Fishing Monthly Magazine | January 2023

Page 116

North Coast

WA

Barra, threadfin and mud crabs on the menu DAMPIER/KARRATHA

Troy Honey

Another year of great Pilbara fishing behind us and looking forward to an even better year ahead. Wet season is setting up nicely for 2023 with barra and threadies being caught in many of the

creeks along the coast. Fewer and smaller tropical storms are forecasted for the remainder of the season, which will flush the creek systems and set the region up nicely for plenty of enjoyable camping and fishing throughout the year. Looking back first, the annual Estuary Challenge by King Bay Fishing Club

Local angler Josh Mullen headed out to a local creek working the tides, which resulted in Josh landing two solid barra.

Top and above: Ricky Mclean continues to prove his knowledge of barra fishing in Karratha by landing more healthy specimens.

was held late November with 231 fish caught during the comp from 21 teams and 58 anglers. A total of 12 barra, 111 jacks, 38 salmon, 32 queenies, 3 tripletail and 35 fingermark. The longest barra went 890mm and longest threadie went 980mm. The water temp was still quite cool for the comp, hence the low numbers of barra but still highlights the quality of the fishery in the Karratha region with such a diverse range of species. Most notable information to come out of the comp was the presence of a 2-3m saltwater crocodile in Airport Creek in Nickol Bay that was spotted by various competitors, with one even managing to get a side scan image of it. Crocs very occasionally

visit the waters around Karratha, they have been seen further south with a few confirmed reports over the years, in the Ashburton River for example, further south below Onslow. It is a timely reminder to always be vigilant when around the creek systems and coastline, especially in murky waters or dawn, dusk, or night-time. Airport Creek is only a stone’s throw from the popular swimming beach of Hearsons Cove, where many families head for a swim. A croc of this size could easily be a problem for smaller children. The water temp in the creeks and further offshore has risen considerably since the comp and we are above the prime temp of 29ºC for barra to fire up, and the many catches

that are coming in during December are confirmation of that. Both lures and live baits are working well with the former being the preferred option by most anglers and either trolled or cast have been successful. Threadies have been the predominate species caught when trolling lures throughout the creek systems in Karratha with anglers fishing the larger spring tides having no problem achieving their bag limit of healthy size salmon. Mud crabs have been caught in good numbers and size over the last month with the full moon period being the most productive. Muddies use the moonlight to hunt at night and also the bigger tides soak the mangroves, indicating to muddies it’s time to hunt and use the stronger tidal

movement to travel in easier in search for food. Offshore there is plenty of action to look forward to during January. Spanish mackerel are still being caught and there are some very large GTs pushing anglers beyond their limits. All of the shoals and shallow ledges are holding mackies, queenies and GTs. Bluebone continue to be the dominate demersal species being caught around coastal and island waters off Dampier, Cleaverville and Point Samson, with coral trout not far behind them. Both species have very healthy populations but need to be preserved as there have been both visitors and locals taking undersize fish, which can severely impact the required breeding stocks. Other species such To page 117 (Karratha)

Striking gold over the flats EXMOUTH

Barry Taylor

This month’s report has been supplied by Josh Cheong The fishing in late November/early December was a bit slow. I’m not sure whether it was to do with the tides or weather, but regardless, everything from inshore to offshore was a bit more quiet than usual for that time of year. However, we are now starting to hear more reports of blue marlin after a slow start to the season. We had seen the odd blue and sail being caught earlier in the season, but there were a lot of hours between fish – until now. Inshore there are still a few mackerel around, ranging from approx. 10-20kg, being taken 116

JANUARY 2023

on stickbaits and trolling. Choice lures include bigger floating stickbaits like the Riptide 200 or, if you’re

trolling, shallow or deep diving lures in the 190mm size, such as the Laser Pro or Samaki Pacemaker.

Anglers are still picking up the odd sailfish in the Gulf. We haven’t seen red-hot fishing or

Giant herring have a distinctive scale pattern. @indepthangler_josh.

An idyllic summer’s day. Image courtesy of @indepthangler_josh.

big numbers, but the guys chasing them are coming across a few fish. The sails do seem to be pushing a bit further down into the gulf,

so we should start seeing more coming down to the King Reef area and Cooper Shoal soon. To page 117 (Exmouth)


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Boat Test: Edencraft 6m Offshore

10min
pages 122-128

Freshwater

7min
pages 118-119

Exmouth

5min
page 117

Karratha

4min
page 116

Mandurah

6min
page 113

Lancelin

3min
page 114

Kalbarri

5min
page 115

Metro

4min
page 112

Augusta

5min
page 111

Tournaments

21min
pages 105-109

Victorian Angler Diaries

7min
page 104

Hobart

5min
page 103

Offshore

7min
page 102

Eildon

3min
page 100

Crater Lakes

6min
page 99

Ballarat

3min
page 98

Bendigo

7min
page 96

Wangaratta

4min
page 95

Gippsland Lakes

5min
page 90

Phillip Island

7min
page 89

Port Phillip East

5min
pages 86-87

Port Phillip West

4min
page 88

New England Rivers

5min
page 79

Canberra

4min
page 80

Hunter Valley

5min
page 78

Batlow

5min
page 77

Albany/Wodonga

3min
page 76

Batemans Bay

6min
page 73

Illawarra

8min
page 72

Central Coast

4min
page 70

Port Stephens

5min
page 69

Swansea

6min
page 71

Coffs Coast

5min
pages 66-67

Forster

4min
page 68

Sydney South

5min
pages 62-63

Testing Booth: Tackle Tactics

10min
pages 56-57

Freshwater

14min
pages 48-49

Cape York

6min
pages 44-47

Mackay

5min
pages 34-35

Cooktown

4min
pages 42-43

Kayak: Budds Beach

11min
pages 50-52

Sheik of the Creek

3min
pages 53-55

Bundaberg

6min
pages 32-33

Noosa

5min
pages 30-31

Southern Bay

3min
pages 24-25

REGULAR FEATURES What’s luck got to do with it?

13min
pages 8-11

Jumpinpin

3min
pages 22-23

Starlo: snapper on plastics

4min
pages 12-15

QUEENSLAND The Tweed

6min
pages 16-17

Brisbane

12min
pages 26-27

Northern Bay

6min
pages 28-29
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