Fishing Monthly Magazine | May 2023

Page 99

WA

Changing targets set for the cold MANDURAH

Jesse Choy

As we begin to see the end of autumn, the winter weather begins to set in and our targetable species change along with it. We can expect to see fewer of the

These spots will produce well when it comes to your normal resident species such as herring, whiting, silver bream and trevally as well. When targeting these fish, a moderately weighted pilchard, prawn or some squid will work well and can often result in some

Silver trevally are great fun on light gear, just ask the Hill brothers who rate them as a target on many of their outings. warm water fish like tailor or numbers of yellowfin sticking around, although the odd fish will still get pulled up and generally be a bigger specimen that is happy hunting on its own. Fishing from the town or Dawesville rock walls is a great option at this time of the year, as the narrow entrances offer great flow of water with tidal movement and will quite often be some of your first spots to clear up of debris as a result.

unlikely by-catch. Anglers should expect that salmon schools will now be passing through these areas, although the quantities of fish coming through may range from evident schools to smaller numbers of singular fish that can be quite shy in their migration. In previous years, a moderately weighted pilchard, scalie or whole herring has worked well and in others it has been the lures that have picked up some of the more finicky

whiting and skippy will become more frequent and their activity gets the other predators, like mulloway and shark interested. In turn this means good fishing for

called “Salmon School Tracker”. If the salmon are around, this page will tell you where they are. INSHORE Our inshore water is a veritable smorgasbord at

fish, which are hesitant in committing to feeding. Pink snapper are another very viable option if you are chasing something different from the stones, with great sized specimen roaming close to shore looking for an easy meal. Quite often pink snapper will patrol such areas, as some of their favourite food sources will get dislodged from the rocks as a result of the heavy surge and can often become a disorientated meal. If you are looking to get some sand between your toes, the beach should produce quite well if you are able to find a section of clean water that is weed free and has some contour to it. Although some of your larger specimen can be harder to target due to the abundance of weed as a result of surge, there is definitely plenty of

bread-and-butter fish to go around. Using your smaller baits, herring, sand whiting and silver bream are plentiful around most beaches from the town and all the way through to your drive on stretches like White Hills or Preston. Chasing some of your bigger specimen like salmon, snapper or mulloway will be very much an option, although you will still need to put a lot of consideration into where you fish and placing your baits into a gutter where it can sit for an extended amount of time. Though at times you can get lucky with regards to hooking up almost immediately after putting your bait in the water, in most cases you will have your best chances where you can soak your bait and let the fish find their way to you. With the larger swells,

Rene is an avid bream angler who lives locally and absolutely loves the challenge of bream on lures.

West Coast

Ryder is a great example of persisting in order to achieve the desired result – he managed to go from one beach personal best to catching an even bigger one after this! it can only be assumed that foraging fish will be looking through overturned sand as it exposes new food sources and offers easy pickings for minimal effort. River fishing is a staple all year long, though it can be challenging for some during certain points of the year. Fishing in Autumn provides ample opportunity for anglers to get stuck into some great sized bream, with there also being a possibility of coming across some of

the elusive river mulloway that frequent the Murray and Serpentine. If you are fishing up the rivers, lightly weighted or unweighted prawns or worms are ideal and will not last long when casted relatively close to structure that provides fish with a sense of security. If fishing lures, you will find that the fish can appear shy, though aggravated and hungry fish will be readily willing to eat a variety of lures you will find in your box.

some quality squid and King George whiting. You may just need to change locations a bit as, in particular, the whiting will move around. Any broken water or

The mighty Z Man, aka Peter Zahradka, with a lovely metro beach pink!

Dom Magoo with an absolute cracker Swan River blue! beach anglers. The other option, although they can be fickle at times, will be Australian salmon. They should turn up? If you love chasing salmon there is a great Facebook page that is worth following

the moment. During the day our shallow reefs will hold plenty of skippy and herring, while these same areas will hold snapper at night. A good berley trail will improve your fishing. Broken ground in 10-12m of water will hold

inshore reef systems along the coastline will have tailor holding in and around it. Metal lures, stickbaits or gang rigged mullies will be your best options to catch them. The bluefin tuna fishing has been on fire

recently and this should continue. The 25-40m line seems to be where they are most prolific. Keep an eye out for birds as they are your best indicator as to where the tuna schools may be located. As you head a little wider (30-50m), reefy areas will hold dhufish (some really big ones are being caught), baldchin groper, breaksea cod, the occasional big King George whiting as well as snapper of all sizes. On top of that,

samson fish, yellowtail kingfish and salmon should all be on the chew. It really is a great time for our inshore anglers. OFFSHORE Our offshore fishing continues to be dominated by the mahimahi fishing around the FADs. Not only has the fishing for them been fantastic, the quality of the fish this year seems to have improved as well. A win-win for anglers fishing for them. Anglers targeting them are generally using live baits

or are casting stickbaits or minnow style lures around the FADs. Deep dropping will be a little more difficult (less weather windows to get out to do it), however this is always a viable option off our coastline and the resulting captures are some of the best eating fish in the sea. May is a fantastic month to get out and wet a line. I hope you all have a chance to do it and I will catch you next month. MAY 2023 99


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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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