FISHING, BOATING AND ADVENTURES
T
he continuation of La Nina weather conditions shouldn’t be surprising, after all, BOM had been forecasting it for months, but it has led to some disappointing fishing days. Halfway through January, the wind started to come in from the south and has been blowing up regularly, 20 knots and beyond. From land or a boat, it’s difficult to cast your bait where you want it, and the fish often haven’t seemed interested anyway! Even though summer really isn’t prime time for big flatheads, it’s usually possible to find smaller ones in the deep gutters, but there hasn’t been much luck lately. Sand whiting, too, are very hard to find – the beaches have often been too windy, and the Passage might be just a little too murky. Other fish have been easier to catch over the last month. Plenty of bream are coming in from different spots and they haven’t been fussy about the bait, either. Cameron and his family were up at Ningi
Creek on a fast-falling tide, with prawns and mullet gut, when they caught 5 breams, all of them more than 30cm. Nick and Josh caught some big bream at Banksia Beach, using squid; they also got a nice snapper and one lonely sand whiting. The bridge has been a good spot to try fishing over the past month, at least when the wind isn’t making it uncomfortable. Robin took a few mates out there a couple of weeks ago, to fish through the bottom of the tide. With prawns and chicken fillet, they scored 5 Venus tusk fish (32cm+), 3 bream (33cm+) and 5 sweetlips (33cm+). Jonah and Simone were also at the bridge, when they caught 6 bream and a big sweetlip, using pillies. Drifting on the falling tide on the south side of the bridge, from the lock entrance towards Bongaree Jetty often yields a good catch. Usually, it’s more successful if you try a neap tide, and float along about 100m off the beach. Lynda
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was on the other side, drifting past the green markers when she caught a snapper and “the biggest sweetlip ever”. Prawns are just now building in numbers – the trawlers have been bringing good loads of prawns from Moreton Bay, but there are plenty of opportunities for you to net some yourself in the Passage. Schools of big ones can be seen skipping over the water at night or early mornings – the recent rains are growing them and drawing them out from the creeks, which all hold prawns at this time of year. It’s all very well seeing them but finding a school when you’re out with a cast-net is not always easy! The only way is to get out and have a good look around, especially after another flushing spell of rain. Ningi, Elimbah, Bullock or Glass Mountain are all good creeks to try out. Look for any inside bends in the creeks, where deeper holes form, or dropoffs in the Passage, or even try the flows of water away from
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the mangroves on the falling tide. The Pumicestone Passage creeks are fairly shallow - any holes where prawns school up are pretty small, so prawning here is very affected by the tides. Be ready to start casting your net about halfway through the falling tide. Generally, that’s the best time to get prawns, when they school up in those sections of deeper water. There’s usually only a short window of opportunity; prawns move about quickly and often disappear when the tide drops out of the creeks, or they might spread out again when the first of the rising tide comes back in. A lot of people seem to rely on a sounder and an electric motor these days, poking around and hoping to see a school on the screen before they cast the net. That’s perhaps more efficient but there’s nothing wrong with the old-fashioned timewaster method. At least there’ll be plenty of opportunities to practice your cast-net technique. There are even
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