Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 12 04

Bluewater Tackle World News for December 4th

Our apologies for failing to get our regular newsletter to you last week. That's the first one we've missed since we started doing them over two years ago, and it was due

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Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 11 21

Bluewater Tackle World News for November 21st

There's another Pink Fly Fishing Clinic on at Point Walter, Saturday 6 December 2008. We covered this event last time it was held, and it was well attended and

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Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 11 14

Bluewater Tackle World News for November 14th

The marron season for Western Australia for this summer has been anounced. The dates are January 16th to February 8th, midday to midday. All the finer details are here.

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Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 11 07

Bluewater Tackle World News for November 7th

Last week we mentioned new restrictions this cray season for both amateurs and pros in Western Australia. The recreational daily bag limit drops from eight to six, and a possession limit of

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Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 10 30

Bluewater Tackle World News for October 30th

The biggest solar boat in the world, still to be built, will begin its world tour in

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Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 10 23

Bluewater Tackle World News for October 23rd

If you like sharks, great whites in particular, or exciting photography in general, check out a little photographic essay we have here. The photos are by Bluewater Exmouth's Matt Gates, but they're not at Exmouth.

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More busted: The decision by two recreational fishers from Yallingup to hide a haul of blue manna crabs on their boat has led to fines, court costs and penalties of almost $1140 each.

68-year-old Mark Alexander PATERSON and 57-year-old Geoffrey Leif LARSON had declared a catch of 20 crabs, when they were questioned at the Quindalup boat ramp last month, but a search of the wooden dinghy uncovered the additional concealed haul.

Busselton Court was told this week (Oct 21) that the additional 29 crabs were located underneath the floorboards of the boat. The judge also heard that, when Paterson had been questioned about his knowledge of the bag and boat limits for crabs, he told the Fisheries Officer “it’s on the sign” and pointed to a Dept of Fisheries crabbing sign located adjacent to the Quindalup ramp.

The sign states that the bag limit is 10 crabs per person, with a boat limit of 20 if two or more persons are aboard.

Southern Region Compliance Manager Steve Embling said the 29 additional crabs were checked and seized, after they were removed from their hiding place. “Luckily we were able to return the crabs to the ocean on this occasion,” Mr Embling said.


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This week's Bluewater Tackle World internet special is $20 off Daiwa Saltist HRF Hard Rock Fish baitcaster reels. They're a tough low-profile reel with a speedy 6.3:1 gear ratio, and eight Corrosion Resistant Ball Bearings (CRBBs). See that fine product and all the other specials here.

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Here’s a preview of this weekend's Sunday Times fishing news, with a bit of extra stuff...

PERTH METROPOLITAN

Craig Spooner and crew enjoyed a red-letter day also out of Two Rocks, with jewfish to 19kg, big pink snapper to nine kilos, 60cm king george, baldchin and breaksea cod in their bag. Joe McNamara joined a couple of Bluewater staffers, Nick Bailey and Chris Boyling, to chase some adrenalin-producing species out from Two Rocks, amberjack and samson fish supplying the required rush. Bluewater Scarborough’s Joff Weston spent a couple of exciting hours in the Two Rocks area, catching a legal jewfish on his first drop, and then adding some nice king george to his bag. Weston found the water temperature increasing significantly. Whopper sized bluespot flathead made a good target in 36m-deep water out from Mindarie, great king george fishing in 38-40m.  
 
Reports say there are heaps of mulloway and big skippy around wrecks well offshore, in water 80 to 110m deep. Blue Juice Charters have been talking of vast numbers of samson fish offshore, no doubt beginning to form aggregations.  
 
Yellowfin whiting have made appearances for shore anglers in the Cottesloe area, the Gulp soft plastic sand worm pattern a hit with them, and real sand worms making the best bait.

Beach fishing for tailor has improved right along the metro coastline. Karl Rosenow from Bluewater Morley suggests it’s time to look for gutters for the spring run of mulloway at the likes of Singleton and Golden Bay. Tailor were active from Perth offshore reefs, some terrific fish among them. 
 
Neil Grant worked Cockburn Sound waters where he and crew picked up 28 squid, eight king george and plenty of skippy.
 
Point Walter and Claremont yielded flathead, and a mulloway around 15kg hit the sand on the south of the Narrows recently. There were a few chopper tailor in East Fremantle waters.
 
MANDURAH
 
Chopper tailor are a feature for Mandurah’s shore fishers, with herring to chase after the tailor schools have moved on. San Remo produced some nice-sized flathead and a few mulloway were landed there, not huge fish but worth catching at about 8-10kg.
 
An odd king george has returned to Dawesville Cut while in the White Hills area whiting and heaps of juvenile salmon created activity.
 
For boaties the Five Fathom continues to yield numbers of pink snapper, the best fish to near 10kg, jewfish catches good in 30m deep water.
 
JURIEN 
 
Tailor make an attraction for shore fishers along the Jurien coastline, early morning at the Town Jetty among better times to try, one local bringing in a couple of shark mackerel from the Jetty which surprised many. Herring in big numbers should make it easy to take home a meal of those, sand whiting prolific from beaches.
 
Craig White from Jurien Seasports reckons the samson fish are going mental as they chase jigs, one boat catching a 32.5kg sambo. Nice jewfish came from 40-50m deep water, decent snapper, the largest 96cm, found in the same area, many baldchin being a pleasing addition. White reckons it won’t be long before the tuna turn up as there are large numbers of good bait schools in the region.
 
EXMOUTH

There'll be a new Exmouth-only newsletter on the site this weekend. Last week's is here, with some news about the Betta Billfish Bonanza, mackerel, flathead and dart.

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Bluewater Tackle World News comes from Bluewater, 21 Scarborough Beach Road, Scarborough, Western Australia - phone 08 9245 1313 - www.bluewater.net.au

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Please feel free to forward the web address for this newsletter on to friends who might appreciate it.

You can receive this news as an email the moment it's available (usually well before it appears on the website) by registering on the ‘create an account’ page. You don't have to buy anything, we just want you to get the info when it's most current.

 
Bluewater Tackle World News 2008 10 16

Bluewater Tackle World News for October 16th

EFTTA, the European Fishing Tackle Trade Association, has been encouraging a standard when it comes to providing anglers with details on the exact performance of fishing lines.

Thirteen lines have recently been through EFTTA’s unique Line Test Project, which encourages manufacturers to have their lines examined in controlled laboratory conditions to verify breaking strain and diameter.

Only two passed and can now carry the ‘EFTTA Approved’ logo on their packaging.

Victoria Seymour of EFTTA said: “We will continue to carry out our twice-yearly random line tests until the problem of incorrectly labelled strains and diameters is cleaned up in the market place."

While we don't stock any of the lines recently tested, the results are an indicator of how little the label on a spool of line can mean. It's more true in the European market place than anywhere else. See the EFTTA site for the results.

Diameters were universally understated, and in most cases breaking strains were overstated. One of the worst, Asso Double Strength, understated the diameter by 10%, on a line rated at nine kilos that actually broke at 4.8kg!

The best of those recently tested was Bayer Perlon, which was close enough to stated diameter, and broke at 20% over stated strength.

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A reminder to our overseas customers: have a good look at what you might like from us this week, because with the radically devalued Australian dollar, everything we sell is suddenly much cheaper to overseas clients, particularly in the United States.

If you're overseas and haven't 'logged in', the prices you see on the site are 10% higher than you will pay, due to our local tax that you don't have to pay. If you log in and change the currency on screen to either $US or Euro, you will get a better idea, though it will rarely be spot on due to daily fluctuations that we don't try to keep up with. However to give you an idea of how that has changed with our falling dollar, today we changed the $US conversion from 0.95 to 0.69 - so everything on our site is 27% cheaper for you now than the last time we adjusted. That's scary for us but a good deal for you. The Euro change was 18% down.

Australian customers can be assured that as most of the product we sell is imported, this does mean we'll be seeing price rises coming in all directions - but they invariably take a few months to flow through.

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Two Perth men, who fished for rock lobster after the season had closed, have been ordered to pay more than $16,500 in fines, court costs and mandatory additional penalties.

Magistrate Michael Wheeler told 47-year-old Van Thang Nguyen and 55-year-old Ngoc Tri Phan that the fines were set high because fish stocks were finite and needed protection from over-fishing.

Nguyen and Phan were observed between 7pm and midnight (on 30 June this year) on Port Denison Marina. After the men left the area, they were stopped south of Dongara by local police, operating in support with Dongara-based Fisheries Officers. Fishing equipment was seized and two wet bags found in the vehicle were searched.

Compliance Manager David Griffiths said not only had Nguyen admitted to catching all 38 of the rock lobsters in the bags, his fishing activity continued past the end of the 2007/2008 season which had closed at 6pm that day.

Nguyen was fined $1,000 for joint possession of undersize rock lobsters, and $500 each for charges related to not having the appropriate recreational fishing licence and taking more than the daily bag limit. He was also ordered to pay a mandatory additional penalty of $4,650 for 31 undersize lobsters and a further mandatory additional penalty of $4,500 for the lobsters in excess of the bag limit plus court costs of $114.20. Nguyen also forfeited all his fishing gear seized by Fisheries and Marine Officers on 30 June.

Phan was fined $500 for joint possession of the 31 undersize rock lobsters, plus a mandatory additional penalty of $4650 and court costs of $114.20.

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This week's Bluewater Tackle World special is $20 off Williamson Gamefish Kits, six rigged lures in a dedicated tackle pouch. Excellent value for only $39.99. See that and all the other specials here.

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Here’s a preview of this weekend's Sunday Times fishing news, with a bit of extra stuff...

PERTH METROPOLITAN

Chopper tailor and flathead are Swan/Canning features, lower parts best with some of the flatties reported at 40 to 50cm, just a few crabs turning up in the system. In the Harbour, the E-Shed area has yielded some excellent skippy, with a few herring around the Moles, and the odd good tailor at night from North Mole, glow sticks helping. Bream are fairly active towards Guildford, but you need to watch the size. Floreat Drain is one spot where quality tailor were landed, with small schools appearing right up and down the coast. The Marinas are just okay for herring and skippy, quite small herring along usual haunts south of Fremantle.

Offshore action is scarce, skippy a good bet around reefs and wrecks, and expected to improve, samson fish numbers on the increase at the likes of Fairway Buoy and Centaur Marker. Charter boats have accounted for some terrific jewfish, Craig from Saltwater Charters telling us of two caught by punters, one 18kg, another 20kg.

BUSSELTON

Greg Baird tells us that Geographe Bay fishers are having a great time with squid and crabs widespread, even scooping in the shallows good at times, especially in the evening when the weather is right. The Jetty is working well for those species and herring are biting better just before dusk for Jetty anglers. King george whiting make a solid target throughout, fresh squid and coral prawn baits doing better.

Boating parties are reeling in some great skippy just near the end of the Jetty, the best fish over a kilo.       

The west coast has turned up really good tailor when the swell is down, Mitchell Rocks and Injidup notable.

Larger boats are venturing well out from the Cape where they’re scoring excellent jewfish catches.

GERALDTON

Graeme Maunder has been using small mulies to land some massive herring, the best to 35cm, from near Point Moore one night; and the next night he enticed a small mulloway with one of the same size mulies floated from rocks at Greenough. Both First and Second Point at Greenough are holding a few school mulloway, some chopper tailor about but fishing from reefs in the area nigh on impossible courtesy the big swells in the region. There are also a few pike about Greenough and at Southgates.

Both yellowfin and school whiting provided decent bags at the likes of the Live Cray Factory, Separation Point and Point Moore, a few tailor in those waters but they were unreliable and quite varied in size. Drummonds Cove worked reasonably well for whiting, a few herring and chopper tailor.

ALBANY

A few nice days has allowed bigger boats to work 65 to 70m deep water out of Albany, good mixed bags resulting for those prepared to move around, red and pink snapper, jewfish, breaksea cod, queen snapper, samson fish and sharks among the catch. Leatherjackets make perennial pests. Closer in, king george whiting were in reasonable numbers, some squid there too.

Sand whiting are abundant but mostly on the small side, as are the skippy and herring with juvenile salmon frequenting the area. Better herring and salmon fishing was found to the east of Albany, Bremer Bay notable. Flathead added an attractive option at Cosy Corner, Wilson Inlet and Two Peoples Bay.

River fishing for bream is reflecting the increased water temperatures in local rivers, those around Walpole on the quiet side with around Albany rivers yielding plenty of bream, some good size fish among them.  

EXMOUTH

There's a new Exmouth-only newsletter on the site here, with some news about the Betta Billfish Bonanza, mackerel, flathead and dart. A good mixed bag. There'll be another newsletter up soon.

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Bluewater Tackle World News comes from Bluewater, 21 Scarborough Beach Road, Scarborough, Western Australia - phone 08 9245 1313 - www.bluewater.net.au

***

Please feel free to forward the web address for this newsletter on to friends who might appreciate it.

You can receive this news as an email the moment it's available (usually well before it appears on the website) by registering on the ‘create an account’ page. You don't have to buy anything, we just want you to get the info when it's most current.

 
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