Geelong Advertiser

TARGETING TUNA

HUNT FOR BIG FISH OFF HEADS

- With Geoff Wilson Phone: 5248 1307 geoffw10@optusnet.com.au

WITH a favourable weather forecast for Sunday, a good many were out off Barwon Heads in search of tuna.

Among them was Justin Burns and Simon Williams, who caught one each with the challengin­g technique of casting lures (stick-baits on this occasion) to fish feeding at the surface.

That was out in 60m of water, while Kane Ardiri and Nello Sorgiovann­i found them a little closer in and broke out the pilchards.

But it was a free feed for some — four were on but didn’t finish up in the boat.

Anchored up in 50m of water off Torquay on Sunday were Murray and Darcy Scott and Ben King.

They were hoping for a gummy shark or two and, as it happened, they caught three — two around the 6kg mark and another of 8kg.

They also caught a 40kg seven-gilled shark. However, two big fish got away.

One that Ben hooked, possibly a very large gummy shark that just kept peeling off line until it broke free, possibly snagged the line on a reef, and another that Murray hooked, was probably a school shark rather than a gummy, because — well within sight of the boat — it bit through the trace above the hook.

Mind you, they cast many a lure toward endless shoals of passing tuna, some well within casting distance from the boat, but there were no takers.

CORIO BAY/BELLARINE PENINSULA

WITH Clifton Springs boat ramp carpark at capacity, and vehicles parked up Bay Shore Ave, Andrew Phillips along with Mark and Tina Sesar, headed down to the less crowded Point Richards ramp from where they launched and were away by 9am.

Initially, there wasn’t much doing with the whiting, but they kept picking up the occasional good-size flathead for an eventual tally of six.

And their luck with the whiting eventually improved as well, with a final tally of 50 fish, the biggest measuring 45cm.

But that was before the undersized pinkies moved in on their baits, so about 1pm, they returned to the ramp with a very respectabl­e catch.

On Saturday, Andrew Johnson and Dennis O’Brien finished up with 20 really good size whiting after releasing a good many that, although of legal size, didn’t quite meet their standard.

Mike Windsor, of Clifton Springs Boat Hire, reports that squid are about, and among those to catch them were Paul Moore and Nathan and Toby Campbell who found a productive patch in 3m of water out from The Dell.

And, using a portion of their squid for bait, they also caught six nice whiting from much the same area.

Flathead are also about in good numbers said Mike, with Nathan Huybens picking up 17 offshore from the boat harbour, along with three small gummy shark, four pinkie snapper and several Australian salmon that he returned.

Rod Ludlow, of Beachlea Boat Hire, reports that squid are also the main chance off Indented Head, along with flathead abundant out in the deeper water.

QUEENSCLIF­F

ANCHORED up over the Swan Island grass-beds at Queensclif­f on Friday evening, and hopeful of a good whiting catch, were Murray and Darcy Scott and Trent

Budinski. Conditions were good with quite a bit of run left in the tide, but the whiting were biting timidly.

In fact, they would go completely off the bite at times despite the favourable conditions. Neverthele­ss, they finished with 35 rather than the bag limit catches they’ve been used to of late, but for many, that would have been a completely satisfacto­ry catch.

Abe asks:

Geoff, I’ve noticed that huge tracts of seagrass have disappeare­d from some areas in Corio Bay. What would have caused this, and will they return?

Abe, for as long as I can remember seagrass beds in Port Phillip and Corio bays have flourished then regressed in what some have described as a natural cycle. Searching scholarly articles on the causes of seagrass regression revealed that intensive aquacultur­e, algal blooms, bottom trawling with nets, along with turbidity from dredging, are the chief concerns over the health and longevity of sea grass meadows and the intricate biological webs dependent on them.

 ??  ?? Justin Burns with a tuna he caught offshore from Barwon Heads on Sunday. Picture: SIMON WILLIAMS
Justin Burns with a tuna he caught offshore from Barwon Heads on Sunday. Picture: SIMON WILLIAMS

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