Fishing Monthly Magazine | April 2023

Page 32

Central OLD

Baits take centre stage BUNDABERG

Luke Truant

In the last month we managed to do only a couple of trips just due to weather, but on both trips the fishing was outrageously good. I fished areas that I can’t fish very often, because these areas require good weather aligned with the right tides. As a bonus, the shark gods smiled on us too – the sharks stole only 5-7 fish per day, which is a massive improvement on

why the predators were turning up their nose at larger baits. MACKEREL We have had plenty of school mackerel and plenty of Spanish around lately (charter boats had an exemption during the closed season in March). Bear in mind there will be new bag limits introduced on 1 July this year. The recreational possession limit will change to one fish per person, or two fish per boat with two or more recreational fishers on board (the boat limit

in the Bundy area. I recommend making them a primary target, and you can find them around the edges of any reefy areas in that sandy margin where you might normally catch iodine bream. Usually in April you’ll tend to get really good sweetlip catches in those fringy areas, in depths from around 10-50m. Grass sweetlip will take a wide range of baits, but they love big squid baits in particular, and they like their squid to waft around a lot. To that end, it’s best to leave your squid

Anglers have enjoyed some good fishing over the past month, when the weather has allowed.

A beautifully marked cattle dog cod, aka blue Maori cod. the usual 30-plus fish at this time of year. The species we caught were a mixture of goodsize tuskies, big blue Maori cod, and heaps of just legal red emperor. The best bait, bizarrely, was mullet. We had heaps of gorgeous fresh local squid, and put them out whole next to small pieces of mullet, and the mullet was out-fishing them. It just shows the importance of bringing a variety of baits… and that you can’t discount old mullet. We put down 15 goodsize live baits throughout the day of varying species, but surprisingly only got one or two strikes and missed hook-ups. It was a similar story with hussar fillets and large flesh baits, which also were also not particularly effective. It seemed that the predators were only focussed on smaller baits, and ignoring big baits. I’m not sure what the reason is. I did notice that the Maori cod were regurgitating quite small baitfish as opposed to the usual large wrasse that they normally regurgitate. Maybe that was the reason 32 APRIL 2023

will not apply to licensed charter fishing trips). Until then, the bag limit is three per person or six per boat (with two or more people on board). GRASS SWEETLIP April is the best month of the year for grass sweetlip (grass emperor)

whole, insert your hook in the hood and allow the tentacles to waft in the current enticingly. When it comes to rigs, you use a ball sinker running down to a swivel and then a trace, or a running ball sinker directly down to the hook. Paternoster rigs are

not particularly effective on grassies; you’ll still catch fish but you’ll catch more with a running ball set-up. Paternoster rigs work better on red emperor and other large species in the depths. If you haven’t targeted grassies before, you can catch them on pretty much any of the fringing reef along the coast between Agnes Waters all the way down (provided it’s not in the green zone, of course). April is by far the best month along that stretch to catch grassies, and best of all you don’t need a big boat. The average size grassy is typically around 1kg along the coast, and maybe 1.5kg out wide. You may also encounter a bigger one around the 5kg mark if you’re lucky. Your best chance of catching a bigger specimen is to use big baits.

It’s a more expensive way to fish, but you’ve got a better chance of catching one of those photo-onthe-wall fish. MANGROVE JACK This month should still be able to encounter jacks in a range of locations, including the Burnett and Kolan rivers, and in Baffle Creek. They can be caught on live bait, dead bait or lures. You should focus your efforts around heavy

of exasperation. Sometimes a surface lure can get crunched immediately, but at other times you’ll be doing a lot of casting. As a bonus while you’re targeting jacks, you may pick up a barra as bycatch. If you hook up to a freight train that zooms off away from the snags, it may well be a little barra. • Truansea Charters specialise in 10-hour day trips chasing prized reef

It’s a good time of year to target grassy sweetlip.

On some recent trips, larger fish have been preferring small baits.

structure, and I recommend fishing fairly heavy; I generally use 40lb fluoro trace on 40lb braid. If you go much heavier you’ll put them off, and much lighter and they’ll bust you off. A range of lure types will work on jacks. At this time of year I like to use 4” paddle-tail plastics, rigged on a fairly heavy jighead to get down amongst the structure. I use a mediumpaced retrieve, with a few pauses and jiggles along the way. If you want to target jacks with lures, be prepared to wait a while for a bite on some days. It can take some time to annoy a jack long enough for it to strike out

targets such as coral trout and red emperor, as well as arm-stretching pelagics like Spanish mackerel. The maximum number of anglers is 6, so you’ll never feel crowded. The price is $330pp (or $300 pp if you book the whole boat), which includes all gear, fuel, bait, ice, chilled water/soft drinks and laughs! You’re welcome to bring your own reef fishing gear if you prefer. Other charter options include half-day reef trips, half day river trips and private guiding. To find out more visit www.truansea.com.au, or you can Like them on Facebook or call Luke on 0423 015 490.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

GEN III

0
pages 126-127

Stessco Albacore CC560 with Yamaha F130 4-stroke

5min
pages 124-125

AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST National Fishing Challenge

2min
pages 122-123

Langford pips Johnson for Glenmaggie title

3min
pages 116-120

Johnson claims maiden BASS Pro win at Blue Rock

3min
pages 114-115

DUO Vukic achieves Hollands Landing heroics

7min
pages 112-113

Tight bags and tarwhine on the Swan

7min
pages 110-111

Now is an exciting time to be on the water

8min
pages 108-109

All eyes on Karratha blue swimmer crab season

3min
page 106

The new Stacer package deals

2min
page 105

Exciting Easter action on tuna

2min
page 105

Impact of regulation changes

2min
page 104

Fishers eager to get back out

3min
page 103

Demersal options are back

2min
page 102

Salmon sightings tempt fishers

6min
page 101

Launching a land-based assult

4min
page 100

Savouring the calm autumn weather pattern

2min
page 100

Good fishing continues into the cooler months

4min
page 99

The good, the bad and the ugly: Tassie offshore

4min
page 98

The WIRF Leaders are making lots of waves

1min
page 97

Decisions, decisions: which bank shall we fish?

2min
page 96

Making the most of Gippy during the cold months

2min
page 96

Crackdown on fishing offenses

3min
page 95

Consistent results for fresh salmonid fishers

1min
page 95

Autumn fishing is firing up

4min
page 94

Trolling up some solid autumn Murray cod

3min
page 93

Prime time to go chasing cod

1min
page 92

A great month for trout in northeast Victoria

2min
page 92

Great angling opportunities in Bendigo region

2min
page 90

Tough going on the Murray

1min
page 90

Tracking down the bait schools

2min
page 89

Hot fishing in local estuaries

0
page 88

Bream and flathead from the Bemm channel

1min
page 88

Super snapper from the surf

4min
page 87

A constantly changing fishery

1min
page 86

Flat out dusky flathead fishing

3min
page 86

Your fishing licence fees at work

0
page 85

Local advice is the key to catching bluefin tuna

5min
page 84

Get ready for seasonal changes

4min
pages 82-83

Last chance for good PPB snapper sessions

4min
page 81

Impressive catches in estuaries

3min
page 80

Decent bream catches in the Hopkins River

1min
page 79

Anglers are still on the lookout for big tuna

2min
page 79

Get out there and catch a nice feed this autumn

2min
page 78

Autumn arrives with redfin catches everywhere

3min
page 77

The DPI needs your fish frames

2min
page 76

Perfect time to be walking banks

1min
page 76

Smooth flows ahead for April!

2min
page 75

The importance of water temps

1min
page 74

Anglers enjoying some excellent trout fishing

3min
page 74

School holiday fun for the kids

3min
pages 72-73

Anglers enjoying the long awaited seasonal change

1min
page 72

The autumn fishing is on fire

5min
page 70

A better class of fish on offer

5min
page 69

Anglers are enjoying more moderate weather

5min
page 68

Inshore anglers get into action

3min
page 67

Decent catches are increasing as autumn begins

2min
page 66

Getting the small things right

3min
page 65

Mackerel fever spreads

2min
page 64

The pelagic fishing is at its peak

3min
page 63

Coffs is right in the middle of the mackerel run

1min
page 62

Tagging Tales

1min
page 61

Keep moving to find the fish

4min
pages 60-61

Sydney flathead are still taking bait and lures

7min
pages 58-59

A transition period for all the Sydney waterways

6min
pages 56-57

Range of pelagics in harbour

4min
pages 54-55

Spectacular fishing on the surface schools

2min
page 54

Gary’s Marine Centre

5min
pages 50-51

We’re spoilt for choice

3min
page 50

National Recreational Fishing Survey 2019-21

10min
pages 46-47

Glorious rain is flowing throughout Cape York

2min
pages 44-45

Crabs are under the spotlight

1min
pages 42-43

Autumn adventures abound

2min
page 42

Promising prospects ahead for autumn bags

2min
pages 40-41

Clean tropical waters make for great catches

2min
page 40

Hungry autumn barra are not fooling around

2min
pages 38-39

Bright lures in dirty water

4min
pages 36-37

Transition through the month

3min
pages 34-35

Baits take centre stage

4min
pages 32-33

Why donating your fish frames to science provides valuable data

1min
page 31

What’s a holiday without a bit of fishing?

1min
page 30

Flathead just keep on coming!

4min
pages 28-29

Transitioning from the summer to winter species

2min
page 26

Unseasonable species settle

9min
pages 24-25

Cool conditions bring stability

2min
pages 22-23

Return of the Spaniards

4min
page 18

Big autumn wahoo offshore

3min
page 16

The Great De-Bait

2min
pages 14-15

Used Boat

3min
pages 9-10

Bolstering bait tactics

4min
pages 8-9
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.