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Recfishwest's State-wide Fishing Report 6 January 2023 🎣

 | By Seamus on 1/6/2023 2:40:25 AM | Views (160)
Recfishwest Newsletter
Recfishwest
Fishing Report
06/01/23
Marco Fraschetti @oceansdownunder as always has your back for the best underwater snaps of great WA species. The electric green colouration of dolphin fish and his magic behind the lens are always a great combo. Make sure you check out his page! 
Our contributors
Sam Russell
John Dempsey
Peter Fullarton
Sedin Hasanovic 
G'day <>,

Hope you had a great Christmas and welcome to 2023! Plenty of great fishing snaps have rolled through over the holiday period so we're glad to see many of you had the chance to wind down and wet a line during the silly season. 

If you've got a cracking fish photo you want to send in remember to keep sending us your catches by tagging #recfishwest in your online posts! You can also follow and private message your catches to our Instagram page @recfishwest and make sure you let us know where and how you caught it!  

Keep up to date with events, clinics, news and amazing catches across WA by following our Instagram page @recfishwest and give our Recfishwest Facebook page a like!

For your photos to appear in the weekly fishing report, please make sure they reflect Recfishwest's responsible fish handling practices (fish held horizontally, no blood, hand under the belly, no fingers in gills, etc) just like the images below.

If you're planning to head out this week, stay safe, take plenty of photos and have fun! 

Jarrad Lawford

RECFISHWEST FISHING REPORT EDITOR

Pic of the Week!

There's your usual 'kidney slapper' of a King George whiting but fish this size are certified rib wreckers. Jaden Brennan caught this 58cm whopper recently at Windmills in Perth, which has been one of the more reliable metro spots for plucking these slippery beasts lately. 

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If you want to be included in our weekly State-wide Fishing Reports, send your best fishing photos and a description to jarrad@recfishwest.org.au to potentially be featured.
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Fishing for Science fish of the week -  GOLDEN TREVALLY   



Check out the Fishing for Science fish of the week, supported by the Fishing for Science team in Dampier and funded by Woodside Energy

Stay tuned for exciting 2023 news from our Fishing for Science initiative! 

Find out more about the Fishing for Science program here!

 

_______________________________________________________________

Recreational marron season starts this Sunday at noon until 5 February!

The marron season is kicking off from 12 noon, 8 January (this Sunday) until 12 noon, 5 February 2023 and we're in for a cracker of a season!

For the best tips on catching marron, rules and regulations and where to find them, click here! 

Broome catches
Jade Relph @relphfishwest has caught virtually every desired species you can think of in the northern regions of WA and this silver beast of a barra caught in one of the town's local river systems before the flooding helped him see out 2022 in style. 

Boats

Given the unprecedented flooding occurring through the Kimberley region at the moment, it's slammed the breaks on fishing unfortunately. According to the pros from Tackle World Broome, the amount of water flushing under the Fitzroy River per day is enough to supply all of Perth for 20 years, so it's clear there has been a serious amount of rain! The airport has been closed and the wind has also been howling at 30-40 knots consistently which hasn't helped. Locals will have to wait with patience until it dries out and hopefully the situation doesn't become worse, hang in there folks. 
 

Shore-based

No luck for the shore-based fishing either as the water is a mess from the rain and a lot of spots are completely underwater due to the flooding. Thankfully the next five days are so are warmer with minimal rain so hopefully it will dry out soon.  
Exmouth catches
One of the lesser-known mackerel caught around Exmouth is the broad barred, but they certainly make the reels sing just as much as their bigger Spanish cousins. Photo courtsey of @onstrikecharters. 

Boats

While it has been pretty windy for the last week or so, the first half of the day has been okay and allowed skippers to send it out for a quick session. Sailfish have been commonly sighted with a few boats having good luck on the troll further north and along the western side. For boats roaming the Muirons, there were plenty of cobia and tomato cod landed. Bottom bashing has been rather quiet for jigging, but baits have resulted in more fish. Some of the crew from Tackle World Exmouth headed out off the north-west tip and saw hundreds of dolphin fish in only 30m of water, which is quite an odd depth for this many fish. Stickbaits worked well for the school and they ranged from smaller to jumbo sizes. Spanish mackerel also performed best in the morning when it was calmer. Apart from the Muirons, most of the islands have been inaccessible due to the weather. Surprisingly, the squidding in the Gulf is still doing well, with a lot of locals spotting dozens of them in close off the marina rockwall being chased by dolphins. The Gulf has also been a fantastic spot for chasing whiting on surface lures and poppers and boats have had great luck flicking towards the shore. The mornings over the coming week are your best bet once again for a send as the south-westerly winds should be calmer before picking up at midday.

Shore-based

The rather strong westerly winds have caused most people to go the north tip or eastern side for better casting but Spangos and bluebone are still being caught on the western side throughout most mornings. Just keep an eye out for gutters and reef ledges and yeet your baits, plastics or stickbaits in there. The Gulf has been a great spot for a mix of species over the past couple of weeks, with queenies caught all the way to the bottom and the shoals on occasion. Mackies and trevally are being landed off the north east tip and are moving down into the shoals through the Gulf. The Bay of Rest also saw good numbers of smaller trevally and queenies. The whiting action is only getting better and will remain red hot for the next month or so through the Gulf, so make sure you give this a crack with surface lures and poppers. Learmonth Jetty has performed well for school mackies and bread and butter species. The mud crabs have been rather quiet but mostly due to less fishers targeting them. Lighter south westerly winds are coming in throughout the mornings this week which looks like the best time for a flick. 
 
 
Kalbarri catches


Boats

The mackie action has started to kick into gear over the past week or so. Trolling over any decent undulating ground generally to the south or around Red Bluff has worked well, although the water has been quite dirty and the luck has improved when it's cleaner. Out wider, there have been plenty of snapper, groper and rankin cod puled in from depths past 40m. Decent tailor and mulloway have been caught around the Sand Spit and in close towards the marina jetty. Oyster Reef and the river mouth have also been solid spots for tailor, while Chinamans provided plump whiting in the shallows. If you're chasing tailor or dart from the boats, early morning is the best window and Red Bluff and Wittecarra are the best spots at the moment. On calmer days, Eagle Gorge has also provided great tailor over 50cm. The mornings are still best until at least Thursday with those relaxed southerlies in the morning, although the swell this weekend is picking up until it drops by around Monday. 

Shore-based

Off a majority of the beaches there have been good tailor, but the best window to target them has definitely been the mornings well before 7:00am. The Sand Spit and marina jetty have been reliable spots for the smaller tailor and mulloway in good numbers, but for the larger catches of dart and tailor over 45cm, Oyster Reef, Red Bluff and Wittecarra worked best. Eagle Gorge on the calmer days is another great spot for larger tailor if you can handle the heat. Wagoe Beach has still been a very enjoyable spot for producing nice mulloway and pinkies off the rocks. For larger whiting, Chinamans has been the best spot and most fishers have been having luck off the platform. In the river, plenty of bream have been landed and the odd cod are mostly appearing further up river. Big thanks to Dean from Kalbarri Sports and Dive for his tips as always. 
Geraldton catches
Taxes and Mat Svenson @mat.svenson frequently catching silver freight trains off the Geraldton beaches. Some of the certainties in life. 


Boats

When the weather permitted, fishing off the mid-west through local towns such as Dongara, Jurien Bay and Geraldton produced some decent fish. Most boats located in Geraldton over the last week have stayed in close, preferring to fish inside the reef. Most were targeting tailor, herring and squid, along with the usual bread-and-butter species with impressive results. Further south, boats launching from Dongara hit up White Tops targeting some solid tailor, while those with bigger boats went to Irwin Reef and reported decent success landing the odd pink snapper and dhufish. A few boats also went to North Bank while the weather was calm in the morning and landed larger dhuies over 70cm and some Sambos. Near Jurien Bay, the fishing action has been red hot with a few boats chasing King George whiting and herring near Favourite Island. Slightly further out, pink snapper and dhufish have also been landed across most structure in depths of 25-50m. There is some very high winds and swell rolling through over the next few days across the mid-west which might make it pretty tough for boats, although the mornings are still your best window. 

Shore-based

Tailor have continued to fire in their summer pattern, with plenty of small to medium-sized fish. While most have been slender as opposed to the big and fat catches we generally see in winter, they still provide a great fight for their size. Tarcoola and Southgates has been very effective for tailor, with herring and dart also mixed in with the catches. Both north and south of Drummonds has been quite good as well, with fishers casting poppers and floating stick-baits for tailor above the reef landing some solid fish up to 50cm. The Greenough River mouth has also been quite rewarding for greenbacks. Off Lucy’s, plenty of tailor have been caught along with the odd shovelnose and small sharks. One mulloway was reported at the S-Bend Caravan Park being caught at 13kg from the area as well. Flat Rocks has been quite weedy, however a few fishers have managed to throw some large poppers, enticing tailor to hook up on the inside of some of the gutters while wading out. The beaches north of Dongara around 3 Mile have been producing plenty of tailor, whiting and herring as well. Big thanks to Geraldton Sports Centre for their tips!   
Lancelin catches
Lancelin's fishing guru Peter Fullarton @tailoredtreksfishing took his brother-in-law Clint Howe out for a fish recently and the pair had a great session, finding these two nice dhuies on one drop in close. 


Boats

Most boats have switched to chasing red crays with the pots and most skippers reported the best luck came from dropping them up close to the reef on the heavy ground. Demersal species have been landed throughout a wide range of depths, though most days fishers have had to spend some time testing different depths between 18-30m as they have been a bit off the bite. Random schools of bluefin tuna have been encountered mostly out from 40m depths. Some good snapper catches have been from within a few hundred meters of the beach out to 3km. The best time slot for pinkies at the moment is early morning and a good burly trail is key, which is always a great option if you own a smaller boat or kayak. Some great catches of squid came from depths of 5-6m north of the bay, while the run of super-sized herring continues within the bay, with catches over 30cm common. Will be very windy with a higher swell over the weekend but the southerlies should calm down by Tuesday morning. 

Shore-based

Catches have varied with a wide range of tailor sizes along the beaches from just legal to fish over 50cm. Dart, flathead, tarwhine and large herring have been picking up the tailor baits, so it's well worth down-sizing baits and hooks. Drone fishers have been finding respectable numbers of snapper, with bait drops 175-300m offshore working well depending on the location of the reefs and gutters. Our weekly contributor to the weekly fishing report, Sedin Hasanovic, stopped by Wilbinga south of Lancelin recently to fish for tailor and came across plenty of large herring, whiting and tarwhine being caught just north of the lagoon. Big thanks to Lancelin's fishing guru Peter Fullarton for his tips as always and if you want to join him on one of his awesome fishing expeditions where he will put you on to the best spots, make sure you visit his Tailored Treks website or give him a call on 0427 941 126. 
 
 
Esperance catches
The beaches around Esperance have been great for salmon, mulloway and gummy sharks over the past week. This nice gummy shark snap was courtesy of Neil Pechar from the Fishing Esperance WA Facebook page, make sure you give the page a like and follow!


Boats

You boaties have had a pretty good run of catches over the past week or so, especially throughout the nice mornings. There were good nannies caught out at Mondrain Island on the drop offs behind it in 50-60m. For the harlequin and breaksea cod, the islands located south-east of town saw plenty of catches in decent sizes. Heading out to the south-eastern island groups is always a wise direction to go this time of the year in the mornings because you can head back in with the south easterly winds at lunch time once they pick up. If you have a kayak or smaller tinnie and prefer to stay in close, there have been loads of squid, whiting and herring in the bay. Sunday morning looks great for a nice boat session with the lower south-easterly wind throughout the day. 
 

Shore-based

Despite some rather intimidating white pointers spotted off the jetty over the past week or so, it's been a great spot for your standard squid, herring and snook. A very rewarding spot for sand whiting lately has been around Blue Haven off the rocks on the sheltered side. Decent flathead have been mixed in there too by flicking plastics, vibes and baits around the deeper drop offs. For the larger catches of flathead, there have also been 2.5kg beasts landed from Wylie Bay during the week. The best land-based species this week has easily been salmon though and according to the pros at Southern Sports and Tackle, you can cast literally anywhere off the beaches where there are deeper gutters and have your rod bent within a matter of minutes. Some of the younger guys have been consistently landing 40cm+ black bream from Woody Lake. For the best catches of gummy sharks and mulloway up to 10kg, further east has worked best and Israelite Bay has been the hot spot.
Great Southern catches
Liam Wesson @liamwesson is another great fisher based in Albany who catches plenty of great southern species, including this recent stunner of a queen snapper found in a massive school via jigging. 


Boats

When the weather has allowed it the boats that ventured out to the 80-110m depths have found some decent numbers of nannygai. A little bit closer, dhufish have been caught in decent numbers mixed in with the odd nannygai and breaksea cod. A few big boats managed to punch it out to the shelf reaching 300-400m depths targeting hapuka and blue eye trevalla with reasonable success. Most of the fishing in the past week has been close in however, with King George whiting being quite patchy. The best reports came from using burley and hopping across to multiple different spots around the bay to find them. The squidding action has been quiet, but the usual skippy and herring have been caught inside the Royal Harbour with a few solid flathead also in the mix. Going east of town, a few boats went to Cheynes and had better luck staying in relatively shallow water, landing harlequin, breaksea and queen snapper. Thankfully this weekend is looking glorious for a session in the boats with nice calm winds and cooler conditions. 
 

Shore-based

Landbased fishing has been relatively quiet, with winds making things difficult. Despite this, bread-and-butter species are still being caught by families on local beaches such as Middleton and the Salmon Holes have been doing quite well for thumper whiting, herring and skippy. River systems to the west of Albany have been fishing very well for school-sized black bream. Torbay Inlet and the Hay River are both easily accessible and provide great land-based fishing options for anglers looking to try their luck. Wilson Inlet is also doing quite well for flathead and some stonking herring well over 30cm. There are lighter southerly winds expected over this weekend and from Wednesday next week, which should be nice for a flick. 
South West catches
Bunbury has been on fire recently for demersals and you know you're in a solid spot when you're pulling up dhuies and pinkies on the same drop. Tommy Miller's Instagram page @tommy_miller91 is great to follow for keeping track of the impressive species he catches in fresh and salt water across WA.   


Boats

The crabbing action has picked up nicely off the boats and a lot of crabs have started to wander in close to the estuaries over the past two weeks in good sizes and numbers. For the boats punching it out chasing demersals out from Bunbury and Busselton, it's been a very productive fortnight and hundreds of skippers have landed solid pinkies and dhuies across a wide range of depths and structure from 15-80m. While the crayfish have gone a little bit quiet in close and less pots are being dropped, they are still popping up past 20m and divers in the 25m range are bagging out very quickly. There haven't been any reports of tuna out wide yet, although the tailor and whiting action in the estuary has been so prolific and enjoyable for skippers that many are staying in close targeting them across the shallows on poppers and stickbaits. The back of the islands around Samphire Bay have been a great spot for both species. There are calmer winds combined with a lower swell set to cruise in over the next few days which should make the mornings ideal. 

Shore-based

The tailor action over the past couple of weeks and this season in general has easily been one of the best seen in many years, with good sizes and great numbers popping up across virtually every beach. Flicking mulies on a weighted gang or launching stickbaits and twisties out as far as possible into the surf and gutters is almost a sure bet lately. The mulloway are also still doing well off the beaches in great numbers and the strip in front of Hungry Hollow has seen decent catches over the past couple of weeks. The whiting are thick off the beaches as well and within the estuaries of Bunbury and Busselton over the next month will be the most profitable time to catch them. The bays in close have also produced great numbers of squid in the 4-7m depth range, especially in the mornings. Big thanks to the experts at Whitey's Tackle for their tips and the next few mornings are looking great for a land-based flick throughout the South-West. 

Freshwater

The crew from Two Pirates @twopiratesadventures do plenty of exploring through our South-West freshwater systems and catch solid trout and redfin perch. Check out the Two Pirates Adventures YouTube channel here. 
The marron season is kicking off from 12 noon, 8 January (this Sunday) until 12 noon, 5 February 2023 and we're in for a cracker of a season. For the best tips on catching marron, rules and regulations and where to find them, click here! 

To say the redfin perch fishing in our southwest rivers and dams has been red hot would be an understatement! Some fantastic captures have been recorded over the last 7-10 days with some beefy perch coming from all corners. An obvious cause for this is the fact that we have been in the holiday period allowing far more people to get out and enjoy wetting a line. Nevertheless, redfin up to a very impressive 44cm have been captured recently, with Wellington Dam yet again producing some very solid and fat fish. Captures of plump brown trout have also been coming in from Wellington Dam, including one captured from the banks on a red spinner which is great to see after some 750 ex-broodstock fish were stocked into the dam in 2022, along with over 8,000 yearlings. Good numbers of well-conditioned redfin perch have also been coming out of the Capel River by those walking the banks casting soft plastics. Big Brook Dam continues to be WA's premier trout haven, with the numbers and size of trout captured not seeming to slow down. A large reason why this waterbody continues to fish so well is that many anglers who fish this dam return their captures to the water, allowing broodstock-sized trout to grow larger and be captured by other anglers. A little further north and Harvey Dam just hasn’t produced the quality of fishing it previously has, however that’s not to say fish aren’t being captured from the dam, just not to the size and numbers of previous years. Both Waroona and Drakesbrook Weir have had good numbers of yearling trout and fish to 40cm coming in over the recent week, with small redfin in the mix also. Captures of broodstock trout from these two dams have been on the quiet side, although that may be due to local fishers keeping their captures more secretive.
 
Hot tip from the pros! Now that summer is well and truly here, the trout fishing can become quite difficult. With warmer temperatures trout do become less active during the day, so if you're targeting trout during the summer months you will need to fish the early mornings and late afternoons for improved success.

 
Mandurah and surrounds


Mandurah

The fishing action around Mandurah off the boats over the past fortnight has been very juicy indeed. Southern bluefin tuna have been common out in the 40m mark ranging in sizes from 2kg jellybeans up to 10kg brutes out wider. The dhufish have been around in abundance as well with most sizes between 50-80cm, although no giants have been popping up. Along Five Fathom for both pinkies and dhuies has worked well as they seem to come in with all the cray bait and burley in the water from the pots. For the larger sizes of pinkies though, most are being caught out deeper in 40-60m ranges. While the crays have been slowly dropping off in numbers, the best way to find them is by simply mixing up your depths between 15-30m and letting your wooden pots soak for at least 24 hours. The mornings are still the best window for boats as the winds will be pretty strong over the weekend.

For land-based fishing in Mandurah the beaches have still been red hot for tailor as a lot of white bait have been schooling in close which lures them in. Around Avalon and Falcon have been great spots in particular. The estuary has also seen huge numbers of tailor and whiting, which has provided endless entertainment for anglers flicking poppers and surface lures around. The whiting can be a bit fussy to find though at times, so just move around and try different lures until you hit the jackpot. Blue swimmer crabs are starting to fire up in the estuary and are moving into the flats. The incoming tide is aiding their movement from the ocean and many of them are massive in size. The meat is getting a lot better too, with full shells now common as the past couple of weeks have seen softer shells with minimal meat. Juvenile salmon will fire in the estuary all through summer, although their numbers have been lower recently as there is just so many tailor around. Squid haven't been as active due to ranging swells, but 37cm hoods were caught less than a week ago off the rockwalls so they're still a good species to target via jigs. Thanks to the crew from Tackle World Miami for their tips! 
 

SECRET HARBOUR / PORT KENNEDY / ROCKINGHAM / SAFETY BAY / WARNBRO SOUND

The beaches around Rockingham, Falcon, Port Kennedy, Warnbro Sound and Golden Bay have all seen great catches of tailor within the gutters, with fish over 45cm common. Mornings has been the best window and wetting a line between 5:30am-7:00am has been ideal. The mulloway action has also picked up this week in the same areas with some catches up to 90cm. There were still decent catches of white and red crays this week, with a lot of skippers pulling in loaded pots from depths of 22-24m but the numbers are starting to drop. Most skippers have opted for the deeper depths now, but they will occasionally turn up in depths less than 18m. The squidding action in close in depths of 3-8m and off the jetties has also been fantastic lately regardless of your jig colour. Skippy have also been in plague proportions and a good trail of burley has been bringing them in around Coventry Reef along with plump herring.
Perth catches
There are scores of flathead being caught in the shallows of the Swan River at the moment and this 63cm beast caught by Max Buggins is up there as the biggest we've seen since summer kicked off. A 3.5 inch plastic in motor oil colour produced the goods and the Point Walter jetty remains a great spot to target them over the sand. 


Boats

The dhuies and pinkies are still getting caught almost anywhere you can find good structure past 20m depths. Five Fathom has been a popular spot, although Three Mile out from Hillarys and the structure closer to Rottnest has also produced good fish. Big yellowfin and southern bluefin tuna have been kicking about mainly west and south of Rotto around the 40m depths. The Duffield Ridge and The Barges have also been producing solid yellowtail kingfish and Samson fish in the deeper depths via jigging and baits. Mackerel are finally turning up and have started jumping wildly out of the water chasing baits, with decent catches mostly being caught further north around Two Rocks by trolling over the undulating structure in depths between 15-35m. The metro crays are still on fire despite regions further south starting to drop off in catches. Consistency is key and mixing up your depths between 18-30m every couple of days and letting your wooden pots soak for at least 24 hours generally sees brimming pots eventually. Just make sure you put females with tar spots or berries back in the drink quickly and carefully. For river fishing, tailor have been on fire via trolling around Mosman Park, Point Walter and Claremont, while flathead are turning up in great numbers off the shallow sand banks on plastics and vibe lures. Big thanks to the crew at Anglers Fishing World in Fremantle for the notes this week!

Shore-based

The marron season is kicking off from 12 noon, 8 January (this Sunday) until 12 noon, 5 February 2023 and we're in for a cracker of a season. For the best tips on catching marron, rules and regulations and where to find them, click here! 

There have been a lot of snapper caught off the rocks around both Fremantle moles in smaller sizes, although a whopper will come through every now and then around the 70-80cm mark. Tailor have been on fire off the beaches generally north of the river, with the gutters close to the Floreat drain doing well. There are tailor and mulloway in plague proportions throughout the river at the moment, which just shows that we're lucky to have such a healthy waterway on our doorstep. Tailor are around the 30-35cm mark in huge numbers around Mosmans, Point Walter, Claremont and up towards Maylands. Shallow-diving stickbaits with a good underwater action are great lures to use for river tailor. The flathead fishing off the sand banks in the river has maintained it's strong popularity, with bigger sizes and more numbers flowing in along with flounder. Anything over 50cm is considered as a great river flathead, while a fish over 60cm (as seen above in the brilliant catch by Max Buggins) is a hats off achievement. If you're wading the sand bars, walk slowly to avoid spooking them and work your plastics or vibes close to the weed or drop offs where the flathead like to sit and wait before ambushing their prey. The Swan River has also started producing more and bigger crabs. Scooping has been rewarding as they’ve come into the shallows across many of the sand bars. Most of this weekend is looking pretty windy, but the next few mornings are looking quite profitable for a land-based flick. 
 
 
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Recfishwest · 3/45 Northside Drive Hillarys · Perth, WA 6025 · Australia

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Catch Information

Species:
Australasian Snapper
Australasian Snapper

Black Bream
Black Bream

Bluefin Tuna
Bluefin Tuna

Breaksea Cod
Breaksea Cod

Brown Trout
Brown Trout

Cobia
Cobia

Dhufish
Dhufish

Flounder
Flounder

Golden Trevally
Golden Trevally

Gummy Shark
Gummy Shark

Hapuka
Hapuka

Mulloway
Mulloway

Nannygai
Nannygai

Queen Snapper
Queen Snapper

Redfin Perch
Redfin Perch

Sailfish
Sailfish

Samson Fish
Samson Fish

Snook
Snook

Spanish Mackerel
Spanish Mackerel

Whiting
Whiting

This Fishing Report was submitted on 1/6/2023 2:40:25 AM by Seamus and last updated on 1/10/2023 7:11:27 PM.


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3/45 Northside Drive
Hillarys, WA AU


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