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Recfishwest's State-wide Fishing Report 16 June 2023 🎣

 | By Seamus on 6/16/2023 3:15:14 AM | Views (149)
Recfishwest Newsletter
Recfishwest
Fishing Report
16/06/23
Chasing the 'big red' is on most fishers' bucket lists in WA's northern regions and are widely considered one of the best quality eating fish in all of Australia.  
Our contributors
Sam Russell
Jarrad Lawford
Peter Fullarton
Sedin Hasanovic 
G'day <>,

There is finally a bit of reprieve in the dodgy weather coming for a handful of WA's coastal regions this week. Best of luck if you decide to punch out wide in the boats or have a flick off the land!

Want to know the best tips for taking great fish photos and also on how to handle fish out of the water? We've got you covered with our responsible fish handling and photography tips page. The page gives a perfect explanation on the types of images we love to use in our weekly Fishing Report and why. 

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 our responsible fish handling practices, so 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! 

William Bennett

RECFISHWEST FISHING REPORT WRITER

Pic of the Week!

@nonstopfillets and @insalt_fishing had a fantastic billfish session off Ningaloo Reef this week, photographing the catch and release of this bigger black marlin and another smaller black marlin that happened to be covered in a fair bit of sea lice on the bill and head. Both fish swam off to fight another day. 

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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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Broome catches
@ayden_ieraci had a quick session on Reel Game Charters @reelgame2 and landed this stunner of a sailfish before releasing it safely. There have been plenty of billfish sightings and hookups this past fortnight off Broome, with some fish landed in depths of only 20 metres. 


Boats

On both sides of Broome the 30-40m depths have rewarded boaties with good catches of Rankin cod, coral trout and red emperor, while on the surface and in a range of depths, tuna have been hitting trolled skirts and deep-diving lures. Boats who came across surface bust-ups also caught tuna on stickbaits and they provided great fun for anglers this week, with good numbers of fish landed. In Roebuck Bay the edges of the Deeps have produced bluebone, fingermark and northern mulloway, while in Dampier Creek barramundi have been caught with live baits working best. Dampier Creek has also held reasonable numbers of mud crabs, with one fisher recently netting nine large bucks in one session. Should be pleasant conditions for the boats in Broome this weekend thankfully.

Shore-based

The Town Beach Jetty continued to fish well for trevally and queenfish this past week and a few anglers there were surprised (and at times under-gunned) by Spanish mackerel. It’s been quieter at the Port Jetty with mainly bream and small bluebone caught in the day, but at night big giant trevally have been hitting surface poppers. Just make sure you bring heavy gear for them otherwise you’ll get smoked. The rocky ground around Entrance Point held Spanish flag, bluebone and spangled emperor, while out at Coconut Wells whiting catches have been improving. At Willie Creek nice-sized mangrove jack have been caught, along with blue-nosed salmon, while the entrance of Barred Creek has fished well for small queenfish and trevally. Quandong Point has been a good spot for bluebone and is holding a lot of bait which has also resulted in good catches of queenfish on metal slices. Quite a few anglers have been ballooning for Spanish mackerel at Gantheaume Point with good results on ganged garfish. In the Fitzroy River live baits have worked well on barramundi at Langies and Telegraph Pool. For the best tips and gear for your fishing expedition, make sure you visit the helpful pros at Tackle World Broome for advice and they will provide details on spots with the best access for a flick.
Exmouth catches
Hats off to Tyrin for landing his PB coral trout via jigging aboard @evolutionfishing out of Exmouth. The colours of coral trout species varies and can be red, green, brown, pink or orange. Generally if they are living in deeper waters, they tend to be red, orange or pink, while coral trout living in shallower waters are generally darker brown. 

Boats

Plenty of boats have been concentrating on billfish on the western side of Exmouth with quite a few fish raised. They were mostly black marlin that ranged from pups to bigger fish, along with the occasional sailfish. The activity has been relatively close in around the 100m depths, with trolled skirted lures also accounting for yellowfin tuna around the 15kg mark and a few wahoo as by-catches. Those targeting bottom species out west of Exmouth have been frustrated by sharks in the shallower depths, although boats fishing further out in 65-100m depths did well on goldband snapper. At the Muirons coral trout and Rankin cod catches have been consistent. In the Gulf, trolling around the shoals has been rewarding with small Spanish mackerel, coral trout and Rankin cod. Lures that can get down to the 6-8m depths have been the most successful, particularly in the 160mm size. Boaties hugging the shoreline of both sides of the Gulf have done well on squid and blue swimmer crabs. It should be gentle south-easterly winds with a decreasing swell this weekend in Exmouth, so it should be relatively flat and nice on the water for the boaties.

Shore-based

Whiting numbers have tapered off for the land-based fishers in Exmouth, but widespread bream and garfish captures have been rewarding shore fishers. Learmonth Jetty was reliable for squid this week and a few small trevally were hitting metal slices there. There were plenty of small queenfish and trevally hounding baitfish around the boat ramp at Bundegi. The town marina continued to offer a lucky dip of species including small cod, mangrove jack, bream and trevally. Wapet Creek has held the odd bream and mangrove jack as well as some larger mud crabs. At the Lighthouse and Mildura Wreck bluebone and spangled emperor catches were reasonable and spangos were also caught from the shore at Winderbandi. Big thanks to the crew from Tackle World Exmouth for their tips as always! 
 
 
Kalbarri catches
It was the first big Spanish mackie landed by @lilemsfishing off Kalbarri this week and they continue to be caught in great numbers around the Sand Patch along with Red Bluff and Wagoe. 


Boats

Conditions haven’t been the best for those heading offshore, but earlier in the week a kayaker reported big Spanish mackerel hitting his baits off Red Bluff. Unfortunately he didn’t manage to land any, but this spot has been firing for the past fortnight for this species and is certainly worth a crack. Bigger boats have also been trolling for mackies along the cliffs and reasonable catches have still been flowing through from the Sand Patch. Bottom fishers who have put up with the lumpy swells have been doing well, particularly north of town, with dhufish, lots of pink snapper and a few baldchin groper coming over the side from the 30m depths. With swells expected to ease heading into the weekend Dean from Kalbarri Sports and Dive recommends bottom fishers have a floater (unweighted rig) out the back of their boat to increase their chances of rounding out their bag with a Spaniard. A garfish on size 7/0 gang hooks is the best bet and a wire trace is also recommended to avoid being snipped when a mackie steams through. This weekend should see nicer conditions with Saturday morning looking best. 

Shore-based

Good mulloway continue to be caught in the Murchison River with a 15kg model taken from the Sand Spit earlier this week. Mulloway have also been targeted at the river mouth and the marina jetty with fair results. Yellowfin whiting catches have continued to improve at the Sand Spit and in the snaggy parts of the river bream have been active with mud crabs still hanging about. Decent-sized tailor are also being caught at the river mouth and good bags of tailor have also come from Wittecarra, which has also been holding plump-sized herring. At Red Bluff there have been herring, garfish, tarwhine and the odd dart. Squid are also worth targeting at Red Bluff in clear water when the swell is down. Big swells made things difficult for droners and ballooners targeting Spanish mackerel, pink snapper and jumbo tailor at Wagoe this week, but favourable conditions are likely for giving this a better crack over the weekend. Big thanks to Dean from Kalbarri Sports and Dive for his tips as always!
Geraldton catches
It was macks of the yak last week for @mat.svenson off our Mid-West coast and this week he landed some fat and healthy pinkies. Make sure you give his page a follow to keep up to date with his quality Mid-West catches.


Boats

Poor weather has kept most boats inshore, but better conditions this weekend should see plenty of activity with dhufish and pink snapper likely to be targeted on both sides of town and Spanish mackerel along the quarry heading north of town towards Wagoe. One boat that managed to get out late this week did well on coral trout, small spangled emperor and red-throat emperor in the 40m depths further out about 28km north-west of Geraldton. If you're thinking of trolling for tailor or pelagics, keep an eye out for the copious amounts of weed that has been pushed in close to shore. The moderate south-easterly winds will start to taper off over the weekend along with the swell which should provide a better-looking boating window on Monday. 

Shore-based

Weed has been atrocious this past week, leaving many land-based anglers cooling their heels with many locals saying it’s the worst they can remember. Whiting catches however have saved the day, with school and yellowfin whiting being caught around Pages Beach and at the back of the Breakwater, with a few flathead, flounder and cobbler also making their way into the bags of fishers. Those prepared to search for a patch of water free of weed have landed a few small tailor, although it took a fair amount of patrolling along the beach to find these spots. Hopefully with better conditions expected in the next few days tailor fishing will improve and mulloway will fire up again after an excellent run in recent weeks. Big thanks to Geraldton Sports Centre for their report as always! 
Lancelin catches


Boats

With the wild weather of rain, lightning and wind sticking around for a majority of this week, boats made the safe decision by staying in port. Throughout the middle of the week a few boats managed to sneak out during a brief window to cast a line inside the bay and reported decent flathead, squid and snook around the weed banks and sand holes. Thankfully the conditions should be quite pleasant for boats from Saturday arvo right through to Monday morning and given the swell and storms stirred things up a bit, snapper are definitely a good chance around the reefy structure and gutters close to shore along with other common demersal species in 10m+ depths. Tailor should start to return in decent numbers too after a quiet week, but try to steer clear of the large amounts of weed that have blown in close to shore if you're thinking of trolling. 

Shore-based

Beaches have been struck by areas of thick weed after the storms, although there’s also some surprisingly clear patches where the water clarity is very good and should hold fish. The storm formed up gutters for the usual winter spots and given the ideal conditions coming in over the next few days, there should be a good spike in the number of land-based tailor, mulloway and pinkies caught. The tailor were quiet over the past week, but there were some nice sand whiting to be found along the beaches for a tasty feed. Lancelin jetty fished very well for herring under the lights at night, while mornings have seen a few squid there during the calmer conditions. Big thanks to Lancelin's fishing guru Peter Fullarton for his tips and make sure you check out his Tailored Treks fishing tours if you want to be put on to the fish. 
 
 
Esperance catches
While the rough weather is sticking around for a majority of this week, hopefully Monday will see a slight drop in the wind and swell to provide a fishing window for those keen to wet a line. 


Boats

Big swells have prevented fishos heading out wide, so most decided to stick in closer to shore and target bread-and-butter species either for the table or as bait for future missions. Squid are in the 3-7m depths throughout Esperance Bay with the area between the harbour rock wall and the Town Jetty producing some big sizes albeit in lower numbers. Smaller squid have been prolific in the 17-21m depths out at Cook Rocks, where bag-outs are common. For sand whiting around the 25cm mark Chapmans Point has produced the goods, as have the sand patches out from the surf club and between West Beach and Lovers Cove. Thumping King George whiting have been caught right on the edge of the weed at Wylie Bay, but in small numbers and in a narrow bite time, while trolling small Halco Twistys in Esperance Bay has provided family fun and good catches of snook and herring. The treacherous winds and swell from today will thankfully start to drop off from Saturday and the calmer north-westerly winds with a swell of around 2m could provide a potential window for boaties on Monday. 

Shore-based

Once again the land-based fishing reigned supreme this week in Esperance. Heaps of big salmon, some over 6kg, have been caught west of town with massive schools cruising 14-Mile Beach, which has also fished well for gummy sharks. Roses Beach has been good for mulloway, salmon and gummy sharks, while the corner at the western end of Roses is worth a try for big tailor around the 3kg mark. Take care on Roses Beach though, especially when the swells and tides are up because the sand there is very soft and has gobbled up a few 4WD's. Warrenup Beach has fished well for 15kg-plus gummy sharks with plenty of sand whiting, herring, flathead and skippy caught there throughout the day. The Munglinup River mouth has been a great spot for mulloway up to one metre and 5-8kg gummy sharks. Closer to town, the first stretch of Wylie Bay has been productive for King George and sand whiting, herring and big flathead. The Town Jetty has been holding big squid throughout the day, with red and green squid jigs working best. There were also lots of bull herring and garfish caught at night. The headland at the start of the Town Jetty has fished well for decent-sized King George whiting, while putting out a bigger bait has accounted for a few flathead. Bream are biting at Stokes Inlet on most baits and thankfully they’re not at all fussy, with soft plastic lures also getting smashed. Big thanks to the pros from Southern Sports and Tackle for their tips as always!
Great Southern catches
After patiently soaking baits off the south coast during the night @gidos_fishing_adventures managed to land this solid pinkie from a gutter off the beach and landed another stonker the next night. You can catch all of this action on Gido's latest YouTube video here. 


Boats

Albany continues to cop the brunt of the nasty weather with 6-8m swells making offshore fishing virtually impossible. Thankfully there will be a brief window of moderate reprieve from midday on Saturday to midday on Monday with the westerly winds dropping to around 12 knots and the swell gradually decreasing to around 2-2.5m. Unfortunately, conditions will spike and go haywire once again from Monday evening right through until after Thursday. If you are thinking of heading out between Saturday and Monday morning, the sheltered parts of King George Sound in close have seen decent catches of King George whiting, which have been caught on the broken bottom and in patches of clear water. A few squid have also been taking squid jigs and were landed quite close to shore after seeking a bit of shelter. Might be worth having a land-based flick in the rivers or off the more sheltered beaches until these nasty conditions ease up. 

For anyone keen to have a crack in Albany Boating & Fishing Club's Southern Squid Spectacular, a reminder that the event has now been moved to Sunday as Saturday's conditions are looking way too rough. If you wish to participate, registration is between 6am and 7:30am and make sure you fill in an entry form found on the Albany Boating & Fishing Club's Facebook Page and hand it in to the club on the Sunday morning. Best of luck! 

ENTRY COSTS:
Shore Angler: $25
Kayak Angler: $25
Boat Team: $55

Shore-based

Big swells have churned up most of the beaches and made fishing from the rocks too dangerous, but salmon would be worth a shot either side of town with the sand between your toes if conditions ease for a bit between Saturday and Monday. Other options include targeting bream in the King, Kalgan and Hay rivers, where soft plastic lures have worked well on them. Nearer to town sheltered areas of Frenchman Bay have produced herring, flathead and squid in patches of clear water, along with small King George and sand whiting. Similar species have come from the Town Jetty and Emu Point, which should help provide a bit of shelter for keen fishers this weekend. Big thanks to the crew from Trailblazers in Albany for their tips!

South West catches
We're not sure what's better, the photography skills of @2_oceans_tackle or their ability to consistently catch great fish throughout our South-West regions. This kidney slapper of a King George whiting was just one of many favoured species landed inshore which also included nice pinkies and dhuies. Give their page a follow to keep up with their quality snaps and fishing action. 


Boats

With better conditions on the way, pink snapper chasers are expected to be out in force after being kept onshore this past week due to the poor weather. One of the better areas, especially for dinghy anglers, is likely to be relatively close in around 1-5km out, just south of the Hutts. Burleying over patchy ground in 13-19m depths around here should fire up the pinkies, with skippy, small yellowtail kingfish and Samsonfish also likely to muscle their way in on the burley trail. The Hutts has also been a prime area for shallow-water dhufish catches. When weather windows arose over the past week, a few boaties managed to find pink snapper and King George whiting within Geographe Bay, with squid baits working best to find the KG's on the bottom and a floating mulie on gang hooks landing bigger pinkies in the burley trails. If you are heading out in the boat for a feed of KG's, snapper or dhufish in Geographe Bay the crew from 2 Oceans Tackle are great to chat to for tips as their staff have done very well fishing for these species over the past few weeks. Enjoy those ideal conditions from midday Saturday to midday on Monday!

Shore-based

Busselton Jetty was the place to be last weekend for the land-based fishos, with 20-30 pink snapper reportedly being caught from the structure from the S-bend right up to the end. The jetty has also been holding plenty of herring, which have been a top choice bait for pink snapper chasers there. Pink snapper were also caught from the beaches as well, but conditions were more difficult. Good catches still came from Preston Beach and the Belvedere and Buffalo Beach stretches though. Herring and a few chopper tailor were also around the Bunbury beaches. There have been few reports of mulloway catches but with the new moon, conditions should be ideal this weekend and Hungry Hollow could be one of the better spots for them. Around town herring have been plentiful from the harbour rock walls, while the Bunbury Cut has offered family-friendly fishing for herring, poddy whiting, small bream and juvenile snapper. Kudos to the crew from Whitey's Tackle for their tips! 
 

Freshwater

Thanks to the recent heavy rains, there has been a solid spike in both the number and sizes of redfin perch caught throughout our dam and river systems. Harvey and Wellington Dam have both been on fire, with soft plastics, spinners and small vibe lures flicked from the banks resulting in numerous 45cm+ reddies like this beauty landed by @dswrats. Make sure you also follow the SW Fresh Water Fishing Facebook page to keep up to date with the freshwater action. 
This week has seen an even bigger spike in the number of big redfin perch caught across the board. Wellington Dam has been a redfin perch hot spot, especially at the back of the dam where kayakers slow-trolling gold 38mm Atomic hard-bodies that have landed redfin around 45cm. Good redfin catches have also come from Harvey Dam. Down Pemberton way there have been a lot of hungry rainbow trout with areas such as Lefroy Brook, East Brook and Cascades among the better spots. Fly-fishers have fared very well on rainbow trout around the Pemberton region, with fish often congregating on gravel patches. Orange bead-head nymphs have been one of the better flies for catching a few brown trout as well as rainbows, while bigger rainbows have fallen to the classic Mrs Simpson pattern. If you catch any great trout or redfin, make sure you message us a snap of the catch to our Instagram page @recfishwest. 
Mandurah and surrounds


Mandurah

Big swells kept the boats on trailers or in the pens this past week, but boaties are hoping to capitalise on good wind and swell conditions over the next few days to target pink snapper, skippy and King George whiting at Five-Fathom Bank and pink snapper and dhufish around Bouvard Reefs. Some great news has come in on the offshore front with a boatie reporting good numbers of dolphinfish leaping about at the Mandurah FADs before the storms rolled in, so they could be worth a visit this weekend before they are pulled back in over the coming week or so. The dollies were certainly playful when spotted, but were tough to hook with not even live baits tempting them. Despite the miserable weather, hardy souls who rugged up did well on a variety of species from the shore. Pink snapper were caught from the beaches, especially those with structure such as Pyramids and Tims Thicket, while chopper tailor and herring have been worth chasing from the beaches on both sides of town. The cracking run of mulloway from the beaches seems to have gone quiet, although a few good fish along with pink snapper were reported from Madora Bay. There has been plenty of activity in the estuary too with the Dawesville Cut and the traffic bridges fishing very well for bull herring, especially when the tides are moving slowly. Big winter skippy should also start showing up at the Cut in the next few weeks. Anglers finding pockets of clear water throughout the estuary have caught tailor and herring along with squid at times, while the Murray and Serpentine rivers have started to fish consistently for bream. If you're thinking of wetting a line around Mandurah, make sure you pay a visit to the great crew from Tackle World Miami for the best tips and gear! 

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

Rough conditions have restricted most fishing activity to Warnbro and Cockburn sounds with the shipping channels at Cockburn producing a few mulloway around the one metre mark. In close, boats using the Garden Island causeway for shelter have caught a few pink snapper, loads of bull herring and some big skippy. With better conditions expected over the weekend pink snapper and King George whiting will be targeted on the Five-Fathom Bank and Mangles Bay should produce King George and sand whiting. Boats are also likely to try their luck for dhufish and pink snapper behind Garden Island. On Sunday the swells are expected to be down, so targeting big tailor at Mewstones, Stragglers or Coventry Reef could be an option. For land-based fishers, pink snapper continued to be caught from platforms between the recent cold fronts and when conditions eased a few squid were about in the clearer water. Challenger Beach and the beaches at Port Kennedy and Secret Harbour have produced tailor to 60cm and reports of mulloway catches have come from there too. The use of burley from the rocks around Point Peron has attracted chopper tailor and herring with a few squid also turning up. Long Point is usually sheltered from the worst of the wild weather and has produced herring and smaller tailor with the odd pink snapper taking baits. Woodman Point and the Ammo Jetty have produced similar catches with bigger winter tailor also caught there this week. Rockingham and Palm Beach jetties have produced herring and chopper tailor, but it’s been more than a week since mulloway catches have been reported from there. Big thanks to Compleat Angler Rockingham for their great tips! 
Perth catches
If you're chasing solid Sambos in the Perth metro like @seain_ghosts this week, the western end and southern sides of Rotto in 40m+ depths have been good starting points. Live baits are usually the best tactic, although this hard-fighting species have also been frequently taking jigs, lures and poppers flicked around the inshore shallow reefs and even around the East Fremantle traffic bridges. Just make sure you use heavier gear that can go toe-to-toe with them! 

Boats

Most boaties lucky enough to find a weather window this week have been staying close in, with many trolling for tailor along the reef line at Ocean Reef or targeting pink snapper and skippy at the Three-Mile Reef. Another area that produced this week was City Beach in the 15-30m depth marks, which received a bit of shelter from the westerly winds and swell by Rottnest Island and fished well for pink snapper and skippy, especially when diced mulies and burley were used to bring fish around. There wasn't much action reported from further out as it was rough going, with even the southern and northern sides of Rottnest copping it. In the lower reaches of the Swan River there have been reports of mulloway catches at Mosman Bay and Blackwall Reach and a few chopper tailor should still be in the system. With the ideal conditions rolling in over the weekend there should be plenty of pink snapper action, so if you decide to have a drop make sure you use burley and try floating a mulie on gang hooks under a float within the burley trail as this is a good tactic for landing a wide range of species including pinkies, Samson fish, yellowtail kingfish, tailor and even tuna. 

Shore-based

North Mole continued to be the hot spot for metro pink snapper this week but good pinkies also came from South Mole and the rock walls at Hillarys. A few winter tailor have been about and reports suggest Grant Street reef and north of Hillarys are worth a try. A stray salmon or two has also been caught at Grant Street, with a few 60cm+ specimens turning up at both Freo moles as well. Near the mouth of the Swan River around the Fremantle bridges, big tarwhine can be targeted this time of year and there are often small Samson fish schooling among them, which can prove quite a challenge on light gear. Herring have entered Fremantle Harbour and can easily be caught around the E-Shed. Sabiki rigs usually work well on them, or for more fun throw out a bit of burley and target them on small Halco Twistys. For Swan River mulloway chasers, big croakers have been caught on live baits up river from the Causeway, but with the fresh water now flowing strongly, better spots to try could be the Narrows and Canning Bridge. Bream reports have been patchy throughout the Swan and Canning rivers, but consensus is they are hanging about in the middle reaches of the system. Better catches of bream came from Windan Bridge in the Swan and Mt Henry Bridge in the Canning. The high tides during the mornings are a good time to target bream but if fishing at night when the tides are low, anglers should concentrate on deeper pockets of water. Enjoy the great fishing conditions this weekend and big thanks to Anglers Fishing World in Freo for their tips! 
 
 
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Recfishwest · 3/45 Northside Drive Hillarys · Perth, WA 6025 · Australia

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Catch Information

Species:
Atlantic Croaker
Atlantic Croaker

Australasian Snapper
Australasian Snapper

Baldchin Groper
Baldchin Groper

Barramundi
Barramundi

Black Marlin
Black Marlin

Brown Trout
Brown Trout

Coral Trout
Coral Trout

Dhufish
Dhufish

Dusky Flathead
Dusky Flathead

Flathead Catfish
Flathead Catfish

Giant Trevally
Giant Trevally

Gummy Shark
Gummy Shark

Mangrove Red Snapper
Mangrove Red Snapper

Mulloway
Mulloway

Queenfish
Queenfish

Rainbow Trout
Rainbow Trout

Red Emperor
Red Emperor

This Fishing Report was submitted on 6/16/2023 3:15:14 AM by Seamus and last updated on 6/18/2023 10:20:40 PM.


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3/45 Northside Drive
Hillarys, WA AU


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