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aussie123

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  1. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Coconutdog in New Home Built Fishing Reel   
    For a long time now I have been wanting to build my own deep drop electric fishing reel as I am sick and tired of rebuilding the standard off the shelf electric reels.
    A few months ago I decided to just get in and do it and so far I am very happy with the results.
    There is no roller bearings in this reel as they always seem to rust and seize up and there is no drag washers to burn out or go lumpy.
    The drag system is electronic and should just about last forever.
    Each part of the reel is modular and runs its own circuitry so in the event of a failure, I can quickly change out any damaged parts, even when out on the boat.
    All I need to finish now is the mounting frame to fit it in the boat, get the switch panel face plate made and spool it up with 1000m x 400lb braid.
    So far nearly everything has been drawn to CAD so I can make some more once this one has been fully tested to its limits.
    If all goes well, I am hoping to take it out to the deep water in about 2-3 weeks time and give it a hard flogging before I make a second one.
     


     
     


  2. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Hweebe in Some Tips For Overnight Stays On Your Boat   
    The main thing out there is your anchor and chain as that is what is going to stop you from drifting, especially after a tide change when your boat changes direction.
    I prefer an anchor that is one size bigger than recommended for the boat length plus a boat length of 10mm short link anchor chain.
    It may be heavy to pull back up but it is far better than having to reset the anchor in the middle of the night, especially if the wind comes away and it gets rough out there.
    If you are anchoring offshore, make sure your all round white light is nice and high and bright so other vessels as well as ships can easily see you.
    Also let out plenty of rope to reduce the chance of popping the anchor through the night.
    Set your drift alarm on the GPS, cook up a feed, have a few drinks and enjoy the night.
     
  3. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Drop Bear in A Little Tale Of A Big Bass   
    I seen a 60cm Bass taken from the brissy river last year, in fact I think it was an Australian Record.
    The Macleay River in NSW has given up a few unicorns over the years as well.
  4. Haha
    aussie123 got a reaction from mick2me in Yamba locations/gps marks wanted.   
    Here's a pic of Jeremy's car and boat from wavebreak last weekend.


  5. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from AUS-BNE-FISHO in Our Black Bass Trip Into West Papua   
  6. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from AUS-BNE-FISHO in Our Black Bass Trip Into West Papua   
  7. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from AUS-BNE-FISHO in Our Black Bass Trip Into West Papua   
    On the 25th March, Stu and myself set out on a trip deep into the jungles of West Papua in search of the mighty Black Bass in some river systems that have never really been fished except for the local villagers in the area.
    This was a trip of epic proportions with months of planning and 3 days of travel to reach our destination.
    Our journey seen us fly to Bali and then Makassar where we spent the night in a motel and then we boarded another plane at 2am to fly across to Biak where we met up with our local mate Teddy.
    We were supposed to jump on another plane the next morning for Serui on the island of Pulau Japen but bad weather seen all planes and ferries cancelled so we sat this out for 2 days.
    This gave us a chance to have a look around Biak so we could  visit the local fish market and check out the different sights around the city.

     

     
    On the
    On the second day we got to hike deep into the most beautiful valley that you could ever wish to see to catch a Spot Tail Bass but unfortunately the fishing was very quiet.
    The scenery and the waterfalls were just spectacular to see and not catching any fish here really did not matter.





    Some local villagers that lived downstream paddled their way up river in their dugout canoes and picked us up and took us downstream through a series of rapids and log jams to where they had a long boat waiting to ferry us out of this insane prehistoric looking valley.
    The scenery was absolutely spectacular with heavy rainforest reaching right to the water.
    As dark fell, the fire flies came out which was just amazing to see.
    On the third day, we decided to jump on a fast passenger ferry to Serui  instead of flying over due to the excess luggage and camping gear that we had to take with us.
    This was a 5 hour boat trip and it gave us a chance to see some of the local islands and coastline which was a very enjoyable part of the trip.

    We finally arrived in Serui  where we arranged a driver with a small truck to run us around to find a motel for the night and to do the necessary food shopping and fuel purchases that we needed to arrange.
    After purchasing  1200 liters of fuel and enough 2 stroke oil for the trip and a ute load of food and water, we had dinner and then headed back to the motel  where we settled in for a hard earned rest before the huge trip into the jungle the next day.
    Life in Serui is vastly different to other parts of Indonesia that we have travelled through.
    The rubbish and filth around the city is unimaginable and really has to be seen to be believed.
    No one uses a rubbish bin or takes their rubbish home, they just drop it where they have finished with it and the water’s  edge around the small harbour was a tip site on its own.
    It is one place that I would be very happy to never see again.



    The following morning we struck our first major hurdle when the guy supplying one of the boats went missing  so we were left with only one  boatman with his 6.5m long boat to take us fishing for the week.
    We loaded this poor boat up with all the camping gear, food, water,  fuel and 6 people and  I estimated that we had over  a 2 ton payload all up but she went like a rocket ship with the twin tiller steer 40hp Yamahas.
    Our  boat trip was around 150km to where we wanted to camp but our plans changed when our  boatman grew up in a small village on an adjacent waterway.
    It just happened that they also owned the river system that we wanted to fish in so on our way into the jungle we stopped at the village where he grew up so he could introduce us to the chief and also so he could catch up with his family and friends.
    After meeting the chief and the other village elders over a coffee, the chief invited us to stay the night in his house with his family.
    As it was getting late in the day and with no chance of reaching our campsite before dark, we kindly accepted his offer and we spent an amazing night with some of the nicest people you could ever  wish to meet.



    Up bright and early the next morning, we headed off through this long and narrow waterway where we eventually popped out into the river system that we wanted to search for the elusive Black Bass.


    Spread throughout the river system were these  little fishing shanties on stilts over the water that the villagers have built for their fishing trips and we were offered the opportunity to use any of these that we wanted.
    We checked one out down near the river mouth but it was a bit small for us all so we ventured further back up river where we found this amazing little shack sitting proudly over the river with its own little jetty at the front door.
    This was now going to be our campsite for the week so we unloaded the boat and then ventured off to have a look around and to have an arvo fish.





    We ventured upstream into a small lake system that was 3.5km long and it had 5 separate entrances from the main river.
    These creek entrances all held Black Bass, Mangrove Jacks,  Trevally and Tarpon and then inside this lake was hundreds of small palm islands, trees and stumps,  which many had good numbers of fish around them.
    This was an amazing little waterway to begin our week of Black Bass fishing.



    The next 2 days were spent down around the river mouth in the pure salt water looking for the bigger Black Bass.
    We fished many miles of creeks and anabranches and even the adjacent river system but sadly we couldn’t find any fish down in this area.
    They would have to be there as the water looked good but they were either shut down or maybe there at another time of the year.
    The next few days we decided to stay well up river in the lake area where we caught our fish on the first day.
    This proved to be a bonanza with many fish being hooked, landed and lost.
    Most of the fish caught this trip were on the topwater  using mullet poppers and just a few were caught on deep divers.
    Tarpon were everywhere this trip and were fun to catch when the bass fishing was quite.
    You could see the schools of Tarpon finning on the surface and their bubble trails in the water everywhere.
    A quick cast over their heads soon stirred multiple strikes at the popper.




















     
    The last day we had some bad weather coming in so we decided to get out of the jungle and start the journey back to Serui.
    We spent the night in a boatmans hut at the village again as the spring tides had made the creek too shallow to navigate in the dark.
    After a good nights sleep, we headed off at 4.30am to beat the falling tide.
    This time we hit many stumps and also had to drive the boat over whole trees to reach the deeper section of the creek.
    Once out it was full stick down the river and across the bar to the open water where it was quite choppy for the first 50km.
    About half way back to Serui we pulled into a small village where our boatmans wife lived so we managed to get a nice jug of hot coffee and buy an extra drum of fuel to complete the trip.


     
    Hugging the coastline to avoid the choppy waters, the  trip back was beautiful as we navigated through a series of tropical islands and over some shallow coral reefs.





    Once back to Serui, we found a motel for the night and we all enjoyed a good feed and a few cold Bintangs.
    The next morning we boarded the ferry for another 5 hour journey back to Biak
    Here we stayed another night at Teddy’s house before the final 2 day journey back home.
    Overall it was an amazing trip and venturing so deep into the jungle with no support and no idea of what to expect added to the thrill of this adventure.
    The people we met and the places we got to experience will be something that all of us will never forget.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     




  8. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Brodie_S in Our Black Bass Trip Into West Papua   
    On the 25th March, Stu and myself set out on a trip deep into the jungles of West Papua in search of the mighty Black Bass in some river systems that have never really been fished except for the local villagers in the area.
    This was a trip of epic proportions with months of planning and 3 days of travel to reach our destination.
    Our journey seen us fly to Bali and then Makassar where we spent the night in a motel and then we boarded another plane at 2am to fly across to Biak where we met up with our local mate Teddy.
    We were supposed to jump on another plane the next morning for Serui on the island of Pulau Japen but bad weather seen all planes and ferries cancelled so we sat this out for 2 days.
    This gave us a chance to have a look around Biak so we could  visit the local fish market and check out the different sights around the city.

     

     
    On the
    On the second day we got to hike deep into the most beautiful valley that you could ever wish to see to catch a Spot Tail Bass but unfortunately the fishing was very quiet.
    The scenery and the waterfalls were just spectacular to see and not catching any fish here really did not matter.





    Some local villagers that lived downstream paddled their way up river in their dugout canoes and picked us up and took us downstream through a series of rapids and log jams to where they had a long boat waiting to ferry us out of this insane prehistoric looking valley.
    The scenery was absolutely spectacular with heavy rainforest reaching right to the water.
    As dark fell, the fire flies came out which was just amazing to see.
    On the third day, we decided to jump on a fast passenger ferry to Serui  instead of flying over due to the excess luggage and camping gear that we had to take with us.
    This was a 5 hour boat trip and it gave us a chance to see some of the local islands and coastline which was a very enjoyable part of the trip.

    We finally arrived in Serui  where we arranged a driver with a small truck to run us around to find a motel for the night and to do the necessary food shopping and fuel purchases that we needed to arrange.
    After purchasing  1200 liters of fuel and enough 2 stroke oil for the trip and a ute load of food and water, we had dinner and then headed back to the motel  where we settled in for a hard earned rest before the huge trip into the jungle the next day.
    Life in Serui is vastly different to other parts of Indonesia that we have travelled through.
    The rubbish and filth around the city is unimaginable and really has to be seen to be believed.
    No one uses a rubbish bin or takes their rubbish home, they just drop it where they have finished with it and the water’s  edge around the small harbour was a tip site on its own.
    It is one place that I would be very happy to never see again.



    The following morning we struck our first major hurdle when the guy supplying one of the boats went missing  so we were left with only one  boatman with his 6.5m long boat to take us fishing for the week.
    We loaded this poor boat up with all the camping gear, food, water,  fuel and 6 people and  I estimated that we had over  a 2 ton payload all up but she went like a rocket ship with the twin tiller steer 40hp Yamahas.
    Our  boat trip was around 150km to where we wanted to camp but our plans changed when our  boatman grew up in a small village on an adjacent waterway.
    It just happened that they also owned the river system that we wanted to fish in so on our way into the jungle we stopped at the village where he grew up so he could introduce us to the chief and also so he could catch up with his family and friends.
    After meeting the chief and the other village elders over a coffee, the chief invited us to stay the night in his house with his family.
    As it was getting late in the day and with no chance of reaching our campsite before dark, we kindly accepted his offer and we spent an amazing night with some of the nicest people you could ever  wish to meet.



    Up bright and early the next morning, we headed off through this long and narrow waterway where we eventually popped out into the river system that we wanted to search for the elusive Black Bass.


    Spread throughout the river system were these  little fishing shanties on stilts over the water that the villagers have built for their fishing trips and we were offered the opportunity to use any of these that we wanted.
    We checked one out down near the river mouth but it was a bit small for us all so we ventured further back up river where we found this amazing little shack sitting proudly over the river with its own little jetty at the front door.
    This was now going to be our campsite for the week so we unloaded the boat and then ventured off to have a look around and to have an arvo fish.





    We ventured upstream into a small lake system that was 3.5km long and it had 5 separate entrances from the main river.
    These creek entrances all held Black Bass, Mangrove Jacks,  Trevally and Tarpon and then inside this lake was hundreds of small palm islands, trees and stumps,  which many had good numbers of fish around them.
    This was an amazing little waterway to begin our week of Black Bass fishing.



    The next 2 days were spent down around the river mouth in the pure salt water looking for the bigger Black Bass.
    We fished many miles of creeks and anabranches and even the adjacent river system but sadly we couldn’t find any fish down in this area.
    They would have to be there as the water looked good but they were either shut down or maybe there at another time of the year.
    The next few days we decided to stay well up river in the lake area where we caught our fish on the first day.
    This proved to be a bonanza with many fish being hooked, landed and lost.
    Most of the fish caught this trip were on the topwater  using mullet poppers and just a few were caught on deep divers.
    Tarpon were everywhere this trip and were fun to catch when the bass fishing was quite.
    You could see the schools of Tarpon finning on the surface and their bubble trails in the water everywhere.
    A quick cast over their heads soon stirred multiple strikes at the popper.




















     
    The last day we had some bad weather coming in so we decided to get out of the jungle and start the journey back to Serui.
    We spent the night in a boatmans hut at the village again as the spring tides had made the creek too shallow to navigate in the dark.
    After a good nights sleep, we headed off at 4.30am to beat the falling tide.
    This time we hit many stumps and also had to drive the boat over whole trees to reach the deeper section of the creek.
    Once out it was full stick down the river and across the bar to the open water where it was quite choppy for the first 50km.
    About half way back to Serui we pulled into a small village where our boatmans wife lived so we managed to get a nice jug of hot coffee and buy an extra drum of fuel to complete the trip.


     
    Hugging the coastline to avoid the choppy waters, the  trip back was beautiful as we navigated through a series of tropical islands and over some shallow coral reefs.





    Once back to Serui, we found a motel for the night and we all enjoyed a good feed and a few cold Bintangs.
    The next morning we boarded the ferry for another 5 hour journey back to Biak
    Here we stayed another night at Teddy’s house before the final 2 day journey back home.
    Overall it was an amazing trip and venturing so deep into the jungle with no support and no idea of what to expect added to the thrill of this adventure.
    The people we met and the places we got to experience will be something that all of us will never forget.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     




  9. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Nirvana in Back To Schoolies   
    These are not schoolies,
    These are Grey Mackerel and a nice catch here boys.
  10. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Drop Bear in What Size/shape Paravanes Or Trolling Boards   
    There ya go Robbie, lol 😂🤣😂
    http://www.reeltackle.com.au/catalog/Paravanes-437-1.html
  11. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Drop Bear in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Another hideous disease Benno.
    Donated and good luck mate.
  12. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from AUS-BNE-FISHO in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Another hideous disease Benno.
    Donated and good luck mate.
  13. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Old Scaley in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Another hideous disease Benno.
    Donated and good luck mate.
  14. Like
    aussie123 reacted to benno573 in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Thanks heaps for the support Lance. 😊
  15. Love
    aussie123 got a reaction from benno573 in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Another hideous disease Benno.
    Donated and good luck mate.
  16. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from ellicat in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Another hideous disease Benno.
    Donated and good luck mate.
  17. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Brodie_S in Father’s Day Men’s Health Message - Prostate Cancer Foundation Of Australia - Show Your Support!   
    Another hideous disease Benno.
    Donated and good luck mate.
  18. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from kmcrosby78 in Reconnaissance Mission   
    I think I would be picking out an area to go to for the day and sound it out fully and mark anything interesting that you see on the sounder.
    After sounding the area out, go back and have a fish on all the marks that you find.
    Sound out one area at a time otherwise you just miss finding to much ground around you.
  19. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from AUS-BNE-FISHO in Reconnaissance Mission   
    I think I would be picking out an area to go to for the day and sound it out fully and mark anything interesting that you see on the sounder.
    After sounding the area out, go back and have a fish on all the marks that you find.
    Sound out one area at a time otherwise you just miss finding to much ground around you.
  20. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from ellicat in Reconnaissance Mission   
    I think I would be picking out an area to go to for the day and sound it out fully and mark anything interesting that you see on the sounder.
    After sounding the area out, go back and have a fish on all the marks that you find.
    Sound out one area at a time otherwise you just miss finding to much ground around you.
  21. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from kmcrosby78 in Easy Fishing With Some Good Company   
    I am good thanks Robbie.
    I am dying to get back out there though, I am so tired of being house bound at the moment, lol
    Hopefully it won't be too long and I can start to venture out again, even if just in the bay or the river bank somewhere for a little while.
     
  22. Like
    aussie123 reacted to Drop Bear in Easy Fishing With Some Good Company   
    I know the feeling...
    Let me know if you want to come out on the boat for an outing. 
  23. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Drop Bear in Easy Fishing With Some Good Company   
    I am good thanks Robbie.
    I am dying to get back out there though, I am so tired of being house bound at the moment, lol
    Hopefully it won't be too long and I can start to venture out again, even if just in the bay or the river bank somewhere for a little while.
     
  24. Thanks
    aussie123 got a reaction from Old Scaley in Easy Fishing With Some Good Company   
    I am good thanks Robbie.
    I am dying to get back out there though, I am so tired of being house bound at the moment, lol
    Hopefully it won't be too long and I can start to venture out again, even if just in the bay or the river bank somewhere for a little while.
     
  25. Like
    aussie123 got a reaction from Drop Bear in Offshore With Tugger   
    Nice feed of fish there, especially those Moses.
    Cracking looking weather out there too.
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