All Activity
- Last week
-
spavtoMof joined the community
-
Humanowep joined the community
-
Tinker reacted to a post in a topic: Leven River wild trout.
-
ButTriag joined the community
-
Beautiful location. Nice fish too
-
Hunter69 reacted to a post in a topic: Leven River wild trout.
-
JaneDor started following Leven River wild trout.
- Earlier
-
The best I have taken is an 81cm “Southern Blue Spotted Flathead”. Back in the day when I was not as aware of the breeding aspects. The Eastern States Dusky Flathead is a bigger species. So 81cm for a Blue Spot is in the upper end of its size range.
-
great write-up. Those big ones are true "crocs". Speaking of.....how log is the biggest bluespot you have seen reliably measured?
-
Raymondsep started following Innovative Ideas Man
-
Mark, It is always the Food stupid! ... the saying borrowed from political campaigns ! I am sure you will get my drift So it is all about the best conditions for the baitfish. Always follow the baitfish. The falling Tide is best. The baitfish retreat and congregate in weedy areas. Flathead follow and also congregate. I don't get as many on the incoming tide. Too Windy. Little baitfish need protection and head out deeper or into sheltered deeper channels. Too Cold. Deeper water is warmer than the chilly shallows for the sensitive baitfish. And this also applies with
-
Always so picturesque in your part of the world. Catching fish is a bonus
-
This was my only trip to the Leven River so far this season, it hasn't fished all that well over the past couple of seasons but i thought it was time to give it a go before the season closes. cheers Adrian..
-
Brilliant report/article & photos Des, plenty of great info as well.. Those flatties were a good size, mouth watering actually.. Thanks for another ripper trip Des,, cheers Adrian
-
Great post. After reading this I need to get myself sorted for some flathead fishing on the flats. What conditions are you looking for? Is it like YFW with the tides, aiming for when they are concentrated at the bottom of the tide? What surface conditions are you looking for? I'm off to Tackle World on Thursday night to fit out my lures with new assist hooks and then hit the flats. Cheers Mark
-
Fantastic post mate! This will be great reference and repeat reference for years to come.
-
A great write up again...You certainly do your homework...and the results show that...Very nice indeed.
-
For the Yellow Fin Whiting Lure fanatics it is time for the withdrawal symptoms to start setting in, as the water temperatures start dropping. Fortunately there is some pain relief, in chasing a few Flathead on lures. Autumn brings a transition for the sandflats lure fisherman. YFW surface lure fishing drops off. Flathead lure fishing picks up. The “Southern Blue Spotted Flathead” becomes more prolific on the sandflats of the Northern SA Gulfs. . And it is the large accumulation of SEAGRASS WRACKS at this time of the year, along with the change in temperature, that starts i
-
Innovative Ideas Man
yellow door 1 replied to yellow door 1's topic in How to guides and DIY projects
p.s. extremely unsafe testing methods were used -
Innovative Ideas Man
yellow door 1 replied to yellow door 1's topic in How to guides and DIY projects
Snapped my testing rig and punched myself in the face - but it got to about 18kg before the wire testing rig snapped - The fishing hook glued into the jighead did not budge -
Innovative Ideas Man
yellow door 1 replied to yellow door 1's topic in How to guides and DIY projects
If you want to add a tow point to a jighead. Just cut a hook - drill a hole and super glue it in gives a surprisingly strong hold. I couldn’t pull it out with 2 sets of pliers -
Innovative Ideas Man
yellow door 1 replied to yellow door 1's topic in How to guides and DIY projects
-
I've started chucking 1/28th's in 9m of water, when conditions allow me to get them down to where the sounder says the fish are. The same plastic will remain untouched (Almost) on 1/4er's or 1/8th's - but a plastic that doesnt plummet, will get smashed on the drop by the unstoppables that make this technique a bit ridiculous on my current tiny jigheads. Sure you can grub heavy heads along the bottom and get hits and land the smaller dumber fish. But on the 1/28th's you barely need any skill at all. Just spot the fish on the sounder and count to 40 as the 1/28th sinks - then hang on
-
This trip was early on in the season, a spin session when the trout went from one lure to another. It turned out to be quite a good spin session as well with some beautifully coloured wild brown trout being caught & released. cheers Adrian (meppstas)
-
Legal size for amateur fishers the same for retail shops selling fish
Wert replied to Born again's topic in General Fishing
The ones you catch here are black bream. -
Legal size for amateur fishers the same for retail shops selling fish
Wert replied to Born again's topic in General Fishing
Size limits same if caught in SA, but for selling there isn't a size limit as such, it just matters they were legally caught or also if they're from aquaculture, you can get tiny Barra and Murray cod quite easily for example due to them coming from aquaculture and small snapper from interstate. -
Legal size for amateur fishers the same for retail shops selling fish
Kelvin replied to Born again's topic in General Fishing
no, same size limits Have you got a picture? Were these Black Bream Acanthopagrus butcheri ? -
Hi Mark OSP Bent Minnows 76mm or similar: Assist Hooks Size 4: https://www.anglerswarehouse.com.au/atomic-trick-bitz-assist-hooks-no-skirt Single Hooks Size 4: https://www.anglerswarehouse.com.au/bkk-imp-inline-single-hooks OSP Bent Minnows 106mm or similar: Size 1: https://www.anglerswarehouse.com.au/atomic-trick-bitz-assist-hooks-no-skirt Single Hooks Size 2: https://www.anglerswarehouse.com.au/bkk-imp-inline-single-hooks Rapala Shadow XRap SXR12 120mm or Atomic HARDZ SLIM TWITCHER 110mm Size 1: https://www.anglerswarehouse.com.au/atomic-trick-bit
-
What size assist hooks and singles are you using? Cheers Mark
-
The sandflats north of Adelaide, at the top of both the SA gulfs, hold some unique terrain and ecosystems. At low tide, these sandflats can drain out for over 2 kilometres. The tidal movements are, over 3 meters in St Vincents Gulf and upto 4 metres in the upper Spencers Gulf. The water temperature ranges from 11C to 25C. Typical of shallow, protected water bodies, it is a highly productive ecosystem holding a lot of fish and marine life. It is home, for two of my favourite fishing targets, the “Southern Blue Spotted Flathead” -Platycephalus speculator and the “Yellow Fin Whiting” -Sil
-
Who's Online 2 Members, 0 Anonymous, 379 Guests (See full list)