicked into over drive as the fish took off, i grabbed the rod and was set for a good fight. after about 15 minutes i could just see colour but the fish had other ideas and he took off for another run. I managed to turn his head and slowly pump and wind the fish back to the boat. After a few more minutes the fish was splashing around on the surface and with a quick tail grab the 20kg+ samson fish was lifted on board. After dehooking the fish i speared him back into the water and headed for home. All in all it was an awsome day on the water, the weather was glassy all day and the fish played the game. Cant wait to get back up to Cervantes soon
- 11 comments
- 2569 reads
Accepting Deckie Applications ..........
Submitted by alfred on Wed, 2010-08-04 22:33I am taking applications for a regular deckie. The current one has abused his privileges twice now and is now under probation.
The first time he abused it, was the first time I took him out. I let him off the hook then as he didn't know better.
I told him "We were going to the FADs, it's the end of the season, the Mahi are big - 120-130cm - bring appropriate gear." As most of you know, I am usually a school hours fisherman, I do the school run, go fish, wash the boat and gear, then have to pick the kids up again, so my fishing window is some what limited and if I am heading out to the FADs, I usually have no more then 1 1/2 hrs out there due to travel time. So what does he do? He has the cheek to sneak on, a gazillion piece, 9 foot travel toothpic rod and a reel spooled with 6lb line. Lucky for me I hooked up and boated my fish first.
I then set the boat and bite up for him to have a go. As planned, he hooks up and spends the next 45-50min kidding himself that his 9foot travel toothpic would get the job done. I end up having to chase the fish from Hillary's FAD to the Furuno FAD to prevent him from being spooled several times, then he has the gaul to break his rod, loose the fish and make me late getting the kids from school.
After that, I told him, minimum test is 15lb if he wants to fish with me.
Well, today we went for a fish again. When we were loading the boat, I noticed in addition to his two rods that he normally fishes with in the metro area, he had an additional rod bag - when questioned, he muttered something about a spare rod and I let it go as that. Anyway, the bottom fishing was crap, so we decide to troll abit to see if there were any tuna around. We were just chatting when my ratchet started screaming - "Fish On!" I kept the motor in gear and we both picked up a couple of SBTs. We set up the troll again and I notice that he is fiddling with his outfit, he kept mumbling something about changing gear and I just took it he had some gear issues.
Anyway, we hook up again and I got my fish to the boat quick smart, turned around and noticed that there was this look of sheer panic on his face, then he said - "I am down to backing." I jumped up leaving my rod and fish on the deck, got the boat in gear, turned around maintaining some angle on the fish and the chase was on. It must have been a monster, the fish kept taking line, we kept chasing and managed to eventually get some line back.
At this point, I need to highlight something that has been happening recently, the following pictures show how he has been hooking fish.
and another couple
As we all know this type of hookup usually produces blistering, unstoppable runs.
I asked "what's taking you so long?" and he mumbles something about 6lb test! It is at this stage, that I notice the bamboo skewer that he was trying to pass off as a rod and this tiny egg beater that he was using.
After about 40 min we finally get to see the fish and "Guess what?"
Yup, you guessed it.
The Jagg Master does it again. From the pictures you can see that he is able to jagg bottom fish, mid water fish and even surface fish while trolling!!!
By the time we landed the fish, I was late getting the kids again.
Will consider all applications.
- 18 comments
- 2413 reads
nice Yellowfin Whiting
Submitted by carnarvonite on Wed, 2010-08-04 18:14Got sick of the missus nagging me on how long its been since she has had a feed of whiting so I chucked Her new rod in the boat, the dog and a handfull of prawns and put the boat in for a run down the channels for the bottom of the run out tide.
Anchored up at a junction of two channels and lobbed the first cast into the shallows on the far side and slowly worked the bait down over the edge into deeper water. Hadn't moved the bait more than 4 feet when bang and off it went, number one whiting on its way in to the icebox. Got another one after 3-4 casts then those mongrel spiky yellowtail bloody things moved it.
Upped anchor and moved to the next junction and in no time had 4 more in the box, enough for us for a feed so it was off home.
6 lovely big whiting in less than one and a half hours since leaving home, can't complain about that.
- 14 comments
- 3224 reads
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