Fishing Monthly Magazine | September 2021

Page 28

OLD

Pelagics on form WHITSUNDAYS

Mick Underwood

We’ve been fortunate enough the last few weeks to be able to enjoy a bit of a pelagic paradise in the Whitsundays. As you can see by this month’s photos, I haven’t

Out at the outer reef, as always, there have been some good bags of coral trout and red throat emperor caught. Judging by the tales that I have been told, the Spanish mackerel population have also been on fire out there. On the fringing reefs around any inner islands,

like picking fruit off a tree. Okay, it is time to get into September now and I for one are excited about that. It is the change of seasons and spring is in the air. I have noticed over recent years that other contributors to this magazine from all over the country all get excited about the spring fishing on their turf as well. All over Australia, both in the fresh and the salt, multitudes of species will be starting to awaken from their winter slumber and begin to get active. Active also means hungry and that’s the important thing for us

The author with a metre-plus acrobatic queeny on fly.

Simon Young was rapt to catch this trout, they didn’t play the game too well last month. bothered too much about any reef fish particularly on the inshore grounds, for me it’s been all about big tropical speedsters. To add to the goodness of it all, the weather hasn’t been too bad either. We’ve had a few blustery patches but in general the conditions recently have been mostly ideal and we’ve all been able to fish in open water on most days.

the reef fishing is struggle street but that is kind of typical for the middle of winter. There are a few astute and super keen trout anglers about who are still getting a feed but they are having to work fairly hard to get the results. The inshore pelagic fishing though is a completely different story – it is simply scintillating! The leaders in the charge at the

Tuna have started to show up. They are still a bit cagey but around the turn of the tide they have been a feasible target. Reel Addiction we caught our first one in June this season and we have been getting tangled up with them regularly since. In the Whitsundays, spring is prime time for little black marlin and sailfish. Given how good and early the bite has started this year I have high hopes that plenty of these stunning fish will be caught through September, October and

November. Each year during the billfish bite I notice that there are quite a few guys and gals out there successfully breaking their billfish virginity. This is awesome and I love to see it. But what I notice each year is that a lot of virginity breaking anglers choose to kill their first fish or allow it to die by either being poorly handled or being left out of the

water for too long. If you are not aware, they are not quality table fare, in fact in my opinion they are pretty average. Where possible, get a quick couple of photos, leaving the fish in the water is best if possible and then release the fish again. If the fish has had a hard fight and is showing signs of fatigue, swim the fish next to the boat first until it is ready to go again. You will know when it’s time to release, the fish will give a little kick or two to let you know. It is as if they are telling you, ‘righto, I’m good now you can let me go’. They may not be the best deep fried in a bit of batter but as a sports fish they are one of Mother Nature’s best gifts to us. So if you haven’t got one on your caught list yet why not put a bit of time and have a go, you won’t be disappointed. It’s not all about sports fish this month there will be plenty of other tasty offerings to target. We still get to catch a pile of Spanish mackerel in September, but this is generally the last good month for them. As the water temps begin to climb these fish will

Sometimes you just have to be lucky. Anglers on board Reel Addiction have caught plenty of these guys recently, and Tyler caught his on a piece of pilchard and no wire drifting on the bottom. I have mostly chased pelagics recently but there have still been plenty of reef fish caught. They have come mostly from the deeper shoaly patches out in the shipping lanes or the outer reef. Some of the nannygai that I have seen coming home from the ‘shoals’ have been huge and there have been some nice red emperor mixed in with them as well. 28

SEPTEMBER 2021

moment are some monster queenfish and golden trevally. A couple of days ago I was trolling lures and jigging plastics on a school of queenfish that I would have to guess at being 500 to 600 fish in quantity and not one animal was under a metre in length, that was pretty cool. It can be insane at this time of the year and when you come across fish in numbers like that, it’s

anglers. Not only will there be fresh species coming on the chew, the winter bite will still also be there. For me that means I will still be able to keep chasing Spanish mackerel and, as an added bonus, billfish will be a more feasible target as well. On that one for a moment, the local billfish season has got off to a solid and early start this year. On

Big golden trevally haven’t been hard to come by and they continually surprise people as to how strong they are.


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Articles inside

Track My Fish

17min
pages 104-105

Freshwater

12min
pages 102-103

Karratha

7min
page 101

Mandurah

5min
page 97

Lancelin

5min
page 98

Metro

4min
page 96

Bunbury

4min
page 95

WESTERN AUSTRALIA Esperance

5min
page 93

Augusta

4min
page 94

Recfishwest

4min
page 92

WIRF

10min
pages 90-91

Ballarat

5min
page 87

Wangaratta

4min
page 86

Mallacoota

4min
page 83

Port Phillip West

3min
page 78

Gippsland Lakes

5min
pages 80-81

Port Phillip East

6min
page 79

Geelong

6min
pages 76-77

Offshore

5min
page 70

Canberra

5min
pages 68-69

Hunter Valley

5min
page 65

New England Rivers

3min
page 64

Central Coast

8min
page 59

Batemans Bay

4min
page 61

Illawarra

7min
page 60

Ballina

4min
page 49

Coffs Coast

5min
pages 52-53

Sydney North

6min
page 47

Mackerel under the microscope

11min
pages 38-39

Sydney Rock

4min
page 46

Sydney South

4min
page 48

Sheik of the Creek

6min
page 41

Sustainability for snapper stocks

6min
page 40

Freshwater

14min
pages 36-37

Townsville

5min
page 30

Jumpinpin

4min
pages 14-15

Mackay

6min
page 26

Starlo’s back to basics

4min
pages 10-11

Noosa

5min
page 21

Northern Bay

5min
page 20

Southern Bay

3min
pages 16-17

QUEENSLAND Gold Coast

5min
pages 12-13

Whitsundays

8min
pages 28-29
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