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The fessor

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  1. Like
    The fessor got a reaction from GregOug in Evans Head Adventure   
    The guy with big alvey and long rod has the right idea for there.
     
    I've been there a few times but not in the last 10 years.
     I was interested in tailor during the day, slayed them.
    And jewfish at night, caught my yellowtail on site an hour or so before the sun started hitting the horizon and had the big float (a piece of Styrofoam with biro pushed through it) and I head either to the end of the wall if it was running in or down to the start of the wall if running out) lobbed out the live bait under the float (set to stay about 16 ft down (if my memory serves me regarding the tidal flow and channel depth)  as far as I could towards the other side and I simply let the current take it and followed by walking the wall until I reached the end , at which point I either retrieved or let the current take the bait out another 100m or so.
    I've  caught a few nice jewfish there but it was hard work c/- fishing the dykes, foreshore or walls at Newcastle, Carrington and Stockton.
    I have memories of a lot of walking following the bait/float. Much the same deal as at Blacksmiths , Swansea  , Forster and  Tuncurry  seawalls (all fast current).
    The trick with tailor there was slabs of yellowtail or tailor (fall back was strips of mullet from a fillet) on quadganged 4/0 520s , no sinker.
    The locals told me they kill the Luderick there in winter (but you have to be in the know to be able to find the best weed sources). I confirmed this by watching a couple local old guys  haul in nice sized kg class luderick one after the other while I was trying to catch livebait nearby. (As is often the case in my experience on my home turf too).
    One more place I should go back to for a fishing holiday some day.
  2. Like
    The fessor got a reaction from ellicat in Weight Of Bigw Jarvis Walker Empty Bulk Line Spools   
    I've never used anything other than mono .
     
    There is good quality mono and rubbish cheap mono. The cheap stuff stretches like buggery and is very soft surfaced (horrible if there are rocks around).
     
    My choice for mono is Torque Green or Maxima .
  3. Like
    The fessor got a reaction from Angler1 in Seasickness Ideas And Discussion   
    Yep , I've been to known to add what ever was in my stomach to the burley trail.... and even when I get back onto solid land and lay down , it seems like the world is still rocking for quite a while.
    One of the reason why I've never owned a boat.  I'm fine in lakes and rivers, but out on the sea , if the fish aren't biting , I'm spewing. 
    Hear there are effective pills around , and some use gadgets now (but that sounds like hokaspokis to me).
  4. Like
    The fessor got a reaction from aussie123 in New Home Built Fishing Reel   
    That's a serious bit of kit.
    Looking forward to seeing how it's developed and the end product and reading how it performs . Not that I've ever fished anywhere requiring an electrically driven retrieve but I'm interested in seeing how you solve the engineering and materials challenges of getting to robust and durable and effective reel.
  5. Like
    The fessor got a reaction from kmcrosby78 in Evans Head Adventure   
    The guy with big alvey and long rod has the right idea for there.
     
    I've been there a few times but not in the last 10 years.
     I was interested in tailor during the day, slayed them.
    And jewfish at night, caught my yellowtail on site an hour or so before the sun started hitting the horizon and had the big float (a piece of Styrofoam with biro pushed through it) and I head either to the end of the wall if it was running in or down to the start of the wall if running out) lobbed out the live bait under the float (set to stay about 16 ft down (if my memory serves me regarding the tidal flow and channel depth)  as far as I could towards the other side and I simply let the current take it and followed by walking the wall until I reached the end , at which point I either retrieved or let the current take the bait out another 100m or so.
    I've  caught a few nice jewfish there but it was hard work c/- fishing the dykes, foreshore or walls at Newcastle, Carrington and Stockton.
    I have memories of a lot of walking following the bait/float. Much the same deal as at Blacksmiths , Swansea  , Forster and  Tuncurry  seawalls (all fast current).
    The trick with tailor there was slabs of yellowtail or tailor (fall back was strips of mullet from a fillet) on quadganged 4/0 520s , no sinker.
    The locals told me they kill the Luderick there in winter (but you have to be in the know to be able to find the best weed sources). I confirmed this by watching a couple local old guys  haul in nice sized kg class luderick one after the other while I was trying to catch livebait nearby. (As is often the case in my experience on my home turf too).
    One more place I should go back to for a fishing holiday some day.
  6. Like
    The fessor got a reaction from tugger in Evans Head Adventure   
    The guy with big alvey and long rod has the right idea for there.
     
    I've been there a few times but not in the last 10 years.
     I was interested in tailor during the day, slayed them.
    And jewfish at night, caught my yellowtail on site an hour or so before the sun started hitting the horizon and had the big float (a piece of Styrofoam with biro pushed through it) and I head either to the end of the wall if it was running in or down to the start of the wall if running out) lobbed out the live bait under the float (set to stay about 16 ft down (if my memory serves me regarding the tidal flow and channel depth)  as far as I could towards the other side and I simply let the current take it and followed by walking the wall until I reached the end , at which point I either retrieved or let the current take the bait out another 100m or so.
    I've  caught a few nice jewfish there but it was hard work c/- fishing the dykes, foreshore or walls at Newcastle, Carrington and Stockton.
    I have memories of a lot of walking following the bait/float. Much the same deal as at Blacksmiths , Swansea  , Forster and  Tuncurry  seawalls (all fast current).
    The trick with tailor there was slabs of yellowtail or tailor (fall back was strips of mullet from a fillet) on quadganged 4/0 520s , no sinker.
    The locals told me they kill the Luderick there in winter (but you have to be in the know to be able to find the best weed sources). I confirmed this by watching a couple local old guys  haul in nice sized kg class luderick one after the other while I was trying to catch livebait nearby. (As is often the case in my experience on my home turf too).
    One more place I should go back to for a fishing holiday some day.
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