Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeIndySPORT: A feed of mixed fish

SPORT: A feed of mixed fish

By BRIAN LONG

ANGLERS reported consistent captures around the region over the past week.
Troy Armstrong caught nine quality whiting from his kayak near Alcoa Pier on the weekend then changed to soft plastics just before the water exploded with fish a few hundred metres away. He paddled over for 30 minutes of action on salmon around 1.5kg, boating four and losing many others.
Guy Stevens found salmon while trolling close to shore between Point Lillias and the quarries. He caught over a dozen and four big pike, the biggest over one metre.
Corey and Matt Knowles drifted with soft plastics over the Stingaree Bay spoil grounds on Sunday Corey, catching snapper to 48cm, pike, salmon and flathead.
Tanner Martin cast small metal lures from Point Lillias, catching close to a dozen pike late during the evening high tide.
Cunningham Pier produced snotty trevalla early in the morning, with anglers also reporting some big fish, perhaps kingfish, swimming around the pylons. Live baits might be worth trying to tempt these beasts.
The best flathead captures were reported from the shallow water along the Bellarine Peninsula. Water under two metre seemed best for the truly big lizards.
Colin McCallum anchored up in two metres off Portarlington where he set a liberal berley trail, which soon attracted a flathead to one of his baits under a float. He eventually caught nine, all quality fish.
Whiting were spread out, requiring a number of shifts to find a shoal. Bag limit captures were reported from St Leonards to Queenscliff.
Stan Porter anchored close to Swan Bay’s entrance where leatherjackets bit off many hooks. He escaped into shallower water where he soon boated some quality flathead.
Salmon remained present around The Rip, although still staying below the surface and requiring the use of deep-diving lures or downriggers.
A handful of kingfish were taken in various locations. Jigging the deep water of The Rip worked but slow-trolling soft plastics off Portsea worked better.
The deep water off St Leonards all the way to Queenscliff continued producing gummy sharks. Brad Mitchell used fresh squid caught early Sunday to great use, landing a pair of 5kg gummies along with flathead and ever-present Port Jackson sharks.
Dianne Goodfellow landed her first gummy, a fish around 4kg, while five-year-old daughter Tayla caught her maiden flathead for the year, putting pressure on husband and father Steve to pick up his act.
A mix of species was taken offshore. Sharks were taken in 50m to 70m, snapper around 2kg boated off Black Rock and Collendina, salmon were found working the breakers at 13th Beach and kingfish were taken in small numbers off Barwon Heads and The Rip.
Stripy tuna were sighted close to shore all the way from Barwon Heads to Lorne. Hopefully more will turn up working the surface in coming weeks.
Michael Evans continued enjoying success on refin at Wurdi Boluc Reservoir in a just reward for his hard work on this sometimes-difficult water.
Ballarat’s Lake Wendouree produced trout and redfin on mudeye. Fly anglers fishing late in the evening and after dark grassed trout around 1.5kg on mudeye patterns.
The Barwon River returned redfin on lure, with soft plastics out-fishing hard bodies. Anywhere between the Shannon Ave bridge to Ceres, Poloksford or the junction with the Leigh River was worth trying.
This weekend’s morning high tides should suit chasing snapper and salmon on soft plastics on the outer-harbour spoil grounds.

Send reports and photos to info@raylongtackle.com.au or visit Brian at Ray Long’s Fishing World 105, Shannon Ave, Manifold Heights.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

It’s not over yet

Bellarine emergency services are preparing for another band of warm weather following recent statewide fire outbreaks. It has been a busy week for...
More News

Recovery begins for tourist towns hit by flash flood

Locals have described the "absolute carnage" of record-breaking flash flooding, with cars and more washed out to sea in an extraordinary river overflow. Clean-up efforts...

Emergency centre open following flooding

Hundreds of people have attended an emergency relief centre in Lorne following flooding, leading to many needing to evacuate the region. Close...

Floating into 50 years

Queenscliff Coast Guard is celebrating 50 years of volunteer marine rescue with a free community open day. Community members will be able...

Geelong train line resumes operation

V/Line services have resumed on the Geelong line following earlier vandalism. Trains will not operate between Wyndham Vale and Southern Cross until Friday, 23 January...

Australia Day event cancelled

An Australia Day event that has been operating for more than half a century has been cancelled due to financial challenges and a lack...

It’s not over yet

Geelong and Bellarine emergency services are preparing for another band of warm weather following recent statewide fire outbreaks. It has been a...

Out and about

Independent photographer Ivan Kemp went to Geelong’s waterfront on a cool and blustery Tuesday to see who was out and about.

Great Ocean Road still closed

The Great Ocean Road remains closed to traffic in both directions between Lorne and Skenes Creek due to extreme weather, flooding and possible land-slips. V/Line...

Grovers get the better of Belmont

Independent photographer Ivan Kemp was at Ocean Grove Bowls Club on Tuesday to see the home side defeat Belmont 69 to 53 in round...

Finally some middle ground for our weather

After enduring blazingly hot days last Wednesday and Friday, Greater Geelong has had a cool week. Temperatures have struggled to get much past 20 degrees,...