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

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
I spent a few days on the water at the start of last week and found the weather to be perfect. It was great just to be on the water, regardless of the quality of the fishing. Cobia were high on the priority list and an all day live baiting session on the Monday failed to produce anything in the bay. On the Tuesday I took Mark Ainsworth, editor of Victorian Fishing Monthly, out to a spot past Western Rocks and we had three hook-ups on live slimies and managed to boat a 15kg and 24kg cobia. It really made for a great day when the wind is only 5-10 knots S/SW and you can travel all the way from Scarborough to Comboyuro and back without pulling the throttle back from full speed. We were back at the harbour by 1pm and enjoyed a nice dinner of cobia fillets after a massive filleting job.

The snapper in the bay have been a little quiet during the day, however the darkened hours have been producing a few good fish. This is due the westerly winds, which are responsible for the exceptional water clarity. The snapper, sweetlip and other species don’t feel comfortable in this shallower water when it is so clear, therefore they will only come in to feed when it is dark.

The mackerel have been fairly abundant in the top end of the Rous Channel, with both anglers and professionals getting good catches. Drifting through the area with a pillie or trolling spoons behind a paravane will usually produce the goods. They are being caught at any stage of the tide where there is a bit of run but the making tide is probably the best.

A few whiting are in the deeper water adjacent to the banks in the bay, especially along the inside of the Rous Channel and in areas of Lazarets Gutter.

In the estuaries it has also been quiet, due to clear water but there is still a few flathead around the areas of cover such as the weed beds and muddy banks. The Swan Bay to Kalinga Bank area has produced quite a few quality bream and also the odd mulloway, mainly on soft plastics.

A few schools of tailor have been working around the Bribie Bridge area but they have mainly been small. Most have been undersized but every third or fourth fish has been legal. The mouth of the canals have been worth the effort, especially at night when, bream, flathead and trevally have been caught. There was even an 8kg mulloway taken recently on a large live prawn.

May your bait be nervous.

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

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Moreton Bay - Wide

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

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Southern Freshwater

Rob Clouten & Paul Cass
Fishin Essentials
robdinga@gil.com.au

James Hocking
SunWater
Service Supervisor - South Burnett

BEJELKE PETERSEN DAM:

Bejelke Petersen Dam produced some reasonable bass, mainly trolling Jackall lures and spinnerbaits

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


BOONDOOMA DAM:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


CHINCHILLA:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


CONDAMINE:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


COOBY DAM:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


COOLMUNDA:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


CRESSBROOK DAM:

Plenty of bass are on the move in Cressbrook Dam and are biting on live shrimp and soft plastics during the day. A few bass have also been taken on Zip’n Ziggy surface lures late in the afternoon. A few yellowbelly have been taken on live shrimp and spinnerbaits, mainly up the Cressbrook Creek end of the dam.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


GLENLYON DAM:

The fishing at Glenlyon Dam has been a little quiet, however there were a few yellowbelly taken, mainly on live bait. A nice 15lb cod was also taken recently on live bait.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


GOONDIWINDI:

The town reaches of the river at Goondiwindi have been fishing well for yellowbelly on live worms. The odd cod has also been taken on live bait, below the Goondiwindi weir.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770

LEMON TREE WEIR:

A few nice yellowbelly were taken at Lemon Tree Weir recently on live shrimp but there have been no reports of any cod.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


LESLIE DAM:

The cod have been a little quiet at Leslie Dam but the yellowbelly are still moving. They are mainly taking live shrimp.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


SOMERSET DAM:

Somerset Dam fished well last weekend for quality bass up to 50cm in the deep water, using Jackall lures. A few yellowbelly were also taken early morning on spinnerbaits and live shrimp.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


STANTHORPE:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


ST. GEORGE:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


STORM KING DAM:



Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


TEXAS:

There were some quality yellowbelly and small cod taken both up and down stream in the river at Texas, using lures (spinnerbaits) and live bait.

Peter Taylor
Mullet Gut Marine
Ph (07) 46329770


WIVENHOE DAM:

There were some big bass landed at Wivenhoe Dam during the recent fishing competition, with plenty of fish over 50cm taken mainly on Jackall lures in the deeper water.

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
It has been a fantastic week weather-wise on the Sunshine Coast with a multitude of anglers enjoying the glassy ocean conditions, which have allowed them to trek that little further in search of some awesome fish.

Thursday morning saw us off to the Banks, but as luck would have it the south easterly kicked in early, churning up a very lumpy ocean and some 18 knots of wind. Plans changed quickly, so we headed on to a top spot at Murphy’s Reef and scored a couple of cod and one squire. Needless to say it was a little quiet.

Around lunch time the winds died a little so we headed 33km out to the Barwon Banks and from the first drop the fish started coming aboard. Fishing in 175ft of water is always fun because it can be like a lucky dip as to what you hook onto and can land. Four bust-offs later and I was cursing with the crows, but finally had a win when a big snapper hit the surface and was bagged inside the net. Following the snapper was a great cod and then the pearlies began to make their presence felt.

Strangely enough, we caught fingermark, cod, pearl perch, iodine bream, smallish red emperors, happy moments (of course), but only the one snapper all day and evening.

Caloundra Wide has also produce some good fish over the past week but with the weather the way it has been, even the tinnies are punching on out to the Banks and why wouldn’t you.

The estuaries, in particular Pumicestone Passage, are producing good bream, black bream, whiting, the odd flathead and some smaller trevally in the evenings and early mornings. The drummer are around the esplanade but not in great numbers, so a little persistence is the order of the day there.

The beaches between Kings and Wurtulla are now offering up some lovely dart and further action with tarwhine and the odd chopper tailor. It has been the best beach conditions this year, so make the most of them.

Best baits are without doubt worms and pillies from the beach, but get your line tight real quick because the dart normally strip the hook before you’re set.

So get out and enjoy the first week of August and share in some of the great catches that are out there.

The picture is looking up towards Caloundra bar showing just how good the ocean has been of late.

Brad McKendrick
Caloundra (07) 5491 3555
Compiled by Brad McKendrick from local fisherman with local reports.
brad@caloundrasbestbuys.com.au

Currimundi to Coolum

Kawana Bait & Tackle
kawanabt@bigpond.net.au

Northern Sunshine Coast

In the river, towards the mouth, flathead, bream and whiting are on the bite. There’s good numbers of trevally around the Woods Bays, taking flies - Cotton Candies are working well. Around the entrance to Noosa Waters, tailor and bream are going on lures and baits, and along the Tewantin stretches flathead are taking drifted whitebaits and soft plastics.

On the coastal surf beaches, Sunshine is producing quality whiting, Castaways Beach has dart and tailor, while at Mudjimba Beach a 2.5kg Australian salmon and a 3.8kg tailor were taken last week, during a night session, by Coolum angler John Green.

On the reefs, quality snapper are being taken on most locations. North Reef, a productive and popular destination, is producing snapper, squire, pearl perch, cobia, parrot, moses perch and Maori cod. With perfect conditions over the weekend The Hards, Chardons and the Barwon Banks had the mad keen guys with the big petrol tanks heading wide.

The coves around the National Park are producing tailor and out along the shark nets there are bait fish boils with the odd tuna amongst them.

PHOTO:
My mate Bill Watson and I went out early Saturday morning from Main Beach, Noosa. I trolled up two small queenfish, one small tailor and this magnificent 4.1kg snapper. The kayak is a "Perception" tandem kayak. We troll around 3km offshore, and along the National Park headland to Hells Gates

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

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Hervey Bay

For a change the weather has been tops and catches have reflected this.
From the outer reefs, snapper, grass sweetlip, tusk fish and reds have been taken.

Closer to home, in Platypus Bay and on the Arti, snapper are the main specie being taken.

At Kingfisher, tailor to 45cm, along with yellow tail king and good bream have been reported.

Winter whiting catches have been mainly from Gatakers and the bottom of Woody Island. Along the foreshores, there are a few summeries and at River Heads, bream and flathead. The rivers have been on the quiet side.

Regards the Feral Kiwi (Ray Ozich)

Dave Ingrey
Fisherman's Corner - Ph (07) 4128 1022
fishcor@bigpond.net.au

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Bundaberg
This past week we have had great reports of flathead, with big numbers being caught. It means that the new bag and size limits are working well on our flathead fish stocks. Most of these fish have been caught on soft plastics - any fish-shaped plastic in natural or pink colours, rigged on 1/0 jigheads, flicked across the bottom, have been successful.

One of our keen anglers nailed a 98cm flathead on the new Squidgy Flickbait plastics then, because it was over size, released it to fight another day.

Also on the plastics, some big tailor and bream have been taken around the pontoons and pylons. Some huge summer whiting have been caught but mainly on the evening tides on yabbies and worms.

On the inshore reefs some good snapper, parrot and sweetlip have been taken - squid and strip baits are the go.

The outer reefs have produced some good trout, reds, parrot and sweetlip. Also, cobia and mackerel have been caught in these areas.

Monduran has been producing some great barra to 89cm using mid-diving lures such as the Storm Mid Thunder Sticks. Rapala Barra Magnums cast in about 12-25 feet of water and slowly worked back to the boat. Some huge bass have been caught locally by working the edges of the dam, with the most popular lure being the Bassman Spinnerbaits worked very slowly along the weeds. Out in the deep Jackals and soft plastics jigged off the bottom have been working a treat.

Good fishing,
Tim Mulhall

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

Hi Folks,
Baffle Creek has been fishing quite well for flatties, cod, bream and whiting on the incoming tide around the mouth and towards Winfield and Flatrock, on fresh prawns and pilchard baits.

The Burnett is producing some great sized bream on soft plastics.

Lake Monduran is producing some nice barra to the 80+ cm range as the water temps are on the climb. The average temperature is around 22 degrees C, with some nice hidden pockets reaching the 26.5 degree mark, which is quite surprising for this time of year. It looks like it might be an early kick off this year to a great barra season.

Until Next Week, Safe Boating

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

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Yeppoon

Hopefully things might improve this week.

The tides build towards the dark moon on Friday, from early in the week, but aren't so big that they make it hard to fish.

I'd suggest a try on the night run-throughs at the Causeway Lake from about Wednesday night onward for bream. The weather during the last full moon was just horrible, so maybe this week is the window of opportunity many have been waiting for.

It's a bit hard to second guess the chart this week, but if the wind stays around or below 15 knots, the water inshore will clean up enough to make looking for a doggie mackerel a fair bet. It will also allow beach and headland fishing.

The estuaries haven't been breaking any catch records lately, but it is winter after all. Although, if you know what you're doing, you should be able to come home with a mixed bag from Corio Bay and Waterpark Creek.

Offshore the reefies are biting quite well in the deeper water and some parties up to the north have found patches of nice grunter on the gravel.

The Fitzroy River looks a picture at present, with lovely green water in the city reaches. This should indicate a bream or two nosing around and king salmon at night. Some real quality bream have been taken around Port Alma and the Narrows and blue salmon are still around if you're in the right place at the right time.

Kim Martin

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Stanage Bay
Howdy all fishers, from Stanage Bay - Shoalwater Bay - The Percy and surrounding islands.

Even though we had a bit of wind around our ears, the keen and die hard fishers still managed to get outside, catching reds, trout, sweetlip and the odd grey.

In the sound we are still being surprised for this time of year - potting massive muddies. Around the back of Quail Island, extra large bream, nice grunter, and off
the beaches, whiting. A few mangrove jack were reported caught, but were thrown back, being undersize.

Full marks to a couple of the Vietnam vets, that stuck out the bad weather to reap some nice rewards. Well done to Andrew and his crew - first timers here to the Bay. They made a killing up the sound and went home after a four day stay as happy as larks.

Yeh to Trevor and Earnie and their crews from Bundy. Hope you had a good trip home.

The road in is like a highway apart from the last 20k - onya to the council workers. Keep up the good job.

Don't forget we still have some accommodation bookings available for 2005. If you need any extra info on our last frontier, or as Tony calls it "The Lost Paradise", give either Tony or Von a ring or email us anytime.

We will let the photos do the rest of the talking - so until next week, get your rods bent, your lines wet and keep reeling em in.

Yours in fishing and crabbing

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

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Mackay / Seaforth

Arthur Lovern
Seaforth Fishing Tours
Phone (07) 49590318

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

Capt. Ken Bryant
Marlin Blue Charters Ph 07 49465044

www.marlinblue.com.au

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Townsville
WINTER BARRA

The tides over the previous weekend were good for most types of fishing and with the little bit of rain earlier in the month most of the creeks and rivers were producing some nice fish.
There have also been reports of some nice crabs being caught lately, however despite the rain the prawns have not shown up in any numbers yet.
Two of the boys from my shop fished Crocodile Creek last week, catching five barra, three mangrove jacks and plenty of cod, all casting lures. Contrary to the belief that “barramundi don’t bite during winter” they can still be taken in good numbers as shown by the boys. If you follow a couple of simple rules you should catch them.
Firstly, during winter, fish shallower water as the water temperature can often be a couple of degrees warmer in the shallows. Most importantly, if casting lures, accuracy is the key. You MUST get those lures as far up in the timber as possible. If you are not getting snagged occasionally you are not close enough. During winter, barra are extremely lazy and you will have to practically land the lure on their head to get the bite.
If live bait fishing is your preferred method for chasing barra, then prawns are the go, and the larger the better. Once again the same principle applies - get as close to the timber as possible.
MONSTER CRABS
I thought you might like this one. Check the photo out. Is that a crab?! I don’t think they come any bigger! There is no trick photography. It is a real beer carton. A few blokes, who want to remain anonymous, caught 30 of these giants on a recent trip to the Gulf.

Danny & Rosalie Brooks
Tackle World
Ph. 0747251266
tworldtsv@beyond.net.au

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Hinchinbrook - Lucinda

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

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Hinchinbrook - Cardwell

Cold, windy days have made it hard to find fish, especially barra. We managed to find some decent fish on Wednesday but couldn't keep them hooked. We had some fun later in the week with big silver bream on light outfits, using soft plastics. They were really on the chew. Some of them were even taking the bigger barra lures. I for one will be looking for the warmer days, when the water has warmed up a bit and the fish get fair dinkum! Until then just keep attacking any rock bars you find.

Safe boating. I'll see ya on the water and remember fish for the future - practice catch and release.

Jim Lee
Un-Reel Sportsfishing Adventures
Ph (07) 40660032
0408 842691
jimlee@qldnet.com.au
www.un-reel-sportsfishing-adventures.com.au

Cairns

The run of appealing weather has continued in Far North Queensland, with strong wind warnings alternating with gale warnings, along with rain. - Very difficult conditions indeed that have only marginally improved lately.

Reef charter boats have still managed to fish occasionally, and while fishing was only average, several quality fish were reported amongst the catches. Coral trout, painted sweetlip, cod and trevally dominated catches. Reports on other blue water fishing have been non existent due to the poor weather.

Estuary fishing has been reasonable with a few good sized fingermark being taken on live sardines and mud herring. The deep water holes at the sugar terminal in Trinity Inlet have produced some nice fish to 70cm, on live baits. The occasional trevally, permit and grunter are also being taken, along with plenty of catfish.

The rivers have been a little slow with the occasional small trevally and flathead being taken on baits.

Surprisingly for winter, Tinaroo Dam produced a great barramundi bite recently, with one angler reporting over ten strikes and landing several fish from 50cm to 1.05m, mostly on a Reidy's B52 lure. It may be a good sign for the next full moon period in August.

Unfortunately, the weather still doesn't look great, with winds averaging around the 20 knot mark forecast. Check the latest forecast before heading to sea as they have fluctuated greatly over the past few days.

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
Fishing in Port Douglas of late has been reasonable, without setting the world on fire. In the rivers and creeks, reports indicate that the bait fishermen are fairing much better at the moment, which is not surprising considering the windy and cool conditions. Bream are the species on the go - big bream and plenty of them, with 37cm the biggest to filter through. Other fish have included smatters of queenfish, trevally and grunter but there is no real consistency to their movements.

Offshore, local charters have reluctantly headed out once again after a week of driving winds and have found the going fair. Coral trout, gold spot trevally and sweetlip have been the consistent players. The Spanish mackerel have slowed somewhat but that is mainly due to adverse conditions.

The first solid reports of small black marlin to 300kg have arrived from the game boat operators. These puppies are chasing down the flying fish on the Shelf ridge and a trolled garfish is tempting these fish. At this size they play up on the end of a line and are great value on light gear.

In the coming week there seems no end to the cool winds, but you'd expect some time in August the weather will settle and when it does the tropical action will move into top gear.

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
Report: 11 to 23 July, 2005

Weather:
Light to moderate south east winds for 11th to 16th, then strong to very strong south to south easterly winds for the remainder.

Fishing Methods:
Lure casting, trolling and live baiting

Clients Details:
Wally, Peter and Peter from Melbourne; Neil, Kevin, John, Graham, Stefan, Alan, Simon from Melbourne;

Species Landed:
Barramundi, mangrove jack, fingermark, queenfish (2 species), king salmon, blue salmon, golden trevally, tea leaf trevally, brassy trevally, big eye trevally, gold spot estuary cod, black spot estuary cod, Qld groper, barracuda, doggie mackerel, narrow barred spanish mackerel, broad barred Spanish mackerel, longtail tuna, mackerel tuna, scad, cobia, giant herring, pikey bream, wolf herring, black jewfish, coral trout, sweetlip, stripey, wire netting cod, black cod, tusk fish, remora, longtom, grunter, tomato cod, dart, ooglie, archer fish, catfish (2 species), shark (2 species). (42 species). Sighted dolphin, rays, manta rays, sharks, turtles, sea snakes.

Crocodiles Sighted:
Heaps (best day 18)

Report:
These two weeks were chalk and cheese weather wise - the first week ideal winter ‘paradise’ stuff, the second very wind blown and overcast much of the time. The two Peter’s and Wally found some fantastic offshore action happening around the Boyd Bay/Pera Head area during week one and spent plenty of time trying to get hard pulling tuna and mackerel past the ever hungry sharks.

On one occasion, while fishing with Dan, three big sharks lined up the same tuna right at the boat with one beast taking two sizeable chunks out of the gelcoat with its exposed teeth, when it missed the fish and bit the boat instead. The boys were doing their best to hide at the other side of the boat at the time.

Lure losses verged on the horrendous side but the boys were more than happy to keep trying. Fresh tuna sashimi and beer battered mackerel were on the menu quite often that week. Dan also found some big queenfish biting on poppers and jigs closer inshore with the action coming thick and fast during a couple of sessions. As I ended up spending most of that week laid low with a particularly bad virus, Dan kept the boys very busy the entire time, finding a few barra, salmon, grunter and plenty of fingermark, trevally and cod up the rivers, when the boys wanted a rest from their offshore mayhem.

In contrast, our second week found us confined to the rivers as the entire Queensland coast was pummelled with some of the strongest trade winds of the year. With gale warnings current for much of the week, our party decided that discretion was better than punching big seas and spent the entire week working Weipa’s extensive river systems. Although the strong winds put the fish off the bite initially, they settled down after a couple of days and some great fishing followed. Best catch of the week went to Neil with a beautiful king salmon measuring 102cm – and just to show that one wasn’t a fluke, followed it with another of 98cm! Some big jacks also came aboard, the best a 51cm horse taken by Kevin. The rivers were alive with plenty of fingermark, trevally and queenfish as well. Graham and Simon spent a top day trolling lures, landing 11 species including barra, jacks, three species of trevally, two species of cod, barracuda, pikey bream and some nice fingermark. So even though the weather wasn’t the best, the fish didn’t seem to mind.

STOP PRESS:
Just back from a fantastic morning spent with a film crew from Queensland Weekender. Country and western singer, Troy Casser-Daley and I caught some great fish for the camera, with Troy landing his best Spanish mackerel to date, a 16 kilo beauty taken on one of my special ‘mackerel proofed’ assist hooked Lazer jigs. Troy also landed a nice golden trevally and had a longtail tuna monstered at the boat by a big bull shark - the entire sequence captured on film for the show. Troy’s prowess with rod and reel is now almost as legendary as his famous vocal chords! The show is not expected to be aired until around the end of the year.

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

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25/12/2000

Queensland Tide Times

Bureau of Meteorology