Fishing Monthly Magazine | April 2023

Page 74

NSW

Anglers enjoying some excellent trout fishing BATLOW

Wayne Dubois waynedubois@westnet.com.au

This month spells almost perfect conditions for fishing and camping in the greater Batlow area. The nights aren’t too cold just yet, the sun has lost its midday bite, and add to this the lack of water skiers and jet skiers, and you’re in for some great days on or near the water. BLOWERING DAM Blowering Dam has been a hive of activity, with anglers travelling from far and

frequent the shallows in search of a good feed under the cover of darkness, so once the sun goes down it often pays to head up into the shallows and throw around a few big lures. With big golden perch often doing the same thing as the cod, you just never know what is going to whack your lure whilst scouting around in the shallows. Golden perch can also be caught in the same areas as the Murray cod at this time of the year, but it pays to downsize your lures if you really want to target them specifically. The best lures to troll and cast for

Once that sun starts to go down, if you’re targeting the natives you can’t fish too shallow. In fact, quite often the shallower the better!

In low light and after dark, big golden perch will be up in the shallows with the cod, and will often take large lures destined for their bigger cousins. wide to get amongst the big Murray cod action. Although cod numbers have dropped off considerably, they are still certainly worth targeting. Murray cod at this time of the year are best targeted with large lures, the bigger the better. The 150mm AC Invaders, for example, are ideal for casting and trolling, but any lure over 90mm will put you in with a chance. The best places to troll lures are the old river bed up around the top end of the dam, and any rocky point or wall would be worth running over a few times. At night time, the big Murray cod will often

Stuckey lures and lipless crank baits. Alternatively, if you’re casting it is hard to beat plastics, rubber vibes and the ever-reliable blades, especially the Ecogear ZX range and Insanity Tackle Yab blade range.

Thanks to two straight years with plenty of rain, the trout fishing in the greater Batlow area is as good as ever. golden perch at this time of the year are the Balista Dyno 60 and 75, Trollcraft Double Downers, AC Slim Invaders,

Nick Price

74 APRIL 2023

to fish and quite easy to walk to another spot if your favourite hole or section is being fished already, or you think you have exhausted that hole. Lure and fly selection in the flow doesn’t get much easier. If you’re casting lures, all you will need is a few spinners like Bling Spins, Rooster Tails and Mepps Bugs, and some little hard bodies like the Rapala CD and F range or IMA Sukaris. It also pays to stick to natural-coloured lures in the low flows because the water is almost always crystal clear, and a bright, flashy lure can sometimes spook the fish. Stick with natural rainbow and brown trout colours and you can’t go wrong. If you’re fly fishing and would like to target fish with dries, you will have to fish the first hour of daylight in the morning or the last hour of

Redfin in our impoundments like Blowering Dam will move off the edges and start to form massive pre-spawn schools, making for some great fishing. will be in low flow (fingers crossed) which will make for some spectacular fishing. Whilst it is in low flow, almost the entire river is accessible on foot, which makes it both easy

light before dark. Alternatively, if you want to catch fish all day long it is hard to beat a small bead head nymph, suspended about 1-3 ft below an indicator or highly visible dry fly.

The importance of water temps HUNTER VALLEY

If the Tumut River is in low flow this month it will be hard to beat indicator nymphing with a fly or spin rod.

REDFIN Over the last few months redfin schools have been spread out all over the lake, from the surface down to around 100ft in depth, which can make it difficult to locate them at times. This month, the majority of those smaller fish in the shallows will work their way out to the deep water with their bigger mates, as they start forming their massive pre spawn schools. Once the fish are in these pre-spawn schools they can be easy to catch, as there are so many in a school and because they are so competitive. When the fish have almost all moved out to deeper water and fairly consistently hold at around the 25-70ft mark, it makes it much easier to locate them at this

time of the year. You can troll, cast, drift and/or use your sounder to find the schools, then once a school is located drop plastics, ice jigs, blades, vibes or lipless crank baits into them and jig up a storm. Bait fishos can do the same thing with worms or yabbies bobbed on a paternoster rig. Whether you jig with bait or a lure, it often pays to add a small 1-2” soft plastic or flashy fly about a metre or so above your offering. This will give you a chance of bringing a couple up at a time instead of just one. It is also handy if you’re fishing around weed because the plastic or fly will still be fishable if you happen to foul up your bottom offering. TUMUT RIVER Hopefully by the time this article hits your newsagent’s shelves the Tumut River

April is one of those months where the fish are transitioning, and they can be hard to catch until a patten is worked out. There is no set way to catch these fish, so try different methods until you find what the fish are after. Often it can be an assortment of techniques that are working. During these transition times I rely on water temperature as the key to unlocking the technique that will catch many bass. If I can find water around 23°C, that’s where I prefer to fish. This is reaction temperature and it’s good, fun, easy fishing throwing lipless crankbaits, square bills or spinnerbaits. If the temperature is above 25°C, I recommend looking for those deeper fish and trying a plastic fished either vertically or horizontally. If the temperature drops to

around 20°C, you can also use a plastic. Using spinnerbaits in timber is a good way to fish

if the bass are not biting. The bass love structure, and the bigger trees in 20-30ft of water usually hold bass at this time

There are lots of little trout in the Upper Hunter, which bodes well for a good season in 2024.

of year. Spinnerbaits bounce over the timber, puffing up sediment and eliciting a reaction response from the bass. Beetle spins with a little plastic and small crankbaits like Jackall Chubbies are also a way to catch fish in the timber during transition months. There are many, many carp in Glenbawn at the moment, and some locals are looking at running a carp fishing competition in June. The average size is over 1kg, with carp up to 7kg showing up regularly. All the details for the competition will be on Facebook, or you can ring the shop and speak to Liz and she can give you the details. The trout season is still open, and there are reports of good fish being caught. Head further back into the tops for better catches with larger fish. The more marginal water down low has had a hard time over the summer from both anglers and environmental


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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
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