Fishing Monthly Magazine | May 2023

Page 61

NSW

Autumn sessions off the stones FORSTER

Luke Austin

It seems absolutely crazy to think that we are almost out of autumn already. The good news is that our awesome winter fishing season is about to really kick off in earnest, which means lots of big blue-nosed bream, stonking snapper, and black drummer! Wallis Lake has seen plenty of rainfall over the past few months, but

target these big, smart bream, there are a few simple things that you need to remember. Firstly, the lighter you can fish, in both line weight and sinker size, will have a huge impact on how many fish you catch. Fishing a nice, light line translates to more hits for one very simple reason: it’s thinner and harder for the fish to see. The downside of going thinner and lighter is that it’s a lot harder to pull the fish out from the gnarly structure that they love to

Secondly, presentation is very important. Whether you are fishing bait or lure, your presentations have to look ‘natural’. These fish are insanely smart, and if they can see too much hook hanging out of your bait, or if your soft plastic isn’t quite swimming right, they won’t even think about eating it! Flathead are still a reliable target within the estuary despite the change in seasons. Those anglers that have moved a little way up into the system have been finding really good numbers of fish. The average size is still great, with plenty of fish up between 50-70cm. 3-4” soft plastics and soft vibes are working wonders out there, with areas such as the Wallamba River, Regatta Island, The Cut and Wallis Island all worth checking out. The local luderick fishing is slowly simmering away, and seems to be getting better by the week. Although the huge numbers of ocean-run

fish are yet to come in and settle on the rock walls, there are still decent numbers of fish hanging about. They are taking most offerings at the moment, and if you are struggling to find weed or cabbage, imitation weed flies are working. Beach reports have been very consistent: bream and tailor! Most beaches have been producing both species in decent numbers, and there are some absolute horses about on the tailor front for those people wishing to hit the sand early. The key to finding these really big fish is to offer them something on the larger side, such as big stickbaits, poppers and plugstyle lures. All have been working well. The local stones have seen a fair bit of activity in recent weeks, and most anglers have found a bit of a mixed bag out there waiting for them. For the land-based game enthusiasts, longtail tuna and cobia are still about,

John with a nice early season luderick. despite this, the fishing is still cruising along fairly nicely. Bream numbers are beginning to really stack up throughout the bottom of the system, with some great fish caught this recently from the rock walls and down around the bridge. If you really want to

hang around! The trick is to find a happy medium between maximising bites and minimising bust-offs. This will vary from angler to angler, but you will definitely see those anglers using 4-8lb leaders hooking many more fish than those fishing 10lb and up.

Laird braved a cool morning to land this cracking tailor.

Catching shallow water reds on plastics is hard to beat! however the reports are very few and far between. Expect to put in some long, hard days if you want to get results. Throwing lures can be a very productive way to fish the rocks at this time of the year. There are nearly always tailor, salmon, bonito, mac tuna and the odd kingfish cruising about. Soaking a slab bait, piece of crab or cunje can be a rewarding way to pass the time on the rocks as the weather cools, and there have already been some great sessions on the ‘bread and butter’ specialties that are drummer, bream and luderick. Heading offshore during May is almost always productive, particularly on the reefs to the north. The shallow grounds fish really well during late autumn/ early winter, but the bite times can be very narrow so make sure you hit the skinny stuff nice and early in the morning or late of an afternoon to make the

most of it. A little further out, reefs in 40-60m are holding good numbers of trag (even in the daytime), the odd pearl perch and plenty of pan-sized snapper. We are still seeing a flutter of pelagic action for some lucky anglers, with some cracking Spanish and spotted mackerel being landed along with the odd cobia. Unfortunately, the bites are very few and far between, and with the cooling water temps, the fishing will only get harder for these warm water loving species. • Luke is the owner of Great Lakes Tackle - your ‘local’ bait and tackle store. They sell only the best brands and offer sound, friendly advice on where you can go to land your next trophy fish while visiting the wonderful Great Lakes region! The store is open 7 days in the main street of Tuncurry. You can contact them on 02 6554 9541 or find them on Facebook to see what they have been up to!

Need tackle? Need a new boat?

Give Kris a call for a quote!

3 FINANCE AVAILABLE

Australia’s Number 1 Dealer

02 6552 2333

Mulloway are plentiful at this time of year.

13 VICTORIA ST TAREE NSW admin@manningrivermarine.com.au

www.manningrivermarine.com.au

MAY 2023 61


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GEN III

0
pages 118-119

Edencraft 233 Formula with Twin 300HP Mercurys

2min
pages 116-117

DUO The Captain Risky Coota comeback

6min
pages 112-114

Open on Lake Awoonga

2min
page 111

Team Tracker win Venom BARRA Australian

2min
page 110

Tagging Tales

3min
pages 108-109

Ewen Maddock Fish Stockers Teams Tournament

0
page 108

A day with Carl Jocumsen: Bassmaster Classic

8min
pages 106-107

Dry, hot summer punishes winter freshwater fish

7min
pages 104-105

Billfishing remains steady LIGHT, POWERFUL, DURABLE…   INTUITIVE CONTROL

3min
page 103

A sea of blue swimmers

3min
page 102

Durable Oztent AT-6 Air Tent

2min
page 101

Offshore antics running amok this autumn

1min
page 101

Better boating in May

2min
page 100

Changing targets set for the cold

4min
page 99

Fishing choices are endless

2min
page 98

Salmon are slow running

5min
page 97

It’s an autumn pink paradise

3min
page 96

Lots to do for land-based anglers

1min
page 96

Productive fresh and salt outings

5min
page 95

Get ready: May is jumbo tuna time

4min
page 94

Big trout numbers being reported

5min
page 93

The friends we made along the way

3min
page 92

Stocked fish are stacking on the pounds for winter

3min
page 91

Lake Wendouree’s trout are biting

4min
page 90

Anglers descending on cod central at Mulwala

2min
page 89

Hunting yellowbelly over freshly-flooded edges

2min
page 89

Native species are taking a back seat this autumn

3min
page 88

It is time to think big

3min
page 86

Quintrex Freestyler X

3min
pages 84-85

Big schools of fish are throughout the system

0
page 84

A bumper season in review

5min
page 83

Change tactics in the cold

1min
page 82

Astronomical numbers of bream

3min
page 82

Record dusky flathead stocking

0
page 81

Protecting the future of fisheries

4min
page 80

Best baits at the best times

4min
page 79

May is better than you might think

3min
page 78

NSW DPI and VFA team up to fight fishing crime

2min
page 77

Soft plastics are picking up plenty of pinkies

4min
pages 76-77

Remember to keep your cool if you hook a beast

2min
page 75

It’s been great weather for chasing bluefin tuna

1min
page 75

Favourable fishing results for keen lure casters

1min
page 74

Getting stuck into quality tuna

2min
page 74

Catching quality cod off the surface

4min
page 73

Time to get out and enjoy the autumn weather

2min
page 72

Finding right depth for active fish

2min
page 72

May the cod be with us?

2min
pages 70-71

Late season stream trout bounty

2min
page 70

There is still good fishing to be had around Tathra

1min
pages 68-69

Sea temperatures are still warm

1min
page 68

Things are still holding up

4min
page 66

Hunting out the best spots in May

5min
page 65

Enjoying the autumn mornings on the water

5min
page 64

Locals taking on the torpedoes

3min
page 63

Autumn fun for Central Coast shore-based anglers

1min
page 62

Autumn sessions off the stones

3min
page 61

First class flathead fishing action

2min
page 60

Plenty of productive days in store

3min
page 59

Looking back on great pelagic run

2min
page 58

Catching whoppers off the walls

4min
pages 56-57

Bountiful autumn transition period

5min
pages 54-55

Bread and butter on the chew

3min
page 53

Latest releases from Daiwa

2min
page 52

Anglers are working towards consistent fishing

1min
page 52

Good value in the Okuma Ceymar HD spin reels

3min
page 51

THE FREEDOM To Escape.

5min
pages 48-50

Gary’s Marine Centre

4min
pages 46-47

Last chance to catch warm weather species

5min
page 46

Vale Jack Beattie

1min
page 45

National Recreational Fishing Survey of 2019-21

9min
pages 42-45

Epic wet season will spell a great dry season

2min
pages 40-41

May Mayhem to come

2min
page 39

Impressive angling in FNQ

2min
page 38

Clean waters make for great bags

1min
page 38

Cool weather transitions

2min
page 37

Don’t pack away the barra gear!

3min
page 36

Best of both seasons

5min
pages 34-35

Time to catch XOS fish on live baits

5min
pages 32-33

Women spearheading recreational fishing

1min
page 31

Why fish passage is vital for fish migration

0
page 31

How boat ramp surveys help our fisheries

1min
page 30

PROVEN WORLD LEADING ANCHOR DESIGNS

2min
pages 28-29

Change of season is a great time!

1min
page 28

Excellent fishing across the board

4min
pages 26-27

Layer up for autumn sessions

9min
pages 24-25

Taxman has arrived early

1min
pages 22-23

Mack attack through May

4min
pages 18-21

The big push for winter species

2min
pages 16-17

A boat called Compromise

3min
pages 14-15

Hunting for redfin

5min
pages 8-11
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