Wednesday, February 23, 2011

First Video review-Sebile Flatt Shad


Hey guys this is my first video review, take a look and tell me what you think,
Happy Fishing

Monday, February 21, 2011

The Downpour

The recent rain falls and floods have done some crazy things to the marine environment, one in which particularly amazes me. Lake Awoonga one of queenslands leading inpoudnment barra spots went from being considerably empty to so full there were massive volumes of water gushing over the spillway and with it many many fish. take a look at some of the things that were happening.


Take a look at the black areas in the wash, believe it
 or not they are just really big barramundi.


GAWB hatchery people taking a look at Barra they are catching
to make sure everything is going well.

GAWB people getting the Barra
 out of the water to inspect it

Reeling in a barra


Almost got it in

Getting the hooks out I presume

Releasing the barra back into the Boyne River

Another shot of the spillway


















Keep coming back for more fishing activities with video logs on lures and more fishing trips to come.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

another day out on the lake

Hey all,
recently my friend and I had a kayking trip out in a saltwater tidal lake, hoping to pick up some barra.
My set up, 2metre graphite spin, 2500 sized spin reel
spooled with braid.
everything was right, except the style of lures we took. here are some pictures. I admit my friend picked up one small barra but that was it all day.

Me and my Extreme kayak fish bandit.

Rocky drop off and a little bit of mangroves, perfect for bream
and jack if the conditions were good
submerged timbers, great for barra hunting
My kayak has a built in measuring thing. so we used that.
Lunch
more wonderful structure
should throw a crab pot in there

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Fish Fact File, Whiting

Fish Name: Sand Whiting
Common Names: summer whiting, silver whiting, yellow finned whiting.
Description:
A small elongated fish lacking the spots of a king George whiting. They have a golden yellow back but can often be more of a grey. They have bright underbellies with a yellow tinge on the tail and the fins. Large fish over 0.7kg have a blue tinge around their nose.

Feeding Habits:
 Whiting are loosely schooled and forage in shallow water. Sand whiting mainly eat smaller crustaceans and the like such as sand crabs along with worms and yabbies and even small prawns.

Size:
Most whiting are between 15 and 25 centimetres long with an occasional few reaching into the late thirties. Loss of large oversized whiting is mainly due to over fishing and people taking undersized whiting, often cast netters also use them as live baits for bigger fish.

Fishing Techniques:
Bait:
Bait is the best way to catch these shallow water foragers. Live prawns, dead prawn, live yabbies, live works, dead worms, pippies and crabs, whiting eat it all. The best bait for me to date is a segment of frozen prawn on the tip of a 1/0 red long shank. Whiting live in all different areas so rod specs are up to you.

Soft Plastics:
There isn’t a great deal of soft plastics on the market in Australia for whiting yet. If you do use hard bodies or soft plastics use a light graphite spin combo. A local tackle shop not too far from my town of origin sells great little 2 inch curl tails and paddle tails. Other than that you could try a gulp 2 inch baby shrimp or a small storm wild eye twitchy.

Hard bodies:
The same thing applies to hard bodies as soft plastics, whiting will only attack small lures and there aren’t too many good lures for whiting out there in the tackle stores of lures. Surface lures work best on whiting. A Sebile 52 splasher works great as does a 72 stick shad FL. Retrieve styles and lure reviews will be online soon for these lures and others. Stay tunes for more kayaking adventures.