Fishing Discussion
tying braid to spinning reel
Submitted by straith on Thu, 2014-12-04 08:14Hey guys,
Does anyone put masking tape on reel first before tying braid to stop slipping?
Saw on youtube
- 12 comments
- 2993 reads
wilson inlet fishing advice
Submitted by Rocktron on Wed, 2014-12-03 19:40hey guys, im heading down to denmark on boxing day for a week with family and have no clue as to where in the inlet to fish. Dont want to go out into ocean. Taking 4.2m Tinny and 2 kayaks. Staying at rivermouth caravan park which supposedly has a boat ramp at it. Im after any advice i can get about fishing wilson inlet and any general areas in there that would get me onto some nice fish like kgs, whiting, flathead or any other fish. Mainly after smallish stuff. Does the charter still operate there? if so, does anyone have a contact for them ? thanks guys
- 2 comments
- 3885 reads
15 year old boy wants to be a good fisherman any tips.
Submitted by Clarkey_99 on Wed, 2014-12-03 17:14Im Jacob Clarke.
I have a boat.
I have my skippers ticket.
I have tackle.
I really wanna catch some big fish can anyone help me.
I live in Perth Western Australia.
- 34 comments
- 4347 reads
Hermafrodite crayfish
Submitted by Leigh85 on Wed, 2014-12-03 11:08Has any one here seen a hermafrodite crayfish before?
Just asking as we got one this morning, would that mean they could fertilise their own eggs, or would they be infertile?
what is your opinions?
- 9 comments
- 3070 reads
North charter fishing
Submitted by Fuzz on Wed, 2014-12-03 08:50Recent trip to exmouth had us haul our quota in a day and a half. Bagged out with ruby snapper, red emperor, sharp tooth and rankins.
you know you have been looked after when spangos are being thrown back to make room for more red skin fillets haha
thanks heaps to bearnie and kane on mahi mahi 111.
I dont usually charter fish, but would highly recommend these boys. They know their stuff up there thats fasure.
Definetly going to make it a yearly trip for the same crew
- 6 comments
- 2178 reads
Costly Tree
Submitted by Formerathlete on Tue, 2014-12-02 20:20My wife has no sense of humour...

- 8 comments
- 2854 reads
QLD- Crabber Fined.
Submitted by Karak on Tue, 2014-12-02 18:05$15,000 fined plus boat and trailer confiscated.
good news.
- 6 comments
- 2694 reads
Karratha
Submitted by Toucay2425 on Tue, 2014-12-02 16:19Hi,
I am visiting Karratha and surrounds in January and would like to try some land based fishing.
Any tips on where and what rigs to use would be most welcome.
I have purchased some Halco poppers, will these work?
Kevin
- 2 comments
- 2771 reads
Setting cray pots
Submitted by stephenm on Tue, 2014-12-02 13:03HI guys, I know that I might get a few interesting comments but I'm new to setting pots and wanting to know if it's worth setting them out from Busselton at the moment or down at Augusta? Any help would be much appreciated. Cheers
- 2 comments
- 2290 reads
Cray pots bait box opened?
Submitted by kirky79 on Tue, 2014-12-02 11:55Hey guys,
As the title suggests the last two trips out to check the pots, 3 of the 4 pots bait box lids have been opened. I'm guessing smart occys but not 100%. Tied some rope around them this morning but think I will get some wire and wire them shut in future. Anyone come across this before. I've used these pots for 2 seasons and never had it happen before. Got 6 nice size whites in the pot that still had bait 
Cheers
Chris
- 25 comments
- 5365 reads
Land base Bremmer bay Christmas
Submitted by Rob b on Tue, 2014-12-02 10:51Hey folks heading down south to bremmer bay for a week with the family and inlaws a week befor chrissy. We usually go to reef beach for a day fish if weather is good but this year would love to get into some new ground and hopefully get some kingy's or anything of size off the rocks or beach, if anyone could help out on we're about's to start, any sort of info would be great thanks.
Then after Christmas off to seabird with the dinghy, let's hope the weather plays the game or at least the pub is open :)
- 2 comments
- 2007 reads
Deep Drop Reel Choice - Shimano or Daiwa?
Submitted by Bucko on Tue, 2014-12-02 09:23Looking at buying an electric reel shortly, I have always been a Shimano man, but in this case I can't seem to find much info on the shimano reels.
The reels I am looking at are:
Daiwa - Tanacom 1000
Daiwa - Seaborg Megatwin
Shimano - Plays 9000
I have used both the Daiwa's and they are nice reels. I would be happy with the Megatwin for sure, but I am just after any real world feed back on the Plays 9000.
Anyone used one, and are they as good as the Daiwa's?
Cheers
Craig
- 13 comments
- 12182 reads
Stripping and Regreasing your Reel
Submitted by Jackfrost80 on Tue, 2014-12-02 08:24Interested on some advice on stripping and regreasing my reels. I recently had my 1000 Sedona sprayed with salt water when driving around the river and as it’s only worth $80 decided to strip it and have a go at cleaning it and putting it back together so that I have confidence to service my own reels going forward. I went to my local store and they suggested the heavy duty reel grease but I had conflicted advice from two other stores that the Daiwa heavy duty grease would be too heavy for the small reels. I took it back to the original store to change but they scoffed at the second opinion and said heavy duty grease is fine for 1000 size reels. I regreased the reel using a small paintbrush to dab the grease on and put it back together but the reel was quite stiff so I restriped it and pretty much cleaned off all the grease leaving only a smear on the gears and it is much smoother but it still feels like the gears are slightly ‘grabbing’. Is this normal when applying new grease to a reel? Does anyone else strip and regrease their own reels and if so what grease do you use for the smaller reels? I was even thinking I could mix a little reel oil with the heavy duty grease to thin it out a little bit.
- 7 comments
- 2523 reads
Christmas Vino
Submitted by smicko on Tue, 2014-12-02 06:56Feeling particularly magnanimous this year and would like to give someone a case of wine worth around the $400 mark. Should that someone like to repay my generosity by gifting me some cockroaches of the sea I would happily take them without payment.
PM away....
- 1 comment
- 1959 reads
Walpole / Nornalup Inlet Mixed Bag Fishing Story
Submitted by Mick C on Mon, 2014-12-01 21:15Last weekend the young fella and I ventured to Walpole to participate in the Australian Anglers Association State Estuary Championship representing the MAAC. This was one of these lovely opportunities to go to somewhere of immense natural beauty to fish waters that we had never been to before. Throw in that this is a team’s event (MAAC participation was high) and a quality weekend of: great spot; great people; and pristine fishing was certainly on offer.
Needless to say there was a lot of FishWrecked “searching” to see what had been posted about Walpole and the Frankland River turning up a good bit of useful advice (and some Member photos of very small fish?). Careful studying of the Google Earth images and the chart on the GPS plotter gave us quite a good idea about what it was going to be like, but you just don’t know until you get there.
Needless to say we headed off fairly early on Friday so we arrived with enough time to take out the Hornet (she was built for these types of waters) and have a good look. What a fantastic drive through the forests of the SW, and after what seemed like was an eternity we finally arrived at Rest Point. The accommodation was “fair” but realistically we didn’t need much and were happy with what we got as it had all the essentials. The facility has a ramp so it didn’t take long to start unpacking all the stuff and getting the Hornet ready.
I’ll digress for a minute but will only write one paragraph about this matter although I reckon I could write a book if I had too. There is a lesson for everyone here: do not open your gob going on about what an awesome fisherman you are (my rods, my burley, my spots, my techniques) to a whole bunch of people that you don’t know who are attending a place for a fishing competition (note to self – it is probably likely that most people here know what end of a rod is which so endless rattling on about my own self-importance and knowledge before the comp even starts is a bad plan). This individual must have come out with at least 20 comments of truly memorable material before we could even get the boat in the water, and they were very valuable keeping us amused over the whole weekend with discussions about how you could even say that. Anyway, let’s just say that this individual left the weigh in early and didn’t stay for the presentation, so back to the matter at hand.
A nice Friday afternoon with a moderate southerly greeted us to the water. We decided to have a look at Coalmine Beach, Frankland River, the ocean entrance of Nornalup Inlet and some deeper holes in the Inlet that showed up on the sounder. We decided not to fish but to spend the time looking around and formulating a plan. Given also that the Inlet is very shallow in parts it was good to have a look and set up boat tracks in bright sunlight where the colour of the water gave you some idea of depth. In short, there were no end of fishing possibilities with different bottom types and depths, different currents and flows, different structure and grades in the sub-surface and different environments such as rivers, “lakes” and entrances. No doubt you would need to spend years to properly understand the subtle nuances of a system like this. For someone that had never been there before, the only option was to come up with a plan and stick to it otherwise you may spend all day “chasing your tail”.
Come Saturday morning, the competition didn’t start until 12.30pm, with a compulsory briefing at 11.30am so there wasn’t a real lot to do other than to tie rigs. There was a bit in this as all our gear had to be downsized quite considerably given the “nursery” nature of the ;ocation. I still took my Storm PE3 with the CI4+ 4000 and PE3 8 ply as it is very small and light, but cut off the 50lb wind on and replaced it with 16lb mono. I then ran a 4lb fluorocarbon leader and tied all rigs out of this. Our rigs were simple: very small running sinker to swivel to leader; and one hook paternoster with our King George circle hook arrangement – we had a variety of hook sizes ranging from small to nearly “impossible to see with the human eye”. We also had an selection of “proven” plastics and lures that could be used if required. The preparation of our bait was also a priority. With really no idea how to fish the waters it is fair to say we had huge bait variety: bonito, squid, pilchard, prawns, white bait, octopus, cockles and various others that I can’t remember. Of course, fresh cut bait is always a winner so legal fish that we could sacrifice from the weigh in were to be keenly sought. I don’t need to mention that kilos of the home made burley came along as well.
After the 11.30am briefing (obey the rules and don’t keep anything undersized or be disqualified) we decided to set off and establish a troll track off Coalmine Beach and another one in the Frankland River before lines down at 12.30pm. For those of you that don’t know about this feature of the Minn Kota i-Pilot, it is where you can set up a track of up to 2 miles by putting the Minn in the water, hitting record and then motoring with the outboard at <4kn over the ground of interest. Once the track is recorded, you can then go to the start or end of it, along the line, at any of the Minn’s 20 engine rev settings. This is a feature that I haven’t used much as I am a spot lock addict (no anchor in the water, not tied to the bottom and no noise) but it really is a quality feature. We then planned to head to a “hole” in the River we had found (well every sounder has it) and see how it went. Once done there, it was to troll the previously made tracks, fish the entrance and then finish with the channel between the Nornalup Inlet and Walpole Inlet. That was our plan anyway.
Come 12.30pm we could put our lines in the water – we were a little late as we troll tracked for longer than anticipated. 2 rods each is the limit so out go the lightly weighed rig and the paternoster. Bonito and peeled prawn were the baits of first choice so it was time to see how they went (the burley was up first of course). Who would have believed it as within a few minutes the Storm/Stradic with the bonito was screaming more than when it is hit by a big pink devouring, and running with, a whole sand whiting. WTF is going on here? Isn’t this the place with little fish? I don’t like my chances with a 4lb leader! Do big pinkies come up the river? This has to be a ray! After its first run I started to get some back which was suggesting that it might not be a ray. Run after run after run was indicating that this was a fish of some size and it clearly didn’t like the boat as it would strip 30m of line every time it came near. After 15 odd minutes we got the wind on back and had our first look at it – a metre long gummy. Needless to say, getting it on the boat was a challenge and in the end the deckie just had to pick the thing up in his bare hands and haul it out of the water. At the weigh in it was 4.8kg so I was pretty stoked to get it on such light gear and pleased it chose that rod to hit as my other one had a Sienna and I don’t think it would have been up to the job. Nice start really.
From there the burley started to work and the sounder showed our hole had become an aquarium. At one stage I thought the sounder was malfunctioning as it had these really huge shapes that we somewhat reminiscent of seeing a whale going under the boat off the 3 Mile, but I will get back to that later. We were constantly landing juvenile pinkies and bream to the point that it was getting out of control. They just kept coming but the one thing we did note, and this is a lesson to be learned, is that we had to change up our baits quite a lot. The fish would constantly hit one type of bait but then “switch off” and you didn’t get them again until you used something else. We just kept catching fish but nothing that could be weighed in. After time, the burley was clearly starting to work its “magic” across the whole system and we had enticed a lot of herring to the boat (it reminded me of a trout stream when that hatch was on by the amount of times the surface was getting smashed). A rig and technique change up and we started to catch a few fish that could be actually weighed in with a number of herring, including my “horse herring” if such a thing exists. A few size herring that were just on 200mm but too risky to weigh in were sacrificed to produce some fresh strip bait and a lone 330mm salmon, that must have been lost, hit my line and the decks. And the endless undersized pinkies and bream just kept hitting the decks, and getting chucked back, as well.
Now, having a lot of fun landing a lot of fish on light gear is good but it doesn’t score you any points. The spot was quality and the fish were firing so we just needed a tactic to get the bigger models. We changed our location ever so slightly (just turn spot lock off, head the Minn towards the bank 10m and hit spot lock to anchor up again – love it) to see if fishing the snags on the drop off would help. The fish were still “on fire” but were starting to get a little bigger (even though one of the sayings of the trip were “they are getting bigger” it was really pushing the truth). A bit of gear was lost but it did work with the landing of a nice 400mm+ flathead, a 280mm bream and a 285mm King George. After a number of hours the spot had gone well and it was time to stick to the plan and move on. I will make one comment about this location and that is the disappointment in the number of people that didn’t stick to the 5kn speed limit. Such a beautiful and tranquil place and you have these tools treating it like a race track, and the same applies to other speed limited locations in the system – rant over.
As the light was starting to fade we decided to troll track the river dragging some plastics and lures. No action there so it was to the open country of the Frankland River mouth to troll for some tailor on the way out. There were a few hits but we put them down to herring and moved on – bad plan in hindsight as there were a number of “legal” choppers caught at about that time. We tried to troll track along Coalmine Beach but were really in the face of the moderate wind and it was just too much for poor Minn. We headed to the sheltered stretch between the inlets and spot locked just outside the channel within casting distance to the shore. This produced another entertaining session with the rampant little pinkies and schools of undersized tailor – you lived in hope that they might get bigger as surely the bigger ones existed, but to no avail. The highlight here was that the young fella got a cracking flathead casting to the shore. As it was getting really dark the mossies came on thick as and the incessant whinging and complaining about this from the young one really gave no option but to come in. In hindsight, we should have kept going and targeted more sharks, but hindsight is a wonderful thing. Spending time with the club mates for far longer than you should have, bulls*&ting about your day and consuming far too much was also a wonderful thing.
After chatting to the guys, a “hazy” plan for the next day was hatched. As weigh in was at 11am there was not a lot of time so it was decided to head out at first light (sounded good at the time), troll the channel between the inlets, head over and troll the mouth of and the Frankland River, head to the entrance and seek out some whiting and then fish the rubble to the north of Snake Island. First option nothing, second option nothing then we headed up the river. Not far from our hole of the previous day the sounder showed a structure rising up from about 8m to 1m covered with fish and as our lures went across it a size tailor smashed my line – nice one out of the blue. A number of passes over the yielded no more so we decided to “park on it” and see how we go. It was then that we saw the mysterious sounder shape from the day before. As we were in quite shallow water with the burley out you could see the bottom and all of the fish and the most massive stingray that I have ever seen appeared. No kidding, this thing was easily 6ft+ across and its tail at the base was thicker than my leg. It just kept circling and circling our burley for a quality show. Picked up a few more herring but “stick to the plan” and it was time to move on.
We headed to the entrance keen to catch some species that we hadn’t got yet. Following the “tip” of a member “extracted” the night before we set up at the “nominated location” in shallow water that was like glass (never really a big fan of these types of conditions). Out came the burley again and next thing we had clouds of bait fish around us. Unfortunately, the massive rays found our burley again as well and if I was a whiting I wouldn’t have really wanted to be around that spot. A move to deeper water of the entrance and no hits of any description in 15 minutes meant it was time to keep moving. Off to Snake Island for our last “fling”.
We pulled up on a likely location with a rubbly bottom in about 2m of water and out came the burley again. This time we attracted massive schools of bream, skippy, trumpeter and stripies and it was quite amazing to watch the burley being devoured by hordes of hungry fish. We were sure that some of the bream and skippy were size but the amount I landed and measured between 24cm and 25cm was beyond a joke. The young one had turned his attention to trying to sight fish the larger specimens out of the schools which was really quite entertaining. He did have success though as a size flounder came along and took his unweighted peeled prawn. My hook-up rate was not how I really wanted it so I downsized the hook and started fishing away from the boat. With just over an hour to go I hooked a 270mm bream and a 290mm King George so all that perseverance had paid off with a couple of point scores at the end. We headed off with plenty of time to pull the boat out of the water and get our bags to the weigh in. We had a mixture of things and a good experience.
The young fella and I watched the weigh in with interest and we have never been to an AAA event before. It was all done very well with clear records being taken and an appropriate level of scrutineering. It was obvious that some guys had fished the night as there were quite a few gummies weighed in. The bags varied quite considerably and it was a good spectacle to watch. After that was done there was the call for the individual fish for the species prizes. To our surprise the young fella’s flathead and my “horse” herring topped the size categories and this was certainly unexpected.
The AAA people quickly tallied the results and it was time for the presentation. The MAAC had representation in all categories so it was great to see the 3 mini-juniors get up to receive their prize (with a front page photo for the newsletter no doubt). Next up was the juniors and it was not surprising that the MAAC picked that up as well (my young guy had a reasonable comp and the other MAAC junior is a proven quality fisherman). It was MAAC for the ladies as well (that lifetime of devotion to their obsessive husbands has allowed the natural fishing ability to shine through). The men’s was deservedly won by Ocean Reef with my team coming in runners up (or first losers) by a fair margin. Freemantle picked up the veterans with a quality score.
The young one won the runners up trophy for the juniors and the “first loser” comments didn’t cut it as he sledged all the way home about his “gold” medal and trophy compared to my “silver” one. Unfortunately, this is becoming all too common of a situation.
What a great place. The fishing was excellent with a guarantee of a lot of action. Yes, the fish are generally small but for a family holiday with the boat, the young kids would have a ball. It is not hard to find the fish but perseverance is required to catch “keepers”. Fish light, change your baits regularly and burley up. Flathead, gummy sharks and herring were the most prolific fish of keeping size (at least when we were there) and these were caught trolling the shallow edges, fishing the deep holes at night and surface fishing in the burley trail. As noted above, it would likely take a lifetime to really know what to do but that shouldn’t stop you having a crack. A bit of attention to “basics” and you will be rewarded with fish in a place that would rival anywhere in the world for its natural beauty.
- 15 comments
- 9658 reads
Hillaries Crays
Submitted by Gaz on Mon, 2014-12-01 20:05G'day,
New to it all and want to get some pots in the water the next couple days off Hillarys, been busy with work so haven't been able to do sooner.
What sort of depth and terrain should we be looking to be in? Out at 3 mile reef? Head north out of Hillarys?
any little help would be great.
Thanks Alot
Gaz
- 3 comments
- 2471 reads
One deckie position Tuesday 2nd
Submitted by big john on Mon, 2014-12-01 19:08Available for tomorrow, leave from my place in Iluka at 7.00am, launching at Ocean Reef, fishing with 'uncle' on here and me.
Plan is to pull our cray pots first and then go looking for a metro mack/yft on the troll and jig any likely fish shows we come across. Will be out most of the day and won't be returning for a seasick deckie.
Your third of the fuel will be around $50.
Own gear required, plus a bit of general know how. No alcohol on the boat, or bananas.
Please PM if interested.
Cheers John
- 14 comments
- 2590 reads
Cray fish behind Garden Island
Submitted by Panto89 on Mon, 2014-12-01 17:21Hi All,
First time poster
just seeing how people are going with catching crayfish behind garden island, I haven't had a huge amount of luck as of late, dropped my pots on the five fathom bank the other day and when I pulled them this morning I only had one cray, can't complain to much as it was my first cray for the season, it's making me wonder whether I have missed the boat already and the crays have moved past the FFB already. Has anyone else been catching them in close towards garden island or are they on the move and past the FFB?
Not asking for spots or anything more info regarding there movements and some advice as I'm keen to get on some good numbers and have a bit of success for change, it's safe to say I'm not the best cray fisherman out there.
Any info is much appreciated.
cheers
- 22 comments
- 7753 reads
Walpole
Submitted by 6171 on Mon, 2014-12-01 15:50Photo of Goose Island taken with iPhone 5 from 2100 Tournament.
- 6 comments
- 2953 reads
I think the macs are finally here
Submitted by Supafishall on Mon, 2014-12-01 08:26Headed out off two rock seen the birds, out went the lures on wire traces ,heaps of splashing on surface then nek minute no lures lol dam it only had 2 on me . O we'll next time
terrible day trying to catch kgw in close an was hooking up on dhuis that wea legal all released safe an sound on 1/0 long shanks had to give up with one kgw on board an a good feed of Crays from my 2 pots!!
- 20 comments
- 4961 reads
Jigging combo
Submitted by Tim1511 on Sun, 2014-11-30 22:01Hi all have just ordered a Biomaster SW 4000v2 XG limited edition and need a rod to match it any suggestions would be appreciated. And also what weight braid should I spool it with?my budgets around $300
thanks
- 5 comments
- 2023 reads
Cray pots
Submitted by AlwaysFishin on Sun, 2014-11-30 18:14Looking to purchase 4 new/near new ready to go full size jarrah Cray pots. Anyone got any or recommend where to go?
- 3 comments
- 2697 reads
Double header
Submitted by sea-kem on Sun, 2014-11-30 17:54Had a troll on the river today and the Tailor are about. Young fella got this double header on a lure lol. They were very hungry at one spot.
- 31 comments
- 3916 reads
boat rod and reel advice for sharkbay
Submitted by mattycutters on Sun, 2014-11-30 12:29hi all
im going to shark bay chasing mainly black ass red emporer and coral trout for a month in may.
my question is im in the market for a new rod and reel or combo and any suggestions on what line to put on it.
would like to keep the combo under 500 all up any suggestions would be great thanks
- 13 comments
- 3773 reads
Cray pot floats?
Submitted by Hairyone on Sun, 2014-11-30 10:32Gday,
Does anyone know the legalities of craypot floats other than you have to have them?
My problem is I can find plenty of places to put my pots in off the reef in front of my house but being nearly holiday time the chance of them being there the next day isn't real good with all the campers.
What would happen if put my pots in at low tide without a rope or float. (just an identification tag done to the correct specs)
Or a float on a real short rope that technically doesn't float?
The main reason for floats is for identification right, and your own benefit of course.
Whats your thoughts........I just reckon if Im the only one who knows were they are and they are licenced and to spec it should be ok????
Or do you just put a small piece of broken rope on it and explain it must have been cut?????
Cheers
Hairy
- 12 comments
- 5650 reads
West coast tackle ??
Submitted by piston broke on Sun, 2014-11-30 10:03Has the shop in Woodvale closed down? (been closed for last few weeks) cheers Pete.
ps Apologies if this has been covered already.
- 2 comments
- 2209 reads
Exmouth Heavy tackle comp - Who's fishing
Submitted by Brad S on Sun, 2014-11-30 08:40Hi
Just wondering who's fishing the comp? was a great comp last year.
Video from last year day after the comp
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ux33-5A8Ffk
Cheers
Brad
- 5 comments
- 2996 reads
Baking coral trout whole
Submitted by Francis on Sun, 2014-11-30 08:35G'day guys,
I've done some research on google and it says if baking a fish whole in the oven when wrapped in foil, a general rule of thumb is 15 mins per half kilo. That sounds like a lot?
Ive bought a nice 3kg coral trout and the thought of leaving it in the oven for over an hour worries me.
is anyone able to offer some advice on this? Id hate to over cook such a nice fish.
- 5 comments
- 6258 reads
What's Happening
Submitted by fish 06 on Sun, 2014-11-30 00:44What's Happening with the cray's ?
very quiet on all fronts, ( divers & potters) Looking forward to finally getting my holidays & putting the pots out on Thursday for 5 weeks
Have to test the new winch & tipper somehow
- 4 comments
- 2737 reads
emergency boat repairs over xmas
Submitted by james1989 on Sat, 2014-11-29 21:39hey guys im off for a few weeks over xmas. If you strike trouble or need any repairs over xmas with boat or trailer call me and we will sort it out straight away.
Send me a text or call
0403814674
Good luck with the fishing over xmas and safe boating


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