Jarrad Lawford
RECFISHWEST FISHING REPORT EDITOR
Get ready for another metro FADs fishing competition! From 1 March until 1 May, we will be running a best photo competition from the metro FADs, with three top prizes of Madfish Fish Bags up for grabs and eight other prizes containing loads of Richter skirts and lures that are perfect for catching the hard-fighting pelagics that school around the FADs! It's easy to win a prize, all you need to do is: 1) Travel out to one of the 14 metro FADs currently deployed between Rockingham and Two Rocks. 2) Catch any of the pelagic species on offer there, take a photo with your catch that reflects Recfishwest's responsible fish handling guidelines with the FAD clearly visible in the photo. 3) Send a photo of your catch to our Instagram page @recfishwest or email it to jarrad@recfishwest.org.au detailing the FAD you fished and when you caught it. 4) We will compile all the photos and award prizes to the best 11 snaps once the comp concludes on May 1! The FADs are already firing, so make sure you get out there! The offshore FADS are going great and have been firing all day, with plenty of decent-sized dolphinfish along with football-sized southern bluefin tuna. Small skirts and compact Halco Laser Pros are working wonders, with calmer conditions best for dolphinfish. Further west of the FADS, there have been some massive billfish breaking lines so this is always worth a crack on the troll if you're out there. Out the back of Rottnest in 30-60m depths, yellowtail kingfish and jumbo Samsonfish are stretching arms. Both species are being caught on fillet baits or jigs and drifting over the old wrecks out there has been productive. King George whiting in 40-50cm sizes are biting at Windmills and Stragglers. There has also been good tailor in the 45-50cm range around the inshore white-water reef zones of Stragglers and Mewstones with slices and floating fish baits working well. The Five-Fathom Bank and Three-Mile Reef are worth a try for sand and King George whiting and the odd skippy. Squid have been active on the inside of Garden Island and burley trails have brought in huge schools of herring in Cockburn Sound this week. Heading north of Perth, the Spanish mackerel went a bit quiet between Hillarys and Two Rocks, but this was made up for with huge numbers of southern bluefin tuna. The 29m mark out from Ocean Reef saw very good numbers of King George whiting. In the Swan River, drop-netters have been catching blue swimmer crabs in a range of depths but the 12-18m areas have been the most consistent. Tailor up to 40cm have been taken on the troll on both lures and mulies. Just a heads up, the Rottnest Channel Swim is on tomorrow (Saturday) so we recommend avoiding the stretch between Cottesloe and Rotto and brace yourselves for some very busy ramps early in the morning. Planning on fishing in the river this week? Fishers are being reminded not to eat mussels or other bivalves caught in the Swan-Canning Estuary and to clean their crabs before eating or freezing. The reminder comes following a recent visible pale orange Alexandirum bloom spotted near Riverside Drive. Alexandrium produces Paralytic shellfish toxins that can accumulate in crabs and mussels and if eaten can be dangerous and in extreme cases fatal. You can find DPIRD’s and DBCA’s guide on how to clean crabs here.
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