Fishing Monthly Magazine | April 2023

Page 86

East Coast

VIC

Flat out dusky flathead fishing GIPPSLAND LAKES

Brett Geddes b.geddes@bigpond.com

There’s plenty to report on as the lakes finally drain the remaining floodwaters of the last two years. The big flathead are now slowly moving further upstream towards the rivers, with their size and numbers growing. There have been plenty of exceptional bream caught, with goodsized tailor and salmon pushing up into the lakes. DINO DUSKIES With so many bream comps on recently, anglers have been searching far and wide, with many commenting on how plentiful the big flathead were. Owen Pierce told me he and Stevie Wheeler had to abandon some areas after hooking too many thumping duskies. It was bad news in a bream comp, resulting in lost time and breaking off $25 lures on 4lb leaders. I loved Owen’s comment when he said, “Some shallow areas around Raymond Island were polluted with them”.

We quickly spooked a few big fish in the shallows, so we knew how deep to start searching. We cast for a few hours without a result, and sadly just spooked big flathead where we had cast

four of them, with the biggest going 69cm. My mate hooked three and landed one at 56cm. We covered a lot of water that session, and by lunchtime the fish were fairly shut down, with many

Justin Kohte with yet another stunning landbased bream at 44cm he found lurking around the jetties near Paynesville. refusing our lures. I’ll return for another look soon. The lesson I learned that day is to always use big lures to get those large duskies to bite, and also get on the water at first light. I’ve been saying this for a while, but what I’ve seen with my own eyes now

is that the Gippy Lakes is starting to rival Lake Tyers as the ‘Big Dusky Capital’ of East Gippsland. As we drive into Lakes Entrance, maybe we should have a massive statue of a big flathead! BREAM IN THE SHALLOWS As mentioned, the Gippy Lakes has been host to a few bream comps recently, and the results were truly breathtaking. So many bags of five big bream at 5-6kg hit the scales, with a lot of individual bream going 1.4-1.8kg. The stand-out feature was the amount of big fish caught in fairly shallow water in Lake King between the Mitchell Flats and Paynesville. The most effective lures, as reported by a lot of competitors, were the Hurricane Twitch 40 and 50 sized hardbody lures. That’s rather fitting, given that they were designed, developed and initially road tested in those exact same waters. The deeper areas around jetty pylons also produced some real trucks and the Muss lure or black blades were the go. Special mention to Mario Vukic, who won the ABT event with a bag of 12.5kg. It was a well-deserved win for the good-natured bloke, who also happens to be a gun big bream tamer. He really knows how to get the best out of Hollands Landing and Seacombe, which can be a nightmare to fish, with

Big lures are needed at times to wake up the larger flathead, like this 69cm dusky from Raymond Island. super-fast flowing water and deep, thick snags. Of interest to me is that Mario now uses 8lb leaders in the area, having dropped down from 12lb and 10lb in years gone by. All I can say is, he’s a braver angler than me! It’s very hard to talk about bream these days without mentioning the Kohte brothers. This time, Justin got a turn. Once again, he stalked his local jetties, and his best day produced a stunning bag of fish. On that occasion he landed 20-odd bream ranging from 30-44cm. Five of the fish were 44cm, three were 43cm,

and one was 40cm. Adjusting those fish back to fork length, and then using the current ABT weight-to-length table, that would give Justin a bag of bream going at least 6.5kg. Justin generally runs 6-10lb leaders, and does well to keep nasty bream from wrapping him around the structure – although I think a few battles end in disaster for sure! While actually fishing on the jetties themselves, fishing light makes the battle fraught with danger by pulling the bream into structure, unlike from a boat where you can haul them away from linebreaking timber.

A constantly changing fishery LAKES ENTRANCE

Steven Pryke

A 75cm flathead caught and released by Brodie Metherell in the eastern end of the Gippy Lakes. The boys also said the flatties were all big fish, around 60-75cm and maybe bigger. It was time to investigate. On a stunning calm day, a good buddy joined me with our target being big flathead, hopefully 70cm and bigger. 86 APRIL 2023

multiple lures over those same fish. I then put a much bigger soft plastic on, and immediately got results. Over the next two hours I hooked six big duskies, all 55cm and bigger. I landed

The Gippsland Lakes is a constantly changing fishery. It continues to improve and has become known for the biggest bream in the country, drawing many anglers to the region. LAKES ENTANCE King George whiting are staple in our lakes these days, with all the weed beds from Lakes Entrance to Paynesville producing good numbers of whiting. Traditional bait fishing techniques work best, with baits such as pipi and muscle always being a deadly approach. As the whiting have been so thick lately, I’ve had good fun throwing small soft plastics at them, such as Gulp Crabbys and Worms. These small bite size plastics have been hard for the whiting to pass up. The big key to success is finding a jighead with the right size hook for whiting, as typically the hook is a

Lake Tyers has really turned on the bream this season. bit too big making it hard for hook ups. Tailor have been crazy through the lakes. They are commonly seen blowing up on the surface smashing the local bait fish to pieces. This has made for some amazing fishing, throwing small surface lures at these massive packs of tailor has been great

fun but expensive! Short wire traces or heavy fluorocarbon is recommended, or you’ll find yourself emptying your wallet pretty quickly with these sharp toothed hunters. LAKE TYERS The lakes continue to impress over recent times, and Lake Tyres has really turned it on with the bream

fishing being some of the best I’ve ever seen. The many flats through the lower lake has been covered in tailing and feeding bream, commonly they have been up so shallow I’ve found myself jumping out of the boat and walking in ankle deep water casting at them. This top water


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.