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Gabm

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Posts posted by Gabm

  1. Best of luck Frank. Always good to get time out on the water.

    I haven’t been able to raise a squid in the Bay last few trips but last week the slimeys, which had disappear for some time, were back, although very picky.

    Hopefully you’ll find some success.

  2. A couple weeks ago, I lost most of two 4” shads which came back exactly like that., I was very careful with the 3rd & managed to hook an unlucky calamari on a jig head. Were you fishing the bottom?

    But, I’ve also been plagued by Jackets in Botany Bay last few weeks, Although they often take everything by snipping the braid.

    • Like 1
  3. Hi Radiers,

    Recently, I’ve been losing leader sometimes but often braid. to what I assume is leather jackets (we sometime bring them up).

    Is there anything that can be done, other than moving to a new spot?

    Does anyone think there are any colours less likely to be bitten off? My green seemed to survive more often than white & colour change?

    Thanks

  4. Thanks for the replies. 

    Good point on the guides, but it happened on 3 different rods at the same time within a short time so it’s prabably jackets or similar. If it happens again, maybe wire with a mono hand line will confirm.

  5. In Botany Bay last weekend, fishing over sand in no more than 15 metres, we lost several rigs: some cut through leader, but eventually braid was cut on two rods. Light set-ups (6 & 8 lb), braid colours white & green. Bait, jig head, slug & a squid jig! All within an expensive half hours drift.

    Late last year we lost another in the same way. But has not happened prior, ever, in 3 years of fishing the bay.

    Any idea what fish could be causing this?

    I thought a plague of jackets but over sand?

  6. On 8/14/2018 at 10:25 PM, JonD said:

    I ran this by our local maritime officer today who still stands by only self serving for the first year ( with some manufacturers) the second has to be done by the manufacturer. I've owned Burke, marlin, hutchwilco, axis and nautilus. The hutchwilco is the only one that has the 5 year stamp boxes inside but even that according to maritime doesn't mean I can fill all those five services myself, just the first year as it doesn't state I can do them all myself. Truthfully I find maritime to be full of their own self importance and way to eager to give warnings or write out fines. All of my inflatable jackets are now out of date according to maritime.

    I find I have enough to think about before any trip offshore making sure the kids have sunblock, buffs, lfejackets, water, fishing gear cameras battery's  etc etc, so just buy the foamies these days. Literally everything gets checked from the lanyard on the bucket to the battery's in the waterproof torch on a regular basis by maritime, it can be a real pain when they park their boat blocking one side of the boat ramp then check every boat using the other side. I questioned why they check our epirbs at the ramp, we don't need them unless we are 2nm offshore, reply was " Sir you have it on your boat it needs to be indate "  

    There's been times when the sumertime daily checks push me to almost giving up boating.http://maritimemanagement.transport.nsw.gov.au/lifejackets/lifejacket-servicing-and-maintenance/index.html

     

    By the way I own a full floatation suit which meets international safety standards for world  yacht racing, according to maritime because it doesn't have an Australian standards mark it's not acceptable to be used in place of a pfd1, even though the floatation and thermal value greatly accedes a self inflating pfd. I went through many calls to maritime and Aus standards trying to rectify this but eventually gave up, try finding what a Aus standard is and who actually tests them.

    John, thanks for the info. I don't see in the standards where it states only self servicing for the first year?

    it says that you follow manufacturers instructions. Many of these allow self servicing for up to 5 years (or more?)?

  7. 7 hours ago, Captain Spanner said:

    You have probably been hit by something with sharp teeth like a tailor or small shark, possibly mackerel if you are up the coast. The baitrunner wouldn't have helped you here, only a second hook down near the tail. The baitrunner more suits fish that turn the bait and swallow it whole like kings and jewies. In saying that jewies will take the thing whole anyway if it fits in their gob, as discussed in comments above.

    Thanks.

    It's Kings that were targeted but agreed something toothy would have been the culprit both times. Botany Bay so probably tailor or similar.

    Can I ask, for kings, without a baitrunner, should I loosen the drag giving them time to turn & swallow? Or leave the drag set in the hope they hook themselves?

  8. How about using baitrunners for live baiting?

    Been trying now for a half dozen sessions. Twice I've had hits, but each time only 1/3 of the yakka comes back (just where the hook sits). I wonder if it's because the fish feels some resistance?

  9. I was in the same boat as you 3 years ago.

    The wharf suggestion is on the money but understand crowded ones can be tough.

    Flats are a good alternative if he's happy to get his feet wet. Just wear appropriate footwear (stingrays).

    We tried: flats at San Souci (in front of the St George sailing club), there's even a wharf just near the bridge.

    Gunamatta flats in Cronulla is great at low tide as you can walk out near the channel: my son used to be keep interested by feeding the whiting (berley) & occasionally Bonnies  would cut through the schools in front of us providing even more interest.

    Yarra bay from the beach is safe but might be a bit quite fish wise for your son. He can wade / swim there too.

    Make sure to berley lots to keep things interesting!

  10. I have the 5" so can't do it.

    But quick read of the manual & it seems possible for the 4". Look up 'adding a custom layout to the home screen':

    - select customise home->add->add new layout

    - after adding, select 'split' to choose direction of the split

    I can't test it, hopefully it works. Good luck

     

  11. All I can say is that for me, restricted to mostly to bay fishing ( & not very successful at that, yet), your reports offer a window into a world I can only aspire to & therefore are truly appreciated.

    And this has to one of your best! Thanks again for sharing.

     

    • Like 1
  12. Is the South, East or North side of Sydney more convenient?

    As North & East are covered, I'll add the south. There are great flats on Gunamatta Bay Cronulla or just in front of the St George sailing club at San Souci.

  13. 15 hours ago, recurve said:

    Your jig may have not been getting right to the bottom. When this happens use the plastic to bring them up and even better if you can bring them to surface then present a jig to them. 

    Have caught loads of squid doing this. 

    Agreed. When fishing SPs, we would often get them following all the way to the boat, even in up to 15 metres of water! Have a rod rigged with a squid jig ready to drop within view. It's amazing to see how aggressive they are.

    Ps: They also drop an amazing amount of ink when hooked close to the boat.

  14. Changed to singles on all my lures after an unfortunate release with an angry bonito.

    Another advantage is you can use larger gauges than the trebles you replace - rough guide treble size + 2 to 3 - do a search on single lure size for guides.

    I havent noticed a significant decrease in hookups & they are much easier to handle.

    • Like 1
  15. 3 hours ago, JonD said:

    I've gone a little cheap lately on the braid front and only put 100m on each of my snapper and king outfits. With most of my snapper and kingy fishing being in around 40-60m I simply top shot braid over the mono, if I hook a fish that takes more than the 100m of braid I then get down to around 100m of mono, if that gets low I could always chase with the boat.

    I use colour change braid which changes every 10m with 5 different colours, if I start with the colour blue then reach it again I know my soft plastic has reached 50m. This makes keeping your plastic near the bottom far easier if the current or wind are making plastic fishing hard. By buying 300m spools I can topshot three reels. I used to fill spools right to the bottom but prefer the way I do it now.

    On my heavy spin gear I use for marlin and tuna I top shot the opposite way using 500m of braid with mono over the top untill the spool is full ( I still have a small amount of mono backing against the spool ). The mono gives me more stretch (forgiveness) on bigger fish. By the way I'm not a hardcore game fisherman else I would probably go back to the bent butt tiagra outfits.

    Ive had my braid to mono joins out in the water during big fish fights so often which have never parted that I simply don't worry about them anymore.

    Great advice Jon, thanks. I've not used any more than the top 10-20% of my braid & haven't even considered this! I'll give it a try when next I need to re-spool or top up.

  16. I'd say most of the Wollongong ocean facing beaches would have them? Haven't done this in a while (maybe 3-4 years) but I've certainly caught them at Port Kembla (near break wall on South side), W'Gong South beach & have seen them at Fairy Meadow BW Corrimal & North.

    Next time you're at a beach at low tide, drag something along the water line @ a likely spot (non pebbly) & see if anything pops up.

    Maybe a current local can confirm?

    Ps: it's a frustrating job, unless you're experienced, which I'm not!

  17. 6 hours ago, PaddyT said:

    The flats at Gunnamatta on lowtide

    2nd this. In warmer months tho as you need to get ankles / knees wet.

    Started my 6 year old here. At low tide you can get close to the channel which is alive with fish. In summer, betley will bring on schools of whiting & mullet they can target. If lucky, occasionally you'll get a bust up of Bonito or other predators through your school which are exciting for the kids & great fun on light gear.

    When the tide rolls in, retreat to the beach area & they can feed the schools of fish with bread, swim, or play on the sand whilst you fish.

    Gets crowded though - so be early.

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