Fishing Discussion
** Oceanside Tackle and Marine RICHTER LURES / FADS "Specials" **
Submitted by Oceanside Tackle on Sat, 2009-11-28 17:29Oceanside Tackle & Marine has just received another big Richter Lures Order and just in time for the new gamefishing season.
We stock over 190 plus Richter game lures with 25 different models and one of the most comprehensive selections in WA. We also have an "Exclusive" range of "fully rigged" Richter lures so no need to rig up as we've done it for you. Just clip on and use, reliable Momoi trace line and quality hardware are also used.
These lures represent handmade quality, swim well, good colour & model selection and more importantly they catch fish worldwide. Dolphinfish & tuna are one of many species that will be around this season and many more other applications for Richter lures including billfish and pelagics etc.
If your going away on holidays this Chrismas or going to stay local & get out to enjoy the FADS (just been deployed thanks to the PGFC) why not stock up now and be ready.
Oceanside Specials are;
Buy $100 or more and get LESS 10% OFF
Buy $200 or more and get LESS 15% OFF
Buy $300 or more and get LESS 20% OFF
** Wind-on leader, teasers, rigs and all other game fishing accesories also available **
** Big savings and all popular models & colours ( a few new ones) all in stock!
** Please let us know you're taking up the "Richter Special" , this is a web special only!
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Reel suggestions
Submitted by iphaen on Sat, 2009-11-28 15:43Hi guys
Im looking at buying a new reel for the big rod but i also wanted to use something interchangedly with a beach rod, at the moment i have an Okuma salina(? looks similiar to that model) with a pretty large line capacity (500 yards i think) that has pretty much died of late, so was looking to replace it with something along the same lines, not really interested in overhead reels as im mainly landbased at the moment and the problems i have had with overheads arent worth the hassle.
Also looking at getting a decent beach rod so any recommendations would be great as well.
Cheers
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Anyone catch anything today??
Submitted by wadetolley on Sat, 2009-11-28 15:07Well launched at hillarys at 7am. Ramp was busy, ran into a few fishwrecked members heading out as well. Wind was blowing pretty hard from the east. Went down in front of Scarbs to get a feed of whiting. From 0 to 10m baby whiting 10cm long, one squid. Then headed out to 20m and still small whiting15cm long , which was weird for this spot i normally fish. I then went out to 28m straight off the back of the centaur reef marker..and thats when we hit the mother load. Old mate pulled in the biggest of the day at 30cm, and we caught a bag in a little under an hour. Wind dropped off, and after an hour of cooking in the sun, it was time to head home for a cool redback.
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28 Nov 2009: PGFC FADs launch
Submitted by till on Sat, 2009-11-28 14:20I volunteered to help launch the FADs today with the PGFC on the Maritime Image. About half a dozen of us met up at the jetty in Freo, the FADs having been loaded the night before.
It was a pretty blustery morning, certainly it would've been unpleasant on a smaller boat and that wind was freezing. We made pretty good time none the less and launched them largely without incident*.
The weather really fined up on the way in though, half thinking about heading out again when I got home, but I missed the window dammit.
You can see the weather really fined up later in the day.
PS: ta for the half a sanger George!
* someone else's phone, one small tangle, some missing skin
FAD Season starts now!
Hillarys, the last to launch, on the way out.
Lines being paid out for the Hillarys FAD
Anchors ready to go on the shooting board
Hillarys anchors on the way down FAAASSSTTT!!
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Palm beach jetty
Submitted by nodforce on Sat, 2009-11-28 09:59Does anyone know whether the new jetty down in Rockingham is open yet??
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- 2203 reads
sl20sh shb?
Submitted by Bungel on Fri, 2009-11-27 20:17Im looking at buying a Daiwa SL20. Been looking at them for a long time and recon they are hard to beat.
Ive just seen that a new version is available .. SL20SHB . i think its basically the same reel but in a new colour, black and blue.
Does anyone know what the specs are for this reel, i cant find them anywhere.. the price is higher but not sure if the specs are. Anyone know??
And what can i do to this reel to upgrade it a bit? I was banking on spending a bit closer to $250, so recon i might as well put it into this reel with a few decent upgrades. Anyone upgraded theirs?.. where to get it done?
Cheers,
George.
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reels for sale
Submitted by luke george on Fri, 2009-11-27 17:13hey guys got a few reels for sale prices are as follows
revros 3000 - $120
revros 2000 - $120
bc luna 1003 - $300
abu garcia 7500c3 - $180
okuma titus 50W - $200
okuma titus 20L - $180
okuma titus 50L - $180
okuma titus 30 - $150
okuma catalina CT30CS - $180
okuma catalina CT30L - $180
Give me a pm if your interested Cheers Luke
- 2 comments
- 1799 reads
Whos Going Jigging
Submitted by jng on Fri, 2009-11-27 16:46With the weather looking allrite on saturday i think i will be going out for a jig. Any body else heading out?
- 9 comments
- 1847 reads
Woodmans point night fish
Submitted by Goodz on Fri, 2009-11-27 16:38So the boys are keen to get away from the girls for the night and have a night fish before a morning snorkle for crabs about Woodmans Point. Is there any chance of catching anything other than sting rays there at night? I've never fished there before myself but can't really be bothered fishing if it's only rays on the menu...
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- 1942 reads
Sat 28th get into it.
Submitted by Goodz on Fri, 2009-11-27 15:30Sat morning is looking like a nice excuse to get out of bed early and hit the water!
Just going for a snorkle for some blue mannas but recon it would be a nice day in the boat to play with some fish. Let us know how you went if you got out and about.. love to hear some reports of squid action or out wide jigging!?
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hillarys barge
Submitted by Luke R on Fri, 2009-11-27 14:31hey all
was just taking a long shot and wondering if anybody would be able to give me the Co Wards to the barge off hillarys. If any body could help my out that would be GREAT
thanks guys
cheers
luke
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- 1915 reads
Rowley Shoals
Submitted by bod on Fri, 2009-11-27 13:10This is edited from Steve Lague of the West (24 November 2009). Wish I'd been there to write it!
If we don't get to do or see anything else, it won't matter, it's already been worthwhile." That was the comment as we powered back to the 24m catamaran Odyssey, anchored inside Clerke Reef as the sun was setting on the first of a seven-day diving cruise at the Rowley Shoals.
He was sitting on the gunwale of a 12m dive tender, still on a high. On our first day, we had dived at a site called the Aquarium, drift snorkelled on an outgoing 10m tide and swum with a humpback whale while she fed her calf.
The Rowley Shoals is made up of three coral atolls on the edge of the continental shelf about 260km west-north-west of Broome. They were named in 1818 by Captain Philip Parker King. He named Mermaid Reef, the most north-western of the three atolls, after his ship. The middle shoal was named Clerke Reef after Captain Clerke, who had reported it from a whaler some time between 1800 and 1809, while the south-western shoal was dubbed Imperieuse Reef after the vessel from which it was sighted by Captain Rowley in 1800.
All three atolls, which are each about 85sqkm, rise from very deep water with near-vertical sides that form shallow lagoons. Mermaid Reef rises from 440m, Clerke from 390m and Imperieuse from 230m.
They are renowned for their virtually untouched coral gardens, giant clams, inquisitive potato cod and abundant fish life. There are more than 230 species of coral, including 28 different species of staghorn, and 688 species of fish, including sharks that inhabit the shoals. Clerke and Imperieuse reefs were declared marine parks in 1990, with the size of the parks increased four-fold in 2004. There are still areas at both these locations where fishing is allowed. Mermaid Reef has been declared a Marine National Nature Reserve and no fishing is allowed. Since 1977 charter boats have been taking fishing and diving enthusiasts to this remote location.
It is a 16-hour cruise from Broome over a stretch of water that can become both very rough and windy, restricting the season to October and November. It is this isolation that ensures the Rowley Shoals remains one of the most pristine coral atolls in the world. It also means that fewer than 250 "tourists" visit the region each year.
After a long night and morning of cruising, fortunately for us on calm water, the first sign of the atoll was a slim white line on the horizon. The line is Bedwell Island, a small sand island that is home to one of only two colonies of red-tailed tropicbirds in WA, and the only land we will see for the next seven days. There is also a small island at Imperieuse atoll which is the most heavily fished and the only one of the three atolls that does not have access to the lagoon.
As we closed in on Clerke Reef, and Bedwell Island, the colour of the water started to change. It reminded me of the waters around Rottnest Island, only the blues are more vivid and the water clearer. The destination is a site called The Aquarium, the only dive site inside the atoll and one of the shallowest. Falling back into the water was like easing into a cool bath on a hot summer's day and the water was about as clear, with amazing visibility up to 40m.
For the next six days we dived at least three times a day, and on two days added night dives to the itinerary. Despite the extreme depths of water we kept our dives to a maximum of 30m, which was more than enough to thoroughly explore the ever-changing landscape that includes vertical walls, gorges, swim-throughs and big caves. Most were also drift dives, where we allowed the outgoing, or incoming, tide to waft us along the outer wall, exploring on the way.
The variety of corals, range of colours and abundance of fish life in all sizes and colours at the Aquarium was something I had never seen. The beauty of these natural wonders is enhanced by soft corals in every imaginable colour, massive gorgonians and coral forests that are home to an unbelievable variety of fish. Trying to adequately describe the fish life is difficult.
The shallower water is dominated by tropical fish, with pelagics also cruising just under the surface with sharks up to 3m and in healthy numbers, patrolling the vast schools. The first encounter with a black or white-tipped shark takes your breath away. Like most of the other fish at the Rowley Shoals, they simply ignore you, going about their business, even feeding on other fish.
There were also giant clams, big turtles, eels, and in certain areas gentle, giant potato cod. The swim with the humpback whale was an unexpected bonus of the trip.
Top restaurants remove bluefin tuna from menu
Submitted by bod on Fri, 2009-11-27 12:23AFP
November 27, 2009, 10:59 am
PARIS (AFP) - Top French chefs this week pledged to keep bluefin tuna and other threatened fish species off the menu, whatever the cost.
With half of the tuna eaten in Europe dished up in restaurants, it was high time for the food-loving nation's leading chefs to take a stand, said one of the country's greatest chefs, Olivier Roellinger. "We have a responsibility towards all those who are in charge of feeding others, cooks but also mothers and even fathers, and must show them the way," he told AFP.
"They must be made aware that the sea, this natural larder, is in danger," added Roellinger.
Environmentalists say bluefin tuna (aka red tuna) faces the threat of extinction because of overfishing and want its trade banned by CITES, the UN body that rules on wildlife trade.In a move to protect the species, an international body meeting in Brazil last week agreed to cut the allowable bluefin tuna catch in the Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean by 40 percent next year compared to 2009.
Scientific experts reckon the fish we eat will have disappeared from the oceans by 2050.Roellinger, who has just become its deputy president, has won an agreement from 60 percent of its members -- 475 European, Japanese and US chefs in 57 countries to stop dishing up bluefin tuna. "We will release the names of all those and their establishments who don't agree in order to make sure that they assume their responsibilities."
Three-star Michelin chef Gerald Passedat, one of only 26 in the top league in France, took bluefin off his menu in Marseille two years ago though he cooks with 65 to 70 species of fish a year.
"I like to work with lesser-known fish," he said "for the different tastes but also to help biodiversity."Likewise Joel Robuchon and Alain Ducasse -- arguably among the handful of the world's very top chefs with respectively 18 and 14 Michelin stars for their various restaurants across the globe -- too have scrapped red tuna in their inns.
But with sushi bars flourishing and Japan by far the world's largest consumer of red tuna, the chefs are wary of fighting a losing battle. "We have to make people conscious individually," said Orieux. "This is what we need to do to save fish."Crays In Pots?
Submitted by Big Kev on Fri, 2009-11-27 11:52Have been out and pulled our pots on 4 occations but no Crays we tried in shallow 4-6 metres and out to 8-12 metres using 4 pots moving them around but can't get any Crays in our pots. How are you guys doing with your pots?
Kev
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Mandurah Prawn Run
Submitted by Hammerhead on Fri, 2009-11-27 10:32As a kid mum & dad used to take us down to the Mandurah bridge to dab net for prawns does anyone know when they start running as i would like to take my kids & boat down and have a go at getting a few any info would be great,thanks.
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Photo galleries
Submitted by nodforce on Thu, 2009-11-26 21:46What is the best way for me too upload new photos? I guess i need to crop as the last steep pt photos were way toooo big
Id like 2 add quite a few but im not sure what is the best way of going about this
Is it ok to ask for my own gallery or would it be better just postin a few at a time?
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Fish Preparation
Submitted by Alan James on Thu, 2009-11-26 20:04What's the best way to prepare a 10kg+ dhuie for eating (shallow frying). Do you fillet or cut into cutlets? Fillet and then cutlet? Fillet and then cut the fillet in half, thickness wise?
Grey Band, puka and bass would be similarly shaped.
What do you do?
- 9 comments
- 1947 reads
is got one in woodvale
Submitted by hilux67 on Thu, 2009-11-26 19:29is got one in woodvale re opening
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Fishing From Rocks In Bunbury
Submitted by Redfin 4 Life on Thu, 2009-11-26 19:10whats biting from the rocks at the moment???
any stories or breif reports will be greatly appreciated
cheers redfin 4 life
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- 1879 reads
Loading backing onto a reel
Submitted by Dale on Thu, 2009-11-26 17:58G'day all, I've got all the line I need to spool up my Okuma for jigging. I've got some 24kg platypus nylon line for backing and want to top it up with 50lb Whiplash. Whats a good way of knowing how much backing to put on before getting on the full 300yds of whiplash?
Cheers
Dale
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- 2034 reads
jigging with saltwater next week,
Submitted by original teenage on Thu, 2009-11-26 17:50hey guys,im thinkin of going out with saltwater charters next week,either monday or wednesday,just wondering how are the feed back on em and if anyones that jigging next week?we'll be going out of hillaries.and if i do go ,ill be going alone,let me know,cheers :)
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fin nor rods
Submitted by sloppyjoe24 on Thu, 2009-11-26 17:20Has anybody tried these out yet?
seen them in the local and man these things have some balls!!! and they're supposed to be impossib;e to high stick, plus easy on the wallet too. i can see alot of one off sambo jiggers getting their moneys worth outs these rods
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- 2251 reads
mulloway
Submitted by fisherman1992 on Thu, 2009-11-26 17:06where 2 find mulloway around south metro what bait and what rigs reely keen to get my first one this summer
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*** Fisherman Andaman "Super Deep" Jigs, limited stock **
Submitted by Oceanside Tackle on Thu, 2009-11-26 16:10Well they're finally here, the Fisherman Andaman "Super Deep" Jigs. These 600grams jigs are rare and very sorted after and with good reason.
There's no doubt the deepwater jigging is taking off here. The Sanme 650 being one popular model and the other being the Andaman 600g jig. A different jig than the Sanme, these Andamans are a short darting & fluttering type of jig that throw out plenty of flash & action to entice a bite.
Andaman 600 is perfect for Ruby Snapper, Bass Groper, Blue Eye Trevalla, Harpuku and many other species have been caught succesfully with these jigs.
These Japanesse handmade super premium jigs are worth the money, the detail, finish and proven fish catching has made this a must with extreme jiggers.
Oceanside Tackle and Marine have the only shipment to arrive into WA, we have been waiting 4 months to get these jigs and the wait worth it. Stocks are "very limited" with many already been pre allocated over the last 4 months to FW memmbers but we have a dozen left after that so get in quick as first in - best dress.
$129.00 is the FW price, PM us or call us on 9337 5682 for more info
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Augusta.
Submitted by couldntcatchacold on Thu, 2009-11-26 15:05Heading to augusta next weekend for a bit of fishing/camping with the workmates wondering if anyone could give us any help on locations whats biting and what rigs/bait you generaly use thanks!
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- 2280 reads
Co-ordinates
Submitted by JoRn on Thu, 2009-11-26 14:02Hi all,
I was wondering do you guys know of any software that we can put in GPS coords and it will show where it is on a map, similar to google maps?
I've been given a number of co-ords, and i want to have a look which ones are applicable rather that entering 1 by 1 on my gps plotter.
thanks!
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- 1685 reads
Anyone see latest edition of Western Angler?
Submitted by Auslobster on Thu, 2009-11-26 08:38Page 91, letter by Rhyss Johnson. He writes about the need to look after dhufish, and how he and his crew valiantly tried to revive/release a 21.5 kg specimen out of Busselton but ultimately had to keep the fish. "An absolute shame" and "how much fish do you really need to keep" were some of his exact words.
He then goes on to say that " few days later" he and some family members went out and caught 4 more dhufish ranging from "a smaller one" on up to 12 kgs before eventually getting a monster estimated at above 25 kilos, which WAS successfully released. I'm assuming the catches/letter occurred before the ban/new bag limits BTW.
He ends his letter by stating that dhuies should have a max size limit of 1m and bag limits should be decreased, as well as something about future generations of anglers being able to enjoy this sort of fishing.
So with all this concern this bloke has for dhufish, why would he go out and target them again after already having a big one in the freezer? If he's got a big family who like fish and eat it really fast, fair enough, but to give us the song and dance, complete with heart-rending violin solo, about protecting fish stocks, well I suppose it's alright to portray yourself as a great tree-hugging warrior defending the poor dhufish as long as the freezer is full.
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Sherbs' Shocking Experience
Submitted by Colin Hay on Thu, 2009-11-26 06:24
Sherbs and I decided to go for a quick mid week fish at one of the local Perth metro beaches last evening to see if there were any tailor or mulloway hanging about.
We arrived at one of our favourite inner metro spots to find that the wind forecast was a bit off and it was absolutely howling - and there was still a fair bit of weed hanging about.
We toughed it for an hour or so and Sherbs managed a mini flathead and I landed a "horse" of a Wirra before we decided to head up the coast and give the north wall of Hillarys a try as it would be protected from the big southerly.
We hadn't been there long when Sherbs reported that he had a knock and that he was on.
He soon had this really weird looking, wiggling creature up on the rocks and was calling if for a baby shovelnose.
He soon found it wasn't one of those when he went to gently unhook it to return it to the water. He must have jumped a few inches off the ground when shock of the "Numb Ray" kicked in.
After that it was long nosed pliars and a quick toss back into the water so it could swim off.
Luckly it was only a little tacker and not a bigger version like the one pictured above or we might not have been laughing about it after.
That was about the highlight of the night as we only landed a few small fish between us after that and then called it a night.
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Pflueger Supreme Xts
Submitted by flangies on Wed, 2009-11-25 22:09I was recently at oceanside and saw the supreme , it felt stunning and is certainly on my maybe list for 2500 size, will be running 8lb braid. Despite the smaller line capacity than i am used to, I couldnt really find a downside for the reel.
Does anyone here have one and how do they go?
Will the carbon fibre handle be prone to breakages?
At the moment i'm tossing up between Twin power and Supreme, the twin power ends up at roughly the same price so price isnt an issue.
Hopefully putting on a T curve 2-4kg
Any and all info very much appreciated
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- 4694 reads
Drogues / Sea Anchors
Submitted by Alan James on Wed, 2009-11-25 20:24When drift fishing where on the boat do you attach it to? I've fished with guys that attach it to the stern cleat and others that use a central cleat which means you are side on to the drift / wind and others that will have two sea anchors off each of the starbord and port stern cleats.
What do you do?
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