Fishing Monthly Magazine | June 2023

Page 83

VIC

East Coast

Here come the salmon and perch PORT ALBERT

Brett Geddes b.geddes@bigpond.com

It’s that time of year again to get ready for the salmon and perch, which have both arrived early this season. However, first up for this report I’m starting off with some tips on where and how to fish the jetties as winter begins. PORT ALBERT JETTIES Even if it’s too windy and cold for boating, keen anglers can always rug up

and catch a wide variety of fish from the safety of the top-quality jetties in the area. The jetties are kid friendly, suitable for wheelchairs and there’s room for dozens of anglers. They often have permanent rod holders and cleaning tables, and at Port Albert you have a fish and chip shop on the jetty right next to you. Just recently I saw a couple of anglers set up for a big afternoon, with plans to fish well into the night with bluebait and squid. They ended up catching

The cooler weather means you need to get your squid jigs in order, and they have arrived early this year. fairly brisk rate. When you detect a few bumps or knocks, just slow the lure right down and let the bream eat it. You cover vast areas of water and often stumble across small, tight schools of bream or get a by-catch of flathead and even whiting. TAILOR One very noticeable difference this year are the prodigious numbers of big tailor that are found almost everywhere across the whole Gippy Lakes. There have been countless numbers busting up on bait at Hollands, and it’s nothing to hook 20 or more if you target them. They range from 35-50cm, and make for top sport if the bream and flathead are shut down. I seem to hook at least four or five every trip to that area while I’m really only chasing the big bream. I have kept a few tailor to eat, and I’ve discovered they are excellent eating as sashimi with sesame oil, chilli jam and honey soy. Toothy tailor will always remain a pesky and costly lure thief, but I will now look forward to keeping a couple for some raw fish dining.

trevally, good tailor, nice flathead to 36cm and heaps of small salmon, all from the same spot and working the changing tides. My best tip is to cast one bait out wide and drop another one down beside the pylons, and eventually the fish will ‘tell you’ where to cast. The new Port Welshpool jetty is an impressive structure at 800m long, and flathead, salmon, garfish, whiting, leatherjackets, and squid are a regular catch. The jetty extends right out into deeper water, where you also have a chance of catching a kingfish or a nice snapper. Quite a few anglers fish the jetties well into the night, and target squid with a whole range of coloured jigs. If you can find ink-stained areas on a jetty as you walk its, length you can bet the locals have been busy, and it will be one of their hotspots. SALMON ON LURES The early run of salmon has been a nice surprise this winter, and although the big fish have yet to arrive, the schools of smaller fish have been bigger than usual. The real hotspots for salmon are the entrance areas of McLaughlins and Manns, especially two hours each side of high tide. The interesting thing I’ve found just recently is that these salmon have pushed deep into the estuary, and can be caught almost anywhere you have deeper channels. You will at times locate the schools while busting up on bait, however I also find that allowing your lure to sink to

the bottom before you begin your retrieve can be even more effective. Salmon can often school up very deep, and won’t always rise to faster lures near the surface. Besides, by fishing deep and slow you can also jag a few flatties, too. THUMPER EP Estuary perch are, for the most part, fairly easy to trick when lures are cast accurately along weed beds or deep into structure. However, they are a hard species to locate. They are incredibly mobile, and just when you think you’ve worked them out and found them in big numbers, they will disappear overnight. Sometimes never to return for years! At other times perch can do the reverse and turn up in huge numbers where you have never caught them before. It was a total surprise to me while fishing one of the many creeks and rivers of South Gippy that I bumped into an absolute trophy perch after hours of finding nothing. I was about to call an end to my perch search for that morning, and go and chase flathead, when I nearly had the rod pulled out of my hands. I eventually netted one of the best EP I’ve ever caught.

A very happy author with a 54cm and 2.61kg perch caught on a Tomahawk Sprat 65 soft plastic. back with the flow to make sure you cover the whole water column. At dead low tide, find the deepest holes you can and work your jigs in a teabag method, and vary the retrieve from super slow to a few fast rips and a pause. The best-known trick when catching squid is to cast another jig in behind the squid you’re about to

land. More often than not, there will be one or more squid following behind. It even pays to leave your catch in the water until someone else can cast behind you. Check with the locals before heading out because the best squid locations can vary from week to week, and pay attention to which channels other boats are drifting along.

Salmon are possibly the best fun on lures. Justin Deenan loves to chase them on the surface, or with lures worked deep.

The bigger flathead are moving up into Lake Victoria as water temperatures drop.

At 54cm and a whopping 2.61kg, she swam away strongly after a few quick pictures. For the record, that EP ate a Hurricane Sprat 65 in the Tomahawk pattern on a lightly weighted size 2 jighead. The cooler months can be prime time for chasing EP, as they often push far up into the rivers, so that’s where I’ll concentrate my efforts next. WINTER SQUID The best time to target squid is about two hours each side of the high tide. Size 3.0 and 3.5 jigs are your best bet, and if the tide is flowing fast, cast upstream into the current and retrieve your jig

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03 5687 1385 JUNE 2023 83


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GEN III

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pages 118-119

Anglapro Sniper 444 PRO with Yamaha T60 4-stroke

3min
pages 116-117

Healey Drops 5.24kg on Final Day for Hawkesbury win

5min
pages 112-114

at Sydney BREAM event

3min
pages 111-112

Morgan completes rare Open double

3min
page 110

Morgan doubles up on epic run to take BASS Open

6min
pages 108-110

2023 World Sooty Championship

4min
page 107

2023 Great Northern Cod Nationals

3min
page 107

ECBS ROUND 2 RESULTS

2min
page 106

Trout and redfin are flourishing

7min
pages 104-106

Pilbara visitor paradise

3min
page 102

Demersal $10m support package

3min
page 101

Watch out, there’s sharks about

1min
page 101

Glory between the chill

3min
page 100

Scratching that itch

4min
page 99

Going beach prospecting is well worth it

2min
page 98

It’s salmon time, baby

4min
page 97

Prepare for a land-based assault

4min
page 96

Cool winter nights fishing off the beach

1min
page 96

Spying on yellowtail kingfish

1min
page 95

Victoria’s fishing licence: how to boost revenue

7min
pages 94-95

Pick your day and pick your location this month

6min
page 93

New releases from Daiwa

2min
page 92

Making the most of winter weather windows

1min
page 92

Aggressive pre-spawn trout are on the chew

1min
page 91

Luring up some tasty redfin at Lake Elingamite

1min
page 91

The winter bite is underway

4min
page 90

There are fewer fish but bigger sizes this month

2min
page 89

Locals catching crankbait-crunching golden perch

2min
page 89

Time to take winter walks along the river banks

2min
page 88

Putting in the hard yards is producing the goods

4min
page 86

The fishing at the moment is full-on in the flow

1min
page 86

Scoring cool catches on our chilly local beaches

1min
page 85

Rec Reef renamed to Rhys Reef

2min
page 84

Heading down to the beach in June

0
page 84

Here come the salmon and perch

4min
page 83

TTs supports oyster reefs

2min
page 82

Winter whiting, flathead and bream on offer

1min
page 82

More fish habitat into the Gippsland Lakes

0
page 81

Closure at Lake Wendouree

3min
page 80

Bracing for bigger bluefin tuna

1min
page 80

The fishing is still going strong

4min
pages 78-79

Trial by ice in the UK

5min
page 77

Great time to target southern calamari

1min
page 77

Local catches are well worth the numb toes

3min
page 76

Attractive options for freshwater anglers in June

2min
page 75

Bream and EP are still active in the estuaries

1min
page 75

It’s happy days in Portland for offshore anglers

2min
page 74

The best spots to focus your efforts

4min
page 73

Last chance to fish for wild trout

5min
page 72

Fish are heading down deep for the winter months

3min
page 71

Hunting for big, fat Murray cod

2min
page 70

Tathra Wharf gets upgraded with a new makeover

1min
pages 68-69

Some big fish down south

1min
page 68

NEW FROM RAPALA! RAP-V BLADED JIG

0
page 67

Enjoying cool, crisp days fishing in Batemans Bay

5min
page 66

Making the most of all that’s on offer in June

6min
page 65

Lake Mac trolling in a winter wonderland

3min
page 64

Anglers cashing in on the crossover period

3min
page 63

Focusing on targeting the right species this month

2min
page 62

Great time for targeting snapper

3min
page 61

Deep drop fishing at Macquarie

2min
page 60

Keep an eye on those offshore water temps

3min
page 59

Abuzz with the epic run of mulloway

2min
page 58

Tempting winter fish with fresh baits

5min
pages 56-57

Shore-based anglers reap the winter rewards

6min
pages 54-55

Soft plastic prawns are picking up the pace

3min
page 53

DPI crackdown on taking invertebrates

2min
page 52

Winter species are becoming more numerous

1min
page 52

THE FREEDOM To Escape.

5min
pages 48-51

Gary’s Marine Centre

8min
pages 46-47

Make the most of the mixed species

1min
page 46

Tagging Tales

2min
page 43

Baffled, but not broken!

5min
pages 42-43

June fishing is jumping

2min
page 40

Big bountiful barra

3min
pages 38-39

New dynamics in FNQ

2min
page 37

Cold water tactics

1min
page 37

Time to head upstream

2min
page 36

Smaller lures and lighter gear work well in winter

4min
pages 34-35

Expect the unexpected in the coming weeks

6min
pages 32-33

Celebrating a year of the Women in Recreational Fishing Network Queensland

0
page 31

Ready to land the fish of a LIFETIME?

0
page 31

New rules for Spanish mackerel start 1 July World Oceans Day:

0
page 30

Cool changes make a difference to fishing tactics

4min
pages 28-30

Calm winter fishing approaches

6min
page 26

It’s worth braving the cold

9min
pages 24-25

Mountains of mulloway

2min
pages 22-23

PROVEN WORLD LEADING ANCHOR DESIGNS

1min
pages 18-19

School migrations move north

2min
page 18

Beach gutters, rock ledges and headlands

4min
pages 16-17

Know the rules — no excuses!

2min
pages 14-15

PRECISION XTREME PENCIL

2min
pages 9-13

Making memories at Moura: catching saratoga

5min
pages 8-9
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