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fragmeister

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Posts posted by fragmeister

  1. 4 hours ago, SaltyGreek said:

    I would usually be down fishing both the crooked river and 7 mile beach this time of year but due to complications we weren’t able to go.

    Off 7 mile beach I find a lot of the gutters that form are usually further down south along the beach past the bend and we usually pull out good whiting and bream there on beachworms.

    I think the last time the crooked river was landlocked was in 2017 and I’ve found a pattern that it closes for a while about every 4 years. Live poddy mullet in the deeper channels past the road bridge do well on flathead there and live nippers usually do well for the whiting but because of the river being shut for so long it might’ve changed things around a bit especially with all the rain too.

    Thanks Salty,

    I didn't venture further upstream as it seemed to ve very soft underfoot around the mouth of that little creek just past the bridge.

    Next time I might take a paddle up there in a rented canoe and toss the fly again.

     

    Cheers

    Jim

     

     

  2. Hi Raiders,

     

    Just before Christmas I had a week camping down at 7 Mile Beach.

    I have been there a few times and I have to say that it is reasonably tough fishing compared to other destinations down the coast.

    We stayed at the caravan park on Crooked River which is a very shallow estuary that I believe was closed off until a few months ago.

    In the past I have caught some jumbo whiting in the Crooked River but this time around they seemed to be absent.

    It was very relaxing wading the sand flats with my fly rod and I did pick up a few flatties with my favourite flattie fly.

    It's a little blood worm pattern, and it works for me every time... mind you I don't think flatties are that discerning!

    Fly.thumb.jpg.8a938ae88658b8d0c5bce597a3b8d08b.jpg

    I am afraid I didn't get any decent pictures but here's one from the bridge over the river taken by a mate.

    You can see how shallow the water was. I was casting into a patch of seagrass and I got two fish in rapid succession.

    Not big fish, but it is always good to bring in a few on fly.

    IMG_4555.thumb.jpg.681b898a8123a97acb0e7cd936ee7f71.jpg

     

    I didn't hit the beach this year, but I would be interested to hear any comments from other raiders.

    The beach has a very gradual slope and at least at the northern end is comprised of very fine and tightly compacted sand.

    Plenty of pipis and some beach worms that are a little difficult to catch because the sand is so compacted.

    I also find that there are very few gutters and I think this leads to an absence of many of the traditional beach species like salmon and tailor.

    Plenty of flathead though if you wade out to get a decent casting distance.

    All this may be different further south on the beach though where it is a little less protected.

    Would love to hear from any Raiders who know the area better.

    Anyway, it was all a very relaxing time with some great sunsets, few beers and some good friends.

    IMG_1941.thumb.jpg.26b3761b8118c4d50dba3536b2b25845.jpg

     

    Cheers

    Jim

     

     

     

     

    • Like 8
  3. 9 hours ago, slothparade said:

    Not to be rude or start an argument as it's just probably my ignorance but don't most people have a couple of crappy life jackets for their passengers and have the good one as their own? That's how it's always worked with my uncle and mates.

     I have all 150's, but I can see some logic in having the best available for the skipper.

    As the skipper you may go offshore solo, and potentially you could get knocked out and fall overboard. I came close once going a little too fast and coming down hard off the back of the wave. Smacked by forehead on the top of the windscreen. I was ok, but it could have been a lot worse.

    So, a quality self inflating and self righting 150 is a good move for the solo trip outside. So perhaps more budget priced ones for the crew is ok  when there are a few on board to help each other out.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

    • Like 1
  4. 11 minutes ago, slowjigger said:

    Also I think sand flathead and blue spot are one and the same. Common names can be confusing I know, as is identifying offshore flathead. The tail spots are said to be a distinctive and useful in identification of sand/ blue spots.    

    Cant agree with that one..

    Bluespots are Platycephalus caeruleopunctatus

    Sand flathead are Platycephalus bassensis

    In Sydney you will catch sand flathead in the bays and close in  but generally blue spots are only in 25 meters or more.

    Plus they have very clear blue spots.

     

    Cheers

    Jim

     

    39 minutes ago, slowjigger said:

     

     

     

  5. Hi Raiders,

    After a recent fishing trip I cooked some flathead fillets using my favourite batter - Tempura Batter.

    This is a personal taste only because I was never keen on a thick batter.

    While the flathead I cooked was very nice it was not quite as good as I thought it would be.

    I think it was a little "watered down" and not a sweet as I expected.

    That's not to say it wasn't good, but it was just a little shy of fantastic which is how I normally think of flathead cooked the same day.

    What was different ( apart from my expectation after 12 months without a fresh fish perhaps)?

    Well, this was a Tiger Flathead and I would usually be cooking Blue Spots.

    So this led me to wonder whether there were any opinions in the Fishraider community as to the

    table qualities of my big 4 in the flathead species. Certainly other fish such as Sand Whiting and King George Whiting are rated differently, so flathead may also vary on the chew.

    So here are my big 4 Flathead species in no particular order of preference.

    Dusky Flathead

    Sand Flathead

    Blue Spot Flathead

    Tiger Flathead

     

    Let me know your thoughts.

     

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  6. 6 hours ago, Yowie said:

    Good to see you back on the water, with a few fish caught as well. There are a lot of spikies outside, mostly full of roe so they must be breeding like rabbits.

    Thanks Yowie,

    Have you seen any Blue Spots around?

    Also, I found a post of yours from 2017 where you talk about a mild poison in the dorsal fin and how generally difficult they are to handle. I have to agree with that!

    I did  not know that there was no legal size on them. Most of the ones I caught would have made two great baits!

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

  7. 16 hours ago, frankS said:

    Jim. Good to see you back on the water again, sounds like you had an adventurous day with a few variants.

    Some good fish thrown in the mix and I would call it for being a successful day .

    I actually don't mine the odd Mowie probably my main catch down Bermi way, and they put up a half decent fight.

    Frank

    Hey Frank,

    I have to agree about the Mowie's fight, they are no slouch  in that department.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

  8. 4 hours ago, big Neil said:

    Hi Jim, great to see you back on Fishraider. I was actually thinking about you the other day...more specifically what you were up to and whether you were alright. Fishing reports have definitely been scarcer since Covid became the main impact on our lives. I am waiting for the Kingies to turn up and will risk a visit to Sydney to try catch one. Meantime, I'll look forward to reading reports. Welcome back Jim and hope you soon get back in the groove. bn

    Thanks Neil,

    All work and no play was the main issue. It was a big year of COVID and adapting at work and that put everything on hold. (including my planned semi-retirement!)

    Cheers

    Jim

     

    1 hour ago, Isaac Ct said:

    Great report mate, good to see you getting out for a fish. Well done, certainly not a bad day out.

    Thanks Isaac,

    It was a great day out.

    I see that you hail from the Shire.  I grew up there (50 years ago) and fished as kid from all the local wharfs and  sandflats.

    Great fishing memories from those days.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

     

    • Like 1
  9. Hi Raiders,

    It's been a while since I had anything to post with lockdowns and changes at work.

    I had the opportunity , so I ventured out today  to check out the harbour and a few inshore reefs.

    I was surprised how many boats were out on a weekday. There were six boats were on the artificial reef and another 6 boats on a couple of k's out from Diamond Day.

    There were also a few in much closer trolling or down rigging for Kings I suspect.

    I tried drifting for flathead from Diamond bay, but there was very little wind or run in the tide. I wasn't covering much ground and the place was alive with small spikey flathead. I drifted in 30 meters, then 40 meters and finally 50 meters. By the time I had finished all the slow drifts all the boats had dispersed - I guess they weren't doing well either.

    I moved across to the reef off North Head ( some people call it the Colours but there is also a Colours off South Head so I don't actually know which is the one, although they are both structure.)  Some squid strips went down on the standard 2 hook paternoster rig and I immediately  got hit by a Mowie. He looked like this.
     

     Mowie.thumb.jpg.241c43867537e6e2a17c902746bdb441.jpg

     

    I don't normally keep mowies but my  neighbour  fries them whole with Thai spices so I kept one for him.

    I was excited about the catch because I have found that Snapper and Mowies are often caught together but unfortunately the next two catches were similar sized Mowies.

    The bite went off so I returned to the start of the drift   and sent the Paternoster Rig down again. Almost immediately I get a hit from what I picked as Flathead and this came up from the 35 metre mark      

                                    

    Tiger.thumb.jpg.5f2b07176ce864bba2900afc2d526a25.jpg

    I kept this one for feed, but I released two more that were a little smaller. 

    The bite went off again, and I lost quite a few snapper leads working this ground so I decided to move inside the harbour and check a few of my normal spots.

    I was surprised that on the way out and back and even in the harbour I saw no sign of any birds or any surface action.

    I checked some of the main markers and there were no sign of Kings, so I anchored up at Sow & Pigs reef with half a dozen other boats.

    The tide was on its way out so I set up a burley trail heading back towards the reef. Unfortunately the sweep were in plague proportions and I just caught them one after other.

    I cast well away from the burley trail and came up with a few bream that look like this.

    bream.thumb.jpg.8dfb58889df072dffbc1079471f23c07.jpg

    They all went back too.

    I decided before I went that I would just keep enough for a feed on the day, give a fish to my neighbour and return the rest.

    I just wanted to get out there after more than 12 months of being out of action.

    I have to say though, I am out of practice... the whole prep the boat, get up early, fish for hours, back to the ramp and clean up at home is bloody exhausting!

    And, to show I'm even more out of practice, I reckon I got "Flathead Spiked" half a dozen times!

     

    Cheers

     

    Jim

    P.S You would think I could get 1 of the Fish Shots the right way around!(lol)  Fixed for you Jim :) 

    • Like 10
  10. On 8/28/2020 at 8:28 PM, kingie chaser said:

    All good Jim, I've only been a chef for 36 years but those fish & chips store guys might have something over me 😁

    Recollecting from my childhood the best tasting chips came from the semi cooked chips being kept all day in a big hopper next to the fryer, scooped into the basket & fried in dirty oil then wrapped in the daily telegraph.

    Could have been the toxic ink that gave them the extra flavour 🤭.

    Actually depending on my mood I either like my chips English style which is thick & soft(like they are from being wrapped) or thin & crispy.

    My preference is thick & soft.

    Nor worries @kingie chaser- I am sure you are a very experienced chef but I guess it all boils down ( or is that fries down!)  to individual preference. If someone gave me the best thick, soft chips in the world I probably wouldn't like them!

    There are so many ways to make chips and my method only works for people who want a no fuss thin and crunchy chip that stays crunchy for a long time.

    Happy for you to make me some chips one day and put them to the test!

    Cheers

    Jim

     

     

     

     

  11. Tried all that @kingie chaser but it is still hit or miss in my experience.

    I  think the secret is the fozen chips. It stops the inside overcooking so you can get enough crisp of the outside of the chip.

    Give it a try ... its a 6 - 8 minute job straight out of the deep freezer and its as good a result ( and more consistent) as I have ever got using a blancing/double fry method.

     

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

    • Like 1
  12. Hi Raiders,

    It has been so long since I posted, so long since I have been fishing. The whole COVID thing has meant that I have to be more involved in my business at a time when I was hoping to retire.

    Ah well. $H1t Happens!

    What I wanted to share with you may well not be any big secret, but it sure is news to this little black duck!

    It's not a monumental discovery... but it matters to me and I suspect for many of you, it does too.

    So here it is...

    I have struggled with getting a good chip for many years.

    I've tried all the techniques...

    Super fresh potatoes, soaking them in salty water to draw out the moisture, double frying them, tripple frying them, using diffrent oils, different temperatures ,drying them out in my air fryer before frying, blah blah, fricken' blah.

    But the results were always inconsistent. Sometimes they were great, sometimes they were soggy ( some like them like that but I don't!), sometimes they were nice and crisp but only for a few minutes. Really, should it be this difficult! All I want is a decent chip!

    But then , I stumbled on a consistent approach to producing my perfect and long lasting crunchy chip...

    My local chicken shop serves great chips so I asked them for help.

    They sold me a 3 kg bag of pre cut frozed chips for $15 bucks and told me to chuck them in the fryer frozen and fry them in canola oil at maximum temperature until they were golden brown. ( they said my choice of peanut oil was good but too expensive for them).

    In their industrial fryer, that was only 4 minutes of cooking time  but in my home fryer it was more like 8 minutes and you have to do it in small batches otherwise the frozen chips just drag the temerature down too much and that mucks up the final result.

    The result is a cripsy golden brown chip that stays crispy even until it gets cold. Every single time!

    No more sourcing the right potato, no more peeling, soaking, drying out and molly codling the bloody things.

    I'm in heaven!

    I hope this helps others in the quest for a great chip to go with the fish you are hopefully catching.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 6
    • Haha 1
  13. Thanks for the post Wazza,

    Brings back memories from my land based days in Coal & Candle Creek- certainly not as challenging as your experience... The car was close by for shelter from the rain and you could watch your glow sticks from the relative comfort of the front seat with the heater on!

    They are a great fish and reading your account just makes me keen to go out and catch one again.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

     

  14. This is my favourite catch mainly because it involved a few challenges.

    It was caught while slow trolling a live yakka at 12 mile reef.

    My 5.8 meter  Quintrex is only really suitable for going outside on good days so to get out there is a rare enough event anyway.

    This fish was quite a challenge and of course you are never sure who well they are hooked so I played the fish for perhaps 15 minutes as it stayed down deep. When it came to the surface it made a few jumps and lit up iridescent blue with its fins raised... very spectacular and the fish in the photo doesn't do it justice.

    Getting a gaff in the fish single handed was a challenge so it was a great relief when I had it boated.

    By far the best dollie I have caught and it fed the family for a few months

    Cheers

     

    JimDolly.thumb.JPG.01353debaa6f3d29b6d11a3cb1ae2161.JPG

     

     

    • Like 9
  15. My Dad taught me to fish when I was very about 5. I recall pulling a chair on to the verandah on Saturdays when he worked up until lunch so I could see when he got home because that meant we would be off to Gunnamatta Bay wharf for a  fish into the early evening. I think I sat there for hours impatiently waiting and the excitement never wore off.

    He had a German mate who paid me a penny for the yakkas or slimies I caught at the wharf. Get paid to catch fish.. bargain!  I remember him catching jewies from that wharf that were longer than me at the time!

    I remember being bitterly disappointed when they went on night fishing trips and I couldn't go. I think I told mum I had to go because they needed me to catch the live baits!  She didn't buy it ... and not the sulking 5 year old either!

    When I was still only 12 or 13 dad often left me overnight at the Lugaro Street Wharf to fish until the morning ( not sure what mum thought about that!  You certainly wouldn't do that these days!

    That wharf ( gone now) was an absolute gem in those days. Right on a narrow channel with weed beds in close and a sand bank over the channel in casting distance you could catch the limit of squid and bream in a session plus the odd John Dory, jewie and flathead in between. From time to time schools of tailor would appear and a frantic session would follow. I think many of my pb's  came from that wharf.

    I had three brothers and in some way we all connected with dad but my thing with him was a love of fishing.

    Great memories.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 3
    • Thanks 1
  16. On 3/17/2020 at 12:11 PM, Scratchie said:

    Fellow raiders, 

    The reason for this post is simply due to the magnitude of this situation. We will ALL have to deal with this crisis either directly or indirectly for an unknown period of time. 
    It is not to single out anyone for undue comments or someone trying to make light of the situation. I’m sure we all have a good joke or comment. (I know I do) Although, Let’s save them for 6 months time when we can all look back and laugh! 
    But reality right now is that people are sick, people are finding it hard to cope with bills, food, employment as well as the general struggles of life. 
    So let this time be a reminder to ourselves, be kind to each other, embrace your family and friends, don’t be selfish, sharing is caring and the fact that there is always someone worse off than you! 
     

    From a personal level....... I’m a baker at Woolworths. Today I watched 300-400 elderly and disabled people come through our doors in a frantic state. So me and my fellow baker went down to the front door to welcome them. Why??? Because they are the vulnerable, we are a familiar face to them and that made the mood remain calm and welcoming. 
     

    As we are a strong community here, let’s also be strong for the community around us. 
    Keep fishing when you can, keep sharing your knowledge on this site and remember that this is our happy place! 
     

    Kind regards 

    scratchie!!! 

    That's a nice touch Jeff.

    You set a great example.

    Cheers

     

    Jim

    • Thanks 1
  17. I bit late since you are probably already well into the trip but drifting in 30 - 40 meters of water  off Rose Bay will almost always get you a feed of Bluespots as my son can testify to.

     

    IMG_1316.thumb.jpg.08415b2d0c22eb43ec3219567d7d3643.jpg

  18. 3 hours ago, Scratchie said:

    Great to see you back on the water mate! And you found a feed. Gotta be happy with that! 

    Cheers scratchie!!! 

    Thanks Scratchie.

    I don’t know how I survived this last 6 months without the stress relief!

    my wife reckons  I have been easy to get on with though (not!)

    Cheers

    Jim

    • Like 1
  19. Thanks all.

    It was great to be back on the water but I am certainly out of condition for a 3 am start after 3 hours sleep!

    The drift was north to south Blaxland.

    Correct  Yowie, they were red spots.

    The foot was a little tender - all that lateral movement I guess, keeping balance in the swell.

    I settled down last night for a feed of deep-fried flathead and double cooked chips... bloody beautiful! Oh, and a few quiet ales. Funny thing, I didn't seem to feel any pain after that!

    BTW, I didn't mention earlier that I have changed my flathead bottom bouncing strategy a little.

    Through the entire drift, I will be getting bites. I believe most of those bites are either Red Spot Whiting or small Flathead.

    With one rod in the rod holder further out back and the other in my hand in closer, I will feel every bite in the handheld rod and strike at many bites which of course are often too small to hook up.

    Eventually, I will strike at a more serious bite and it will be a decent Bluespot. Almost immediately I would hook up on the rod in the rod holder which ofcourse arrives at the patch of fish a little later.

    So, basically, my strategy is that as long as I don't start the drift too far away from the patch of Blue Spots I leave both rods in the rod holders and stop interfering. There will be plenty of bait still on the hook by the time I am over the right patch of fish and the Bluespots will hook themselves.  This saves the effort of striking at small fish, winding up a little way to see if the fish is on, letting it back down again and effectively taking it out of the bite zone. Not a lot of finesse but I think it is more effective to let the fish do the work for you.

    I am sure this will be a familiar strategy for many but for those who like me can tend to over-manage the rods this may be of value. It is certainly true that I will catch more fish with a rod held in the hand but they will be species and sizes I don't want.

    We have had a few discussions on bottom bouncing in this forum... So I am interested in how many of you would use a less managed rod holder approach and how many want to keep the rod in hand?

     

    Cheers

     

    Jim

     

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
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