Fishing Monthly Magazine | January 2023

Page 42

OLD

Glass out conditions COOKTOWN

Justin Coventry

The weather has been great with some amazingly calm days and lots of opportunity to head out further to discover new

nannygai there waiting for an easy feed. That first drop and the sudden take as the reel goes ballistic and reel screams its head off as the fish does its initial run. The way they fight you think you have hooked a shark until the fight starts

ends up attacking your bait at some stage that produces a fight to remember. Once landed it has not much strength left in it and will take some time to revive before letting go. Also, the swim bladder will need deflating – it can be done easily enough through the side of the fish with either a thin knife and a twist to let air out or a large needle if you have one. Pushing down on the stomach as you do so helps push air out of the hole as well. Cod are hardy creatures and will swim away and hopefully survive the experience. The position of entry on the side is crossover from 4 spine on top fin and in line with the dorsal fin. You will know when you reach it as you will hear the release of air. There is a theory that the big cod help to keep the wonky hole open and clean so releasing it is a good idea and, although small gold spot are nice eating, large ones are best released. Finding new spots is

Jen with a decent sized coral trout. such a fast rate that it’s going to make any structure out on the reef hard to escape anglers. The fishing regulations are also increasing, along with the pressure increasing on our fish stocks. Hopefully they manage it well as the fish are running out of places to

hide apart from protected areas. Anyway, great to see more options available but we still need to always be aware of our actions so we don’t over fish a resource. I often wonder at the size of the large mouth nannies on some wonkies and think it might be that they breed there, or is it

Sam Ryder’s mangrove jack he caught from the wharf. ground. There’s nothing better than to find a new spot and pull some large fish up from the bottom. My favourite would be finding a new wonky hole with bait all over it. You know there is going to be a hungry largemouth

to wain and then you see the 10kg shiny red coming up to the surface. Such a nice fish and so nice to eat. Most of these areas have a resident bar check trout, which does nicely for the esky, but it’s the big gold spot cod that often Dan is certainly pleased with this largemouth nannygai.

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getting easier with the electronics available these days and the mapping. The ocean’s secrets areas are getting smaller and with side imaging covering a large scan area and searching for new spots has become so much easier. I still remember using a paper sounder to find the edge of a reef, mind you we did catch plenty of fish then too. Then came the GPS and once you found a good spot you had it for life, so no problems revisiting it to catch more. Now with electric motors with spot lock GPS the little bumps in deep water are easy to check and doesn’t have the same issues skippers had when they had to try to anchor on these spots. The technology in fishing is advancing at

just the fact they have been hidden for such a long time? Fish travel and sometimes fish school at a spot, so I’m unsure. More research is needed. So not over fishing a spot allows it to produce for further trips and replenishment. The local wharf has seen some big days with large schools of herrings shadowing the waters. Lots of predators coming in and out with the tide. There have been some nice mackerel and trevally around with some decent mangrove jack caught recently. Large schools of barramundi are still present and often caught on people using vibes around the wharf. Releasing them careful back into the water is a must. I’m looking forward to next month when the season opens. The wet season should see some more flow and dirty water around the wharf but conditions will see lots of calm weather for reef fishing and some great opportunities to search around for some new spots.

Morgan with a nice trevally from Cooktown Wharf.


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Articles inside

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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