Jump to content

Cape York 06


slinkymalinky

Recommended Posts

Just wanted to share an awesome trip I took in April 06. Mrs Slinky and I left the kids in the hands of the In Laws and joined a live aboard charter for 8 days on the Western side of Cape York.

After agonising over what to leave behind with the strict luggage limits on the light aircraft that flew us into Bamaga, we still went aboard the great vessel groaning under the weight of tackle we'd managed to squeeze in. The trip down the coast South from Sesia was amazing with the water like glass... no swell at all the for the whole trip and only little wind chop to deal with occasionally.

post-6175-1245729085_thumb.jpg

The view south from Sesia wharf

A quick stop at a little bump in the coast called Vrilya Point and almost immediately, every rod was loaded up with a succession of Queenfish, Longtail Tuna, GTs and Mackerel falling to chrome slices and poppers. Mrs Slinky had her first ever go with a carbon fibre rod and learned all about high-sticking on her first cast as she showered those around her with graphite particles... she still managed to land a nice little Spaniard.

post-6175-1245728718_thumb.jpg

Ouch!

For 6 days solid we fished our bums off. The routine was moor in a river mouth, have a leisurely breakfast each morning, hop aboard a guided skiff, fish till lunchtime, eat a restaurant quality meal, fish until dinner time back aboard the skiff, then eat drink and sleep it off until the next day.

post-6175-1245728780_thumb.jpg

Mouth of the Jackson River

To say the fishing was mind blowing is an understatement. We caught 29 species between us and the only problem we had was choosing from session to session what to chase. The Long Tail Tuna were so predictable and easy to catch they quickly got boring and we spent our time alternating between flats fishing for Golden Trevally and the like (couldn't hook any of the Permit), chasing bait balls, creek bashing for Barra and Jacks, and walking the shores with rods in hand.

post-6175-1245728855_thumb.jpg

These guys were everywhere and became our fallback on the rare occasion when things were quiet elsewhere

Sharks were an occasional menace but even losing the odd fish right beside the boat added to the spice of the trip.

post-6175-1245728688_thumb.jpg

Don't fall in...

We caught so many firsts and PBs that it's impossible to list them all but here's just a few.

post-6175-1245728703_thumb.jpg

80cm Bludger Trevally on fly

post-6175-1245728731_thumb.jpg

Mrs Slinky's 1st Cobe

post-6175-1245728748_thumb.jpg

A much hoped for Diamond Trevally on a Halco Scorpion 90

post-6175-1245728831_thumb.jpg

Golden Trevally were thick... this one on fly went about 90cm

post-6175-1245728866_thumb.jpg

The biggest mullet I've ever seen... caught by another patron on a secret fly.

post-6175-1245728889_thumb.jpg

My first Saratoga... about 65cm again on a trusty 90mm Scorpion

post-6175-1245728900_thumb.jpg

this one of around 55cm on fly

post-6175-1245728791_thumb.jpg

and Longtail on fly... they go hard!

post-6175-1245729666_thumb.jpg

Best Queenfish for the trip... just on 1m caught by Mrs Slinky while I was 'having fun' feeding the sharks

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What an absolute corker of a fishing trip, bet you were sore after hauling those things in.

Imagine getting bored catching longtails, very jealous Tony.

Congrats to you and Mrs Slinky for some great captures..

Cheers...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That brings back some memories! :thumbup:

Great trip that and was something I did quite a few times.

The diversity of the area is amazing with great fishing offshore to the fresh water reaches which are worth a trip just itself! My highest species count for a trip was 28 different species all on plastics and 38 species in total including ones on bait and hardbodies.

Oh man I have been trying to stay calm and collected but less than 3 weeks to go before my first sea plane fishing adventure! :yahoo:

G

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mrs Slinky had her first ever go with a carbon fibre rod and learned all about high-sticking on her first cast as she showered those around her with graphite particles... she still managed to land a nice little Spaniard.

Great report their Slinky....

Could you provide an insight to what you mean by "High-sticking" in relation to a carbon fibre rod?

Bar Up

Link to comment
Share on other sites

WOW!!! :1yikes: SLINKY!!! You're killin' me. The whole thing just looked super! What a trip! I love that kind of stuff as I'm sure fellow Raiders do as well....Good on Ya"ll. CHEERS....Tom the Yank P.S. I hope you got Mrs. Slinky a new Stick!... What time of year was it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

WOW! What a trip!! That's sensational fishing!

Fantastic photos. I love the "half" fish photo (must have been a decent shark) and that Diamond Trevally is a weird looking thing. Never seen one before.

Twenty nine species is amazing! Did you have a favourite?

Thanks Slinky and Mrs Slinky for the report.

Cheers

Peter

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Great report their Slinky....

Could you provide an insight to what you mean by "High-sticking" in relation to a carbon fibre rod?

Bar Up

High sticking means pulling back on the rod too far during the fight - particularly at the end of the fight where the fish is at your feet. If the butt of the rod is pointed straight up in the air when the fish is at your feet, or even angled slightly backwards as you pull against the fish, then the curve in the rod can be well over 90 degrees.

Not too bad in a fibreglass rod, but carbon rods just don't bend that way.

In my experience it's difficult to stop someone from high-sticking. As soon as the adrenaline hits they forget about it entirely. That's why I now have fibreglass rods for my guests!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Great report and photos mate. That's a great part of the world. Some fantastic fish on offer, and all of them seem to have one thing in common ... they pull like freight trains! :yahoo:

I bet Mrs Slinky is very aware of rod capabilities now :biggrin2: Very envious of a superb trip

Cheers

Skip

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's a good variety of fish Slinkymalinky, you're catching just about every species now that you're up in Qld ..

Beats that Hawkesbury two tide session session we had Tony, we only managed undersize jew and only a few soapies worth taking home and nothing much else at all on a good day with eight rods out ....

Well done mate it's too cold to fish down here :frozen::biggrin2:

Cheers

jewgaffer :1fishing1:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...