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Recfishwest's State-wide Fishing Report 23 June 2023 🎣

 | By Seamus on 6/23/2023 4:23:34 AM | Views (181)
Recfishwest Newsletter
Recfishwest
Fishing Report
23/06/23
Landed yourself a rainbow trout with a full tail lately? It means it has likely grown up in the wild, rather than in a hatchery. Many trout that are bred in hatcheries tend to rub their tails against the bottom of the tank over time, which can alter their overall shape. 
Our contributors
Sam Russell
Jarrad Lawford
Peter Fullarton
Sedin Hasanovic 
G'day <>,

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!  

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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!

Jaxon Rowden uploaded this impressive snap of a 94cm,10kg horse of a pink snapper caught in our South-West this week to the W.A Land Based Snapper Hunters Facebook page. The fact that it was the first land-based snapper for Olivia Wells (pictured) takes the cake for pic of the week!

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Broome catches
Northern mulloway love snapping up baits or soft plastics when the sun is low around our northern regions and this sunset silhouette was snapped by @hereweareaustralia from the pristine waterways of the Buccaneer Archipelago. 


Boats

Although it’s been choppy at times, boaties choosing their days have done well out wide with sailfish starting to show up in good numbers, especially out from Barred Creek where they have been hitting lures and trolled garfish baits. Keeping the sailies company have been Spanish mackerel and tuna, with many anglers coming across bait balls and casting stickbaits into the fray with good results. For fishers targeting the bottom, it’s been the usual suspects with depths from 30m holding red emperor, coral trout and blue-lined emperor. In Roebuck Bay, northern mulloway and fingermark have come from the edges of The Deeps, while Crab and Dampier creeks have fished reasonably well for blue-nosed salmon and barramundi. Dampier Creek has been one of the better spots for mud crabs in the nets. The wind and swell are staying low until around Tuesday arvo before they both start to creep up, so now is a good time to punch out for a fish. 

Shore-based

Town Beach Jetty has produced plenty of excitement this week with one of the highlights being a northern mulloway caught there by a young girl. Spanish mackerel have also been cruising past Town Beach Jetty, but many jetty fishers have lacked the heavier gear needed to land them and were smoked. The jetty has also produced plenty of queenfish and trevally with metal slices or soft plastic lures working well on them. At the Port Jetty queenfish and trevally have been active, with bigger giant trevally also passing through. At high tide the Port Jetty has produced bluebone and cod around structure. Mud crabs have been around in good numbers at Barred and Willie Creek and the latter location has also produced blue-nosed salmon and mangrove jack, with pilchard baits and vibe lures working well on both species. The mouth of Barred Creek has offered queenfish and mangrove jack. Coconut and Cable Beach have plenty of whiting with many landed on traditional bait rigs while other anglers have targeted them on small poppers, which is a lot of fun. With the lower water temperatures, barramundi fishing has slowed in the Fitzroy River but Telegraph Pool and Snags Crossing have produced a few fish for anglers using live baits or trolling hard-bodied lures. 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
Another week, another sailfish making its statement as the most striking-looking fish in the sea. @innkeepersportfishing out of Exmouth know how to put their clients onto top quality billfish and it resulted in Samir landing his first sailfish, great work mate! 

Boats

Boaties trolling in 40-100m depths on the western side have done well on black marlin and sailfish, with tuna and wahoo also coming to the party, while out from Winderbandi boats trolling in 50m depths have been catching Spanish mackerel. In the Gulf, tuna schools have been hanging around the bottom end and at the shoals, while Spanish mackerel catches are expected to improve in the Gulf with the cooler water temperatures. The shoals have also been producing coral trout, blue-lined emperor and a few spangled emperor. The weed banks in 2-4m depths either side of Exmouth have been reliable for squid, but blue swimmer crabs have been hit or miss. Conditions are looking welcoming for the boats for the next five days so make sure you get out there. 

Shore-based

Learmonth Jetty has held its usual mix of squid, bream, queenfish and small trevally species, while Bundegi Jetty produced a solid Spanish mackerel earlier in the week. Bundegi usually holds plenty of baitfish and they have continued to attract trevally and small queenfish. The jetty has also fished well for bream which were plucking soft plastic, small vibe lures and prawn baits. The marina has produced plenty of small species including bream, trevally, mangrove jack and cod, while the rock wall on the outside of the marina is worth a crack for squid. Spangled emperor and bluebone are worth targeting at The Lighthouse and Mildura Wreck, while Tantabiddi Jetty has been holding bream and a few mangrove jack. Big thanks to the crew from Tackle World Exmouth for their tips as always! 
 
 
Kalbarri catches


Boats

Conditions were excellent last weekend and Spanish mackerel came to the party, particularly north of town with several boats returning with five or six Spaniards. The 20m depths along the cliffs have also fished well, with one angler scoring a 9kg dhufish and a 4kg coral trout. Fishing for pink snapper and baldchin groper has also been rewarding and the northern regions have again been better, with the 30m depths a good starting point. The Kalbarri Offshore & Angling Club held a competition last weekend and some of the better catches included a 6kg pink snapper and a 10kg Samson fish, while at the river mouth the club president, fishing in the competition from a tinny, caught a healthy 9kg mulloway which was safely released. The winds are staying relatively low with around a 2m swell for the coming days, so it's looking decent for the boaties. 

Shore-based

Wittecarra has been consistent for tailor around the 40cm mark, along with a few dart and tarwhine. Bigger tailor have been targeted at Chinamans and Frustrations with fair results. Red Bluff has been quieter for the bigger pelagics, but Spanish mackerel and pink snapper are always a chance there. In the Murchison River good numbers of mangrove jack have popped up with the marina jetty one of the better spots for them. Bream are also about where there is structure, in similar areas to mangrove jack, while mud crab captures in the river have been fairly rewarding with a few nice bucks rolling through this week. The Sand Spit has been producing yellowfin whiting and mulloway are a chance from there as well. Big thanks to Dean from Kalbarri Sports and Dive for his tips as always!
Geraldton catches
Jack and his family had a cracker of a day aboard Offshore Charters WA - Geraldton celebrating his 50th birthday with a nice haul of bugs! This was further complimented with some decent demersal catches including pink snapper and dhufish. Great way to mark a milestone birthday. 


Boats

No groundbreaking reports have come in this week, which is surprising because conditions looked pretty welcoming earlier in the week. The Offshore Charters crew in Geraldton managed to sneak out earlier this week and managed to put Jack and his family (pictured above) who were celebrating Jack's 50th birthday onto some decent pink snapper, dhufish and various emperor species before managing to pull in a good haul of tasty crays. The reefy grounds have produced a few demersals over this week, although it has been a rough journey. Winds are lighter on the Saturday, but swells of 2-2.5m are forecast, which could keep demersal chasers at home. For boaties needing a fix, if the water is clear the weed beds around Point Moore and Champion Bay could be worth a go for squid. The easterly winds will combine with a lower 1.5m swell around Tuesday and Wednesday, which could provide better boating windows. 

Shore-based

Weed has been a problem at many beaches so it may just be a matter of trying to find some clearer water, or moving around until you do. Few reports of tailor catches have come in, but this time of the year big winter tailor should be around, especially in areas of reefy structure such as Flat Rocks. In the lead-up to the full moon it is hoped that mulloway activity will pick up. A month or so ago around the same moon phase, mulloway fishing was superb both in size and numbers, with good fish landed both sides off town. If it's not weeded out, Tarcoola, Drummonds or Coronations generally should produce fish if they are running. Locations exposed to freshwater run-off such as the Greenough River mouth and Buller River mouth also often produce good catches. For whiting anglers it could be worth trying perennial favourites such as Point Moore and Separation Point. The Batavia Coast Marina could also be worth a try for squid at night if you're after a delicious feed. Big thanks to Geraldton Sports Centre for their report as always! 
Lancelin catches
The 30m depths off Lancelin this week were quite productive for demersal species. Tim Ayliffe had a drop over the weekend and managed to rustle in some solid baldchin groper, large cuttlefish and pink snapper from the same patch of reefy ground. Photo courtesy of Peter Fullarton/Tailored Treks. 


Boats

Boats that were able to make the most of weather windows found strong currents offshore and noticed plenty of whales are migrating through the region. Tuna schools were widespread, but an absence of birds made them difficult to spot when the wind was chopping the water. 30m depths were productive for fishers finding large dhufish to 20kg, baldchin groper and cuttlefish. There were some great reports of dhufish in the 10-15kg range caught around the 10-12m depths just outside the bay from small boats and jetskis, while boats setting up a burley trails for pink snapper in these depths found small sharks became a problem. Sand patches north and south of town in 5-6m depths have been an excellent source for sand whiting which were in abundance, with blue spot flathead also lurking in the sand holes between the weed banks in similar depths. Within the bay there are plenty of snook, herring and skippy, while squid have been a more challenging target this week due to the dirty water and choppy conditions. The wind and swell will remain quite high until at least Tuesday, which should start to see the lower swells and calmer easterly winds roll through for more pleasant boating conditions. 

Shore-based

Shore fishers were having a lot of difficulty driving on the beaches, especially on the high tide, with a number of vehicles having to be recovered last weekend. It always pays to check what the tide is doing and take extra care near the waters edge on the incoming tide. Seaweed has been thick in specific areas, although it has been leaving clean patches that are easy to fish which were producing some very plump sand whiting by day and small whaler sharks at night. Some deep gutters and holes that provided decent catches in recent weeks have now been filled up by weed and we may need a few calm days for the weed to settle before they are easily fishable again. The jetty has been typical for this time of year with plenty of herring schooling under the lights at night and the average size is very good, providing some great fun for families. 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


Boats

In Esperance Bay, sand whiting and herring were plentiful along with squid, which saw hoods in the 30-35cm range landed quite often. Esperance Bay also produced quite a few snook, which have been caught on trolled Halco Twistys and also gold Gillies Bomber 15As, which are normally a barramundi lure. Offshore, boats around Charley and Cull islands have been catching sweep, small nannygai and queen snapper in decent sizes and numbers. In the open water, there has been yellowtail kingfish and Samson fish. The 55-60m depth marks have held plenty of nannygai, while west of town saw some impressive dhufish up to 12kg being landed. Thankfully the wild swell and wind will start to drop right off from Sunday through to Thursday, which should hold better boating windows (albeit with some rain). The stirred up conditions from the past few days should see some heightened fish activity though, so fingers crossed next week's report will have more catches reported from the boaties in Esperance. 

A reminder that Southern Sports and Tackle’s Chase the Kraken squid competition has kicked off which is supported by Harimitsu and runs until August 16. The entry fee is $20 and the first-prize winner for the squid with the longest hood will receive 70 per cent of the total entry fees, with the remainder going to the runner-up. Plus, Harimitsu has donated two $150 squid packs, one is a random draw and the other is for the best photo (with a bonus if it includes a Harimitsu jig). All details on the comp below!

Shore-based

Salmon activity has quietened down, but a few have come from Roses Beach which has also fished well for tailor and big skippy around the 5kg mark. 14-Mile Beach produced herring, flathead and gummy sharks. Gummy sharks have also been caught at Munglinup and Thomas River beaches. The Bandy Creek Boat Harbour had small King George whiting, plenty of herring and flathead. The Town Jetty has recently fired up for squid (a good spot to have a crack for the Chase the Kraken comp above) and also herring and gardies. Taylor Street Jetty was a decent location for herring, squid and gardies, plus small skippy and the odd King George whiting. The Bream Lakes have fished reasonably well, with some 35-40cm specimens landed. The higher water levels there have made the fish more spread out, but small hard-bodied lures have been the go-to lure of choice. Big thanks to the pros from Southern Sports and Tackle for their tips as always!
Great Southern catches
There were plenty of great squid catches (and inked faces) from the Albany Boating & Fishing Club during their 2023 Southern Squid Spectacular! The biggest squid weighed a whopping 1.89kg and was landed by Steven Plant, while the biggest bag of 10 squid for the boat category was taken out by Aaron Jones with 7.81kg of the tasty cephalopods. Check out the Albany Boating & Fishing Club Facebook page for all the action! 


Boats

Tackle shops in Albany sold a a lot more wet-weather gear than fishing tackle this week, with last Sunday really the only fishable day, which fortunately coincided with the Albany Boating and Fishing Club’s Southern Squid Spectacular. This great annual competition once again saw an army of boats heading out into King George Sound with plenty of good catches recorded. The biggest bag of 10 squid for the boat category was Aaron Jones’ 7.81kg haul. Anglers not chasing squid in the sound also came up with some reasonable King George whiting. However, despite last Sunday’s weather window boats have been unable to get out into the open ocean. Thankfully, the wild swell and winds that have ravaged the southern coast will start to drop off between Tuesday and Thursday, providing some welcome relief for fishers hoping to punch out. 

Shore-based

The beaches are still carved up by big swells, which meant most anglers had to be content targeting smaller species in sheltered waters this week. A report from Fosters Beach said salmon were around when conditions were fishable, and skippy and herring were being caught at Cheynes Beach. The town marina has been productive for herring and tarwhine, while Middleton at night has been a reliable spot for squid if the water is clear enough. Frenchman Bay could also be good for squid, again if the water is clear, or Emu Point for herring, whiting species, small skippy, salmon trout and squid. The deep channel at Emu Point does bring in bigger species including big Samson fish, which have spooled many anglers or wrapped their lines around the pylons. Also on the squid front, a big congratulations to Steven Plant whose whopping 1.89kg shore-based squid was the biggest of the Southern Squid Spectacular, outshining competitors in the boat category. Another option is bream fishing in the King and Kalgan rivers where darker coloured soft plastic grubz, such as motor oil, bloodworm or watermelon, have worked well in the tannin-coloured and fast-flowing water. Bream catches have also been reported from Torbay Inlet. Out at Denmark’s Wilson Inlet bream and herring could be an option and snapper should start to show up in the inlet’s Prawn Rock Channel soon. Big thanks to the crew from Trailblazers in Albany for their tips!

South West catches
Big smile for a big Sambo! @tommy_fishin took out eight categories of the 'Jag A Junior' fishing tournament recently out of Cape Naturaliste, including champion angler with 12 species weighing a combined 43.05kg. Photo courtesy of @tommy_miller91.


Boats

Pink snapper continue to dominate catches in the 8m depths and all the way out past 50m. Plenty of solid skippy have often been among the snapper schools. North of town around the Bouvard Reefs, there have been good catches of dhufish reported in 25m depths. Geographe Bay has fished very well for squid in 10m depths and quite well for pink snapper and King George whiting in a range of depths. The Naturaliste Game & Sport Fishing Club held a junior competition last weekend which produced some excellent catches including breaksea cod, dhufish, baldchin groper, pink snapper and a 23.7kg Samson fish (pictured above) which was a junior club record for Thomas Irvine. Out from Canal Rocks, when the swells have been low, kayakers have done very well on pink snapper, harlequin fish, breaksea cod and dhufish. The southerly winds and swell should taper off from Saturday arvo through to Thursday, where it should be very calm and flat on the water. 

Shore-based

Pink snapper have been plentiful at Preston, Mindalong, Belvedere and Buffalo beaches and at the end of Busselton Jetty. More catches that were landed from the famous landmark this week included mulloway and, as usual, herring and squid which were plentiful right along the structure. Herring have continued to be prolific throughout the Busselton and Bunbury regions while tarwhine are among the herring at the Bunbury Cut. Back at Preston Beach, salmon have been passing through, with one angler landing four in one session this week. Kudos to the crew from Whitey's Tackle for their tips! 
 

Freshwater

Another freshwater fishing escapade resulted in all three target species (redfin perch, rainbow trout and brown trout) landed by the talented crew from @2_oceans_tackle this week. As they quoted, water levels in our southern waterways are certainly swollen at the moment, but this means finding fast water isn’t too hard, which means finding a few fish isn’t too hard either! Check out the great high-definition highlights from their recent freshwater trip here. 
The feeder creeks around Wellington Dam have been producing big redfin with Razor Edge soft plastics lures in the Bullant pattern (a yabby imitation) working well. Most of the redfin sizes have been very impressive, with one angler trolling deeper diving vibe lures on his kayak around the north-eastern and back area of Wellington Dam managing to land eight redfin all over 40cm on Saturday. A few rainbow trout around 35cm were also landed there on small hard-bodies. Redfin perch have also been caught at Harvey Dam and the Collie rivers next to the structure. 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

It’s been quieter than usual around Mandurah, but the Five-Fathom Bank has remained reliable for pink snapper with the 10-15m depths producing plenty of fish with the aid of burley, be it cubed mulies or snapper pellets. The Five-Fathom Bank has also been holding heaps of solid skippy, so it could be worth taking out a lighter rod and having some fun on them while waiting for the snapper to bite. That shouldn’t take too long with some anglers reaching their boat limit of pink snapper in half an hour. Plenty of squid are about the Five-Fathom as well in a range of depths. Behind the Five-Fathom Bank tuna have been hitting trolled lures. The tuna haven’t been particularly fussy, but a Christmas Tree-style lure is likely to get plenty of interest. King George whiting activity has tapered off, but early-morning missions could be the go as often there’s a red hot window of big KG's at first light. Mulloway have been caught on both sides of town, from Madora Bay down to White Hills with a few reports of tailor. Herring have been about in huge numbers and a fillet or half-herring as bait has been favoured for bigger fish such as mulloway and pink snapper, which are worth targeting from Pyramids down to Tims Thicket. The Dawesville Cut has been holding huge amounts of herring, although in the next few weeks skippy should start to show up there too. A few younger anglers have targeted skippy on lures in recent years, often by jigging for them with a small Halco Twisty. Small buck-tail jigs, in white and around an eighth of an ounce, have also been known to work well on skippy too. The traffic bridges have been safe and reliable spots for a feed of herring and bream, while tarwhine have shown up there from time to time as well. Bream catches have been favourable in the Murray and Serpentine rivers. In the upper reaches of the Serpentine, past Goegrup Lake, some excellent bream catches have come from the feeder creeks that flow into the river. Crabs are still worth a shot, either right at the entrance of the estuary or out from Mandurah or the Dawesville Cut, with the better spots being where the tidal flow creeps out. 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

Good catches of King George whiting have been reported in the 25-30m depths behind Garden Island, with fish in the 50-60cm range coming over the side. One crew that did well on the KG's then went out to the 50-60m depths and picked up some big breaksea cod and a couple of decent baldchin groper. Some nice harlequin fish have come from there also. Last Sunday’s glassy conditions encouraged a couple of bigger boats to head way out to the 400-500m depths where they encountered hapuka and big cod. In Cockburn and Warnbro sounds pink snapper are still widespread in depths as little as 5m. The Five-Fathom Bank has continued to fish well for pink snapper, along with solid skippy, and ground out from Woodman Point has also produced. Squid fishing in both Cockburn and Warnbro Sound improved last week as the water cleared, with kayakers enjoying plenty of action. Sand whiting and herring were also plentiful in both areas. For land-based fishers around Rockingham, big winter tailor have started to show up at Secret Harbour and Port Kennedy and herring have been right along the coast in big numbers. Long Point and the Penguin Island sand spit have produced some big flathead, along with their usual mix of whiting, herring and skippy. Woodman Point and the Ammo Jetty have fished reasonably well for herring, tailor and flathead and the Ammo Jetty has also produced some nice squid. At Rockingham and Palm Beach jetties small chopper tailor and herring have been caught. Both jetties have also fished reasonably well for squid. Big thanks to Compleat Angler Rockingham for their great tips! 
Perth catches
While they usually don't pop up as often around metro waters as other demersal species, harlequin fish are always welcomed strongly aboard boats given their incredible colours and eating quality. This beauty was landed by @jcrainie earlier this week. 

Boats

Waters in the 20m depths between Garden Island and Rottnest fished well earlier this week for King George whiting, sand whiting and squid. Skippy and just-size pink snapper were also in the area and some crews encountered larger schools of tuna. Big pink snapper, some nudging 90cm, and a few dhufish have come from the 40m depths south of Rottnest. Out from Rottnest’s West End boats slow-trolling live baits, small skirts or deep-diving lures have picked up small yellowtail kingfish. Windmills fished well this week for smaller King George whiting and plump sand whiting. Inshore waters all along the metro coast have held heaps of herring and waters off South Fremantle have been teeming with lots of squid, especially around Douro Road. Squid have also been caught in good numbers off Hillarys, while the Three-Mile Reef has fished well for pink snapper, skippy, King George whiting and big Samson fish. The stronger swells and south-westerly winds will hang around on Saturday but will start to drop off into easterly winds and a decreasing swell to one metre by Tuesday, which should provide some nice flat conditions for the boats in the metro area. 

Shore-based

Plenty of land-based action around Perth this week. There are still quite a few pink snapper at the North and South moles with droners doing especially well but casters also getting their fair share, including a nice 75cm pinkie landed by Ben Fawcett over the weekend. Herring are plentiful at both moles, especially before or in between rain fronts. Butterflied herring is a preferred pink snapper bait with many fishos arriving at rock platforms and catching herring first before setting up for snapper. Small bits of squid have worked well on herring because of squid’s resistance to pickers, but so has lumo tubing fished under a float. Squidding at the moles has slowed because of poor water clarity, but the inside of South Mole has been a good spot to target them. In north metro waters big tailor and pink snapper have come from beaches and rock walls around Two Rocks. From structures between South Fremantle and Coogee marina good skippy have been caught on micro jigs, with the Palms Jigaro brand in a zebra pattern working well. Bycatch from this sort of fishing includes herring, tailor, flathead and juvenile salmon. In the Swan and Canning rivers bream catches have been widespread but patchy. Spots that have produced 25-30cm bream include Ascot and Belmont in the Swan and Mt Henry in the Canning. Both rivers have continued to produce soapy mulloway with fish from 40-80cm coming from the Causeway, the Narrows and the Mt Henry and Canning bridges. Casting off the beaches should be quite pleasant from Tuesday through to Thursday with a lower swell and calm, easterly wind. 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:
Australasian Snapper
Australasian Snapper

Baldchin Groper
Baldchin Groper

Barramundi
Barramundi

Black Marlin
Black Marlin

Breaksea Cod
Breaksea Cod

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

Hapuka
Hapuka

Mangrove Red Snapper
Mangrove Red Snapper

Mulloway
Mulloway

Nannygai
Nannygai

Queen Snapper
Queen Snapper

Queenfish
Queenfish

Rainbow Trout
Rainbow Trout

This Fishing Report was submitted on 6/23/2023 4:23:34 AM by Seamus and last updated on 6/24/2023 1:56:01 PM.


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3/45 Northside Drive
Hillarys, WA AU


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