Fishing Monthly Magazine | September 2022

Page 26

Southern

OLD

Back to normal for the bay BRISBANE

Gordon Macdonald masterbaitertackle@hotmail.com

Wi t h warming temperatures during the coming weeks, September promises some varied fishing for those venturing out on the water. With the snapper closure over, fishing routines will be back to normal for most in Moreton Bay. Pelagic numbers will be increasing and there will still be numbers or squid and cuttlefish about. Crabbing will be improving as water temperatures rise and a great mix of demersal and pelagic species will be on offer. Let’s look at more of your Moreton Bay options.

SCHOOL MACKEREL Numbers of these tasty speedsters will be increasing over the coming month, especially in the major channel systems. The Rous, Rainbow, Kianga and Pearl channels are all viable options over the coming weeks. Mackerel are often in considerable numbers in these areas and getting a full bag limit of ten fish over 50cm can often be fairly easy. As the tide starts to rise, the schoolies will roam through these channels until the water rises and they can proceed onto the adjacent bank’s areas to feed. As the tide starts to fall, the school mackerel will again move into the channels, often patrolling the edges awaiting the baitfish, cephalopods

and other morsels that are forced from the flats by the receding waters. Catching these fish is often easy and can be achieved with both baits and lures. Drifting the channels with a gang-hook rigged pilchard aft is a fun way to score a few schoolies and allows you to fish fairly light line. Small, deep diving minnow lures can be trolled on light line to entice a few strikes. More commonly, anglers troll spoon lures behind paravanes for good results on school mackerel and other species. The paravane is responsible for getting the lure down into the strike zone and is usually deployed 20-30m behind the boat. The spoon is a further 4-5m

With warmer water temperatures, pelagics such as school mackerel will be readily caught. This one ate a Kimberley spoon trolled behind a paravane.

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SEPTEMBER 2022

behind the paravane and a swivel (preferably ball bearing) is essential in front of the spoon to eliminate twist with the rapidly spinning lure. This rig is generally trolled at speeds between 4-6 knots and can be set up on a 40-60lb handline or a heavy (minimum 30lb) rod and reel outfit. Once a strike is received, the paravane will flip over and plane towards the surface. Common spoons to use include the Halco No.3 and No.4 Barra Drone and Kimberley Spoon and the Macka Spoons. I have also used the Aussie made 35g and 50g Flasha Lures with success. The various beacons scattered throughout the central and northern bay will also hold decent numbers of fish at times during September. These can be fished by dropping pilchards adjacent to the structures and then drifting away, or by vertically spinning with chromed slugs and slices. Once the lure is allowed to sink close to the bottom adjacent to the structure, it is then wound back to the surface flat out. You cannot wind too fast. If the mackerel are following yet not striking then you are not winding fast enough. The occasional bout of surface activity may be found, however it is more common that the mackerel will be located deeper in the water column in the channels, around the artificial reefs and the bay island surrounds. A couple of mackerel will guarantee a tasty feed so having a pilchard drifting aft whilst fishing any of these spots can be well worthwhile. SNAPPER After the snapper closure finished mid-August many anglers were back out targeting their favoured table fare and sportfish. Both the quantity and quality of snapper encountered this year has been excellent, mainly due to regular rains, which have flushed valuable nutrients into the system. This has not only promoted healthy baitfish and crustacean numbers but has also decreased water clarity resulting in larger fish feeling comfortable to enter and feed in the shallower bay waters. Anglers have achieved great results around the artificial reefs, bay island margins, lower reaches of the Brisbane River and the numerous wrecks and other structures scattered throughout Moreton Bay. Although there has been numerous 80cm+ specimens caught, it is the number of 40-60cm snapper that has been surprising. These are a great eating sized fish and

Chris with a trophy class mulloway taken while casting lures near Mud Island. are less wary than the larger specimens in general. I prefer to eat mulloway than snapper but they remain one of the more desirable table fish for many. The artificial reefs provide anglers with plenty of opportunity to score a few quality specimens, however, like many spots they can shut down with excessive boat traffic. The Harry Atkinson, Coochiemudlo, Peel, Curtin and Bill Turner artificials are all great places to score snapper and numerous other species. For anglers into lure fishing, these depths provide opportunity to use soft vibes, numerous soft plastics, blades, micro jigs and even trolled minnow lures. Any quality baits will entice snapper including pilchards, fillet baits, large banana prawns, slimey mackerel, yakkas, herring and pike. These baits are best fished lightly weighted and with hooks well hidden with just the points proud. Quality snapper fishing should be experienced for several months yet so you have plenty of opportunity to get amongst them. CEPHALOPODS Although water temperatures are starting to rise, there will still be plenty of quality tiger and arrow squid to be caught. If water clarity is good inshore (not too much rain) then the foreshore areas will still hold squid for the land-based fraternity to chase. Further out in the bay, the shallows around the bay islands, weed beds north of Tangalooma, the discoloured edges in the upper Rous Channel and other locations where clean water flows over weed beds, reef, rock or rubble are likely to produce. Even in the middle of the main channel squid can often

be found, especially arrows. Casting egi in shallow areas and working them back to the boat in a series of hops or a stop and start retrieve will usually work well. In deeper areas, drifting an egi or baited skewer under a float, even whilst targeting other species, will produce a few squid, especially big tigers. The deeper channel running from the Ormiston area to the front of Green Island is a good bet for a few cuttlefish. This area is best drifted with egi, however you will need to add weight or present them on a paternoster rig to get them close to the bottom. This same presentation will work in areas such as the outer edge of the Harry Atkinson and also the area where the Small Ships Channel meets the western end of the Rous Channel. FLATHEAD September is a great month for anglers to target flathead, especially duskies that are congregating in the estuaries getting ready to breed. Commonly one large female is surrounded by several smaller males, who are all biding to be the chosen one. Commonly several fish can be taken in a small area with consecutive casts. If you are trolling and hook a fish then a second, third or fourth pass over the same ground is advisable as it is highly likely that several others will be in attendance. Understanding a flathead’s movements will greatly increase your catch rate. On the lower stages of the tide flathead will reside in and move through the channels. As the tide rises, they will take up spots along the edges of the channels and then move up onto the flats once the water level is


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Boat Test: Whittley CR2380

5min
pages 120-124

Freshwater

10min
pages 116-117

Exmouth

3min
page 115

Karratha

4min
page 114

Kalbarri

5min
page 113

Mandurah

3min
pages 108-109

Lancelin

3min
page 112

Eildon

4min
pages 98-99

WIRF

5min
pages 100-101

Augusta

6min
page 107

Ballarat

8min
page 95

Shepparton

4min
page 94

Port Albert

7min
page 89

Port Phillip

5min
page 86

Hobart

6min
page 79

Geelong

10min
pages 82-83

Canberra

5min
page 77

Offshore

3min
page 78

Phillip Island

5min
page 87

New England Rivers

3min
page 76

Batlow

5min
page 75

Swansea

7min
page 69

Central Coast

4min
page 68

Coffs Coast

6min
pages 62-63

Port Stephens

4min
page 66

Sydney South

4min
page 58

Sydney North

5min
page 57

State Fisheries Advisory Groups

11min
pages 50-51

Freshwater

16min
pages 46-49

Cooktown

5min
pages 41-42

Townsville

4min
page 38

Mackay

5min
pages 36-37

Hinchinbrook

4min
page 39

Cape York

3min
pages 44-45

Bundaberg

8min
pages 34-35

Starlo’s: Trolling tips and tricks

4min
pages 12-15

Gold Coast

7min
pages 18-21

Noosa

5min
pages 30-33

Brisbane

12min
pages 26-27

Northern Bay

5min
pages 28-29

REGULAR FEATURES Grass sweetlip reef catches

11min
pages 8-11

Jumpinpin

2min
pages 22-23

QUEENSLAND The Tweed

5min
pages 16-17
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