Jump to content

Neil Stratford

Members
  • Posts

    417
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    46

Posts posted by Neil Stratford

  1.  I find the tide sizes don’t really affect it too much , you’ve just got to be prepared to move around and position yourself in the right spots during your session down there. It’s always about knowing how the puzzle works ie  how when why and where  you anchor your  boat and  present your baits. Whiting will move to where the food is., think like the fish .Sounds like you tried a few spots ,but  hey , not all was lost , at least you’ve found where they don’t bite on those tides. The next trip will  be better.

    regards

    neil

  2. I presume you’re not sleeping in your boat whilst reef  fishing ? If sleeping I prefer to use a plough of some sort and drop it on a sandy patch and set the anchor alarm. 

    If just shallow reef fishing , I suggest just  using a  lead filled 5 pronged reef pick with about 3 m of  6 or 8mm chain  with some 10 mm silver rope and pull it up with a ball when your on reef . ( The 10mm rope is softer to use  on your hands than 8mm) This can be all stowed in a fish bin and taken out your boat when your not planning on anchoring on rock or reef. 

    Keep your expensive Manson anchors for sand and mud for which they are designed .

    Have a look at a Sarca  , they’re cheaper than the Mansons and have a slide shackle set up. They are bigger and may or may not suit your setup.

     

    Regards

    Neil

  3. Found a significant school  of Threadfin  and baby bull shark tailing   in 1.5 m of water this morning , right where they’ve been for weeks, so didn’t have to go looking for them. 

    Helped myself to a couple before the wind started  to puff up a bit ,  then took off for home.

    Had a double hookup on the second one , but it got off before I could attend to it , which was a bit of a bummer.

    2 was enough  , so  left them feeding , for next time.

    Beautiful clean fish off the sand , full of banana prawns , bled out and iced down well , they should taste good! 

    A start for team south for May.

    Threadfin 1010mm and 910mm.

     

     

    IMG_4372.jpeg

    IMG_4370.jpeg

    IMG_4362.jpeg

  4. Arrr Ellicat , I thought you were just leading a northsider up the garden path.

    I think it’ll be good in sheltered waters till about 10am ,then it’ll get windy pretty quick.

    Fish usually bite well leading up to a  strong southerly , if I get motivated I might give it another crack early tomorrow as well.

    The boats packed,  I’ve just got to get motivated tomorrow morning.

    regards

    neil

     

     

  5. Yes it’s certainly a fair trip up there from the Southside of Brisbane, especially on a public holiday .
    Presume you got rewarded with quality fish .

    We got back from our  stint dog sitting at Bribie yesterday and I  went for a whiting fish this morning. There was a heap of boats out down the Pin. Surprisingly I managed to find a quiet spot out of the chaos  and got a nice feed of pretty good fish  .
     

     

     

     

     

     

  6. I personally like using slightly larger  spinning reels .

    I recon I   get greater distance in my casts with the  slightly larger spools , and you don’t have to put as much effort when continuously casting and retrieving lures and plastics .You also  often get greater line capacity which sometimes comes in handy if you come across an unexpected larger fish like a big  thready or longtail  ,they’ll empty those tiny 1000 and 2000 series  spinning reels faster than you can blink  .So long as the larger reel isn’t too heavy and the rod /reel balance feels good there’s  nothing to loose going up 1  or even 2 sizes. I think the Daiwa kix and Shimano sustains are pretty similar on paper. The Sustain 3000 is just over 10 percent lighter than the 3000 kix., but the 4000 models are pretty much both the same weights. 
    regards

    neil

×
×
  • Create New...