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Recfishwest's State-wide Fishing Report 11 August 2023 🎣

 | By Seamus on 8/11/2023 4:42:27 AM | Views (247)
Recfishwest Newsletter
Recfishwest
Fishing Report
11/08/23
Al McGlashan managed to snag this cracker of an underwater snap of a giant trevally shortly after it inhaled a surface popper, not the easiest of tasks given their power and speed once they realise they're hooked! Arguably the hardest-fighting of the 40 trevally species although bluefin trevally give them a good run for the title. 
Our contributors
Sam Russell
Jarrad Lawford
Peter Fullarton
Sedin Hasanovic 
G'day <>,

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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!

Josh Yates @josh_yates__ and this rather fat Spanish mackie took top honours this week in our north-west, with this beast dragging him around via his speargun before his mate managed to get a second shot in. Would be approaching the magical 30kg mark. 

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Broome catches
The series of photos uploaded by @tyler_ridlzz this week from the remote Charnley River in the Kimberley region paints the perfect picture of how beautiful and isolated the fishing and camping is in this part of the world. Do yourself a favour and check out his latest Instagram post and it will likely make you want to pack your bags immediately to go camping at the same barra pool. 


Boats

Boats fishing the 60m depths have done reasonably well on red emperor and coral trout while Spanish mackerel and tuna have been taken on the troll anywhere from 2-20km out. Sailfish and black marlin in the 20-45kg range have also come from the 20m depths. In Roebuck Bay, Crab Creek and the Fingers. Threadfin salmon ranging from 70cm up to 1m have been around in decent numbers, while blue-nosed salmon are also plentiful throughout the bay. In Crab Creek a few small barramundi have been caught on vibes. The edge of the Deeps and the bommies in Roebuck Bay have also offered northern mulloway, while the 30m depths behind the reef at Gantheaume Point have produced Spanish mackerel and tuna. It will be mostly light to moderate south-westerly winds this week with lower swells, so there should be ample opportunity to head out in the boats. 

Shore-based

The Port Jetty has produced solid bluebone, queenfish and trevally as well as the odd school mackerel, while wading out at Entrance Point has been productive for bluebone, mangrove jack and coral trout. At the Town Beach Jetty small trevally and queenfish along with bream and javelin fish have been the main catches. Willie Creek has offered bream, mangrove jack and the odd barramundi, while the mouth of Barred Creek has fished well for whiting. Quandong Point held trevally, bluebone and queenfish, while at Coconut Wells and Cable Beach whiting have been plentiful and the odd queenfish and trevally have been caught. Threadfin salmon catches have been reported from 80-Mile Beach, providing a great feed for anglers putting in the time and effort. 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
We had too many great catches of bottom fish to choose from this week in Exmouth and this large mouthed nannygai (saddletail) landed aboard @onstrikecharters found the Nomad Squidtrex too good to resist. 

Boats

With glassy conditions this week most boats headed out to the western side and did well. Billfish chasers found sailfish and black marlin in the 100-150m depths along with a few dolphinfish. In the 30-60m depths out from North and South passages and Tantabiddi, nicely rigged garfish baits or hard-bodied lures accounted for Spanish mackerel and tuna when trolling at 5-6 knots. Rankin cod in the 45-55cm range have been plentiful in the 20m depths with soft plastics and Nomad Squidtrex vibes working well on them. Rankin cod and a few coral trout have also been caught around the Muirons and charter boats that went out the back of the islands to the 80m depths found saddletail snapper and big cod. Conditions have been exceptional in the Gulf, but the fishing has slowed a little. Nevertheless, crews that have put in solid days have caught blue-lined emperor, Rankin cod, Spanish flag and Chinaman cod. Better spots have been the Cooper, Camplin, Wapet and Schofield shoals and King Reef, with soft plastics, mulies, occy and squid baits doing most of the catching. Squid have been in reasonable numbers, especially out from Wapet Creek where blue swimmer crabs have also been caught. This weekend is looking glorious on the water yet again but the southerly winds and swell will start to increase between Monday and Thursday. 

Shore-based

Big schools of giant trevally in the 2-3kg range have been active around inshore waters, hitting small stickbaits, metal slices and soft plastics. Among the better spots for them has been Bundegi which has also held a few small queenfish. At Learmonth squid have been about off the jetty along with whiting, bream and a few trevally. Fly-fishers at the bottom of the Gulf around Bay of Rest and Whitmore Island have tangled with giant herring. At the town marina bream have been beating most other species to the bait but small cod, trevally and mangrove jack are always a chance there, while the rocks around the industrial estate have offered a few squid. At Tantabiddi giant trevally and spangled emperor have been the main species caught and a surprise coronation trout was landed there this week. At the Lighthouse, walking out and fishing the low tide has been productive for spangled emperor, while the Mildura Wreck has also offered spangled emperor and the odd bluebone, with imitation crab lures or the real thing working well for the bluebone. A top tip for land-based fishers in Exmouth is to start off using mulies as bait because their oil often brings the fish in, then change over to more resilient baits such as occy or squid. Big thanks to the great crew from Tackle World Exmouth for their tips! 
 
 
Kalbarri catches


Boats

Quite a few boats took advantage of good conditions early in the week but had little to show for their efforts, with some crews suggesting water temperatures may be a little on lower side. Baitfish schools were abundant offshore however and plenty of tuna and mackerel were seen jumping, which had the same effects to the heart rates of fishers. Despite this, there were no reports of Spanish mackerel catches despite plenty of ground being covered chasing them. For the best results, try to work lures through or along the current lines which usually look similar to slicks on the water surface. Keeping an eye out for weed is also handy as this tends to drift within the current lines where the fish tend to sit. Trolling a mix of deeper diving and surface lures means more of the water column is covered and 5-6 knot speeds also generally work best. The mornings from Saturday through to Tuesday could provide great windows for trolling with a calmer forecast expected. 

Shore-based

Red Bluff and Wittecarra have offered a few chopper tailor, as has the mouth of the Murchison River. Down at Pot Alley pink snapper around the 50cm mark have been in reasonable numbers. One party of fishers went to Lucky Bay chasing mulloway without success but they did return with some decent tailor. The Murchison River has been the most reliable spot this week, with catches reasonable rather than spectacular. Whiting have been in good numbers in the shallows and from the Sand Spit, which has also offered chopper tailor. Good bream, some over 40cm, have been active from the marina jetty to far upstream, while cod and mud crabs have been among them. About 10-15km up the Murchison big mulloway were seen smashing mullet schools this week, while at the marina jetty an under-gunned angler lost a big mulloway after it wrapped his line around the jetty pylons. It's looking decent for land-based fishing conditions over the next few mornings thankfully. Big thanks to Dean from Kalbarri Sports and Dive for his tips as always!
Geraldton catches
Even if the weather doesn't provide a welcoming window to punch out wide, there are still tasty options in close around the more sheltered waters as @mat.svenson discovered this week on his yak. 


Boats

Conditions have been up and down again unfortunately, but good skippy up to 1kg have come from Point Moore. Not too many reports of squid catches came in this week and most that were caught came from very shallow and sheltered depths of 2-3m (as seen above). Thankfully the water has cleared a little, so they could be worth a crack around the inshore weed beds, especially between the calmer winds and steady swell from Saturday to Monday. The swell and wind will start to creep up from Tuesday, so the next few days is your best window for now.     

Shore-based

Whiting have been the main species caught in what has been a very quiet week for shore fishers, but catches have been inconsistent. A Pages Beach regular caught a good haul earlier in the week, with 20 or so fish with some up to 30cm. He returned the following evening and landed just a solitary whiting, which shows being in the right place at the right time has been the key for the past week. Another angler fished Point Moore one evening and got a good whiting of 35cm and a few smaller ones before schools of pike came in on the high tide and crashed the party. The Batavia Coast Marina has been full of blowies lately, but the outer walls could be worth a try for squid and the Greenough River might be worth a crack for bream in the evenings once the blowies disperse. Although weed has been a big problem along local beaches, clearer patches have started to appear and a bit of exploring could produce a feed of tailor or even a mulloway, especially tomorrow morning with a touch of an easterly wind aiding in casting. Big thanks to Geraldton Sports Centre for their report as always! 
Lancelin catches
Lancelin's Fishing guru Peter Fullarton from Tailored Treks found a honey hole that was producing solid pinkies this week following the recent storms. If you want to be put on to the fish on one of his great beach fishing tours, click here. 


Boats

Since the demersal closure kicked off on August 1st, most of Perth's boating anglers have ceased visiting town, while a number of locals have opted to start putting pots out and fish the nearshore waters for pelagics during this time. Dingy fishers have been finding more to do in the bay, with plenty of whiting, squid, snook, herring and tailor around. The skippy and herring in particular have been in great numbers about the bay, especially when burley has been used. Snook have also been hitting everything that moves, including squid jigs, so it is best to keep the expensive squid jigs in the tackle box as their strong jaws and sharp teeth can do a fair bit of damage. They are quite underrated on the chew though and are easy to fillet. As for tailor, they have been in solid numbers this week, so trolling the nearshore waters or flicking stickbaits, Halco Twisties and ganged mulies into the whitewash towards the beach is a good bet for landing some 60cm+ greenbacks and even the odd mulloway. While there is a touch of rain sticking around for the next five days or so, Saturday and Sunday should be quite flat on the water with calming easterly winds and a swell of around 2m. 

Shore-based

The gutters have been holding some smaller mulloway and larger greenback tailor this past week, with plenty of catches and sightings of tailor reported in the waves. Nolan and Garrit had a flick with Peter Fullarton and enjoyed a great tailor session, with two 60cm+ fish being hooked at their feet and an estimated 40 tailor at one stage trying to steal the lure of each hooked fish. Weed has been moving about with the passing tides and has made it quite difficult to cast into clear patches of water, so it does require a little bit of searching to find the clean patches. Pink snapper have also been caught by both the drone fishers and beach casters this week, with some thumping sizes rolling in. Recent storms cleared the bay's southern beaches and once this happens the shallows are a great place to cast lures and baits for an excellent spread of species such as flathead, flounder, yellowfin whiting, skippy, herring and tarwhine to name just a few. The local jetty also had its lighting back on this week and was once again a great spot to grab a feed of herring each night. This weekend is expecting some more ideal land-based conditions with calmer easterly winds and swell albeit with a bit of rain, so make sure you're careful driving along the beaches as the sand could be quite soft following the downpours. If you're not confident, try parking up off the beach and walking to the gutters. 
 
 
Esperance catches
With some more comfortable fishing windows opening up last week, @lachy_warren had a few drops not too far from the mainland and managed to find a couple of nannies along with a decent blue groper. 


Boats

Esperance Bay has offered plenty of squid, a few cuttlefish, small snook and sand whiting. The sand whiting catches have also been favourable at Lion Island and Fourth Beach. The islands located closer to shore have produced queen snapper, small Samson fish and plenty of sweep. Out wide, queen snapper have been about in big numbers with reports of up to ten fish coming from the one lump. The deeper waters have also offered nannygai around the 45cm mark, Samson fish nudging 30kg, small yellowtail kingfish, cuttlefish and big schools of tuna. Squid chasers are reminded that Southern Sport & Tackle's Chase the Kraken competition closes on August 16th (Wednesday), so make sure you get out there and have a flick to get your entries in. Sunday and Monday morning are looking like your best windows for boating, with a lower northerly wind and swell expected. 

Shore-based

The Town Jetty has been the hot spot for squid once again (hint hint for the final days of the Chase the Kraken comp), with some tubes up to 40cm. It has also been holding herring and small skippy in good numbers. Taylor Street Jetty remains temporarily closed, but the rocks around it have been good for King George whiting and bigger skippy, while small King George whiting and flounder have been the main catches from Bandy Creek Boat Harbour. On the beaches it has been very hard to get away from salmon with 5kg-plus fish coming from Salmon Beach, Fourth Beach, Wylie Bay, Roses and Lucky Bay. As well as hordes of salmon, 14-Mile Beach, Roses, Thomas River and Alexander Bay have offered gummy sharks, small flathead and herring.
Great Southern catches
Emi Campbell @emi_campbell managed to catch her first dhufish off the yak during the calmer conditions this week off Denmark. Given how flat the water was her screams of excitement were most likely heard all the way back on the mainland. Nice work Emi! 


Boats

Squid have been the main catches this week with only a few weather windows allowing smaller boats to target them in King George Sound. The numbers of the tasty cephalopod have been fairly good with white Shimano Sephia rattlers and Harimitsu Lemon Special jigs producing the best results. The Sound has also offered King George whiting, but the size has been nothing special and most were just touching the 30cm mark. A couple of bigger boats briefly got out to the coral ground during a lull in the bad weather and their catches included pink snapper, dhufish, breaksea cod and blue groper during the flatter conditions. Sunday could offer a welcoming glass off on the water with the wind dropping right down along with a 2m swell, but Monday onwards is looking rough. 

Shore-based

Squidding has been very good from the shore with the better spots including the town jetty, Frenchman Bay, Emu Point and Whalers Cove. These locations have also held herring, small skippy and whiting species. Reports of bigger skippy have come from Cheynes Beach, while a few resident salmon have been taken at Cheynes and Salmon Holes. Bream in the King, Kalgan and Hay rivers have generally been small, but a couple of 40cm-plus fish have been among them with soft plastics and smaller vibe lures producing the goods. Sunday should produce some nice land-based fishing conditions. Big thanks to the crew from Trailblazers in Albany for their tips!

South West catches
As you can see, weed has been a bit tedious this week but it didn't stop Corren Wakelam @corren_wak04 from throwing on the waders and finding a clearer patch of water to soak some baits. This silver slab of a mulloway put his rod to the test and was released to fight another day. Great catch Corren! 


Boats

Plenty of boats have been heading out to Four-Mile Reef and enjoyed reasonable success on King George whiting. Among the KG's have been plenty of solid skippy, while sand whiting and herring have been caught closer in. Squidding has been difficult because of poor water clarity, but conditions and catches have been better in 10-15m depths. Boaties jigging for Samson fish and yellowtail kingfish have reported good catches starting from the 40-50m depths, while the inshore bays in Bunbury and Busselton have held plenty of tuna which have been feasting on whitebait schools and showing a liking for 15g or 20g Halco Twistys when boats have flicked them either side of the bait balls. Trolling the current lines has worked best and skirt lures or deeper diving lures working down to 3-6m depths trolled at 5-6 knots produced the most fish. Geographe Bay has also been consistent for smallish King George whiting, chunky skippy, a few sand whiting, loads of herring and squid when the water is clear. It should be pristine and flat on the water throughout the South-West until at least midday on Sunday, so make the most of it! 

Shore-based

Tailor catches have picked up along the coast with some anglers getting their bag limits at Preston and Buffalo beaches. The tailor have generally been a decent size (40-60cm usually) and these beaches throughout most of the South-West region have also held lots of herring. The better pink snapper fishing has been around Dunsborough and at Busselton Jetty, where big mulloway have been caught along with the pinkies. The jetty also has held plenty of herring, but squidding there has been quiet because of the dirty water. This should improve over the weekend with low winds and swell expected. A few bream have come from the Collie River and the Bunbury Cut has offered decent numbers of herring, small skippy and the occasional chopper tailor. Enjoy those calm conditions on the water this weekend and kudos to the crew from Whitey's Tackle for their tips!

Freshwater

There were a handful of larger trout landed this week in the South-West waterways, including this 50cm beauty of a rainbow trout landed by @bushrats which was a new personal best for the avid fisher. You can catch the footage of this fish being released back into the fast flowing stream here. 
Good numbers of rainbow trout have come from the Collie and Preston rivers and other local streams, some from really skinny water, while the Brunswick River produced some cracking brown trout this week. The rainbows have been hitting small hard-bodied minnow lures but fly-fishers have fared well on them using big-patterned flies such as Woolly Buggers. Rainbow trout have also been sighted in the streams feeding into Logue Brook Dam, but they’ve shown little interest in lures or flies. Redfin perch have been around the Harvey, Wellington and Glen Mervyn dams and while numbers are down, sizes have been good with reports of quite a few 35-40cm redfin landed. Fishing soft plastics around dam walls and other deep structure has been the go. Further south, rainbow trout have come from the streams around Pemberton, with small Rapala hard-bodies a popular lure choice, while fly-fishers have done well at Big Brook Dam. 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

Dirty river water has been flushed down from the estuary system, drawing schools of small whiting to waters off the rock walls around the Dawesville Cut. Better whiting catches have come from the ocean however, quite close in around 1km or so either side of the Cut where the water is clearer. Good King George whiting have been caught out from Dawesville in the 20-25m depths, while Five-Fathom Bank has offered plenty of skippy in the 1kg range. Floating a lightly weighted whitebait on a set of ganged hooks down into a burley trail has produced great results on the skippy, which can be enormous fun on light tackle. Inside the Five-Fathom Bank plump sand whiting have been in good numbers in 8-12m depths, while at the back of the Five-Fathom trolled 2-4-inch skirts have accounted for plenty of tuna. Squid fishers have done best out from Melros, while the best beach fishing has been south of town starting from Tim’s Thicket with tailor, herring, sand whiting, school mulloway and pink snapper landed, plus the odd salmon among the tailor schools at Tim’s Thicket. With all the dirty water in the estuary, Tackleworld Miami staff suggest anglers targeting herring, tarwhine and skippy should fish lower in the water column, using a weighted burley cage rather than a float at locations such as the Cut and Mandurah traffic bridges. Bream chasers are expecting fish in the Murray and Serpentine rivers to also become more active over the next few weeks. Enjoy the great fishing conditions this weekend and 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

Garden Island, Cockburn and Warnbro sounds and Mangles Bay have fished well for King George whiting. Depth hasn’t really been a factor as it’s more of a case of finding broken ground. Quite a few sand whiting have been among the bycatches and they have also been caught right in close. Five-Fathom Bank held plenty of solid skippy with good use of burley the key to a hot bite, while squid catches in the Sounds and in Mangles Bay have been solid. Good numbers of tailor have been around the exposed offshore reefs and tuna have been plentiful behind Garden Island in 30-40m depths. The 60m depths behind Garden Island and near Rottnest Island have also held good numbers of amberjack. For land-based fishers sand whiting catches have been good with Long Point and Secret Harbour among the better spots. Long Point has also fished well for herring and small chopper tailor, while tailor catches have improved at Port Kennedy and Secret Harbour beaches. A bit of exploring is needed at these beaches however as weed has been a problem at times. Rockingham and Palm Beach jetties held herring and scaly mackerel. Squid and herring have been rewarding fishers at most of the rock walls and jetties, including the Ammo Jetty and Woodman Point. Enjoy those great conditions this weekend and big thanks to Compleat Angler Rockingham for their tips! 


With last weekend's weather turning it on with spring starting to hint its arrival, Ammo Jetty produced the goods with many fishers taking advantage of the warm and calm conditions. Metro fishing at its best. 
Perth catches
Jake Rotham @rothy_mate was one of many fishers who scoped out the local metro beaches hoping to find some greenback tailor and this healthy specimen was caught and released near the exposed reef breaks in front of Marmion Angling Club. If you can find a deeper gutter close to a reef break that has whitewash stirring around it, then it's usually a good place to start flicking a stickbait or ganged mulie in the hopes of landing one of these hard-fighting species. 

Boats

King George whiting catches have been good around Windmills with most fish around the 40cm mark. Windmills has offered quite a bit of variety this week, including solid skippy when burley is used and snook up to 60cm that have been hitting metal slices and deep-diving lures. Good King George whiting catches have also come from Rowboat Reef and out from Hillarys in 40m depths. Sand whiting have been in great numbers, especially off Hillarys, the 10m depths off Cottesloe and on the edge of the shipping channel. Squid catches have been widespread with the better spots including the 3-5m depths off Hillarys and Mindarie, and the same depths of South Beach and Bathers Beach. A few cuttlefish have been among the squid at the northern locations. Tuna and a few yellowtail kingfish have been around the 40m depths in the north metro areas, while Rottnest Island’s West End has also offered both species. Tuna have been about in great numbers though, especially last weekend with the warmer conditions, with boats reporting catches in depths between 20-35m west of Three Mile Reef in the northern regions. Trolling skirts and deeper diving lures that can reach the 3-6m depths at 5-6 knot speeds worked best, although flicking Halco Twisties around also saw plenty of catches in the 3-5kg range. In the lower reaches of the Swan River dinghy fishers have been trolling for chopper tailor with some success. This weekend will be nice and glassy on the water, so we're expecting the whiting, squid and tuna catches to continue.  


Some beasty black bream were doing the rounds further up river in the Swan this week, with @josh.phillips.6054 landing this 40cm+ beauty while untangling lines. 

Shore-based

Bream have been the main target in the Swan River system and once again it has been the middle to upper sections of the Swan and Canning rivers that have produced the best catches, especially after dark when the blowies go to bed. Structure has been the key with better spots including Canning Bridge, Mt Henry Bridge, the Narrows, the Causeway and Garrett Road Bridge. A few soapy mulloway have been among the bream as well and the flats around Burswood have thrown up a flathead or two. Vibe-style lures in gold patterns have worked well for the flathead and occasional bream or mulloway, especially Gladiator Tackle House Rolling Baits. The lower reaches of the Swan are still offering chopper tailor, while undersized pink snapper nudging the 45cm mark have provided a bit of excitement around North Fremantle. South Mole produced a few squid and lots of herring and squidding has been reasonable around Freo's Fishing Boat Harbour. North Mole has been quieter than usual, but herring have been there in good numbers and anglers have also been doing well on snook when baitcasting mulies. Tailor fishing was more consistent from the beaches north of Hillarys, but a few good ones have been landed on stickbaits at first light from Cottesloe Groyne, which has also seen a legal-sized pink snapper this week. Make the most of those glassy 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:
Australasian Snapper
Australasian Snapper

Barramundi
Barramundi

Black Bream
Black Bream

Black Marlin
Black Marlin

Bluefin Trevally
Bluefin Trevally

Bluefin Tuna
Bluefin Tuna

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

Greater Amberjack
Greater Amberjack

Gummy Shark
Gummy Shark

Mangrove Red Snapper
Mangrove Red Snapper

Mulloway
Mulloway

Nannygai
Nannygai

Pike
Pike

This Fishing Report was submitted on 8/11/2023 4:42:27 AM by Seamus and last updated on 8/15/2023 1:26:14 AM.


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3/45 Northside Drive
Hillarys, WA AU


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