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stefan

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Posts posted by stefan

  1. Hi rigga,

    Sorry for the late reply had almost no internet there. Here are some tips for next time: Any beach works. Sandbar, Lighthouse, tuncurry and boomerang are the best from my experience. Burley up little fish (tailor) and cast one out or use freshly caught worms. I bring vacum packed squid i caught from Sydney. I use a 80lb leader and 30 lb mainline mono. Braid tends to give me too much trouble at the beaches, sometimes I use 60lb ebay braid on a rod if its calm enough.

    I go running sinker (ball, star or anchor depending on surf) to swivel to leader to two snelled hooks. If you are up there and there is a big northerly/northerly surf, try the north side rocks at boomerang where the surfers are. By the time the last surfer leaves its the perfect time to cast . I still havent landed one there but I'm pretty sure i got dusted by one. Lots of rays and port jacksons though so have a lot of bait or fish a livie. If you get one there, send me a pm! That also goes for any lurkers reading this! Its the last spot for me to test :)

  2. Report + Information + Question

    Went out last night with fresh squid off the corner of a beach. 1 hr before low tide got a hit. Wasn't ready for its strength, got absolutely burned on the rocks. I've attached a photo of a similar one I caught not long ago same spot same conditions. This one pulled much harder though.

    For anyone deciding to target them this summer, here is my two cents:

    Lots of failure sessions until I realised the importance of some things follow:

    The obvious:
    - Good bait
    - Change of Tide

    The things I started to factor:
    - fish at night time (After sunset. Toughen up and go at night.)
    - find white-water, the rougher the better unless it is too rough to keep a bait out or too dangerous
    - fish the gutter closest to the rocks or ideally off the rocks
    - fish the biggest bait you can. Octopus stays on the hook 10x longer than squid or worms. Live is the best but sometimes hard to bring to a beach.

    I love fishing off the rocks at the end of a beach which can actually be much cleaner and more sheltered if you factor in weather conditions. I.e southern corner in a southerly. It also makes sense as this is closest to where the mulloway hang out during down times. But this strategy has led to a problem:

    Its about a 50/50 whether the fish runs back towards the beach or around the point. If it goes beach, I follow it down and fish landed however the last few fish have chosen to retreat back to their caves in the point and I am losing $$$ of line getting shredded on rocks like last night...


    What strategies do you recommend when this happens?

    Locking drag and hoping to turn the fish? Trying to follow it around the point? Running to the beach and trying to turn it from the rocks? I run 30lb mainline mono with a 80lb leader. Time for an upgrade?

    This is one that headed towards the beach. Same conditions except 1hr after high tide.

    post-12572-0-65530000-1412303713_thumb.jpg

  3. Middle Head + dobroyd reef, The drums off clifton gardens, Spit Bridge and surrounding moorings (especially around corners), Quarantine Bay near North Head, Goat Island + its markers, Any Marker in Main Harbour, Shark island, Parsley Bay and i have heard of hermitage bay working at times.

    One of the above spots + the ones you mentioned is bound to hold fish. Just make sure you have an arrangement of squid + livies.

    I don't believe there isn't a kingfish sticky yet... these things are second after the mulloway aren't they??

    Stefan

    PS let me know if you find any extra spots, I'd love to add to my collection :)

  4. Hey all,

    Apparently there is a squid deficit going on (tho my problem is with the kingfish lol) so i thought i wud share a bito advice when these northerlies cause a bit of havoc on the harbour. Another good landbased spot off the rocks is the north side of bondi beach which can really provide the squid at times. Prime time would be low tide on the change of light with northerly winds to calm the sea down which are pretty much the conditions now :) it can be a bit dangerous tho so if u go make sure u take a buddy and appropriate fishing wear (light clothes n cleats).

    Another good spot is the north facing side of Tamarama just down the road but its even more dangerous and involves a long walk down past a hobos place so take it very carefully. Good weed patches there can also fire for the calamari. Won't talk bout this place much as its a bit dangerous and don't wanna create mass drownings there :P

    The squid are usually a bit bigger so more ideal for eating/strip baits but that's only my experience.

    Stefan

  5. go to google, type in wasabi tv + fishing trip, go to the link. Watch all the episodes you want about melbourne.

    also on wasabi tv go to get hooked by duuuuuuhhhhh and get all the other eps there

    Go to google, type in youfish tv and watch all the episodes about snapper and jewfish.

    Finally go to Google, type in adventure bound and search the episodes in port Philip bay then buy the corresponding episodes about squid etc in the bay (these are the best but u gotta pay :( ).

    Theres a good 10-15 hours of footage just on the bay you mentioned. They talk about rigs, spots everything etc

  6. ive only been checked by the police once at 10pm wednesday night on the harbour. They choose the most unusual times.... also been checked by fisheries not long ago which is rare... all i usually get is maritime. Sucks how they chose me downrigging over all the other potential stationary boats there.

  7. bugger after a quick check on google maps i thought the northerlies would do well cos it seemed to be south facing.... are there any protected spots? I can always do the lake nearby etc i love rough conditions tho at the corners of beaches as long as its nowhere dangerous i know that fish come way closer to feed wen its all suddy specially the jewfish so might actually take a beach rod and some of my squid.

    btw thanks for the invaluable info.... this saves me a lot of trouble and some potential dangerous situations.

  8. hello all, i dusted off the electric motor on sunday arfternoon and planed to target a few flathead around st huberts is.

    and as usual when i mention going fishing the wind picks up to about 20kts.

    i threw some plastics around the narrow channel for zip, then tried up on the nearby flats for a couple of breamhits and a school of about 5-6 bream following my lure of the flat(the poppers will get dusted off next):biggrin2:

    so with the wind now picking up my other flathead spot was way to exposed so i changed lures to a shallow chubby and headed to another weed bed and after a few cast i managed to get a 27cm bream but that was about all for that area..

    luckily before i left home i threw in some bread rolls in case the lures failed, so i headed over to the empire bay area and tied up to a lease pole. with the burley working i had some baits up on the flats and one rod for the mullet and garies.

    post-10279-019759100 1289977171_thumb.jpg

    the bream and garfish were dinner on monday night, i have finally worked out how to totally debone a garfish and if i get some more soon ill try and take a few photos as i do it.. cheers..stevo..

    is there any particular method u use to debone the garfish? I know you can eat the small bones as what george said but im just wonderin....

  9. to the above: there are so many things on a sounder than could represent stuff other than fish cudda been anything. I put a post up on fishing chat bout downrigging depths and got told thats its generally better to have the baits slightly above the fish, definitely better than below them anyways. Hope that helps?

    Totally agree that it's a bit comforting to know that it was just the conditions of the day that caused no fish rather than angling errors...

  10. Helping a guy out with advice: 1 beer

    Taking a mate fishing: 3 beers

    Going fishing without a mate and coming back with the bag limit: 1 case

    squidding is about all i can do so i try to help out where i can as the people on this site virtually instantly give me info whenever i ask. It's amazing really.

  11. Thinking of upgrading my sounder. I'm only really a harbour fisho so i need something to suit that necessity but i do think its still important to have a good sounder to locate bait/different structure etc. Id like to know whether the one i have is already good (and im just bad at deciphering it) or whether i shud upgrade to something a bit more advanced like a colour sounder?

    I have a Navman 4432 fishfinder.

    Specs:

    * 16-level grayscale screen

    * 250W RMS power

    * 360×240 Resolution Display

    * Variable Alarms with Speaker Output

    The one i have:

    http://www.gpsreview.net/navman-4430-4431-4432-4433-fishfinder/

    http://www.navmanmarine.net/upload/Marine/Internet_Manuals/4432_4433/MN000433B_FISH%204432_4433_English.pdf

    http://www.marinetrader.com.au/boat/499554/Navman_4432_Fishfinder_sounder/

    I know some people say that you don't even need a sounder but i like to have the knowledge of exactly whats below me so i have the confidence to tough a place out rather than give up and move. Atm all i use my sounder for is the water temp and depth of water... and maybe once in a while i can tell i'm on seaweed/sand/rock. Even with the sensors pushed at max, i can only really tell if there is bait when there are so many fish i can literally seem them from the boat below the water.

    Regards

    Stefan

    Here's some fishing websites for looking at my post haha:

    http://www.wasabitv.com.au/?s=hooked&season=sdvd03

    http://www.fishingfury.com/20090621/the-best-places-to-watch-fishing-shows-online/

    http://www.wasabitv.com.au/?s=fishintrip

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