Fishing Monthly - Latest Fishing Reports - Updated Weekly
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COMPILED WEEKLY BY GARRY SMITH IN CAIRNS:
e-mail: lavallesmith@iig.com.au
Gold Coast
The weather has been fairly good on the Gold Coast over the past week. Most days saw light offshore winds freshening in the afternoons with a few showers in the evenings.

Plenty of boats took advantage of the good weather and headed offshore to troll for pelagics or fish the reefs. A few mackerel showed up this week so it looks like the mackerel season may be getting underway. Trolling skirts and diving minnows will be the best way to chase these fish over the next couple of weeks until the numbers build up. Try Palm Beach or Mermaid Reefs, the Aquarius wreck or any of the coffee rock formations along South Stradbroke.

There were also reports of a few free-jumping marlin over the shallow grounds, so try trolling small skirts or live slimy mackerel. Out on the wider grounds trolling small skirts around current lines, coral spore or FADs has produced quite a few nice dolphinfish as well as some striped and mack tuna.

Bottom fishing on the shallow reefs has been fairly poor during the week because of the low water clarity. The 36s and 50s however have been fishing steadily with a good mix of bottom fish taken. Squire, parrot and tailor constituted most of the catch with a few pearl perch thrown in. The best baits were fresh strips of tuna or pilchards. Some nice kingfish and amberjack are still falling to heavy metal jigs on the 50 fathom line with the 300 gram jigs the most popular size.

The rivers are still very dirty so most of the action last week came from around the Seaway area. Live baits or soft plastics fished around the pipeline and the end of the northern wall produced a variety of fish with trevally, school jew, sharks, mangrove jack and even a few amberjack falling to these methods. Drifting the north wall on the incoming tide, casting metal lures or pilchards into the wall produced plenty of tailor as well as a few trevally. Fishing both the north and south walls with yabbies and whitebait was an effective way of catching a feed of bream and flathead. A few kingfish were taken around the Wavebreak Island rock walls on poppers, soft plastics and flies. Crab Island has been producing good flathead in the gutters and channels on soft plastics, as well as bream over the flats on yabbies, whitebait and small lures.

Further up the rivers the visibility is still very poor, which has reduced the number of fish caught. Lure fishing met with little success while fishing live yabbies and mullet gut produced a few bream and whiting on the incoming tide. As the water clears try the areas around Chevron Island, the Council Chambers and Paradise Waters for whiting and some solid bream. Live baiting the canal entrances and bridges with mullet and herring accounted for the odd trevally and mangrove jack.

There has been good fishing on the beaches, with Narrowneck and South Straddie still producing a few tailor. Spinning metal lures or pilchards has worked well in the deeper gutters. Some big bream, dart and tarwhine have also been taken in the deeper gutters and holes on frogmouth pilchards, yabbies and beachworms. Some good catches of whiting have come early in the morning this week. Fishing an hour before and two hours after dawn with beachworms and pippies has produced the best fish.

Plenty of water is still flowing into Hinze Dam and the fishing has been very exciting as the water rises. Bass have been taken from most inlets and bays early in the morning on surface lures and soft plastics. Fly fishermen have also been doing extremely well. Later in the day switching to shallow running lures or slow sinking soft plastics has worked well. Live baits such as shrimp and worms have been very effective on bass as well as a few silver perch and catfish. Trolling the points and bay entrances has produced good bass and quite a few yellowbelly on deep diving lures.

John Polson & Paul Revie
The Fisherman Pty Ltd
Sporty's Warehouse
32 Strathaird Rd. Surfers Paradise
Gold Coast. QLD 4217
Australia
Phone: +61 7 5531 6511
Mobile: +61 418 751220
www.thefisherman.com.au

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Moreton Bay
A few reports filtered in of small schools of spotties being sighted and caught in the northern end of the bay. The report was a bit sketchy but I think that they were caught around Middle Bank and the northern shipping channel.

A few small tuna, mainly macks and bonito have been working in the Rous Channel, mainly on a rising tide. Small slugs and flies should produce a few hits.

Jigging the beacons in the northern bay is a good way to get an occasional school mackerel. There are not a lot about but they have been good quality specimens. You may also encounter a mack tuna or longtail.

The whiting have been a bit patchy but if you can find a few then they have been worth the effort as far as the size is concerned.

The rubble grounds and ledges in the northern bay are still producing a few quality squire and snapper with the plastics fishermen definitely getting the better quantities of quality fish. Peel has also produced a few good quality snapper and even the occasional sweetlip and parrot for anglers working plastics down the face of the reef on the north-western side. There have been a huge array of plastics working but I have personally had the best success on almost clear plastics with a little glitter in them.

The estuaries have been a little hit and miss with so much fresh in them but there is still a few flathead, bream and whiting to be caught down towards the mouths. Kalinga Bank at Jumpinpin has produced some quality bream and a few flathead for anglers drifting frogmouth pillies close to the bottom. Drifting a live bait out towards the bar on a night time run-in tide is likely to attract a jew or two but the sharks can make short work of a good live bait supply at times. The occasional large tailor is also getting around.

It is definitely worth setting a few pots in the deeper holes up in the creeks as muddies are starting to show up en masse. A nice fresh fish frame is great bait and allows you to recycle your leftovers.

Plenty of sandies are also showing up in the bay and a few safety pots or witches hats and a bit of bait are all that is needed to secure a tasty feed. Keep an eye on your pots as they have an uncanny knack of disappearing.

May your bait be nervous.

Gordon Macdonald
Tackle Warehouse
Ph. (07) 3398 6500
masterbaitertackle@hotmail.com

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Moreton Bay - Wide
Wahoo! What a great name for what I regard as my favourite of all the fish in the sea. Long, strong, blisteringly fast, with the ability to test all your tackle to its limits, the wahoo can turn your lure collection into a few unuseable curios in just one session - if you get any back at all that is. And after all the mayhem, on the table the flesh is very white and firm, lending itself to a wide range of cooking styles, including cubing.

Wahoo are currently in great numbers off Cape Moreton. Anglers are also in great numbers pursuing these fish, so I would recommend midweek and late afternoon to avoid the traffic jam of boats on the shallow reefs. Dolphin fish and small yellowfin tuna to 6kg are also being hooked in the same areas. Towing Jet and Hex Head lures in the darker colours, at around 10 knots, is the most successful method to hook these fish, but the attrition rate on gear sees far fewer landed than hooked.

Pearl perch are making their annual pilgrimage onto Wide Caloundra at this time. The size and quantity of these pearlies makes it well worth the trip up there. Parrot, squire and moses perch are also in good numbers.

An unusual but not uncommon capture at the moment is huge squid- and I mean HUGE! If you are getting huge hits and are not hooking up, try dropping down a squid jig and then hang on. These squid are close to a metre long and pull drag on 15kg outfits!

Black marlin were landed by my good mate Ian Walker, fishing on Phantom, early last week off Moreton Island, so these are an option as well. This is a brilliant time of the year to be fishing if the weather leaves us alone.

Regards,

Keith Hall
INCREDIBLE CHARTERS
20 Courageous Ct,
Scarborough 4020
Tel: 3203 8188
Fax: 3203 8199
incrediblecharters@bigpond.com

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Southern Freshwater
Boondooma Dam had some fair action with the bass the weekend before last. Boys from work report quite a few fish taken on lures. I also heard of a good (50+cm) yella trolled up. I believe spinnerbaits and divers were used for these fish. As the weather warms, look for bass in the shallows and around weed, early and late in the day.

Rob Clouten & Paul Cass
Fishin Essentials




Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 4632 9770
Fax (07) 4639 2543
mullet_gut@bigpond.com

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Lake Boondooma


Lance & Kristy Frahm
Lake Boondooma Kiosk
Open 7 days 8am-5pm.
Ph 07-41689694, fax is 07-41689691,
PO Box 24, PROSTON 4613.
lakeboondooma@wondaishire.com

Stop Tailor Netting - Phone (07) 3284 0043 or 0414 376 217
Bribie Is. & Caloundra
What a wicked week! The Sunshine Coast has been experiencing some unpredictable weather patterns, forcing fishos to leave the boat hitched to the trailer and try again later. For those of us who have braved the wind and seas the quality and numbers of catches has been pleasing.

Murphy’s Reef has been producing some quality snapper in the early evenings up to 5 kg, and great news, the pearlies are on the tooth in close. We hooked up with five magic pearlies, two cod and four snapper on Monday evening. I was shocked to be pulling in the pearlies, as much as old mate.

Now, I am not one to normally pass on another, “The one that got away tale,” but for the first time in my career of fishing with quality braid line and a Live Fibre Rod I experienced a bust off. That’s right. My brief struggle with a horse (or whatever, quite possibly a mackerel) on Monday evening lasted only 45 seconds as I struggled just to put the brakes on the runner. Any fish that can snap braid with ease has my absolute respect.

More reports that the Gneerings is producing some good cod and the odd parrot, along with pan sized snapper caught on pike fillets. I have to admit that lately my best snapper have been caught using pike flesh. They love it. The good thing about that is, the little buggers can’t get their mouths around it.

The passage is nearly clean from all the rain and catches of good mud crabs are to be expected. Whiting and bream are laying low but the occasional ones are taking a bait. Flathead around the mouth on the ebb tide are being landed, whilst on the drift and lures are accounting for most of them. I was watching old Col, a local identity, fishing his favourite spot on Tuesday and he happily landed some nice whiting, one bream and a flathead. “Just enough for a good BBQ”, he commented prior to walking off home. It’s good to see that local knowledge can still produce results regardless of tide and weather. Good on you Col!

The beaches are still quiet and reasonable gutters and fish difficult to find, with the northerly winds increasing throughout the day and into the evening. The bait fish have also moved further out because of the fresh but should soon venture back in, bringing with them all the eager and keen predators. The tides have been big movers this week with over a metre difference, so it has been tricky keeping a bait down in the passage. With these tides I would only fish the hour before and after the change, giving it a big miss during the flow. If you must fish, then you need to drop your line into the current and follow it until it settles in the backwash. Ten to one that’s where the fish will be lying in wait.

Best baits around seem to be fish flesh, either in the form of pillies or blue bait with mullet gut and fillets coming a close second.

Good luck and get out there and catch some. Then get on the internet and send me the photos so I can display them in the weekly reports.

Brad McKendrick
Raine & Horne - Caloundra (07) 5491 3555
Compiled by Brad McKendrick from local fisherman with local reports.
brad@caloundraproperty.com.au

Currimundi to Coolum
Well these northerlies are a little continuous to say the least. Some may whinge cause it brings in the bluebottles and stingers, but I love it - the hotter the better. The heat gets the summer fish activated, especially mangrove jack, trevally, mackerel and the billfish. Ah! And let’s not forget the tuna that all the fly fishos and slug chuckers are waiting for.

Walking along the surf beach late last week the wind was from the north at about 15 knots, so you know by the arvo it'll be hideous outside. All along the coast from north of Pt Cartwright to Currimundi the birds were working - mainly over small tuna schools.

Over the last week quiet a few good quality spotties and school mackerel were caught by guys trolling in all the main areas. If weather allows, try Bray's Rock, Currimundi, under Point Cartwright light and of course Arkwright in close.

Around the close reefs, mainly Mudjimba Island and the Gneerings, the guys fishing for snapper have caught a few yellowtail kingfish - good sport on light tackle. The shallow reefs are still producing a few nice squire and sweetlip on the outgoing tide, but you have to work for them.

In the canals of the Mooloolaba River, some nice trevally and small queenfish have kept us all amused. It's great to see these schools working over bait so close to the expensive houses and really it's so accessible to anyone with a boat. The canals are also throwing up some nice sized whiting on both yabbies and worms.

The beaches have a few whiting but most are only small, but those who are persevering have been rewarded with a feed. Around Walkway 37 there are a couple of nice holes worth trying. I saw a lady catch a keeper this morning while I was walking.

Well that's about it for another week - catch you on the water.

Gavin

Gavin Platz
Tie ’N’ Fly Outfitters - Ph (07) 5444 0611
tienfly@sun.big.net.au

Northern Sunshine Coast

Early morning sessions offshore have been most productive of late. Squire, pearl perch, moses perch and parrot are common to most visited reefs. In addition, Chardon's Wide produced good sized snapper and lots of mahi mahi. At Chardon's Close, sweetlip were the bonus, while Sunshine Reef was the spot for red emperor, sweetlip and mahi mahi.

In the river, the northerlies and the larger tides continued to exacerbate the weed problem, making trolling lures difficult. The last half of the run out tide and the first half of the run in tide were relatively clear, providing some good flathead catches down towards the river mouth. The Woods Bays produced bream, quality tarpon on fly and trevally on soft plastics and poppers.

On the freshwater scene, at Lake MacDonald, plenty of small bass were chasing spinnerbaits and jackals around Borer Creek, Rusty's Run and Three Ways, while at Borumba Dam gold spinnerbaits got the bass and yellowbelly going, but the saratoga responded to surface poppers.

Check out the website www.fishingnoosa.com.au or call the guys at Davo's on 5449 8099 for all the up to date fishing info.

Davo's - (07) 5449 8099
www.fishingnoosa.com.au

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Hervey Bay

The main emphasis this week has been on mac tuna schools that have been scattered throughout the bay. On the Arti, coral bream, blackall and snapper have all been taken over the past few days.

In the Mary and Susan rivers, salmon and javelin have been keeping anglers happy, while in the Burrum, jack have been hitting live baits and lures around the rock bars.

On the Eight Mile, early last week, both school and spotted mackerel were taken.

Along the beaches whiting are still the go on yabbies, particularly at daybreak.

Jim Sullivan
Fisherman's Corner - Ph (07) 4128 1022
fishco@bigpond.net.au

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Bundaberg
Another shower of rain early last week should keep things moving in the rivers. Some good quality grunter have been caught, with some of these fish measuring up to 55cm. Fresh prawns and sprat have been gun baits for them. Several anglers have landed some grunter on lures, with the Prawnstar Junior honeypot and natural colours being the best choice. Other species that have been caught have included bream, cod, flathead and jacks. Crabs have been on the move, as have the prawns.

Mackerel and tuna are still everywhere along the coast. Reef fishing should be on! As we have now passed the November spawning closure all we need is some good weather. December spawning closure dates are from 6th to 14th, so keep these in mind.

With the northerly winds about the barra fishing up at Monduran should be just as hot as the weather. As barra tend to favour the northerlies, walking along the banks of the shallow bays casting Bombers, Reidy’s B52s and Predatek Vipers and slowly retrieving them back to your feet during the late afternoon and early mornings should show results.

Tim Mulhall / Matt Costar / Ben Shorten
Salty's Fishing Team
Salty's - Ph (07) 4153 4747
info@saltys.net


Hi Folks,

What a week with the barra acting like taps - on one minute and off the next. On Monday we ventured up the dam with our gold Bombers and B52's and on average we were getting hit on every third or fourth cast beside every tree we tried. At the end of the day we had landed 13 barra, all around and over the metre mark, with seven lures still swimming around with the ones we could not stop.

On Wednesday it was really quiet, with the water temp fluctuating, which made it really hard to find some stable water to fish. In all we put three barra in the boat, all 57cm long, and lost one the same size beside the boat. We had two solid hits from barra just a touch larger.

Until next week, safe boating.

Brett Jones
Still Water Charters
stillwatercharters@yahoo.com.au
www.stillwatercharters.homestead.com

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Yeppoon

The only catches of note lately have been from the good old Causeway Lake. During the big run-throughs around the dark moon, some real quality jacks were taken, but there were also the usual medium sized GT’s and queenfish mixed up with them. There will be evening run-throughs this week as the moon builds, so I'd expect the action to continue.

Nothing to report from the offshore scene of course, due to the reef fin fish spawning closure, but those who tried for pelagics were generally very disappointed.

A few parties have reported the appearance of some good sized grunter offshore north of Yeppoon and this species should increase in abundance over the next month or so. The problem will be getting at them. They bite best after dark, but that's when the northerlies are at their worst, so sitting out in the slop is singularly unpleasant.

The beaches may be worth a try later this week for whiting. Try the incoming tides, using yabbies or sand worms.

There are unconfirmed reports of a few grunter moving up the Fitzroy River. If there is any truth in the rumours, then look for them around the Lakes Creek reach and the hole at Devil's Elbow.

Kim Martin

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Stanage Bay

Von Ann Ireland
stanagebaymarine@bigpond.com
www.stanagebay.com

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Mackay

Bruce Nash / Tony Lisciandro
Northside Fishing Centre - Ph (07) 4957 2272

Peter Faust Dam / Eungella Dam


Andy Thomsen (Fishing Guide)
www.andysfishing.com.au
0409 466 336

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Airlie Beach / Whitsundays

Andy Thomsen (Fishing Guide)
www.andysfishing.com.au
0409 466 336

Whitsundays - Bluewater
'Marlin Blue' has returned from the giant black marlin season in Cairns and the “Tour of Duty” into the Coral Sea.

The light tackle tournaments at Townsville and Hinchinbrook were just that – “light on”. Only a few small marlin and sailfish were tagged in both events but the social scene was great. 'Reel Chase' won the Townsville tournament with nine marlin bills and 'Utopia' took out the Hinchinbrook event with six marlin.

Marin Blue had yet another successful season in the marlin capital of the world -Cairns. The bite started early again, in September, and Linden Bank and Opal Ridge were crawling with fish to 950 lbs in the first few weeks. Clive Dye from Sydney and his party were first cab off the rank and all tagged marlin to 850lbs. Clive had a good look at an 1100 lb marlin before she dropped the hook.

The bite continued through the next charter, with Tweedy and Mitch tagging five marlin in four days. The fish became very flighty in early October and began to just follow and drop baits presented to them. The moon and northerly winds were blamed for this but in simple terms, "that's fishing".

The Lizard Island Tournament started off well and we were beaten by only 30 seconds for the first marlin of the tournament. Our team from South Australia made up for this with a win on day six. The event attracted 29 teams from all over the world, including Russia, Japan and the USA. The bite went very quiet during the tournament and for the following week. After the tournament the middle of the Ribbon Reefs started to fire again and the fishing was back to normal.

My serious fishing mate 'Polly' was in the first hour of his charter and was doing battle with a marlin knocking on the door of 1000 lbs. One hour and forty minutes later the fish was at the back of the boat when one last blistering deep run saw the 80lb line snap and the marlin win the day.

Overall charterers tagged and released 29 marlin in 32 day’s fishing over the season. Our hook-up rate was 1 in 3.5, which is just below average. In early November we headed back to the Whitsundays and the Tour of Duty trip to Marion and Abington reefs in the Coral Sea - more on that next week with heaps of great pictures to come.

Cheers Ken.

Capt. Ken Bryant
Marlin Blue Charters Ph 07 49465044

www.marlinblue.com.au

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Townsville
It's amazing! During those spawning closures the weather was just perfect and the day after the reef re-opened the wind started to blow twenty knots, and from all reports that I've heard there was very little spawning of any sort going on during the last closure. This then begs the question, if there was no spawning during the month then why do the reefs need to be closed for spawning????

Despite not being able to fish for too much outside, the estuaries have really turned it on onshore and it was mangrove jack, fingermark and grunter that kept fishos busy during the closures. The big tides and good weather during the dark moon phase made sure there were no problems getting offshore a few miles to chase fingermark at night on the shoals.

There have been plenty of quality fingermark in the bay this year with most of the fish up around the five to seven kilo mark and the odd bigger one coming in from time to time. The daylight hours have also been productive for anglers trolling deep diving lures around the rocky headlands of Cape Cleveland and Magnetic Island, with Halco Crazy Deep lures performing the best.

The creeks in Bowling Green Bay have been giving up some quality grunter and jacks, as Matt Rebhein found out. Matt holds up a solid 55cm model that came from the mouth of the Barratta's.

Mud crabs have been more active over the past few weeks with all the creeks producing good sized bucks. Hopefully they'll hang around for a few months yet.

Until next week - Good Fishing.

Tony Katsaros
Tackle World
Ph. 0747251266
tackleworldtsv@beyond.net.au

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Hinchinbrook

Al Goodwin
Crackajack Sportfishing Adventures
Lucinda Ph/Fax 61+07 47778365
crackfish@ozemail.com.au
www.crackfish.com

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Cairns

Two weekends of spawning closures has blue water fishermen eager to bottom fish the reef, however with stronger SE winds forecast they will be further frustrated and restricted to estuary fishing.

Jigging the deep outer reef shoals with heavy metal jigs has resulted in some excellent dog-tooth tuna, which really test any sized tackle to the limit. Dolphin fish (mahi-mahi) are also schooled and are readily taking rigged garfish and skirted lures.

Bottom fishing was excellent early last week after the closure, with plenty of small mouth nannygai, spangled emperor and painted sweet-lip on the bite. The inshore and Fitzroy Island wrecks are producing good sized large mouth nannygai, cobia and trevally, predominately on pilchard and squid baits.

Live-baiting the deep holes in the Cairns Inlet has been rewarding, with some excellent fingermark and black jew keeping anglers extremely happy with their efforts. Mangrove jack and barramundi are also taking live baits in the deeper snags.

The Daintree River has been alive with small barra taking lures, but remember to return them as quickly as possible to ensure their health during the closed season. Giant trevally and barracuda are also climbing on lures in the Daintree with the GT's very partial to poppers.

Slow run-out morning tides early this week look ideal to target fingermark in the deep water with live baits. Live sardines or mud herring are the ideal bait, rigged with a hook size appropriate to your bait size. Only use enough weight to hold bottom and a long mono trace to allow the bait to swim freely. The neap tides will also be great to target big queenfish and giant trevally on surface lures around the mouth of the Russell/Mulgrave and Daintree rivers.

Robert Erskine
Erskine's Tackle Shop
51 Mulgrave Rd Cairns
Ph (07) 4051 6099
erskinestackle@bigpond.com

Cairns - Reports compiled by Garry Smith

Garry Smith
lavallesmith@iig.com.au

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Port Douglas

Lynton "Heff" Heffer
Ph (07) 4098 5354
www.fishingportdouglas.com.au

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Cooktown

Leonard Todaro
Reel River Sportfishing.
PO Box 829 Cooktown Qld 4871
Ph 07 4069 5346.
reelriver@hotmail.com

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Karumba

Jason Jesse
Gulf Sportfishing Adventures
P.O. Box 228 Karumba
Phone - (07)4745 9434
gsakarum@tpg.com.au
www.gulfsportfishingadventures.com.au

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Weipa
Weather:
Moderate south east to north east winds most of the week.
(23 to 38 degrees C)

Fishing Methods:
Live baiting, lure casting and trolling.

Clients Details:
Tony, Dominic, Glen from Brisbane, Lee and Geoff from Sunshine Coast, Ben from Gold Coast

Species Landed:
Barramundi, mangrove jack, fingermark, queenfish (2 species), golden trevally, tea leaf trevally, brassy trevally, giant trevally, gold spot estuary cod, black spot estuary cod, Qld groper, king threadfin salmon, blue salmon, pikey bream, barracuda, doggie mackerel, narrow barred spanish mackerel, longtail tuna, grunter, coral trout, stripey, tusk fish, giant herring, dart, remora, archer fish, moses perch, small mouth nannygai, tomato cod, wire netting cod, sand bass, ooglie, catfish, scad, toadfish, shark (37 species).

Sighted:
Dolphin, rays, sharks, turtles, sea snakes.

Crocodiles Sighted: 1

Report:
Lots of bait schools offshore, but not much in the way of large predators, made the coastal fishing a bit hit and miss this past week. Josh and his crew managed to hit the jackpot mid week by finding a bunch of tuna, GT’s and sharks busting the bait big time – after we’d headed north about 20 minutes earlier finding very little happening. Geoff managed to land a beast of a GT, around the old 50 pound mark, during a couple of hours of tackle busting mayhem that had some very aggressive sharks beating the trevors and tuna to the lures much of the time and even bigger sharks eating hooked fish.

Earlier in the day, crews in both boats had a ball landing a swag of big queenfish both on lures and floating baits along with some good fingermark off the bottom. As is the norm at the moment, some big sharks become involved at various stages, making sure the tackle boxes went home lighter.

Trolling the shallow reefs proved particularly fruitful a couple of times with some excellent coral trout, cod, fingermark, mackerel and barracuda coming to the boat. One afternoon session saw at least 40 fish to 5 kilos landed in my boat in a couple of hours. Some of the crew had some great soft plastic fishing over the shallow reefs, landing a swag of species including some big trout and fingermark.

Big tides in the rivers slowed the fishing there but the lads still managed some excellent mangrove jack, barramundi and fingermark. Glen landed the best jack, a 47cm beauty taken on a vintage C lure. A couple of nice grunter were also taken on lures along with the ever present barra. A couple of busted rods and significantly lighter tackle boxes signalled another top week in paradise!

Barra Dave Donald
Dave Donald SPORTFISHING - Ph (07) 4069 9064
DDSPORTFISH@bigpond.com
www.weipafishing.com

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3/12/2001
10/12/2001
17/12/2001
24/12/2001



3/7/2000
10/7/2000
17/7/2000
24/7/2000
31/7/2000
7/8/2000
14/8/2000
21/8/2000
28/8/2000
4/9/2000
11/9/2000
18/9/2000
25/9/2000
2/10/2000
9/10/2000
16/10/2000
23/10/2000
30/10/2000
6/11/2000
13/11/2000
20/11/2000
27/11/2000
4/12/2000
11/12/2000
18/12/2000
25/12/2000

Queensland Tide Times

Bureau of Meteorology