Luckily this storm passed around us much to the relief of my son Bradley and his
girlfriend (Casey) visiting from Sydney. Given it was Casey's first time to Darwin, she was still pretty enough paranoid just about Crocs jumping into the low profile boat I have but I assured her I had not seen any in the
harbour for quite a while (funnily I did see a 3.5m one off East Point two days
later!).
After a quick ‘look see’ at Shelly Island and Wickham point
for naught surface action wise, we popped over to Weed Reef
We got a few smallish giant trevally but nothing consistent. With the wind dying back to almost nothing, we then
crossed back over harbour for Katlyn Bay.
The baitfish being attacked were smaller than I have seen before, only about 3-4mm deep in the body and about 35 to 40mm long. My son was using a small as possible soft plastic but could not match the hatch size wise and still have something with enough weight to cast on the threadline outfit he was using (seems he has forgotten all the fly casting I taught him when I was married to his mum 15 years ago - but then again he was only five at the time!).
So I place a small ball sinker onto his 20lb leader that was tied to his main braid line and tied on a small calf tail based clouser onto his rig. Instant success to say the least. Even his girlfriend (not at all a fisher person on her own account) caught a couple of the small but plentiful skinnies continually bursting the surface with frenzied feeding activity.
Wanting something larger for them to
tangle with, we headed towards East Point but nothing seen there so continued
on to Lee Point.
As soon as we got to the reefs of Lee Point, a tight
pack of about 20 sea birds could be seen working the pressure wave edge created by the dropping tide
as it pushed up against the rocky outcrops that parallel the Lee Point
headland. We caught some nice 30-40cm GTs and some 50cm queenies while casting to the water under the squawking hovering birds. However, the stiffling
hot and humid conditions as well as the fight between wind and tide creating a
rocky motion in the boat, got the best of Casey and so I headed back into
the harbour dropping her off at Nightcliff Jetty where my wife picked her up and took her home. The son
and I headed the boat towards the boat
ramp at East Arm to meet them at home.
However the tide was way way out
0.5m and the ramp was high and dry. Giving at least an hour before we could even think about hauling the boat out of the water.
Great! More fishing.
We popped back to other side of harbour to Weed Reef again. I haven't been on the harbour at such a low time and we saw reefs and sand bars that I didn't know were even there. At Weed Reef we managed a heap of small trevally – (Giant and Fringed Finned). There were also heaps of really big (and I mean big mother big!) Milkies actively feeding the area. These were not working in waves sucking down algae off the surface but viciously slashing and turning to get at whatever they were eating. They were not interested in the algae flies I have caught them on before, nor the tiny white clousers cast repeatedly in their direction after a boil on the surface used in the hope they were eating the tiny baitfish we had seen earlier in the day at Katlyn Bay. I have had a large Milkie off Lee Point take a large clouser (lost that one as quick as I hooked it!) while chasing queenies, so they do take flies other than scum flies.
Frustrating ourselves with these big
Milkies eventually saw us heading back to take the boat out but a short stop at
Wickham Point gave us some more mini GT action and queenies to delay going to the boat ramp. This occupied us
for about an hour. Eventually seeing the time was
way after we should have been back, we again started towards the boat ramp at
East Point.
However, when zipping past the
wharf side of Shelly Island we saw a heap of slashes and bust ups on the surface off the corner
of the island this had us stopping for another few casts (or twenty!). Two hours later we
eventually headed for the boat ramp, as it took that long for the action to slow down (it wasn't because I was worn out and too old for catching fish as my son suggested!)
The water on this side of the small
island near the loading wharf comes from deep water up over the shallow rock
bar on this side and goes back down into more deep water. The effect on the
water created all sorts of pressure
waves and turbulence – one that must disorientate the baitfish making them easy prey for predatory fish like the GTs and queenies patrolling this stretch of water.
see diagram here abouts for location tips
see diagram here abouts for location tips
Cast after cast received hits and takes - giving bent rods and heaps of laughter and smiles from us both enjoying some good father/son bonding. It was great action in the strong flowing incoming tide – for which the hooked fish used well to their advantage to make them seem much bigger than what actually came to hand.
My son and I had an absolute blast casting our flies into the the tip of the disturbed water and letting the flies drift along the face of the pressure wave before starting a staccato type retrieve. Every cast receive some sort of attention. Many, many times we had double hook ups and raced each other to get the fish in and cast before the other could. We didn't keep score, just enjoyed the constant action and father/son rivalry --- AND HEAPS OF SLEDGING! over dropped fish or a retrieve that didn't get a take from the frenzied fish.
One fish my son caught a 40cm queenie with a couple of small bites out of its back (quite recently from looking at wound). Which was quite interesting
to my son who had to take a picture of it.
So a slowish day to start with but still lots of fun and a few fish from each spot we gave a cast or two - that ended in a great last couple
of hours for the trip of non-stop ‘a-cast-a-fish’ action.
Here is a bit of a video clip of the days trip.
I will be out again in two days time with my regular fly fishing deckie Canadian Peter Cooke.
Blog report and a bit of video on
that outing - up on this blog soon.
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