ginko Posted December 14, 2012 Posted December 14, 2012 There us a big low tide tomorrow (saturday) arvo. so when the fish go off thee bite on the low tide, try betting back some of your gear. Today, I went on the low tide to a regular haunt at spit bridge and could easily walk in front of the casting platform, over the rocky area that is usually under a few feet of water, with oyster covered rocks that have eaten so many of my rigs. Twenty minutes there, and I cleaned up maybe 200 meters of lost lines, retrieved three squid jigs, one hard body lure , about thirty sinkers, and a working pair of pliers. Better than shopping for sinkers, and fewer lines to tangle in in future.
rockfisherman Posted December 14, 2012 Posted December 14, 2012 Yeah I better get down to the cooks river and look for the 10 or so blades that got snagged on oyster encrusted rocks on the ramp side of the bridge... They themselves have probably got something growing on them now. Fishingphase
JimT Posted December 14, 2012 Posted December 14, 2012 on the big low tides when fishing the Cooks River I use to dig up Botany Wrigglers and also get some cricket looking things, a cross between a prawn and a nipper. Bream and Whiting love em....
bharris Posted December 14, 2012 Posted December 14, 2012 Clicking prawns are gun bait parras loaded with them.my dad you to dig worms near teapie but cant do it any longer Sent from my GT-I9100T using Tapatalk 2
JimT Posted December 15, 2012 Posted December 15, 2012 Clicking prawns are gun bait parras loaded with them.my dad you to dig worms near teapie but cant do it any longer Sent from my GT-I9100T using Tapatalk 2 pm sent
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