Jump to content

First trip to Middle Harbour = first legal Kingy


Linc

Recommended Posts

The boat finally arrived from Vic this week so I had to take it out as soon as I had a chance. With the wind forecast to be a bit rough I wasn't sure where to go until Fellow Raider Don_ recommended trying Middle Harbour.

Reunited at last!

post-30908-0-45764100-1379195396_thumb.jpg

We launched and Tunks Park and cruised for a few mins before finding a nice drop off and anchored up to land one trevally (32cm) and drop another slightly bigger at the boat. Then the hoards of undersized pinky snapper came on the chew with the burley trail in full effect so we moved on into Sugarloaf bay.

We couldn't find any bait fish but I think we may have been too late? (We weren't on the water till about 8am).

Sugarloaf was just full of baby snapper, nothing else had a chance to get near the bait so I rigged up some 8lb leader and threw on a Zman Minnowz plastic and had a few small hits put probably just little snapper again.

Next thing we knew, the water police were pulling up beside us for a safety check and told me I was missing a rego number until I told him it was still under vic rego. They then told us some very nice John Dory were being caught around the Spit bridge on livies (dammit, where are these livies?) We fished around the other side of the bridge with sabikis and caught more baby snapper and no yakkas - lots to learn in this area.

Finally decided to head back to the ramp with one last stop on the way in about 18M of water we dropped the baits and again got attacked by baby snapper. So we decided to head off. I went to pull in the plastic which I'd just left dangling over the side and after one wind of the handle BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ my fireblood 4000 reel went off faster than I've ever seen it (This is no port phillip bay snapper!)

Then the fear hit me, %$#& I've only got 8lb leader on and this thing was not stopping. I very hesitantly tightened the drag a little and he started to slow down, I was starting to gain on him and then BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ. Heart pumping I knew what this had to be my first Sydney king!

10 mins later we finally got sight of the fish and after 3 attempts to net him we got him in the boat. Woohoo!!!

post-30908-0-54603200-1379195419_thumb.jpg

Now I know it's not a giant by any standards but my biggest Victorian Kingy was 33cm so this was a monster for me, and after flopping it onto the brag mat it measured in at 66cm a keeper!! I could taste that sashimi already. And landed it on 8lb line intended for a bream I was shaking all over.

We went on to also catch 2 legal snapper (33 and 32cm), I think the kingy must have scared the babies away.

A big thanks to Don_ for the great advice and Dredog who also suggested the area. What a beautiful part of the world so close to Australia's largest city.

post-30908-0-09157900-1379195410_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well done on the kingy mate! awesome effort on 8lb line!

and yes that sashimi looks pretty dam nice, I usually clear out the blood line (the dark red stuff). I find it a bit tastes a bit bitter.

I did that to some of it but remembered having some Kingy sashimi in a sushi restaurant last week and they kept it on their, I think it adds to the appearance and didn't notice any strong taste, though if it were not eaten on the day of capture I'd imagine the dark part might get a bit fishy. They are a good fish to fillet and I was happy to see only a very thin strip of the red meat unlike Aussie salmon where you need to cut half an inch off to avoid it (though why am I comparing kingfish to Aussie salmon.. my poor deprived Victorian fishing history maybe)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A great introduction to fishing in Sydney!

A good way to remove the blood line is to cut along the fillet through the blood line then skin the two half fillets. By starting at the tail end on one and the head end on the other, and holding your SHARP filleting knife at an appropriate angle, you will be able to remove almost all of the red stuff and the skin in one motion. You might still need to trim a little of the red stuff off. You also remove those bones at the front of the fillet (pin bones) at the same time. What remains from each fish is four long. clean fillets ready to be sashimied or cooked.

Try these methods on some of the kingies you are sure to catch in the future:

1. Mix up some olive oil and lemon juice (about 50:50) and season with salt and pepper. Cut the fillets into appropriate sized pieces, dip in the mix and bbq until just done.

2. You need:

A bunch of coriander

3-4 garlic cloves
Juice of 2 limes
Large dollop of hot English mustard – say a heaped teaspoon full
2 tbspns extra virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste
Fillet and skin the fish, removing the red meat. Cut pieces so that they are not too thick (max 1 cm).
Process coriander and garlic in a food processor and then stir in the olive oil, lime juice, mustard, salt and pepper (or simply put it all together in the food processor).
Marinate the fish for 30-60 minutes in the mixture before cooking quickly on a hot bbq or in a hot pan. DO NOT OVERCOOK
Note: Cooking the mustard removes its heat but leaves the flavour behind. Trust me!
You could use this on any white fleshed fish or even chicken.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey linc,very nice catch.That sashimi looks great.Tell me did you bleed the King straight away.They say the sooner the better especially for sashimi.Wait till ya get on to some decent Trevs,now thats my favourite sashimi.

We should all team up and open a seafood restaraunt....call it "Catch of the day"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey linc,very nice catch.That sashimi looks great.Tell me did you bleed the King straight away.They say the sooner the better especially for sashimi.Wait till ya get on to some decent Trevs,now thats my favourite sashimi.

We should all team up and open a seafood restaraunt....call it "Catch of the day"

Yep the second it came off the measuring tape I bled it out as I do with any fast swimming or oily types of fish. I do love trev sashimi to but have never caught them much over 40cm, it was nice to have a thick fillet to slice up for once :)

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...