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Yorky

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  1. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Leven River wild trout.   
    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..
     









  2. Like
    Yorky reacted to Des in WRACK ON not WRACK OFF.   
    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 it all off. Unlike the claims of some armchair academic experts, the sandflats areas where large Seagrass Wracks accumulate, is where you will find the greatest concentration of Flathead at this time of the year.
    .
    SEASONAL CHANGES IN THE ECOSYSTEM
    It is a season of change. And multiple factors come into play.
    The most fundamental change is in water temperature. Daily air temperatures have a tighter range, fortunately without those cold mornings of winter. Water temperature, currently around 18c provides the ambient conditions for baitfish. The sandflat shallows hold a lot more baitfish in these temperatures. And they linger all day in the shallows. And where baitfish linger so to do Flathead.
    Also and most importantly, large Seagrass Wracks form at this time of the year.
    The annual shedding of seagrass leaves through Autumn and Winter along with the higher tides and prevailing breezes, causes the accumulation of seaweed wracks in the northern SA gulfs, over these cooler months.
    In the ambient autumn temperature conditions the Wracks host an explosion of life in this ecosystem.
    When the organic material decomposes and breaks down it contributes to the food web systems by supplying essential nutrients. The composting seagrass accumulations are the source of detritus and of particulate and dissolved nutrients which contribute to beach and inshore marine foodwebs. Starting from (micro) zooplanktons, amphipods, bivalves, worms, crabs, juvenile prawns, clickers and  … lots and lots of small baitfish. Seaweed Wracks are at the start of the food chain that delivers us the fish we catch.

       ~ Weed Wracks, the start of the food chain, so thick that getting onto the sandflats can be difficult
    There are many other signs that the bait fish are around in greater numbers.
    Their predators gather, both from above the water and under the water.
    When the Bird watching groups start reporting some big numbers of bait fish eating bird varieties, you know the water borne bait fish feeders (Flathead) will also be about.

       ~  An abundance of Baitfish feeding Birds. A sure sign of Flathead around.
    With all the indicators pointing to an abundance of Flathead, I decided to spend a couple days immersed in the northern St Vincent Gulf sandflats environment.

       ~  Catching fish is a bonus in this delightful environment
    The best terrain is the weedy areas. The baitfish hold and shelter there and so do the Flathead chasing them.
    Weed barren sand patches hold very few Flathead. However a few whiting are likely while traversing a Flathead barren sand patch.
    .
    LURE SELECTION & TECHNIQUES
    I Don’t subscribe to a long held approach for lure fishing Flathead.
    I don’t fish the bottom. I don’t bounce a lure across the bottom of the sand, puffing the sand.
    Flathead have eyes on the top of their heads. Above their head is their main field of vision. The area that they will be concentrating on. Not so much the peripheral vision areas out  in front of them on the sand.
    So position your lure on top of their heads … Simple!
    For this my methods include fishing Soft Plastics under a float. These days, I am mainly using floating or suspending hardbody lures. All with retro fitted assists and single hooks to avoid fouling on and cleanly pulling through the weed adjacent to the Weed Wrack areas.
     

       ~  The successful lures on this outing. OSP Bent Minnows and Rapala Shadow Raps   ~  
     

       ~  Another victim of the OSP Bent Minnow 106mm - Colour: H09. Crystal Blue Shiner
     

     
       ~  One on the Rapala Shadow Rap 07 - 70mm Colour: Moss Back Shiner. It pays to cast over the same area with 2 size lure offerings. Sometimes they are not in the mood for a big feed.

     
       ~  Assist hooks at work. Flathead can be clumsy strikers of a lure due to a blind spot created from the setting of their eyes. Apart from pulling through weed easily, assist hooks also increase your hook up rate.
     
    This concept of fishing lures above the flathead’s eyes rather than in front of it, has in recent times gained a lot of acceptance with the enormous popularity and success of the floating glide baits now available. They hold and dance above the Flathead’s eyes.
    Also bear in mind you are wading and fishing shallow water. Between knee to waist deep. So there is no need for any deep diving lures.
    Currently my favourite lures are the OSP Bent Minnow and the Rapala Shadow Rap which were both successfully used on this outing
    Your lure retrieval style is critical to your success rate with catching Flathead.
    They do not behave like Salmon or Snook. Flathead are not morphologically evolved for chasing down bait fish like Snook or Salmon are. They lie in wait as an ambush predator with a explosive burst of speed. Often slowly stalking, following the baitfish. Then with an explosive burst lunge and seize the baitfish. Especially when the baitfish momentarily pauses.
    There is plenty of drone video footage here at JC's Fishing Shenanigans of Flathead stalking baitfish … : https://www.facebook.com/JCsFishingShenanigans
    As we most commonly chase Salmon & Snook with lures we have become accustomed to a fast retrieval rate. And the YFW surface lure fishers only know to retrieve fast and continuous!
    The lure retrieval rate for Flathead is very slow … Extremely slow! A few erratic twitches now and then followed by a few seconds of dead pause. Should a Flathead strike and you miss the hook up. Pause again and it will most like pounce back on your lure. The stalking or hidden Flathead likes to strike when the baitfish pauses.

       ~   In knee deep shallow water they go hard. You need to play them out before gliding them into the net.
    My arthritic wrists are certainly enjoying the change in retrieval tempo !
    RESULTS
    Over the two days of pleasant weather I covered a lot of ground, wading the sandflats, searching for and hunting down these beasts. This style of fishing does take some physical effort, but it is the most satisfying experience to successfully find your prey.
    I kept 14 fish ranging from 45cm to 69cm. I even picked up a few whiting while traversing a Flathead barren, weed free sand patch.
     

       ~  My catch retained for the 2 day outing. I even managed a few whiting while traversing a Flathead barren sand patch.
     

       ~  these Flathead are high 60s. Size enhanced by photos taken from the “Anglers Angle” !! T
    I also caught and released a couple of 70+cm Flathead.

       ~  75cm Blue Spot Flathead … Released
     

       ~  Taken close to the weed wracks. A 72cm Flathead … released.
     
    So WRACK ON !!! It’s time to fish the weedy Sandflats.
    Cheers and tight lines Des
  3. Like
    Yorky reacted to yellow door 1 in Innovative Ideas Man   
    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
     
     
  4. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Small stream trout on spinners & hard body lures.   
    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)
     











  5. Like
    Yorky reacted to Wert in Legal size for amateur fishers the same for retail shops selling fish   
    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.
  6. Like
    Yorky got a reaction from Wert in Ok J braid   
    If you don't  already do this, this might help.
    After casting, close your bail manually & not click it over by winding the handle as this will sometimes give you a loose loop of line, put a bit of tension on the line when you first start winding until you have taken up the slack line & have the weight of the lure.
     
  7. Like
    Yorky reacted to Wert in Ok J braid   
    Difficult to say for sure but those loops sound like your line is too loose on the spool, this happens when fishing light lures and baits, try putting tension on the line every few casts and just be wary of any obvious loose loops before casting, hopefully that helps.
  8. Thanks
    Yorky got a reaction from Meppstas in 12,000th Tasmanian trout..   
    @Meppstas Congratulations, that is a great achievement, thanks for sharing your journey, always a pleasure to watch & read
    Thank You
    Yorky
     
  9. Like
    Yorky reacted to Des in WOE BETIDE ME   
    I had a disastrous day last week and could only manage one Yellow Fin Whiting all day. I got the tide and the weather conditions all wrong.
    I was fortunate to realise the error and managed to back it up the following day by relocating my fishing to a spot better suited to the tide and weather and finished with a bag of 20 large YFW on surface lures.
    .
    The sandflats of the upper SA Gulfs are a dynamic environment and ecosystem with many a variable factor that affects fishing. It keeps you thinking. Keeps you on your toes! And we don’t always get it right!
    One of the most dynamic and important factors on these sandflats are the tides.
    And Beware! tides also are, the greatest danger for a novice fishing these areas !
    Knowing what the tide will do on any particular day is essential.
    Every spot has different characteristics, where the same tide will behave differently.
    For a successful fishing trip to these sandflats, you need to consider the tide along with the weather on the day. You then select the most suitable spot for those tides and those conditions.
    My recent trip to the upper St.V Gulf clearly illustrated this.
    .
    On Day 1:
    It went terribly wrong. The predicted tide was a slow steady run out all day. That did not happen. The spot was a wide sandflat. A small tide across a wide space means a slow steady water flow. That has a lot of fish lingering over the soft nipper beds. Unfortunately an unpredicted drop in air pressure and SW winds far stronger than forecast pushed against the flow and held the water at a standstill.
    No flow no fish. I only ended up catching the one fish on Day 1.
    .
    On Day 2:
    The tides and weather were very similar to the previous day. Having reconsidered the factors at play. I moved to another spot. The location was narrower, more restricted & channeled sandflat squeezed between a mangrove wall and the weedline.

    The tide flow here was quicker moving through this restricted space. And the fish were a lot more responsive. I finished with a bag of 20 quality large Yellow Fin Whiting.

    The Sugapen 95 was the most successful lure. And Zipbaits Fakie Dog DS70 took a few.

     
    For a successful day of YFW fishing on the sandflats you need to be aware of all the tide and water flow factors.
    .
    GULF SHAPE, TIDE ENTRY, WINDS & TIDAL FLOWS
    I do most of my fishing in the Gulf St Vincent. So this post will focus on the tidal influences on the Gulf of St Vincent Sandflats.
    The very shape of the St V Gulf affects the tides in the gulf.
    The first factor are the openings to the gulfs and their orientations.
    To the East of K.I. the Backstairs Passage. A narrow and very restrictive entrance to the gulf. Not much water can flow through that passage. Although the tide that does, races through at a great rate.
    On the West side is Investigator Strait. Which is considerably wider and the main entry point for the tide in St V Gulf tide.
    If you study the tide times in the gulf, the tide arrives earlier on western side ports. This western orientation of the main gulf opening, has a major impact on tides when a SW wind blows. The SW wind or storm surge forces a lot more water up the gulf than any other wind. That will increase the tide height, considerably far more than the forecast height.
    And the opposite also applies. A NE wind will force water out of the gulf, dropping the actual tide to lower than forecast.
     

    Air pressure adds a compounding factor. A lower Air pressure draws up more water and a high air pressure will force water out.
    Our Afternoon Sea breezes (occasional Gale) also act similar to a SW wind. It forces more water up the gulf and increases the tide height. Particularly in the upper gulfs.
    .
    So if you have ever arrived at a sandflats location expecting the tide to be where you thought it should be … and it is NOT. Reconsider the above factors.
    Danger is present, should these conditions come into play whilst you are out a kilometre away from the safe shore. A change in conditions can have the tide come in far faster than you have expected.
    .
    Our gulfs narrow at their northern ends. This amplifies any tide movement. In the constricted space of the upper gulf the tide has no where to go but up. Check the high tide on the same day.  A Pt. Adelaide 2.60 mt tide, will be a 3.90 mt tide at Pt Wakefield. So in the upper gulfs the effect from any of the above variables will be amplified. Stay alert! And factor it into your fishing.

    TERRAIN, & STAGE OF TIDE
    Narrow areas will increase the height and speed of tide. Wider areas the reverse. This may assist or hinder our fishing depending on the weather and tide on the day.
    .
    It is important to know your spot and its height in regards to the low water mark.
    Beware the elevated sand flats. If the tide at a spot, like Bald Hill Beach, arrives 3 hours after low, then you are obviously on the higher ground on an elevated sandflat. When the tide arrives here, it arrives at the fastest period of tide flow. Many fisherman are caught and taken by surprise in these locations.
    .
    Know the “RULE of TWELFTHS” .  How much water comes in and when. How much more will be coming in. The Flow rate of the tide in that hour. So you can decide; do you sit it out there and keep fishing or get out of there quickly.
    .
    THE RULE OF TWELFTHS FOR TIDE MOVEMENTS:
    - Based on the most frequent 6 hourly tide cycle experienced.
    .
    If we Start at LOW Tide.
    There is no movement. 100% of the water movement is yet to come in.
    .
    1 HOUR after Low Tide:
    - 1/12th of the tide moves in this hour.
    - 7% of the tide has moved in, during this hour.
    - 93% of the water is yet to come
    .
    2 HOURS after Low Tide:
    - 2/12th of the tide moves in this hour.
    - 25% of the tide has moved in, by the end of this hour.
    - 75% of the water is yet to come
    .
    3 HOURS after Low Tide:
    - 3/12th of the tide moves in this hour. The first of the fastest 2 hours of movement.
    - 50% of the tide has moved in, by the end of this hour.
    - 50% of the water is yet to come
    .
    4 HOURS after Low Tide:
    - 3/12th of the tide moves in this hour. The second of the fastest 2 hrs of movement.
    - 75% of the tide has moved in, by the end of this hour.
    - 25% of the water is yet to come
    .
    5 HOURS after Low Tide:
    - 2/12th of the tide moves in this hour.
    - 93% of the tide has moved in, by the end of this hour.
    - 7% of the water is yet to come
    .
    6 HOURS after Low Tide:
    - the last 1/12th of the tide moves in this hour.
    - 100% of the tide has moved in, at the end of this hour.
    - No more water to come in. This is the top of the tide.
    .
    There have been a few occasions, when I have been counting the minutes and calculating the tide, whilst I was stranded out on a bank with water too deep to cross all around me.
    Hopefully your sandflats fishing can be much more successful armed with the knowledge of these variables and their effects on your fishing.
    .
    Cheers and Tight lines, Des
  10. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Chasing trout in the Meander River.   
    This spin session was a tough one, conditions were pretty good, but the trout were hard to find, I still managed to get onto a few wild brown trout thanks to the Mepps March Brown Bug spinner. Thanks for watching, enjoy the musical photo slideshow at the end of the video and stay safe on/in the water..
    cheers Adrian (meppstas)
     
    A few pics from the spin session.. as always, all the trout were released..


  11. Like
    Yorky reacted to Des in BEWARE the BAG SNATCHERS IN A CUP DAY CROWD   
    A sunny Cup day meant getting out for a fish rather than be stuck home watching the races.
    .
    The flats were very crowded on race day. There were hordes and hordes of legal but smaller sizes Yellow Fin Whiting in the 25 to 29cm mark. They were a fish a cast for much of the day.  But …  Not the kind of horses I wanted to back.
    With so many little mugs about it was inevitable that the sly and the opportunistic would be out there ready to prey on them.
    .
    A sunny day on the sandflats is such a delight. The clear visibility and water clarity makes watching the passing parade a pleasure. Such an array of different species that cohabit this shallow water ecosystem. Amongst all the delightful sights on a sunny race day, are the diverse collection of Rays cruising around mooching in the sand. But amongst the happy crowd a few seedy characters lurk.
    Yup, “Bronzy Bob” turns up just when you least expect it. While you are distracted.  Intensely concentrating on a big Whiting chasing your surface lure, one of only a few on a lean day, your wading tub suddenly lurches left!
    .
    “Bob the Bag Snatcher Bronzy”   was at it again. He snuck up from behind and latched onto my catch-keeper bag that I have dangling in the water.
    Shooing him off did not work. He was persistent.
    When he made one too many swipes at my catch bag of whiting, I thought I should teach him a lesson.
    I allowed him to feel comfortable for yet another swipe. When he was just about to launch into my keeper bag I scooped him up with my landing net.
    It was a bit of a heavier load for the landing net.
    He was a healthy looking 3 foot specimen.
    I gave him a stern talking too, a slap on the snoot, took a couple of mug shots for the “Crim files”, and sent him on his way.
     

     
    I am told they are very good eating at this size if they are prepared properly after they are caught.
    However there is just not enough room in my wading tub to handle the job.
    Lucky for the Bronzies!
    These guys are frequent but annoying visitors on the sandflats.
    Mostly in the 3 to 4 foot range.
    They are not a threat, just disturbing. I can assure you they are discerning feeders and far prefer the whiting to the revolting taste of your waders and leg within!

     
    On the occasional dull session I have targeted them with a whiting fillet on ganged hooks. Good fun landing them on your whiting gear, whilst wading the shallows !!!
     

       ~ One hooked up on a previous session.
    The biggest I have come across on the shallow sandflats is a 6 footer, maybe 7 feet. I didn’t hang around for a closer inspection and accurate measurement!
    .
    My luck had abandoned me today as the weather factors negated each other to provide difficult conditions for stimulating the YFW bite. The wind speed and direction up the gulf, negated the small natural tide movement and the resultant actual tide was virtually at a standstill all day.
    Even if only small, Some tide movement is a great stimulant for the YFW to feed.
    It was hard work catching and releasing dozens and dozens of smaller fish.
    But I still managed to back in a few good horses on cup day.
    I finished with four fish around 40 to 41cm. And kept 10 of the better ones, that were mostly around 35cm.
    .

       ~ "Bob" took a chomp on this one! 
    Regardless of the fishing, it is always an interesting and enjoyable day wading the sandflats.
    Cheers, Des
  12. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Wind change fires up the trout.   
    This trip was to a small river just five minutes from home, this stretch of river was one I used to fish quite often until the record floods back in 2016. That flood really knocked the guts out of this little stream as did another one back in 2022, this trip I wanted to see if the trout had returned in this stretch of river. 
    cheers Adrian (meppstas)



  13. Like
    Yorky reacted to Des in DONKEYS on the DODGE TIDE   
    Regular post readers will know I like to fish the dodge tides for Yellow Fin Whiting .
    I cover a variety of reasons in detail, in this previous post:
    .
    One very good reason, is that you will regularly find better quality fish on the dodge tide.
    YFW movements and feeding are highly influenced by the tide. Revolving around the largest tide of the day, they tend to have a 24 hour digestive and feeding cycles.
    So even when the tides do not move much on the dodge, they will still have a need to feed within their cycles. The larger YFW have greater food needs and will generally preference a bigger meal such as juvenile prawns or clickers.
    With the small dodge tide their feeding will be concentrated to the smaller area, covered by little water flooding in. They will be easier to find.
    The terrain/substrate that holds their preferred food will naturally attract a higher concentration of larger YFW.
    That terrain you can feel under foot. The softer food holding substrate.
    The small tide movement, along with a deeper low tide, holds water over these prime feeding grounds longer. It provides for prolonged access to this zone for both fish and fisher person.
    A better explanation of productive terrain is in this post :
    .
    The dodge tide on Monday with a High of 1.77 mt @ 8.15am  and a Low of 0.97 mt @ 11.36pm provided a long drawn out, run off tide. With a prolonged spell under water, of some prime food holding areas. It looked like an ideal tide and I set off fishing.
    YFW are always stimulated by tide movement to feed. These tides do not provide much of that stimulus. However there are other factors that come into play.
    .
    The day started slowly without a strike for the first hour. The warmth of the day gradually started to take effect and the first to stir were some small Whiting.
    With the warming arvo came an arvo seabreeze, as well as a predicted strengthening southerly wind. YFW love a heavy rippled surface to take cover under and lose their feeding inhibitions. The bite picked up strongly and catches were now steady. In the constrictions of the upper gulfs any lower gulf southerly wind can force water up. A wind tide pushes in. It further stimulated the YFW and kept the feeding grounds covered with a perfect level of water for a wading fisherman.
    .
    I caught my bag of 20 in good time. This situation regularly provides quality fish, with10 of the fish ranging from 38 to 41cm. Most of the remaining 10 fish were around 35cm.
    Sugapen 95 was the most successful lure. Then again I did not need to use a lot of variety.
    The new Sugapen Splash caught it’s share when the afternoon breeze picked up. This is shaping up as the perfect lure for that strong summer afternoon breeze that kicks up a bit of chop.
    A few were also taken on the Ecogear ZX, when I was forced to go subsurface as a pack of persistent juvenile seagulls are yet to learn lures don’t taste good.
    .
    Hopefully we have some more fine weather for the next dodge tide.
    Tight lines all.
    Cheers, Des




  14. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Browns & 'bows in windy conditions.   
    Thanks Yorky, glad you enjoyed it, I'm very spoiled to be able to have so many beautiful scenic rivers and streams to fish down here in Tassie. I still love my ol' home Sth Aussie state too.. As always mate, I appreciate your comments..
    cheers Adrian..
  15. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Browns & 'bows in windy conditions.   
    Thanks YD, the scenery in and around the rivers I fish are great that's for sure. As for the spinners, the fish can run hot and cold on the blade spinners, especially trout, they can be on one minute and off the next and all one can do is to continue to chop and change spinners. Eventually there's one they'll take a liking to for a while then go of it, then it's back to chopping and changing lures again. Then I've had many days during the trout season when I've never had to change the spinner at all.  Spin fishing for trout with blade spinners fishing (or any fish) is certainly challenging most times, in the end that's what it's all about isn't it.. 
    cheers Adrian 
  16. Like
    Yorky got a reaction from Meppstas in Browns & 'bows in windy conditions.   
    Great video, beautiful area as always
    Thank You
    Yorky
  17. Like
    Yorky got a reaction from Meppstas in High water & a few nice trout..   
    Great video & pictures, beautiful area
    Thank you
    Yorky  
  18. Like
    Yorky reacted to Des in CHAIN REACTIONS with CHANGING SEASONS   
    The seasons are changing. The temperature is rising.
    The water is warming. It is all happening a bit earlier this year.
    Lizards are crawling on the roads. And “Lizards” (flathead) are crawling in the sea.
    Water birds are gathering, lining up for a feast of baitfish from above.
    The Flathead are lining up for a feast of baitfish from below.
    In these ambient temperatures, food is plentiful in the shallows.
    The ecosystem has had a great kickstart with the rise in temperatures and every thing comes alive and thrives on the sandflats.

    Temperature is the biggest driver for a series of chain reactions, in the sandflats ecosystem.
    I am forever monitoring the water temperatures.
    The rise in water temperature is early this year.

    A series of natural events occur, which results in delivering us fishers, some fine Yellow Fin Whiting and Flathead.
    Stimulated by the rise in water temperature about now our local Prawns, the Western King Prawn, start spawning in their mid gulf grounds.
    Also now, the Haswell Shore Crabs shrug off their cold weather torpor and also spawn in the inshore shallows.
    Post larval Juvenile Prawns start migrating from mid gulf to the warmer, shallow, inshore waters of the upper gulfs.
    The Haswell Shore Crab larval zoea, now abundant, provides food for the juvenile Prawns and schools of baitfish.
    There is a boom in the population of Juvenile Prawns, Haswell Shore Crabs, and Baitfish in the inshore waters … And also their predators. YFW and Flathead, have moved in, enjoying this abundance of food.
    Having experienced a sustained period of exposure to higher water temperatures, the YFW have now, increased their metabolisms and have developed voracious appetites. The larger predatory YFW that I like to target are now aggressively hunting on the sandflats. Devouring juvenile prawns and shore crabs.
    So it is a perfect time to place myself at the end of these chain reactions and target some YFW and Flathead.

    I took advantage of the warm weekend.
    Given the tides, I selected an area that amplifies the small tide movement and works best on the slower tides.
    I started with chasing Flathead on the falling tide. The Flathead are very active chasing the baitfish as they retreat to the shelter of weedy areas in deeper water.
    Fishing for them in heavily weeded areas does present it’s challenges.

    Lures with trebles catch too much weed. And when a Flathead is hooked they will head into the weed. All the exposed treble barbs, hook onto the surrounding weed and help the Flathead throw the lure.
    I have recently started to use floating hardbodies like OSP Bent Minnows, with singles and assist hooks, for these areas. These hooks pull through the weed easily. So far, I have yet to have a Flathead throw these hooks.


    Look for where the Herons are feeding to show you where the baitfish are and the Flathead will be holding just downstream.
    I was able to extract 3 Solid Flathead that were hiding around the weed, terrorising the baitfish, before the tide slowed.

    Next on the agenda were the YFW. A good depth of water was holding over the softer feeding sandflat areas. Usually you will find this substrate holds more food and fish.
    Whilst not feeding as aggressively as when there is more water movement, the YFW were still keen enough to take a well worked lure offering over the sandflats. My usual favourites, Sugapen, Ecogear ZX and Zipbaits Skinny Pop, were the more successful lures.
    However it is a new season and there are always a few new offerings to try out.
    They did not get too much time in the water but both these new lures took fish.
    The New Sugapen Splash, which is perhaps better suited to a choppier day still took a fish.
    Daiwa’s Slippery Dog 80cm in the colour “Ebi” that I had not previously come across, I thought could work well in this area, had some success.

    A drop in air pressure with a change in wind direction from North to SW, pushed water up into the gulf and provided a small wind tide. The water movement, stimulated the fish to bite late into the afternoon. “Bob the bag snatcher” is also making an early season appearance. I normally don’t see them on the sandflats till November.
    I kept 14 of the better YFW. Most are over 35cm. And the best a very nice 42cm.

    The Flats are Firing early this year !!! Hopefully we can look forward to a great season ahead.
    The only downside is the heavy toll the professionals have taken over this winter as they increasingly search for alternative species to supplement their restricted and dwindling catches.

     
    Tight lines all.
    Cheers, Des
  19. Thanks
    Yorky got a reaction from Meppstas in Cold water trout on Mepps Aglia..   
    Thank You Adrian, that is a beautiful, peaceful looking place
    Cheers
    Yorky 
  20. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in A twenty four trout day..   
    This was one of my better trips during the trout season while fishing a small tannin stream close to home on private property. This video is the short version..
    cheers Adrian
     
  21. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Browns, Rainbows & the Bug..   
    The long 45 minute walk that was had to reach my starting point in the Mersey River was well it with a mix of brown & rainbow trout being caught & released.
    It also required a bit of bush bashing once I was there too..☺️
    cheers
    Adrian
     
  22. Like
    Yorky reacted to MAH in DIY Assist Hooks   
    The weather has been poor so I haven't been fishing much. So what do you do when you're not fishing? Make stuff for fishing! I've been making some small assist hooks to replace the back trebles on lures. 

     
    I bought some silicone lure skirts of Aliexpress to use for a bit of flash.

     
    The cord is cheap 30lb braid. There is no need to use such strong braid, you could use a lot lighter. But I decided to use this braid, because the diameter is easier to handle and tie knots. I measure out 25cms which gives me long enough tag ends to easily tie each hook with a 5 turn snell knot. I tie one hook. then measure 6cm and mark the braid. Next I slide the second hook up to the 6cm mark and tie the hook on. When the knots are dressed and tightened, it gives me the length I want for the assist hooks, which is a tad longer than the pre-tied BKK Striker hooks I previously used. I decided to make them slightly longer after reading a post from Des who add extra split rings for length. I'll probably make some slightly shorter to replace the middle trebles like Des suggests. I've made some with split rings and some with snaps and I attach the hook lengths with a simple girth hitch. Then I thread the silicone flash through the split ring/snap, fold in half and tie off with a 5 turn uni knot using 210D flat waxed thread.



     
    I used Owner 52084 fine wire split rings #0 and Decoy Round Snap #00. The hooks are Owner 5117-031 Mosquito Hook #8 and Shinto Octopus Beak #10, which are physically the same size. I prefer the Owner Mosquito Hooks, because they are very sticky (they cost $6 for 11 hooks). The Shinto hooks are still a good hook and and I picked them up for $9.60 for 24.


  23. Like
    Yorky reacted to Meppstas in Trout, plus a freshwater lobster..   
    This was another of my late season spin sessions in a small tannin stream & it was great to come across a freshwater lobster. They were once plentiful in the rivers/streams here in Tasmania but due to very little catch rate restrictions they became scarce in the rivers/streams. Now they are a protected species that carry a $10,000 fine if taken from a river/stream.
    cheers
    Adrian (meppstas)
     
  24. Like
    Yorky 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. 

  25. Like
    Yorky got a reaction from Meppstas in Autumn on the Mersey...   
    @Meppstas
    Hi Adrian, that was a great relaxing clip to watch with my morning coffee, you definitely are fishing some beautiful country down there. 
    Thank You
    Yorky 
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