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jagger

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Posts posted by jagger

  1. Love em !! usually one of the first things we see when touching down in Darwin.Had to drive out to Kunnanara for the opening of an airfield once and had a big boy hit the windscreen...very sad. How it didn't smash it I will never know.Love the way they sit so high circling around, especially in groups.Saw a nice sized hawk hit the fresh water after a redfin today from around 40m up. Great site.

  2. Go and see a few stores and you will quickly develop a price bracket and discover a few quality ranges as well.$150 for rod and $300 for reel would see you right for many years to come if you look after it. Don't forget...a decent spool of braid can set you back approx $50 on top as well. If you don't treat your gear well ie. never wash the reel and eyes/rod etc...don't spend more than $150 for the combo...you'll have to replace it too soon.Hopefull food for thought

  3. SS spot on with all point. I'm no pro either but got the hang of it pretty quick.Pre warm...normally just 2 pours will do and drpo the mangles mess back into meltKeep the opening clean as well as mouldKeep lead hot and keep on a roll with productionI use cheap mould and drop them to open which cleans and release the lead in one go. Dodgy but it works for me until I buy some good quality gear.You can also get a release agent which could help if your having issues

  4. Ideally you could order in a lead melting pot which has a lever to pour through the bottom ...see linkhttp://www.barlowstackle.com/Lead-Melting-Pots-Ladles-and-Accessories-C62.aspxI just you a very old cheap saucepan which i have bent into shape to have a lip for easy pouring and take it straight off the portable stove and pour straight in. Nice and hot and the lead doesn't cool on the way in leaving squiglles as you have found.

  5. Just got back' date='. got about 100 in about 20 minutes!! It was crazy. And big ones to! I only took the bigge rones. I hardly saw any small onesAfter I got what i needed to took the dog out for a paddle.....watched the BF fall about in the building waves... Sorry i mean MAN SWIM *GRUNT* (he just walked into the room)I went A over T as i stepped on something, something big, something that moved enough to take my leg out under me, something that made my short chubby statue defy the physics of nature and run on water.No idea what it is but when i retll the story, I would of decided it would be a shark hahaha :woohoo: :woohoo: Top day so far :D now to maybe throw a line about the bluff before the wind sets in[/quote']Stingray Kat, heaps of them down there.Quite often (maybe every 3rd trip) we'll see them in the backwash collecting the cockles if we are in a good patch that wash out with the outgoing surge. Interesting to watch.They surely scare the :c out of you when you step on them though. Used to have a shack down there and surfed a bit whcih meant walking out till you have to jump on the board to paddle and you would step on a few each summer. Some big boys down there to :S
  6. One comment I will make for everyone entering...dig deep !! Although the entry is next to nothing, even a dollar or two extra (preferably $5 - $10) will all add up and make it even more worth while for the charity!It's amazing how quick those extra few bucks can add up.See you all down there !

  7. shark over that way are quite small. Was telling a afew of the boys over there how big we got them and they nearly sh*t them selves !Very fond memories of the place. First trip there was with 3 surf boards and a back pack full of boardies for a month by my self. Met up with same top local surfers that took me all over the island for next to nothing. Used to buy half a dozen tuna around 50cm each for stuff all and cook them up on the beach on coals with sambal sauce and rice. Mix that with some local arak and you had a great night!

  8. Have to get you a picture of my old mans. It's a plumbed duel sink with welded frame up against the back wall behind the shed. The beauty of it is that he's had a 2.4mt piece of food grade stainless bent up. It has a splash back, heaps of filleting room both sides, cut out for the sink and one very clever piece of thinking...it has a 10mm bent lip at the fornt which acts as a splash guard and scale/gut catcher. The filleting board rests against it as well which stop slippage to.The best thing is after all is said and done, you just squirt it down and don't have to worry about rust.

  9. After squidding all arvo in the boat yesterday, nust say I preferred the feel of the lure with mono.Couple of reasons....you don't want to set the hook hard and fast like you would with a snapper on a plastic, the extra stretch gently sets the hooks without ripping tenticles off.I also reckon the action of the lure due to the weight would look better from mono than the sharpness of a braid flick.Light weight jags (50mm etc) I would prefer braid though and would run a long leader.Apart from that..braid pretty much all the way unless throwing 40gm slugs all day for salmon then my finger tips thank me for using mono !

  10. Maybe a little light for you but I have the 3 piece travel raider (1-3kg) which I have taken around the world just about. Largest thing I have landed was a salmon off rocks at 3+kg and it handles it no worries.You'll love the freedom the give you. Have them hanging out the back pack and off you go !If we find ourselves in Darwin at the same tiem, I will sign you onto the Navy base up there. Queenies galore !

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