Friday 10, Sep 2010
Bookmark and Share
Home  > Rob's Blog  >  Southern NSW Fishing Report No 0565
Southern NSW Fishing Report No 0565 Category: Reports
Posted: Wednesday 7 October 2009

THE BEST WAY TO CATCH BREAM?

In the estuaries the lead up to the high tide, which is just after lunchtime this weekend and early in the new week, will suit anglers wishing to head up onto the flats and chase species like bream and flathead in the shallows.

Small poppers, shallow running minnows and plastics are all worth a try depending on the conditions.

Note that on average lures are just as effective as baits on flathead, but if you are fishing for bream, a fresh bait is an extremely more productive option-especially if you use all the new technology like graphite rods, braid lines, fluorocarbon leader, chemically sharpened hooks, electric motors, sounders, high end kayaks etc.

Simply cast ahead of the fish the same way you would with a lure, draw the bait into the breams view, and once the fishes attention is drawn drop the bait to the bottom where the bream will swim over and eat it.

Your cast and presentation still needs to be good, and success is not 100% guaranteed, but it’s certainly much more reliable than a lure if the bream are not aggressive on the day: you can’t beat the smell flavor and texture of a fresh bait.

Good baits include a de headed small green prawn, tuna strip, white bait (awesome), pilchard head, carp strip, nipper, worm or any other good bream bait.

You don’t need to sight fish to realize the benefits of this technique; it works in deeper water too, often straight behind boats that are having no luck on lures! Use a suitable jig head instead of a plain hook and cover plenty of snags, racks, pylons or reefy areas: you will soon see there are plenty more bream than lure fishing might indicate.

I guess I am trying to make it clear that bream are tricky to catch on lures; while I have been lucky enough to get cricket score catches of whoppers at times; 6 good ones is considered a red letter day on the more accessible water ways.

On bait I can easily catch a dozen big bream in the same time, even in heavily fished areas, if I ‘work’ hard at it and utilize all the modern technology. That’s the facts: from there it really boils down to what technique individuals prefer.

IF YOU’RE A FISH, IRRIGATION PUMPS CAN SUCK!

The Murray Darling Basin Association is funding the creation of screening systems to save native fish from being drawn into irrigation pump canals.
The Authority has commissioned the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries (now Industry & Investment NSW) to scope, install and assess innovative ways of retrofitting economical screens to selected pumping systems.

The project follows an Authority funded study on the effects of irrigation practices on fish in the Murrumbidgee and Namoi Rivers and the Mulwala Canal system.

This study was the first to measure the extent of entrapment and stranding of native fish in irrigation offtakes and it found that up to 200 fish a day were extracted though the pumps.

The project is part of the Authority’s Native Fish Strategy which aims to rehabilitate native fish populations in the Basin back to 60 per cent of their estimated pre-European-settlement levels, after 50 years of implementation. The program has been in place since 2004 when experts estimated that levels were about 10per cent of those pre-European-settlement.

THERE IS LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL

While this may sound like a daunting task, quite a few projects are helping to make a difference:

The annual MDBA Native Fish Forum held in Albury illustrated that progress made by a range of native fish rehabilitation projects and this year participants heard about award-winning scientific developments such as:
  - carp separation cages;
  - “two-in-one” fishways;
  - the impact of weirs fitted with undershot gates;
  - the benefits of resnagging; and
  - the identification of carp breeding hotspots.

The Forum also highlighted a range of practical, on-ground activities such as:
  - emergency responses to rescue six threatened species’ populations following drought and the Victorian bushfires last summer;
  - the completion of most of the fishways under the “Sea to Hume Dam” initiative;
  - resnagging priority sections of the Murray River; and
  - the establishment of 10 “demonstration reaches” across the Basin.

HELP GRANTED

In the meantime there are also some grants on offer that will help people help restore this once pristine river system. Grants for community projects aimed at protecting and rehabilitating frontages and floodplain areas along the Victorian side of the Murray River are now available from the Mallee Catchment Management Authority.

The grants are part of the Frontage Management Grants Program (FMGP) component of the Murray River Frontage Action Plan.

Grants are available for works and activities aimed at improving river health, including fencing, erosion control, pest plant control, revegetation, track rationalisation, litter removal, disused pump site rehabilitation, recreation management and cultural heritage protection works.

To apply, or for more information, contact Ray de Groot at the Mallee Catchment Management Authority on (02) 50514350; via mobile 0428313177; or by email at ray.degroot@dpi.vic.gov.au

For more information go to www.mdba.gov.au/programs/nativefishstrategy.

See you on the water.

Rob Paxevanos

Video More Videos
Advertisement
Promotions
Copyright © 2010 WIN Corporation Pty Ltd