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connolly

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MACKEREL

MACKEREL (3/19)

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  1. Here's my 2 bobs worth on leatheries. I reackon they taste great! I often use them as a "standby" around Sydney ie. if nothing else is biting or not so great eating fish are caught I stop in at a channel marker to pick up some "eating fish" ie leatheries. Cleaning? Make about a 1 to 2cm cut behind the spine and rip head off and guts out in one motion. Skin them as Diver1 says or just get your thumb under the skin and slowly peel it off. I don't worry about filleting them because you can just eat one side then grab the tail and slowly pull the skelleton out hopefully in one go. Oh yeah, If you have to clean very many of them grabbing the skin wears through our skin like sandpaper which can result in red raw hands for a few days. hooks? longshank no. 8, 10 or even 12. Lastly they are a pest to offshore fishos because they get in to big schools and bite through traces, main line and even braid. So maybe if we catch heaps in the etuaries then we might help the offshore fishos. Hope this helps. Reeltired
  2. G'day fish3rm4n There used to be a spot named Devil's Gorge which, I think, is now in a marine park or "out of bounds" or both. The Tubes!! Awsome spot. Inside the Bay but like deep sea fishing without the sea sickness. They even catch marlin there. From the shore!!! Check out Phil atkinsons "marlin from the rocks" video. I would highly recommend, first going there in daylight without fishing gear so that you know where you are going when you go there for a serious fishing trip. Unless you like head butting rocks and/or drowning at 4 am. The bad news is that you can only get in there on weekends and every day for about a month after Christmas. I have also heard a few horror stories about Navy "natzis" taking people out when the gates were open or even "confiscating" fishing gear. To get to the Tubes park in the lighthouse car park and look for a track on the Western side and follow it for about 20 minutes. It will pretty obvious when you find the Tubes. It's a long platform with the rusted remnants of some sort of huge canon/torpedo shaped thing at one end. If you haven't found the tubes you will just come across cliffs and mostly unfishable rocks. Have fun. I haven't been there for a few years now but I am assuming the details should still be the same. Reeltired
  3. Maybe not a great idea in Jerusalem Bay. But hey, we are much much more likely to die in a car accident on the way to the water than get bitten by a shark. Reeltired
  4. Hey Tan I caught a hammerhead in Jerusalem Bay last year. A bit later in the year - about May. Interesting! I wonder if it's just a coincidence or if there is a reason that they go there. Were you in about the middle of the Bay? What a great place for a fish. One of my favourites. Even if the fishing is quiet I just love being there. Doesn't it get crowded on weekends though? I never seem to get any crabs up there, like I do in other parts of Cowan. I wish I knew that the h/heads were good eating. I let my one go. It was only a tiddler of about 60 to 70 maybe 80 cm. Reeltired Sorry peoples. I meant to add this onto Tan the fisherman's report. Reeltired
  5. Hello Fellow Raiders. Couldn't help adding my 2 bobs worth. I have worked in Government departments for decades and quit recently. Here is the way things are done. Some politition comes up with an "idea" for their own political gain. They know it won't be popular with thinking intelligent people. So they propose something that is a blown up version of what they want, the people whinge, the polly "negotiates" and pats themself on the back for being such a good bloke who is so resonable and "listens" to others opinions. A "compromise" is reached, which is something like their original idea. It is implemented, the masses think they have had their say and the polly gets what he wanted in the first place and what appears to be a "consultative" process has taken place. When in fact the polly got what he wanted all along and the masses have been ripped off. My message is don't budge a millimetre unless you are just happy to be a mushroom ie kept in the dark and fed s##t and doesn't know any better. I am not against marine parks as such but I am sick to death of being ripped off and lied to. I also fear that our sport/pastime will soon be gone forever while we have just sat and watched it get taken away. What are we going to tell our Grandchildren? "Oh it was so good but my fishing mates and I were too gutless and nonchalent to do anything and that's why we are not allowed to catch fish anymore. And that's why the fish that we now eat is this crappy fish farm stuff that is fed with chook pellets and tastes like mud!!" I think the the band "The The" got it right when they sang "the beaten generation, the beaten generation. reared on a diet of prejudice and misinformation, the beaten generation, the beaten generation open your eyes, open up up your imagination." Here endeth the sermon. Reeltired
  6. I've caught a few blue swimmers in Rose Bay along the rocky eastern shore and middle harbour a few hundred metres east of the spit bridge on the southern side in water about 7 metres deep. The Rocky shores up around Gladesville near where I grew up have muddies and blue swimmers but it's really a case of eat at your own risk. Hope this is some help. Reeltired.
  7. G'day MrGenius Great pics for a phone. The sunrise, or is it sunset pic looks almost spooky. Nice catch too. I only ever get the "soapy" jews as well. I guess we just have too persist until we get a big one. It would be no fun if they came too easy. reeltired
  8. Hi Roberta I'm glad somebody agrees with the "three hour" theory with regard to when to start prawning. For some reason I always have trouble convincing people about it. I too learnt the hard way ie. waiting and dozing for 3 hours until it looked like the water was actually flowing out. Thanks for your reports. Reeltired
  9. Saving prawns to feed to fish!!!! Stuff the fish!! I'd be eating the prawns myself. I reckon the ones you catch yourself are so much nicer than bought ones it makes me wonder what on earth the shops do to make them taste so ordinary. Seriously, I do keep some for bait if I have a good catch. If I have a really good catch I use the biggest ones to make "fishermans wharf garlic prawns" the medium ones get boiled and the "rest" get used for bait if I don't change my mind and eat them as well. Live prawns ARE a brilliant bait but I resent having to give them up. Thanks for the report. I've been wondering if the prawns were around yet. Reeltired
  10. Hey guys! Great report and photos. I've only tried SPs a few times and have also been astounded at the success. As long as there are no tailor around because then the tails just get bitten off. And it's so much more fun than just sitting and waiting with a normal bait. Went drifting for flathead the other week and one of our rigs had 3 hooks; 1 with prawn, one with pilchard and one with an SP. Guess which "bait" got the best fish? I guess it wriggled and looked a lot more alive than the dead prawn or half pilchard. Reeltired.
  11. It's interesting how trends come and go. I checked out "blades" last week and couldn't help thinking "they're not much different to those Halco things I bought ten years ago", Remember them? Halco made at least 2 types. One was a 10 gram freshwater thing that looked a bit like a wonder wobbler but had the "tow-points" along the back. They were either brown or rainbow trout coloured. The other ones were flat, metal fish shaped things with a big lump of a red head on them and several holes along the back to tow from. I can't remember actually using any of them before thieves got into our garage and took all of my fishing gear and tools. So it sounds like these new blades really work. They are so expensive!! The old Halco ones were about $5 (for the 56 gram model) not #%*# $18. I don't want to miss out on all of the fun though and I ain't getting up at 3 in the morning travelling dozens of kilometres and spending a fortune on fuel only to find I don't have the right gear. so I'll just have to buy one or twenty. Thanks for this website and all the "reporters". It gives me something interesting to look at every day. I might even have a report to put on soon. I'm going fishing on Sunday. Hooray!!! Reeltired
  12. Hello again Wendyb Not so sure about boat fishing but could have an educated guess. I have been boat fishing there once and it was windy and so choppy that we thought the boat would flip over for sure. My guess would be to either drift for flathead (but the cold water might have put them half to sleep) OR to fish near the "drop offs". To fish the "drop offs" just anchor or drift/putt around in the deeper water within casting distance of a place where it suddenly gets shallow again. Cast a fresh, live bait or lure towards the shallower water and work it slowly back towards the boat or even just let it sit there for a while. I went out in my boat sightseeing in Port Hacking yesterday and noticed heaps of mullet milling around in the shallow water. Sooo it could be worth trying for them (assuming they are around up there at the moment too) with a piece of bread suspended under a small float and enough bread to berley to keep them close by but not so much to have them spooked by sea gulls swooping at the floating bread. If you have access to a small bait/fish trap, the really small (poddy) mullet can be caught in the shallow water in the lakes and they are the best bait on the planet for flathead and good for big bream too. Check the state regulations though. I think it's 20 per person under 15cm per day. reeltired Sorry that's 20 poddy mullet under 15cm per person per day not people under 15cm.
  13. Hey jim77 Really enjoyed your report. I don't think I would be laughing if it was my reel but then I wasn't there. Isn't it great getting younger people into fishing? Sometimes it gives me more of a buzz than catching something myself. Reeltired
  14. Not sure what gear you have but here are a few options; * The entrance itself has heaps of fish (mostly undersized) that can be caught when the flow slows down ie. high and low tide which is about 2-3 hours later than the time the tide charts say that it will occur. There are usually plenty of blackfish there too but you usually need specialist gear for them. Get some fresh live bait like worms or yabbies from one of the local bait shops and fish the "slack" water and you're bound to catch something. Even the blackfish love the yabbies. * The north entrance beach is an awsome place to fish. Cast into a deep hole or the edge of one where the flow isn't belting along the beach sideways. Worms and yabbies can get you bream. whiting and flathead. A pilchard or a large piece of one could get you tailor, salmon or flathead. This stretch of beach has everything from tiny whiting to huge (up to 40kg) Mulloway. You could also try throwing lures into the deep holes for tailor, salmon (common at the moment) and flathead. the tailor usually only come in at dawn and dusk. Hope this is some help. Reeltired.
  15. Great pictures. The one of the Cobia had me fooled for a while. Reeltired
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