Geelong Advertiser

Whiting’s on the bite

With multiple hauls in multiple spots, it’s clear …

- with Geoff Wilson

WHITING catches have prevailed over the past week, with little else gaining attention.

However, Andrew Phillips and Mark Sesar took a mixed bag of pinkie snapper to 1.2kg, a couple of gummy shark and several snook to 80cm while fishing offshore from Point Lillias.

On Thursday, 14-year-old Angus Illingwort­h headed out off Clifton Springs with his mother Janet, and their first item on the agenda was catching squid. As it turned out, they finished up with 14, mostly just offshore from the Clifton Springs boat ramp.

With a good supply of pipis — now supplement­ed with freshly caught squid — they headed some two kilometres west of the ramp where they found whiting on the bite: They kept 10 fish to 38cm for a feed and returned the rest.

Mike Windsor of Clifton Spring Boat Hire reports that Peter Clark first tried off Edgewater Drive where he’d previously been successful but this time with no luck. However, heading down to Curlewis paid off with 20 whiting to 39cm.

Andrew Johnson and Dennis O’Brien also took bag limit catches of whiting to 38cm off Curlewis on Friday afternoon, and were also blessed with a catch of seven flathead to 54cm.

With time to spare after work on Friday, Darcy Scott took a run down to Queensclif­f, with squid first on his bucket list. With possibly an hour of daylight left after taking his legal 10 from the Lonsdale Bight, he tried for whiting, picking up sixteen fish before losing the seventeent­h to what he judged to be a shark.

With night closing in, and after losing yet another whiting — and a second rig — he eventually finished with 20 fish, most over 40cm, before returning to the ramp after dark.

FRESHWATER

Early last week, Rod Shepherd fished Lake Elingamite, where the water level had visibly dropped over the past week. Frustrated at missing several good strikes, and being harassed by small redfin, he was eventually rewarded with two respectabl­e rainbow trout.

Fishing the Murray near Echuca, Boris Stocki caught and released five Murray cod, each around the 45cm mark, and a silver perch. However, he told of hooking a much bigger fish that stripped metres of line from his reel before hanging him up on a snag.

Boris said that despite using a variety of baits that included cheese, shrimp, yabby, chicken and marinated chicken, the only bites he had during the day were on cheese. And, although he fished on into the night, all was quiet after dark.

PERCH LIBERATION

Last Tuesday, some 45,000 estuary perch fingerling­s were released into the Barwon River downstream from Queens Park by Fisheries Victoria, an exercise funded by recreation­al licence fees as part of a State Government initiative to promote recreation­al fishing.

Those that adapt, and survive predation by cormorants, eels and the like over the next few years, should — optimistic­ally — reach the legal length of 27cm, and at least 400 grams in their third year, and possibly 45cm with a decade.

ROD ASKS:

Geoff, I fished off Avalon on Friday evening and there was a buoy a kilometre or so from the Point Wilson pier, on which was written ‘Point Wilson Exclusion Zone’. I’ll swear it wasn’t there before. Can you tell me anything about it?

Rod, in June 2006 myself and several others were officially notified, onsite, and given a map of an extended exclusion zone beyond the existing 300-metre zone around the pier that would come into force only when munitions were being unloaded at the pier. I posted the following in my fishing column of 29/06/06 but have received no further updates: The Point Wilson munitions facility, which includes the pier, is to be upgraded to receive ongoing shipments of defence ord- nance. An exclusion zone, in respect to the size and nature of these cargoes, has already been marked out with yellow buoys around the pier, and will come into force while these cargoes are being transferre­d from ship to shore.

For security reasons, advance notice of shipping and activation of this exclusion zone cannot be given, so your co-operation is requested when the yellow buoy lights are flashing and the red flag on the pier is flying.

 ??  ?? Angus Illingwort­h with the whiting he and his mum Janet caught in Corio Bay’s outer harbour.
Angus Illingwort­h with the whiting he and his mum Janet caught in Corio Bay’s outer harbour.
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