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Sykes

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  1. Thanks
    Sykes reacted to Meppstas in 12,000th Tasmanian trout..   
    I finally caught my 12,000th Tasmanian trout here in Tassie, it's something I had never planned on doing either thankfully by keeping stats & records of each trip and every trout season paid off. I also won the Angling Club Championship again for the 2022/23 trout season for most trout caught in rivers & streams making it 17 years in a row.
    cheers Adrian







  2. Like
    Sykes reacted to Hunter69 in 3lb brown   
    20231023_122301_1_1_1.mp4
  3. Like
    Sykes reacted to bjorn2fish in Life jackets must be worn at all times while on a boat, in new state regulations   
    This has already come up in the shoutbox but for further reading I've included the below originally from The Advertiser website. http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-australia/life-jackets-must-be-worn-at-all-times-while-on-a-boat-in-new-state-regulations/news-story/c959ef073fab6a1c188c93be20ce6b70
     
    DRIVERS and passengers of small boats have to wear life jackets at all times as part of a State Government bid to improve safety on the water.
    Transport Minister Stephen Mullighan will today announce new regulations that make wearing life jackets mandatory for anyone on board a motorised boat shorter than 4.8m.

    The regulations come into effect today, but water police will not start dishing out $160 fines until after a 12-month education campaign.
    Previously, boaties did not have to wear life jackets but had to ensure there were enough on board for every passenger.
    Mr Mullighan will also today announce a “Old4New life jacket upgrade” to give $20 vouchers in exchange for the handover of old, unsuitable, obsolete or damaged life jackets, with a limit of two vouchers per person.
    The new laws also state that:
    ON boats between 4.8m and 12m in length, children aged 12 or younger must wear a lifejacket at all times when on an open area of a vessel.
    ADULTS on these larger boats must wear a lifejacket when on the open deck during times of heightened risk such as when alone, at night, when visibility is poor and when the boat is disabled.
    PADDLEBOARDERS (including those on stand-up paddleboards) and surf skiers will also be required to wear life jackets when more than 400m from shore.
    PASSENGERS must wear a lifejacket if and when directed by the operator of a 4.8m to 12m vessel.
    “The new laws aim to reduce the chance of drownings, after 168 drownings in South Australia over the past decade, with approximately one fifth involving boating and watercraft activities,” Mr Mullighan said.

    “Too many people lose their lives unnecessarily because they don’t wear life jackets and, while we don’t want to stop people enjoying themselves, we want to make sure that we’re doing what we can to reduce serious injuries and deaths out on the water.
    “Already boaties are required to have enough life jackets for everyone. These new rules will make it clearer when people should be wearing them and will bring South Australia into line with other states such as Victoria and Queensland.”
    There will be a maximum fine of $1250, which can be imposed by courts if the matter is serious enough to end in a court case.

    The new law will also require some boat users to upgrade the quality of life jackets. The voucher system is designed to encourage boaties to replace out-of-date or inadequate jackets.
    Boating Industry Association chief executive Howard Glenn welcomed the changes, which he said would improve the stock of life jackets on boats.
    But he said the boating community would closely monitor the effects of the changes during the 12-month grace period.
    RecFish SA executive officer Danny Simpson welcomed the grace period because significant education was needed to meet the new regulations.
    “RecFish SA is supportive of all practical approaches to make boating safer for recreational fishers and their families,” he said.
    “The approach being proposed to educate rather than prosecute in the first year of the transition is sensible.
    “The Old4New life jacket program is an excellent approach. It means that recreational fishers and other boaters will receive financial support for upgrading old and obsolete equipment and will continue to safely enjoy their favourite pastime.”
  4. Like
    Sykes reacted to Kelvin in Biggest Redfin Perch?   
  5. Like
    Sykes reacted to Garrie in Biggest Redfin Perch?   
  6. Like
    Sykes got a reaction from bjorn2fish in Land based Squid help   
    Really appreciate the tips guys!
    I haven't managed many trips but just came back from a couple days away at Port Julia on the Yorkes.
    Managed 3 squid although the tides weren't great. Tried the paternoster rig but tide was so low kept snagging on the weed bed - got the 3 all on slow retrieves. Planning another trip for Rapid bay next month so keen to try the rig again. Cheers!
  7. Like
    Sykes got a reaction from Meppstas in Land based Squid help   
    Really appreciate the tips guys!
    I haven't managed many trips but just came back from a couple days away at Port Julia on the Yorkes.
    Managed 3 squid although the tides weren't great. Tried the paternoster rig but tide was so low kept snagging on the weed bed - got the 3 all on slow retrieves. Planning another trip for Rapid bay next month so keen to try the rig again. Cheers!
  8. Like
    Sykes reacted to Rybak in Land based Squid help   
    Thats how I do squiding for years now. Always works plus never snags up on the bottom. Great when also Whiting fishing as you can just leave the jag as is without worrying about it.  
  9. Like
    Sykes reacted to alfybabe in Land based Squid help   
    Hey guys here is a tip that out fishes conventional techniques for squidding as every other tip has been covered but this
    So firstly you attach a .5 to 1 Oz sinka on bottom of a paternoster rig then approx 40cm attach your favourite  coloured jag and then proceed to cast out as far as u want allowing the sink to hit bottom then wind in the slack so your connected to your sinka (like soft plastics) and give 2 quick lifts or jerks then wind up slack an repeat all way back sometime il stop and pause then with my index finger on the line give it 3-4 twitches  then continue ,the reason for this method is that it keeps your jagabove the weed right in a hungry squids face.
    Make sure jags not to close to sinker 40-50cm is fine 
    Keep connected to sinker winding up slack or jag will go in weed may get caught up 
    Slight steady pull will fix that problem
    Will improve catch rate especially when they aren't out midwinter feeding and are hiding in cover
    Tight lines
  10. Like
    Sykes reacted to Hunter69 in Cod On Fly   
    I was chasing trout recently, I tied a few ruff wooly buggers the night before. Free style.. and pretty happy with them too.. I also Tied on a brand new 4lb leader. 
    About 12 cast into my session, I felt a real heavy weight load up on my 5 weight Fly Rod. "Wow that's a big trout". It sat on the bottom and held my there about 5 minutes. It was an impossible trying to turn its head. It finally turned, it came too the surface. F+++ me !. It's not a trout.. then there was several heavy runs. A 10 minute battle in the end. I finally got it to surface. I grabbed my trout net off my back. Took one look at it and threw it. Pfft.. useless. Somehow I managed to land this fish.
    What it was doing eating a tiny wooly bugger?  I have no idea. How a size 12 (garfish hook) pinned it in the corner of the jaw and didn't fall out ? I have no idea. Why my 4lb line didn't snap. Again I have no idea. 
    It was definitely my day. 


    The fish measured 92cm. Estimate 30lb.
    Also a PB for me. 

  11. Like
    Sykes reacted to Meppstas in Autumn on the Mersey...   
    This is just a short 5 minute musical photo slideshow from a few trips to the Mersey River during Autumn.. I hope you enjoy it..
    cheers
    Adrian (meppstas)
     
     
  12. Like
    Sykes reacted to Hunter69 in P.B Trout   
    Caught this decent Brown in the hills recently. In the Mid 50's. Went all arabattic on me jumping several times. Released well. Caught on own ruff tied fly. 

     

     

     

    20230314_113820_1.mp4
  13. Like
    Sykes reacted to Des in HAND CAUGHT YELLOW FIN WHITING   
    I put this post up in a Facebook group last Autumn ...
     
    HAND CAUGHT YELLOW FIN WHITING
    As the YFW lure fishing season is starting to wane when Autumn progresses.
    I resort to catching them by hand!
    At this time of the year YFW are more active in the evening tide and into the night.
    They have shifted from their major meal of the day being Breakfast to now being Dinner.
    It is not so much water temperatures. But rather it is all to do with the tide cycles.
    The YFW behaviour is as strongly driven by the tide cycles as much as it is driven by the water temperatures.
    Autumn water temperatures are still holding above 20C and their metabolism and appetites have not yet slowed down.
    The evening tide is now the larger more dominant tide. YFW use the largest tide on the day to access many otherwise inaccessible feeding areas.
    Their daily feeding cycle and movements have now changed to feeding more in the evenings using the larger evening tides of Autumn.
    Morning runoff tides and mid day lure sessions are far less productive now. The better lure fishing sessions now occur during the evening run in tide.
    Particularly an evening after a warm day with a strengthening evening breeze and a large tide pushing through the mangroves.
    .
    However there is only a limited opportunity for lure fishing, before night falls. Whiting Lures don’t work in the dark, and so bait fishing for YFW in the night run off tide is very productive this time of the year  …  Or alternatively for a challenge catching them by hand.
     
    In a previous post on YFW Habitats and the food source they held,  I covered a favourite YFW food item. Haswell’s crabs.  ….
    It is their love of these little critters that gives you the opportunity to Hand Catch a few YFW at this time of the year.
    Under the cover of darkness in the evening tide, the YFW will hang back in the very shallow waters of the littoral zone, as the tide drops. In the narrow channels that run between the Samphire beds.
    They wait for the Haswells mud crabs to emerge from their mud holes, that are under and around the samphire beds.  They YFW will linger a long time amongst the samphire beds. A long time after the high tide has dropped, and in very shallow water.

    If you are equipped with a bright headlight you can momentarily hold a stunned YFW (not Mullet!) in the shallows long enough to try and grab him.
     
    I missed a few by hand tonight. A very still evening meant the tide did not push in as high and not as many fish came in. But nonetheless I managed to catch a dozen on bait in the couple of hours after dark.

     
    Try hand catching. A good fun alternative to lure fishing them.
     

     
    Cheers, Des
  14. Like
    Sykes reacted to Wert in Expensive squid jigs - worth it?   
    I strongly believe that the more expensive jigs are almost always better in every way, better quality and designed hooks (cheapies tend to rust instantly) stronger construction and more squid attracting ability, I'd go so far as to say this is basically a fact and have come to this conclusion having targeted squid from pre yo-zuri days 35+ years ago including a 6 month stint as a pro deckie 15-20 years ago during which time I'd have caught more squid than I'll ever catch for the entire rest of my life, just so many squid. 
    However 2 out 3 times it simply doesn't matter, especially recreationally, because hungry squid are about the easiest thing to catch in the ocean and you're unlikely to be catching so many your jags break.
    I only get expensive jigs personally but that's because I know they last longer so it's more about not having to stock up as often as opposed to the odd occasion they work better and given I also only buy when they're on clearance somewhere it probably works out cheaper for me long term this way.
    Of course it's true what Rybak said, a meat jag, especially in conjunction with a Tommie teaser will outsquid artificials everytime.
  15. Like
    Sykes reacted to yellow door 1 in Expensive squid jigs - worth it?   
    Great pics
     
    I don’t pay over $2 a jig
     
    im not what you’d describe as a serious squid fisherman
     
    my cheapies have no problem penetrating squid flesh. A jigs effectiveness seems entirely based on who’s line it’s tied to in my limited experience. 
     
    3 blokes using the exact same $2 jig. 1 guy gets none - 1 guy gets 3 - and the last guy gets 8 over the same time casting at the same water. 
     
    so the guy who got none will go out and buy $20 jigs the next week because the $2 dont work. And he will get better over time and start attributing the suckers to the new jigs.
     
    But the guy who got 8 about as quick as you can catch squid can stick with $2 jigs because it would be harder to catch squid faster than he already catches them
  16. Like
    Sykes reacted to Soobz in Expensive squid jigs - worth it?   
    I was always a user of cheaper jigs. But over time I've bought a few better ones just to see if I was missing something. Apart from build quality, the expensive ones do swim a bit better and don't get snagged as much as they are better balanced.
    Then I thought I'd look closer at the barbs. I'll let you decide from the pics below. All are the same magnification 132x, some focussed a bit better than others, and some measuring lines just for a bit of reference.
    First up, Duel Dartmaster EZ-Q Search #3.0

    Next is Shimano Flash Boost (poor focus sorry)

    Then for a bit of difference, a Ebay cheapie

    Daiwa - the one with a bit of opal in the back

    Neptune Tackle cheapie - well used I think

    Aliexpress real fish type

    Aliexpress bibbed minnow swim type, pointy but soft steel (next 2 pics)


     
    We get screwed in Australia with jig prices, very tempting to go cheap, but if you do they will likely need a touch up with a diamond file.
  17. Like
    Sykes reacted to plankton in salt creek camping   
    There are some campsites you need to book ahead of time and there are others along the back of the beach that are first in. Either way you need to pay online before you go. You should be able to find everything you need here.
    https://www.parks.sa.gov.au/find-a-park/Browse_by_region/Limestone_Coast/coorong-national-park
  18. Thanks
    Sykes reacted to Des in WEATHER or NOT ???   
    The Yellow Fin Whiting season is fast approaching. As the seasons and weather conditions change we have to think about and adapt to the changing behaviours of the Yellow Fin Whiting.
    The most important thing for successful YFW lure fishing is knowing the fish!
    It’s physiology. It’s habitats and ecosystems. Also it’s behaviour in all weather conditions and seasons.
    The next most important thing for successful YFW lure fishing is knowing your spots. The geography and terrain.
    There is always a right spot, for every weather and tide conditions. When do the fish go to a given spot? In what weather? On which tide? And what food is available there in these conditions?
    The least important thing for successful YFW lure fishing is … lures !!!
    Find the fish first. Before worrying about finding the right lure and technique.
     
    Your chances of success will depend on assessing the weather and tide conditions on a given day and then understanding the behaviour of YFW in those conditions. YFW will be found in different locations, in different weather and tide conditions.
    There is nearly always a good fishing spot available. Almost regardless of the weather conditions.
    We are lucky to have the two gulfs and the Yorke Peninsula. It provides us with a variety of options regardless of the weather and which way the wind blows.
    These are some weather and location factors that I consider, before I go lure fishing for YFW
     
    TEMPERATURE
    Early in the season air and water temperatures are critical for lure fishing. With the rising temperature their metabolism, muscle functions and locomotion increases.
    At the start of Spring, I usually pick a day at the end of a series of warmer days. The water would have warmed up a little by then. It takes a while for the water temperatures to change due to thermal lag. And even then I prefer fishing the warmer afternoon on these sunnier warmer days. A smaller tide on these days is a bonus. Less water to warm up in the shallows. Bigger tides can bring in cooler deeper water into the warm shallows. However this dynamic is ever changing and does go into reverse in the hottest months. Stay alert to the different water temperatures at different water depths at different times of the year.
    By November, water temperatures are now consistently over 20c. Low water temperatures and a low metabolism in the YFW is, no longer a factor. A chilly morning in summer may just dull the fish’s appetite. But by mid day as they gather in the deeper areas after the morning run off they will be back to their aggressive best.
    Yes the water temperature can get too hot after a hot spell. Then the obvious thing is to fish the cooler mornings.
    Also pick deeper water locations during hot weather spells. Where the fish can find some relief from the hotter surface water temperatures of the shallows. If fishing the afternoon incoming tide, you will need to fish back deeper in the tide. Where the water is cooler on those very hot days.

    …… Early in the season blades work better, as fish stay deeper and are less likely to rise for a surface lure.
     
    WIND
    Given that water temperatures are good, wind is the next most important factor for stimulating YFW surface feeding.
    The perfect wind for lure fishing YFW on an open sand flat, is in the 6 to 12 knots range. Perfect to stimulate YFW feeding as they feel a lot safer under the cover of a heavy ripple or light chop on the surface of the water. The chop sufficiently obscures their vision, so they are not too discerning with lures in these conditions. Although too windy and too choppy, will stir up the sand and dirty the water. Fish will move to more protected and cleaner water.
    Strong winds are okay. In fact can be brilliant for concentrating fish in certain spots.Your spot selection in these conditions becomes critical. The geography of the Yorke Peninsula and gulfs gives us a myriad of options regardless of which direction the wind is blowing. With the gulfs and peninsula, you will always have a section of coast with an offshore wind.
    In strong winds, a lot more fish are gathered on the leeward coast, as they move away from the open rougher waters.
    Less floating weed and accumulated weed wracks on the leeward side is also a bonus. So strong winds are great for concentrating fish in certain areas.
    ….  A video of the ideal wind when lure fishing YFW
     
     
    ….  Both fish and their predators can be found sheltering from the wind in mangrove areas.
     
    HABITATS
    The varied marine habitats and terrain also provides a few options for windy days. There are habitats that provide sheltered areas regardless of onshore strong winds. A spot behind a mangrove forrest wall will have less chop and cleaner water. This area attracts and holds a lot more fish as they shelter from the rougher conditions outside. Often these strong on shore winds will produce a bigger tide, due to a storm surge. The fish take advantage of this as it provides access to fresh feeding areas around samphire beds behind the mangrove wall.
     
    Flooded in shore lagoons on a high tide are calmer and protected from the heavy churning chop. They will hold more fish in windier conditions. There are plenty of sandy bays and coves on the Peninsula that exist because they are sheltered, always in the leeward side of the prevailing strong winds. The water here is always cleaner and clearer, with fish more abundant in this location during windy conditions. Persistent strong winds are good. Don’t curse them, use them to your advantage.
    You may need to travel to the other side of a gulf to do this. Or even a trip down to the beautiful calm and sheltered waters of Hardwicke Bay, Point Souttar and Corny Point.

    …  An area sheltered by mangrove walls, that will hold more fish in stronger onshore winds.
     

    …. These fish were taken at the entrance of some mangrove areas
    TERRAIN
    Windy days on the open sand flats, will find fish sheltering in the deeper channels that will offer protection from the wind chop in the shallows. You will also find the leeward protected side of weed banks will hold more fish. Conversely should the winds be very light the windward side of a weed bank will have more food stirred up and hold more fish. What ever the wind does, there is a suitable spot to be.
    A windy day bonus - long casts downwind, always catch more fish. I avoid fishing on calm days if I can help it.

    … Channels and weed banks provide some shelter
     
    TIDE
    Any water movement provides a feeding stimulus for YFW. The tides are the most common cause of movement and will always influence fish behaviour.
    However even on a dead dodge tide, SW wind surges, afternoon seabreezes, or changes in atmospheric pressure can create enough stimulating water movement, regardless of the poor tide predictions. A small stimulus on an otherwise listless day often produces a disproportionate stimulatory reaction from the fish.
    Given that the main opening to the Gulfs face SW most tides will be boosted by a SW wind. Low atmospheric pressure will also draw in a larger tide. Factor these in to the published tide predictions, as there always is always a great deal of variation in tide heights on the sandflats.

    …  An old tide book explaining the factors that can effect tide height.
     
    The small dodge tides can be taken advantage of. The small tide holds and concentrate fish in larger numbers in a smaller area, rather than a big tide dispersing them over a large area. At times fishing these conditions can be more like “shooting fish in a barrel”.
    Big tides provide fish accessibility to new feeding habitats. Big YFW love the small Haswell crabs that live in the Samphire beds, behind the mangrove forests. This food becomes accessible to the YFW during the big tides that cover the Samphire beds. The YFW are a much easier target when they make their way in and out of the samphire beds, in a dropping big tide.
    Wether it be a Dodge tide or a big Spring tide, or light winds or strong winds, you will always be presented with a few different fishing opportunities, with the different conditions.

    …. Some of the largest YFW are taken on the biggest tides when they were chasing Haswell crabs in the Samphire beds

    …. Crabs in the gut contents of YFW
    CURRENTS
    Some locations with deeper major channels, that drain the sandflats have increased water flows. The localised currents, can stimulate fish feeding. It is a good location in a dodge tide when these channels can amplify water little water movement there is in the tide.
    These channels will usually bring in water of a temperature that offsets the existing shallow water temperatures. The deeper water also provides a refuge in either temperature extreme. In ambient temperature conditions they are also the tidal highways for fish.
     
    There are also major ocean currents that come into play. In winter the major Leeuwin current flows across from WA and effects the lower Spencers Gulf water temperatures. Boston Bay in Pt. Lincoln is well known for winter YFW.
    I have caught bags of YFW in the middle of winter on southern Yorkes when the locals tell me you won’t see them till October.
    A Northerly wind with a following Westerly change will flick in the warm water flows of the Leeuwin current and bring with it schools of YFW.  Maintain a fishing log. They are a great reference.

    …. The Leeuwin current brings warm water temperatures to the southern Spencers Gulf in winter
     
    SUNSHINE !!!
    On sunny days you catch more fish! It probably is the extra warmth and the better visibility of the lures. But it does not matter if you don’t catch fish theses beautiful days !

    … It is always good fishing in the sunshine
     
    So you either you pick the best weather days for your regular spot, or you pick a new spot to suit the weather and tides on the day.
    One way or another you should be able to catch a good feed of YFW on lures. Regardless of the weather.
     
    Tight Lines,
    Cheers, Des
  19. Like
    Sykes reacted to MAH in Marino Rocks - Land Based   
    Headed to Marino Rocks this morning. Water was reasonably clear. Weather was a bit average, wind started to pick up and there a slight drizzle.
    I had waders on so was able to get out to a nice little rock ledge and start casting around jigs.
    I used slow sinking jigs, but still snagged a couple of times. Luckily I was able to clear the snag each time.
    Caught 2 squid over 1.5 hours, not great but better than a doughnut.
    As the tide dropped I saw a lure wedged in a rock, which turned out to be a 10g Halco twisty. Nice little find.
    A good way to spend the morning.
  20. Like
    Sykes reacted to MAH in Marino Rocks - Land Based   
    Weather looks OK tomorrow and I thought I would try Marino Rocks for squid. I don't know this area for land based fishing, so would appreciate some advice on best time/tide to go.
    Low tide is 10.45am and high tide is 5.07pm. Is it possible to fish this area on the high tide, or do you need a low tide to get out onto the rocks?
    Cheers
    MAH
  21. Like
    Sykes reacted to Kuerschie in Blades   
    Bream on blades has been a fairly simple technique for me. Similar to how you would fish a soft plastic. Long cast, let it sink to the bottom and pause when it’s there. Pause for a second or 5 depending on the fish activity, and then lift and take up the slack. Let it back down to the bottom and pause again and repeat that until you recast. 
    I have also done alright with a burn and kill technique where you let it hit the bottom and then wind straight for 3-5 turns of the reel before pausing and letting it back to the bottom. Rinse and repeat etc.
    Blades that have done me well are the Pro Lure V35, Savage Gear Minnow Blade 4g and EcoGear ZX35. Majority of the colours I’ve had success in are gold, black and orange. I also put scent on the blades too for added confidence.



  22. Like
    Sykes reacted to Des in Blades   
    These must be the easiest of lures to work. They also cast a mile with ease  ... Into the wind too!
    Keep it simple. A constant rolling retrieve across the bottom of a sand flat, will have the Yellow Fin Whiting chasing and hitting it. Never pause with YFW. Keep retrieving even when they strike lightly. They will only chase and hit it harder.
    If there is a little structure around, and a possible Flathead around, then I add in a few smooth rod lifts and drops. 
    This also applies for KGW when fishing the blueline weed edges.
    I very rarely fish Bream areas but I have read they will hit them on the pause.
    Apart from YFW and FH the Salmon Trout love them (annoyingly)...  aaand  ... Bloody Puffers too unfortunately !
    I have had some success on FH and a few YFW with the Strike Pro and TT Lures models.
    But the absolute stand out are the Ecogear ZX. 
    The largest 43mm size works best for me with YFW and FH. However drop down to 30mm if you are in a KGW area.
    My favourite colours are; #418 - Bleeding Prawn and the #402 UV Pink
    Always get some spare Assist hooks. They also work well on other surface lures.
    Good luck. I am sure you will enjoy using them.
    Cheers Des.

  23. Like
    Sykes reacted to Soobz in Braid BS   
    I got my wife a new reel, a nice Emeraldas MX 2500, and she wanted pink so I went with Platypus X9 20lb which says on the packet .25mm. When I only managed to fit 40m I thought I'd better investigate. It's supposed to be 0.25mm. The green thicker one is Sufix 832 30lb and is supposed to be 0.29mm. The thin green is Daiwa Morethan PE0.8 (JDM) and is PE1.5, and should be .205mm according to the gou chart. The silver wire is 0.2mm, the copper wire is .15mm so the camera is calibrated correctly and should be for $30k. This is 100x zoom so the edges are not super sharp, but I measured it multiple times with different zoom/focus. Not happy the Platypus is  so far off stated size and is crazy thick for 20lb braid.
    In the end I've put Shimano Pitbull+ (JDM/pink) PE0.8 on there which I'll measure later but it feels like the .148mm it's supposed to be and I fitted 150m per Daiwa spec.

  24. Like
    Sykes reacted to MIKECATTS in Flash Boost squid jigs   
    Guys.. If you want " different unseen jigs" try Aliexpress.. Some weird and wonderfull ones there...


  25. Like
    Sykes reacted to Soobz in Flash Boost squid jigs   
    How late am I to the party? Well, I figure I won't be the only one so others who are yet to discover the Sephia Flash Boost squid jigs, check them out. Tried one out yesterday, and even in the murky atm Seacliff area (some kind of shore works pumping sand into the cove) and a shit tide it still caught squid when the other lures did diddly squat.
    Video doesn't do them justice but:
     
     
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