Fishing Monthly Magazine | October 2022

Page 108

West Coast

WA

Plenty of options without chasing demersals METRO

Jacob Crispe

The demersal fishing ban comes into place from the 15th of October, and will run through until the 15th of December. This annual closure ensures that our demersal species have the

opportunity to spawn in peace, ensuring we have good fishing well into the future. Having said that, there are plenty of other fishing options, to give you an excuse to go and wet a line. Swan River As we move closer to the warmer months

of the year, the shallow flats of the Swan come alive with fish, and with anglers targeting them. The three main species to be caught in this shallow water (ankle to waist deep)

speedsters of our waterways. Other options this month are tailor and of course mulloway. Rock walls and beaches October for me is all about squid. Their numbers

Jake Walker taming one of the Swan’s ghosts of the darkness. This beautiful mulloway measured 125cm.

Paul Coelho has been catching a lot of nice squid from the rocks around Freo lately.

Dom Magoo from Doms Fishing adventures with an absolute steam train of a samsonfish! Check out his ‘Doms Fishing Adventures’ on YouTube to see him in action. 108

OCTOBER 2022

are flathead, bream and yellowfin whiting. Flathead are by far the most popular of the three that I have mentioned. They push out of the deep water up onto the flats, feeding up on prawns and small baitfish. Although they can be targeted using bait, most keen flathead anglers will use small hardbody lures or blades. Baits tend to get cleaned up by the many toadfish in the river before any flathead gets a chance to see them, and using lures allows you to avoid them so you can actively fish an area until you find a concentration of fish, and then focus on that area. Targeting yellowfin whiting using surface lures tends to also kick in around October. It is something this author loves getting out and doing, but I have found the Swan whiting can be very challenging to catch using this method. For me, the better option has always been to head over to Mandurah and target them there, but I know plenty of anglers who say the opposite. All I know is that it is great fun to do. If we happen to get an extended run of warmer weather, giant herring are also on the cards. For many anglers they are the unicorn of the Swan, i.e. impossible to catch there. However, giant herring are definitely there to be caught. Small metals and stickbaits are the lures of choice. One thing is for certain, you will know when you have hooked one, they are one of the true

will increase (not all big, but plenty of them) and most of our rock walls are viable options to try and catch one. If you are unsure if they can be caught where you are

Harley Jarosz with a pigeon pair of pinks. These fish were caught in a 1-hour session between Harley and his mate. fishing, there is always that tell-tale sign to keep an eye out for: the ink stain left behind on the rocks after

Dom Magoo aka ‘The Fish Tucker Man’, with a couple of cracking shallow water pinks!

a successful capture. Find those ink stains and you are in with a fighting chance. Other bread and butter options are King George whiting, skippy and the everpresent herring. As always, berley is a very important component of targeting these species. Get a good berley trail going, use fresh baits and you will be one step closer to taking a feed home of these tasty fish. Tailor have been prolific along all of our beaches, and this is set to continue through October. They are well worth targeting because the average size has been between 40cm and 50cm, with the odd larger model in amongst the smaller fish in the schools. Remember where there are tailor, the mulloway will not be too far away. It can pay to have a fresh (legal-sized) tailor fillet out in the gutter you are fishing, because you never know when a mulloway may come along. Small sharks (black tips and gummies) can also be attracted to these schools of feeding fish. Mullaloo or Cottesloe beaches are great beach fishing options. Remember there is no shark fishing allowed at Cottesloe beach. Inshore A bit like the rock walls, squid and King George whiting will be the mainstay targets for the month of October. Squid will be found in shallower water, around 2m to 6m. Look for broken,


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Articles inside

Boat Test: Whittley CR2380

5min
pages 120-121

Stessl 660 Seahawk

5min
pages 118-119

Freshwater

9min
pages 114-115

Mandurah

3min
page 111

Karratha

5min
page 112

Metro

7min
pages 108-109

Lancelin

5min
page 107

Tournament Calendar

3min
page 104

Augusta

7min
page 106

Tournaments

7min
pages 102-103

WIRF

11min
pages 100-101

Hobart

5min
page 99

Eildon

3min
page 98

Ballarat

7min
pages 94-95

Wangaratta

4min
page 91

Geelong

6min
pages 80-81

Port Phillip

5min
page 84

Gippsland Lakes

6min
page 86

Warrnambool

5min
page 79

Canberra

4min
page 77

Batlow

4min
page 75

New England Rivers

5min
page 76

Illawarra

5min
page 70

Central Coast

4min
page 68

Swansea

7min
page 69

Port Stephens

3min
page 66

Hastings

3min
page 64

Coffs Coast

6min
pages 62-63

Sydney South

4min
pages 58-59

Sydney North

3min
page 57

Sydney Rock/Beach

5min
page 56

Pittwater

9min
pages 54-55

Freshwater

17min
pages 46-49

Sustainability of estuary species

13min
pages 50-53

Cape York

4min
pages 42-44

Cooktown

6min
pages 39-41

Townsville

5min
page 36

Mackay

5min
pages 34-35

Bundaberg

9min
pages 32-33

Brisbane

13min
pages 26-27

Jumpinpin

3min
pages 22-23

Northern Bay

4min
pages 28-29

REGULAR FEATURES Urban basssing

11min
pages 8-11

Gold Coast

6min
pages 18-21

QUEENSLAND The Tweed

5min
pages 16-17

Starlo: Spinning for trout

5min
pages 12-15

Noosa

5min
pages 30-31
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