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savit

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Posts posted by savit

  1. 31 minutes ago, mrsswordfisherman said:

    can you link us to that hub page? What date was it written? 

    There has been a decade long grace period for people to replace the old Standard ones and that ended Dec 31 2020. Jan 2021 was the changeover date.

    "The new AS4758 standard, introduced way back in 2010, has changed the way that life jackets are rated. Under the old system the devices were marked with either “Type 1”, “Type 2” or “Type 3” depending on the level of flotation they provided."

    "Under the new standard, life jackets are rated according to how much buoyancy they provide expressed in Newtons – Level 150, Level 100, Level 50, and Level 50S."

     

    I just followed the link that was provided in the beginning of this post.

    https://thehub.nrma.com.au/lifestyle/new-australian-standards-lifejackets-started-january-1-2021?mid=social_hub_facebook&fbclid=IwAR2TuBPnR2SZxJZRDpDmHhbwXkkuQ91daiA1QtV2z43NekinUM1vgVRJvoM

    Date of  article 15 of Jan., I believe this year.  Why would they say : New standards STARTED Jan 1 2021 if it were written in the past?!

  2. 4 minutes ago, SquibblyDibbly said:

    It's worth noting that eBay, PayPal and Gumtree are all owned by eBay and despite operating in Australia, with staff in Australia, facilitating sales from Australians to other Australians and taking over a 10% cut of all sales (earning over $7 million in profit per day) they pay ZERO tax in Australia.

    You probably meant zero Income tax. It is not just Ebay, most big international companies do the same thing,  and not just in Australia once they can afford it. I guess the governments  accept it as long as they can charge taxes from earnings of company's employees  and companies still pay local indirect taxes and duties, GST/VAT, FBT, payroll tax, workcover, etc etc - it's all contributes to the collected revenue. 

  3. Smells like a scam.

    I have sold a number of "small" stuff over ebay when it was less greedy.  Now prefer Gumtree over ebay, and local transactions for a pre-agreed price. 

    My last car (5 y.o.) was sold also through Gumtree for the fair price and even without test drive. Local buyer.  Paid by a bank cheque issued in my presence in the local bank branch. The "clowns" were coming from 2 specialized paid car sales websites.

     

  4. 54 minutes ago, motiondave said:

    when selling cars, I had a few dealers phone me to offer ridiculous offers, but they did at least say whom they are, and that its a wholesale price, so honesty was at least mentioned, they still got told no, not selling at wholesale. Almost had one dealer bloke though, he was super keen but would not go the extra $200 to get to my wanted sale price.

     

    And by wholesale - they meant an auction price of the untested vehicles in as-is condition ?

  5. 15 hours ago, Fab1 said:

    Tv is crap in general these days mate.I haven't turned mine on for about 5 yrs now.I have better things to do around the place than watch the crap that's on telly or net flix.

     In regards to the cartoons you mention I haven't seen them so can't common but i do know kids will be exposed to worse than watching a cartoon as 

    Over 25 years -  since I started Uni. First I had no money for TV, then had no time, then just had no interest in it (as there are many alternative sources for news and movies, as well as time spending)

    PS. Tom and Jerry were my favourite.

    • Like 1
  6. When I was selling brand new game boat rods due to changed plans - low ballers were annoying, persistent and sometimes rude.  However when I was selling my cars - low ball offers were usually made with very polite and professional voices - I guess dealers also joined the "circus".

  7. 1 hour ago, HenryNSW said:

    I think the issue is also education and messaging.

    For swimming everyone knows not to swim in the rip

    For rock fishing all I know is wear life jackets, cleats, and don't go fishing when the weather is rough or 'condition is bad'.....  which for me just sounds like don't go fishing if you see big wave and big wind.   

    What is missing for beginners (as many members pointed out) is learning to read the location, know how swell impacts the location.... specifically where the water will flow once it comes over the top

    My local fish store told me to watch a new spot for at least 10 min before starting to fish so I actually watched the spot for 10 min when we arrived while others were setting up so that's what made yesterday's event so surprising for me. 

    Mate, maybe contact also our local Sydney fishing rock star Alex Bellissimo, and ask if he has and can share the video recording of one of his free Rock Fishing Safety seminars (or at least remembers if any council or other org did recording). The seminars were quite interesting and useful, Alex answered plenty of questions from people.  

  8. 1 hour ago, Fab1 said:

    Or with tailor devouring them.Wonder if you can use gulp juice with any other plastics?

    As Rebel mentioned - do not use/mix, and there is no need to.

    As far as I remember Berkley Gulp is made of some water-based  biodegradable stuff  in the shape of lure rather than actual plastic. The actual SP does not need juice as it does not dry out quickly (nor leaks, or badly smells), however you can still apply various scents later if you wish.

    It is better to keep SP brands  in separate or original bags as sometimes they can melt together if stored together.  Zman plactic is well known for that.

  9. 1 minute ago, Fab1 said:

    Cheers mate.The gulp that is open that I have is in its original snap lock bag.Hasn't stopped the drying out/shrivel.

    See if you can find Gulp tubs on  clearance or decent sale around. You get good container,  plenty of Gulp juice and lures on top - you can add yours there. Regular price is not much attractive though.

    I started from Gulp too however moved quickly to Zman + scents due to leaks and smell. Well, in a "proper" spot  - a pack of Gulp wont last enough to dry under the sun anyway 🤣.

  10. 22 minutes ago, Pickles said:

    Great work Savit, great to get out after a long break.- thanks for sharing, that’s a healthy looking whiting. I’ve had a bit of success over sand flats with a small clear / yellow “sugar pen”, but only when it’s windy - seems to give them confidence and maybe brings prawns off the bottom.

    Yep, a bit of break - really hope I wont have any of those soon. I am still trying to locate some of my lures - some chance popular Sugar Pen is already in my "collection", otherwise I will start from the most close design next time.

  11. After observing a few years ago a young family (2 "adults" with 2 5-6 years old kids) picnic straight on the edge of ledge at North Curl Curl rocks,  so they can watch their 7' rods straight on picnic rug while eating and drinking - I have to admit that lack of common sense (mentioned by 2 guys here)  is a big contributor to those tragedies. It is not a " natural selection" or just a personal stupidity,  it becomes an effing negligence when it involves the lifes of others.

    As for PFDs - IMO it is similar to seat belts - It may be uncomfortable a bit however will increase rate of survival for an average(most) user(s) - therefore made compulsory. For those who cant bear it - can get a belt inflatable PFD that wont bother much on the rocks or unopened in the water - still within required compliance.

  12. 7 minutes ago, Green Hornet said:

    Sounds like a productive little session and a 36cm whiting is a great fish. Well done.

    It's always good to have a bit of wind chopping up the surface. More important than dawn or dusk IMO.

    Thanks mate.

    I dont fish dusks or dawns (and probably miss a lot), however at nights -  if wind or rain starts in the middle of lure session for bread and butter species - I can start packing my stuff - otherwise it will be just a casting practice. Whiting is mostly just a bycatch at night for me on lures.

    • Like 1
  13. After almost 4 months without fishing,  and a few recent forum wading topics/posts, I decided to wet a line and feet on Sat morning in my regular Sydney estuary. The beginning (perhaps fish still slept  🤔)  was very quiet,  and I have gone through a fist of small topwater, sinking HBs and some SPs without any action. Then wind picked up and fun has started! Some - missed, some  lost, some landed. Only one legal though - 36cm whiting. All was caught on 2 micro poppers - the rest was ignored.

    Imagepipe_3.jpg

    Imagepipe_7.jpg

    Imagepipe_5.jpg

    Imagepipe_6.jpg

    Imagepipe_4.jpg

    Imagepipe_1.jpg

    • Like 16
  14. I have a bit of range of  glass/soft tip rods however all they have use only on a kayak.

    I find 2-4kg glass tip rods are too soft for working the lures or even setting the hook.  Also  precision ( cast direction and  distance control)  is very low due to whipping - therefore would not use them close  to structure (e.g trees , boats, mates  etc).

    Therefore I use at least 3-5kg and usually 4-8kg glass tip rods as they are stiffer and allow to feel the lure better, and allow  better control over cast. The downside is their weight (and therefore sensitivity) - so not quite suitable for long time casting - at  least for those without Popeye forearms. Shorter - 6 feet instead of 7 feet glass tip rods will make lure casting a bit more enjoyable.

    • Like 1
  15. I used regularly small road/building rocks (Google says average age 500-600 mln years 😀)  as  paternoster sinkers when targetting smaller species in really snaggy areas (1 cast - 1 sinker) with strong  current near rock ledges. Unlike lead -  it has zero impact both on the environment and wallet. I still keep bag of them, wife sometimes uses them for her plants projects.

    Besides that - Steelite bakelite centerpin (late 50s - early 60s) serves as a luderick reel, and Daiwa Silver Series 1300c (mid 70s- early 80s) spin reel -  as a small / bread and butter species kayak reel. Unlike others / modern graphite reels it just refuses to give up after swims.

    • Like 1
  16. Great write up! Thank you for sharing.

    A few other things you might want  to consider:

    - Belt with rodholder (tube type,  not the common bucket type)- eliminates the need for the 3rd hand.  Just put a rod in a rod holder when you need a free hand and -  easy fish de-hooking (may be even faster than youtube veterans without tearing fish mouth)  on the spot, fast lure replacement or knot tying. No more wading to the shore (through "minefield " of sting rays) hoping the fish does not chew through the leader, no more disturbed fish in the area while moving to the land and back , no more wasted time.

    - Sunnies. Consider polarised with high UV protection. Excellent tool for sight fishing on shallows. Helps spot the fish in the water before the fish spots you. Easier and faster to assess the area, and concentrate  casts where fish is actually located. Also, allows to watch better what is actually going on at your feet. And, your eyes are protected on top of that . Polarised sunnies work best in direct sunlight, though not so much in shade or chop. 

    - Gloves. Help save on band aids due to flattie or bream revenge (fish spikes). Also protect palms when landing  on slippery / oyster areas.

     

    • Thanks 3
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