Why the Blog......

9 years now into the blog, and lots and lots posts on the SWOFFING (Salt Water Fly FishING) in and around Darwin - maps, flies, outings and musings

Hope your enjoying it!

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Brassies, goldens, queenfish and macks at Lee Point

Early start at Peter's to hook up boat and load the gear
We were on the water just before the sun broke the horizon

We did notice a familiar red ute at the Dinah Beach boat ramp carpark, so we might run into other fly fishers on the local harbour today - thought they were all at the tying day out at Humpty Doo

We are determined this time to head straight to Lee Point, no distractions and focus on the longtail tuna - so we zip along at a fair pace once out of the 5knot zone out from Dinah Beach Ramp.

However.....
Busting up fish are busting up fish and just before East Point we find queenfish going absolutely nuts all around the boat
no time for photos or video - just cast cast and cast some more there's fish about
I did send off a phone message just incase someone else wasn't catching any

Peter gets a good one, I get a few smaller ones before we remind ourselves of today's main task and keep moving towards Lee Point

The wind is up and the water rough but we don't get too wet on the rest of the way to Lee Point

But horror of horrors on arrival at Lee Point - there are 7 boats, that's SEVEN too many boats at our favourite spot
We find a pressure wave a few hundred metres west of it and sulk till we start catching grey macks one after the other- unlike the lure tossers, 'offs' and 'jack' were their names (think about it!), who are crowding our new spot when we start catching fish. They actually drove trolling lures right through the area we were casting into in their total misunderstanding our how to catch the fish or favourite fishing spot etiquette

We cast across the current to the side of the boat and as the fly sinks we pause and as it nears the pressure wave we start a fast staccato a strip the flies of the silicone surf candy (me) and a 'no see um' (peter).

A few phone messages back and forth sees one boat pull out of the seven and head our way
Its Jeff and Michael in the new blue boat - they too are soon into fish

As the action slows Peter and I move towards our favourite spot now devoid of other boats
We find a patch of bait from 15-24 feet down - such a large thick blotch on the sounder it covers most of the screen
There has to be big fish around it

Remembering the golden trevally Jon White got last week by sinking the fly down deep
We too sink our flies down beside the tight school of bait
Peter hooks up a strong one
I do too

I muscle mine too hard and it breaks me off at the knot - directly under the boat 25 feet down
We chase Peter's 300 meters north from the hook up point and he get a 72cm Brassie for our troubles

That's two good and very strong Brassies in two trips!

But again he is casting into the right places, at the right times, applying the right methods and using proven flies - it all adds up to successful fly fishing
















I then sink the fly again  and hook up to a feisty golden trevally - which I muscle towards the boat but not quite as hard as previously - so no connection breakages this time!

The day is turning out magical - but no tuna yet!
We use the electric to move about and find the bait schools - we find them hit the anchor button on the electric
(a most marvelous invention without a doubt!)
But the schools are nothing like the massive tight pack of bait fish that we found at first

The schools of bait are more like columns in the water now
Again we sink our flies near them and come up tight - casting across current, letting the fly sink and begin a fast staccato strip of the fly

Sadly the wind is howling and as I change mid cast towards another direction and pin my self in the back with a 'no see um' fly - one of Roger's.Whom it seems doesn't crush his barbs sufficiently. It has penetrated my shirt and skin layers below the left shoulder blade with the barb caught under the skin

Peter does the necessary dehooking by wrapping some leader material around the hook bend and pressing down as you snap the fly backwards out of the flesh (not too much blood but the barb did have a tiny chunk of my flesh on it - is that bait fishing if I didn't take it off the barb before I next cast??

After that medical procedure - we get back to casting and catching more fish.

Later, the fish start to get tentative- swarming the flies we strip in but not hooking up
I change flies from a 'no see um' about 5-6cm long (the very one that was stuck in my back earlier)  to a skinny silicone surf candy about the same length, we get a few but are still being rejected by the countless fish following the flies to the boat, I then change to the tiniest white clouser I had in my fly boxes - 3-4cm long and anorexic

Jeff and Michael have moved over to join us, and it is a good omen for me as I get four fish in four casts now that I am using a smaller white clouser

It is still hard fishing in the wind and chop mostly with many casts being made between fish but we are regularly catching fish with slight variations in fly, strip and line type as the conditions and fish reactions change. We even get a few on poppers despite the choppy conditions

Both boats with fly fishers in them then see some tuna 300metres north and we head over but no luck - gone by the time we get there.

As we search and move back to our bait schools we find the water frothy from a thousand queenfish hitting the surface at once

The current is forcing the baitfish against an outer reef line and we park ourselves within casting distance of the reef and start catching fish after fish again. Again casting across current, letting fly sink and then fast stripping as it sweeps along

No major size but so much fun it should be illegal - see Jeff's video on his facebook page
So visual, so exciting!

We move about in between these two long lines of reef chasing fish and catching a few at each spot

Jeff and Michael head back to the ramp - and Peter and I despite the continuing  rising wind and wave keep casting in the hope of something big amongst the average sized grey macks and queenfish

As we moved up current along the reef the pods of aggressive fish seem to stay that hundred metres ahead of us - like always!

Then almost within casting distance, we have this mass of predators absolutely mercilessly swathing their way though a school of baitfish with utter abandon - and lo and behold in amongst them were these massive metre long (at least) longtail tuna! so fat and so round - porpoising their way into the fray

One longtail attacking the bait so fiercely, shoulders a small queenie, cartwheeling it through the air
 a metre out of the water - where is my lost sports video cam when I need it

We get more macks and queenies but the longtails stay always that three to four cast lengths away

We target the queenies in the middle of two parallel reefs that run east to west
The water is about 16 feet deep
If we cast towards the reef we get the macks, towards to middle we get queenfish

We want the tuna but when they are not there or close enough we get the macks and queens
I cast towards the middle and come up tight - very tight - whats this?
A few strong head shakes of confoundment and disbelief  and then the after burners kick in - TUNA at last!

It takes 150m in seconds is heading towards the reef but with only a meter of water over it - I try to slow it down and dissuade it from its intended direction
I lose it - bugger!  Bugger!!!   ----   BUGGER!!!! (pissed me off for quite some time!)

We are still catching fish after fish in the average sized macks and queenfish
All the double hooks ups and bend rods attract three boats of lure tossers

They crowd us and the water is getting really rough now and wind above 10knots - Peter had trouble standing on front casting deck as it is quite high given the up and down of the wave action, and line control difficult in the growing wind too
Despite the lure tossers closeness, we hook up fish after fish - them nothing (yes!)

I get 9 fish to hand and even lose four or five right at side of the boat while the three lure based boats get nothing
GO THE FLY!!!!!!!! It reigns supreme! like always!

Both us play up the hook ups and the fight - to piss them off further- just couldn't resist
Their lures are too big, they don't allow for the concept that bait don't swim against fast flowing tidal water - (go with the flow please)

The wind and wave action eventually gets too much and we head back in towards Dinah Beach Boat ramp

What a day with at the very least, 70 plus fish to hand, for our boat.
A few good ones mixed in too
So much visual fish porn, we both need an extended rest or we might burn out
Using the poppers saw five or more fish slashing at our surface flies - so very exciting - love it!
Also as soon as we went small (unlike last week when they took bigger flies) - hook up after hook up

The trip back was a little wet but Peter was real happy with the new prop he had installed - made the boat travel heaps better in the following seas
He even enjoy putting his feet up and was checking Facebook (see below) - where Jeff had already up loaded a few pics and a video

You know how about this time last year I wrote about getting soft not wanting to go out unless conditions were perfect?
Well, I think with all the recent poor weather fishing we have done lately, we are toughing up
Big seas, strong winds, wrong tides - we are still getting out there and most times getting into fish in numbers and in size
Both Peter and I are really enjoying our SWOFFING lately

Without a doubt, we so need to diversify our targetted species like changing to milkies instead of queenies and so too to go after the species up the harbour creeks - like barra and threadies

But hey, you can't knock a 70 plus fish count on a day outing within sight of a capital city, can you? - heaps of fun today!
Who wants some?


please check out Michael's video of his and Jeffs efforts today! Me-n-Jeff Chase Macs

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

To Vernon Islands for Nothing and back to Lee Point for lots

So, it was going to be five boats heading to Vernon Islands but late withdrawals meant only two boats for the high tide launch at 5am

The ride to the Vernons was slow given you couldn't see the swell in the dark and it could get quite bumpy
The moon had been lighting up the boat ramp but as it set - the pitch darkness shut down all vision

We arrive prior to the dawn but with enough light to see no indications of scales about at all

To cover more area to find the fish.....
Jon and Jack went to the first beacon on the western side
Peter and I went to Oliver reef - this shallow reef sits in over 35metres of water around it
It screams fishiness but nothing

Travelling around the western side of islands we get hit by a heavy rain squall
and put up the Bimini to sit it out

Here is Jon and Jack White waiting for rain to stop

The most awesome rainbow appeared towards the end of the squall

We fished the northern tip and its sandbar - a few skittering baitfish but again nothing despite the conditions and locations that usually always add up to good fishing

As the tide drops we fish the edge of the reef as it steps down into the water. Herons sitting on edges indicate the lower spots through which the last baitfish would travel through and hopefully the piscatorial predators would be laying next to for the same reasons as the Herons

The channel into the blue hole is fascinating in its structure. shallow flat reef several hundred metres wide, then only 10-15 feet out it is 6-9 feet deep and then that distance again it is 50 feet deep
Predators should have been working this edge, large ones but not this day
We did however see a few large sharks, and lots of seaweed and mangrove leaf debris in water

Once in the blue hole again we found nothing - I got one trevally, we saw bait in the shallows acting nervous but nothing comes to hand

We venture to the beacon on south side of eastern island, but nothing here as well. I like this beacon on the top of the tide more than when we got there but you can't have it working for you everyday

We then pop over the the landside blue hole but all quite here too
So given a change in the wind about to occur and no significant fish for the day we head back to Darwin

As soon as we arrive we spot fish frothing the surface - right at my usual Lee Point - spot X
We get a few queenies

Then Peter gets one cast in and lets the fly sink a touch more than normal and hooks up to a strong fish

It's surging runs has Peter working overtime to control it
We cover a large area of the reef as the unseen fish takes long powerful runs and we tag along

We call it for a few species first for the long runs a tuna, then for the periodic head shakes a trevally, then as it hasn't jumped it can't be a queenie unless it is tail wrapped or foul hooked

We also talked about sharks given length of the fight that was occurring
But then we see it and Peter is ecstatic - he has been after a large trev for a while now
while not a metre to the fork like those on the front of fishing mag covers - it is certainly giving Peter a hard time

His new fly rod that he won at a recent fly tournament is working well - a TFO Mangrove 8w

The fight is quite extended but we eventually get it to hand - a 76cm Brassie Trevally

I checked Peter's leader and hardly a scuff mark from such a long fight with a powerful fish

Coming back to the same area we hooked the trevally, we see the tell tail signs of large queenfish swirling at the edge of the reef we have seen them so many times.

Peter puts in the right cast into the right place with the same fly he had caught the trevally on and hooks up straight away.

Once we would be so careful with large queenfish but now after catching so many recently we know just the right amount of pressure to put on them.

So the fight,despite many jumps, was over fast

After a long dark trip to Vernons after no significant fish at such a great location , and then back to Lee Point - it was weird to be into good fish at the usual location so close to the city

Peter was using one of the flies he won at the last club meeting raffle
a rodgie dodgy fly - a 'no see um' type sparse fly

Three casts two big fish on the same fly
It was good fly fishing

Jon and Jack White got a few fish too at Lee Point but then called it time and headed back to ramp
Peter and I stayed for some more casting practice and hopefully a few fish

We then see Jon and Jack stop and fish busting up all around them - TUNA???? or macks?

We scoot over to join in and get many follows on the flies
only 20 foot of water this time almost to top of tide
last time it was same area but a little wider and 35 feet of water at the bottom of the tide

But if the baitfish are there you would expect the predators to be there
And so they were
There were smudges of bait seen at first, up close you could see the tight balls of them and then the water would erupt with slashing porpoising longtail tuna

We tried several types of approaches to the schools and it was awesome to see two or three fish on top and then as we approach see 20-40 of them go under the boat

I think we would still be there, if I didn't have to get home for the wife's night out with friends

Would have definitely been better to hook up but even seeing the torpedoes react and chase your fly was out of this world exciting - even though they would turn away at the last moment!

Peter thought his day was going to be the best ever when he hooked up amongst feeding tuna - only to have a 55cm grey mack come to hand. Sadly, we knew it as soon as it started to fight it wasn't a tuna.

So great day for Peter, all on the one fly! - time for me to tie a few of them for the next trip
I got a feed of fresh fish (small trevs and queenfish that I caught) for my girls who demand fresh fish for dinner after I get on the water for a fly fishing trip.

Here is a short video of bits and pieces from the trip



















Monday, June 13, 2016

Calm by weekend?? - Quite windy the last few days

Well hasn't the wind been nasty the last few days?
Quite blustery by early in the morning!!!!
Hope it blows itself out by the weekend for our planned trip to Vernon Islands, an hour or so north of Darwin, given I want to head out from Nightcliffe boat ramp and go 19 nautical miles from there to Gunn Point and the Vernon Islands just beyond. 

If it doesn't stop blowing, we will have to enter the water at Leaders Creek Ramp

There is a launching fee if you want your vehicle parked in a secured area but you can launch yourself

Don't know of the fee for this.

With high tide just before dawn the trip winding out from the ramp to the bay will be fairly easy and safe but still be careful in the dark

For the week end, I am currently tying up some big poppers - based on Bob's Bangers 

These will be jointed poppers with the front being the foam popper covers in gold foil with large eyes, the popper face coloured red


The rear section of this jointed fly will be a strong hook with a tail of yellow schlappen feathers and a collar of Xmas decorations that was originally a Santa beard ($4 from one of those cheap Dollar Cents (or sense)  shops ) - basically a long pearl ice chenille.
Should entice a few of the larger specimens hang off some shallow rock bommies off Western Vernon Island and its companion islands

Here is the kick board (so much cheaper at $14 than buying a large and similar thickness sheet of it both from Clark Rubber - the sheet was $248 a square metre) and the Santa beard

Anticipation is rising....

Large queenies and trevally, tight to the fly line is all I see in my day dreams........

Every wrap of the thread on each fly is another reason to hope in its intended outcome of another fish to hand..

Go on - tie some flies.....
Get on the water, get the fly in the the water...
Get tight to some fish, tearing line through the guides of your rod......

You will never want it any other way!! 
I guarantee it!

Friday, June 10, 2016

Anyone interested in fly fishing the Vernons?

Anyone interested in fly fishing the Vernons? 18th June?

As I have heard some gr8 reports recently about the area, so am very keen to fish it again after a few outings a fair while back

So 4:45am-5am launch just before high tide from Nightcliffe (or go via leaders creek if worried about the wind in afternoon - but also may be plenty of corrugations on the Gunn Point rd)
Head straight line for top end of Vernons – smith reef and another similar spots –
About an hours run, so that's about 30-40 litres of fuel for Peter’s 4.8 formosa and his 90hp suzuki. He has a 110 litre tank so we should be right for travelling about once there to some degree and the to and back of the trip – but might take a jerry can of 20 litres just in case the tuna are active over a large area. Peter only sits at 5000rpm for his motor most of the trips we have done in past, so we get fairly good fuel economy at those revs

High tide 5:30am so we should get there just as tide starting to run
Hopefully some large trevally and queenies of these reefs and the other bommies around the islands or nearby

Want to visit at some time the beacon on south side of eastern island as a mate has been catching 80cm+ brassies there, they also got a 105cm GT – (on lure gear - almost an hour fight)
Got my ten weight set up with fast sinking fly line, and a spare fly line (in case a big one shreds it on reef) and also taking some bigger flies 4/0 - 6/0 for them, with heaps of pulse - i.e. lots of fullish schlappen feathers and rabbit fur etc, big eyes too. a few big poppers too!

With approx an hour or so to go to low tide - Would then like to get into and fly fish the blue hole on eastern side of western (northern??) island - maybe eat some lunch in here too – a few big fish but mostly smaller fish but an aquarium of species – got 17 species last time in this area alone. Got a great little water fall that predators hang out near - don't forget some shrimp/crab patterns - but clouser will do fine. The channel into this blue hole is full of stripies, small coral trout and a plethora of other reef species, at times big jacks too!

As tide starts back in, again go stake out the outer reefs and bommies chasing big trevally and queenies again

Hopefully, there will (definitely?) be Spaniards and longtail tuna about so will chase them as needed and as they appear, or we find some birds working (you will need extra fuel if u chase these most of the day!) - don't forget a few mackerel flies with pre-tied wire bite tippets. I tie mine with about 5-7cm of 20lb-40lb single strand wire straight onto hook eye and have it ready to tie on flurocarbon leader attached to my fly line.

probably head back about 3:30-4:30 to ramp, hopefully getting back to Nightcliffe for top of of the afternoon tide.

Caution: if any west in the wind direction it will mean a wetter and rougher trips, so be ready for it (well worth a bit of discomfort to fly fish such a great spot), afternoon more likely to be rougher

We could all use the same radio channel and try a few reefs till we find congregation of fish - i.e. cover more area but not miss out if fish nearby are going nuts!. we can sort out radio channel later closer to day of trip

Some might like to try the inshore blue hole, particularly its northern exit which can really fire. the mangroves on land side for barra - so bring your barra flies too.

There is also a snake drain on some mud flats on the sourthern most island on its eastern side that can fire for barra – so some could try a little flats fishing as the tide drops out of the mangroves.

any other questions - then message - Swoffer Darwin
got three boats as definite - so far
- so already will be a great outing.


Sunday, June 5, 2016

Darwin Harbour Long Tail and more

So Chris Wardrop showed up five minutes early - just how I like it
Straight to ramp 10 minutes away and we were launched before the sun was up
Hopefully on our way to some of Darwin Harbour's hot spots I wrote about in two recent blogs

Given it was an hour after high tide and sun just creeping up on the horizon - Weed Reef was the obvious first up choice
It was a magic morning with conditions almost perfect!

Chris hadn't fished Weed Reef before and luckily for me the fish were exactly where I said they would be!
Fish started blowing up the surface is several spots on the reef

You can see easily in the picture below the pressure line caused by the edge of the gravel bar forcing water upwards. To the bottom left of image you can also see the "tongue" that forms flowing away from the gravel bar - this is the place where most of the water funnels through. Best yet the fish are usual always here - if they are about!


Chris caught three fish quite quickly, I lost three just as fast
Chris had one trevally on and a large brown smudge of a shark chased after it - then the whole area seemed to shut down almost like a switch was pushed.

We stayed around a bit longer chasing sporadic bust ups. Then we caught a few more at west arm side trees but tide was dropping fast.

Given is was an exploratory trip with Chris, we popped back over the Harbour to the deckchair foreshore area and worked slowly up to Doctors Gully. I showed Chris a few more spots and while there we saw a few slashes right next to a few small mangrove a few hundred meters east of Doctors Gully. There is a shallow rock bar coming 90 degrees from shore that at certain tides seems to hold baitfish and the predators that eat them - I have caught some macks and queenies here on a regular basis. There are a few blogs about the goldens that can also be caught at this location too hereabouts.

It is also the place I anchor up and start berleying bread for mullet and milkies. This as the tide drops and they leave the feeding area at Doctors Gully to hopefully work their way up my berley trail to me and my bread flies, but really boring stuff waiting for them and I go through several loaves of bread. But worth it as once a big milky is hooked as they are one of the fastest hardest fish out there!

Back to the splashes in close to shore............
These splashes turned out to be large diamond mullet, but Chris did spy a very small barra but no hook up.
A bit later as we drifted along the edge getting distracted by more very large diamond mullet, we both saw a larger barra just mooching along in a foot or so of water.
Chris saw it first as he was already casting as I pointed it out to him - I should have cast first spoke second!
The cast he laid out seemed perfect with a nice lead in front of the fish, the fly should have ended up past the line the fish was travelling and in a few strips would be right in its path and at the right height.

But at the last moment despite the fly line landing softly and dead straight - the leader and fly kicked towards the barra and almost hit it on the nose. It was one of those 'J' casts that happen because of the subtlest movements of the rod tip during the cast (not always planned either). The Barra zipped off very spooked, but it was cool to see this barra within hearing distance of a major city. That Barra got bigger as the day wore on too with each jibe and joke I made about the incident! And I did give Chris such a hard time for rest of day about that cast!! (lol)

Glad it wasn't me that got the cast to that barra as my cast would have most likely been wasted given my nemesis relationship with barra - would have been very embarrassing.

We kept moving out of the harbour with the tide, checking a few spots
We soon found our selves at East Point, particularly the Fanny Bay side.

Here we found working birds and some nice queenies under them to stretch the kinks out of our fly lines and practice our rapid casting - as they were up and down and gone quite rapidly. So you had to be quick to get a cast in.

The queenies were feeding quite aggressively and very willing to take the fly

Clouser, surf candy - it didn't matter

You just had to get it in the right place at the right time.

A lot of fish on the sounder so at times you had to sink the fly deep to get a response if nothing was happening on the surface.

The surf candy below did the trick often!

We almost didn't think we would get any given as when we first found them - this dopey yellow painted tinny drove straight through the erupting water where the fish were feeding. Some boaters have absolutely no idea. or just devalue queenfish to a pest fish and don't care. But who wouldn't want to catch a few silver flashes so willing to take a well presented fly or lure!

We left them biting and proceeded to Lee Point

Just the other side of East Point we found the water frothing with fish and the sky filled with active birds. it was a massive school of long fringe finned trevally (10-20cm) which we managed a few casts for no result before they disappeared but it was impressive to see so many fish blowing the water to a froth with their activity

Once at Lee Point we found some lure tossers in my favourite Spot

The fish were busting up behind them and they didn't even put a cast in!

We managed to put the boat in a good spot near them (casting distance from their boat)  and soon had a few nice mackerel to hand. Chris had a large mackerel (spanish maybe given size?) take his fly metres from the boat and cut him off (no wire traces today). Aside from losing the fish, it was awesome to see the large fish follow the fly and as Chris increased the strip speed of the fly, the mack responded and rushed forward to devour the fly. - and SNIP went the leader - then the mack disappear in a splash and boil in the water right behind the boat.
It left Chris almost speechless!
Most of the macks were greys - some big, most medium to small in size. The guys we found anchored up right on my favourite Lee Point spot asked us what flies were we were using and commented on their regret for not bring their own fly rods. I gave them three silicone surf candies to tie behind their Halco twisters for hopefully better results.

The fishing went quite after a while and we thought to go to Mandorah in search of more locations and hopefully actively feeding fish

We only got 300-400 metres in that direction and we found mackerel breaking the surface gorging themselves on small baitfish --- and better still a few minutes later TUNA doing the same - yeehaaah!!!.

We chased them for a while in amongst a guide boat with three anglers in it and a young couple in another plate boat - all jigging for the tuna and other species. The sounder was thick with bait from top to bottom. Also seen on sounder was some large fish close to bottom. The water depth about 10-12 metres.

Both of us (well me mainly) were having the casting jitters - you know the adrenalin is racing and you rush or as you head towards a porpoising school of tuna - you tangle your line on your tip or catch the fly on something and by the time you get it sorted the pod is gone. Frustrating you even more!

So I did some deep breaths, tried to cast smooth and slow with deliberate intent - then the line started to flow better and land further with far less effort and rush.

I was using my TFO eight weight with a RIO full sinking line. The fly was a size 1 silicone surf candy that I use so much in the harbour so often.

In amongst a few pods working an area, Chris and I were discussing which tuna pod to chase - as we had one pod to the front of the boat and one to the rear, each just out of casting distance. We had the guide boat chasing the rear pod and the couple's boat out the front both within casting distance, it was tight around those tuna. I laid out a quick cast to the pod in front and let the fly sink while talking to Chris on our choices. We were about to go chasing the larger pod to the rear and as I started my first fast strip of the fly line so we could shift, I came up tight - awesome! yes! yes! yes! YES!!!!!

That first run was exhilarating, my heart pumping, my exuberance untapped
This is what it is all about!
The right cast, the right boat work (thanks Chris)
The right fly you tied specifically for this purpose and you are on, hooked up
The line is tight, the backing is singing off the reel through the guides
(150m out of the rod tip in seconds!) woooo! hooooo!
So much fun you are smiling on the outside and on the inside!

Despite using an 8w and only a light leader (with quite a few wind knots I might add), I was muscling the fish back to the boat. As the sharks we had seen early were always in my mind.

After the first run we expected a second but it didn't happen - maybe the 30.8 or so water temp. Instead it slug it out around the boat. A couple of times i had to put the rod under the boat as it took a surging run to the other side of the boat.

I remember looking at my watch at the hook up - 11:20am, and when Chris tailed the fish at the boat, I looked again 11:29am. Seemed so much a longer time than that as the strong fish slugged it out close to the boat and just wouldn't come to hand for quite a while. My bad elbow also certainly was telling me I was working too hard on the fish and felt quite lucky to get the fish to hand.

Just love this head shot - great photo Chris!


What a relief to hold that awesome fish and pose for a photo, then release it back into the water to fight another day. I did quite a few fist pumps as it swam away.

We chased a few more pods, over a wide area but no more luck on the tuna
The slashes in closer to Lee Point were we mostly macks but some were small pods of tuna that we did find but they were getting more and more skittish as the day wore on.

We started back to inside the harbour, visited Mandaorah but not much found, showed Chris a few more possible spots but again nothing found.

We came back to Cullen bay and Kaitlyn Bay, looked at the usual spots - nothing
So headed to ramp but via Wickham Point. There we saw a few slashes behind the rocks and mangroves, so did a quick investigation but no luck again.

Nothing showing at Shelley Island, so we skulked along the newer section of East Arm wharf where the gas supply ships load up. First pass showed a few fish on the corner on the sounder, so we doubled back and gave it a few casts. My first cast must have gave a fish a sore lip as it went nuts once it got off splashing about on the surface. From the corner Chris put a nice cast between two pylons and got an instant result. The fish fought like a trevally which is what we expected to cathc from such a location - it fought deep with lots of tail beats pulsing up through the line but it came up a silvery 65cm queenfish - a PB for Chris. I picked up a small queenie for my girl's dinner a couple of cast later.

Next spot was as we head back to ramp around the back of that new earthen wharf being built out from the old east arm boat ramp. I really wonder how they got the environmental permission for such a huge 'road block' to tidal flow from the area behind it - this wharf seems to extend 3/4 of the way to the small island out from the new East Arm boat ramp. If we keep impacting out nursery mangroves throughout Darwin Harbour like this - the system will change negatively. I hope this sort of development doesn't continue repeatedly til the fishery is dead.

So, an average day based on fish to hand ratios, but a great day on the water due to a couple of fish we caught, the craziness of predators frothing the water around us at several locations, better yet catching fish on fly while the danglers (bait)  and tossers (lure) fisherman didn't.

Thanks to Chris for the deckie role, I really needed a SWOFF and that tuna made my day!

Until next time - all of you - just get out there and give it a go!

Thursday, June 2, 2016

finally a bit of SWOFFING this weekend

Here's the situation.........

Peter Cooke my regular Darwin SWOFFING partner is on way back from Canada - so he cant help me!

My boat is on pallets....... it can't help me!
Trailer stuffed and useless....... bugger!


Then there's the facts of .....
Got a new fly rod to test out
(gift from a friend that was in the back of some one's shed for many years!)

20 or so extra clousers tied and ready to use

So what to do....

Reply on others!
Fly fisherman are such helpful people!

In this case....
Chris W has offered a deckie space on his boat on Saturday morning.

Thanks very much!
Very Appreciated!!!

As the sun rises we plan to be chasing stuff with scales around Darwin Harbour,

What ever we can find really!

Looking so forward to it after many weeks of work stress (too much paperwork -- uugghhh!!)
    .... and countless house designs by the wife for our rural property!

Bring it on!
There's nothing like that first subtle (and at times not so subtle!) touch on the fly, oh how much I love it!!!