Geelong Advertiser

Whiting proves a breeze

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

CORIO BAY/ BELLARINE PENINSULA

LAUNCHING from St Leonards on Sunday afternoon, Mark and Tina Sesar, and Adrian Cole, found a good patch of squid from which they were able to extract a dozen despite the stiff sou’-westerly that saw only a few boats on the water.

And, with the incoming tide aligning with the breeze, they anchored up in six metres of water hopeful of catching a few whiting.

They finished up with 30 good-size whiting as it turned out, but – with the weather worsening toward evening – they made tracks.

Early last week, Andrew Johnson was on the water by 6.30am down Curlewis way in one of his usually productive whiting spots.

However, with nothing doing for half an hour, he was on the move again, eventually finding a good patch of fish back toward the mussel farm off Clifton Springs in six metres of water. And it was from here that he took a bag limit catch of whiting from 34 to 42cm.

With the day still young, he broke out the squid jigs and was initially greeted by a plethora of pea-dodgers, which he released, eventually finding a patch of bigger ones, taking 10; some for bait and others for the table.

Making an early start just offshore from the entrance of Swan Bay on Wednesday morning, Andrew Phillips and Tony Greg’s first order of business was to catch some squid, and – despite the drizzling rain – they kept at it and eventually took bag limit catches that included one of 1.5kg. And, with still a fair amount of run on the outgoing tide, they anchored up near Coles Beacon hopeful of catching a few whiting before the tide was finished.

They caught 35 good-size specimens by the time the tide had died at around 11am, their biggest measuring 43cm. But by then, the weather had worsened with the westerly picking up from 15 to 20 knots on their return trip.

Rod Ludlow, of Beachlea Boat Hire at Indented Head, reports that whiting, some over the 40cm mark, and squid, both put in welcome appearance­s for clients, some of whom were out in indifferen­t weather during the week, but – for the main part anyway – returning with smiles on their faces.

OFF THE BEACH

EARLY last week, Ray Millman fished at Jan Juc from dusk onwards.

All he caught initially were several Whitley skates, one of which was a huge specimen some 1.5m across the wings that took a silver trevally Ray had foul-hooked then fished as a live bait. And, because of its size, releasing that one, as he did the others, proved something of a challenge.

Following that episode, Ray was rewarded, first with a

2.5kg Australian salmon, followed by another much smaller one, the fillets of which he used for bait. His first capture was an elephant fish of possibly 4kg that he released, and then a bronze whaler of just over a metre in length that he kept, along with the larger salmon.

FRESHWATER

JOHN Clements, of the Lake Purrumbete Holiday Park, reports that many anglers had good fishing over the weekend, mainly on redfin, but chinook salmon and various species of trout were also on offer.

Sam asks:

Geoff, can you enlighten me as to the meaning of “salt wedge” when applied to estuaries, and its effect on fish?

Sam, my understand­ing of a salt wedge estuary is that salt water coming in from the sea, being denser than the fresh water coming down the river, in conditions of reduced flow, has the potential to form a layer beneath the fresh.

Under these conditions, this layer tends to be roughly wedge-shaped with the thin edge beginning at the bottom some distance upstream from the mouth, gradually expanding toward the sea where the water is usually salt from top to bottom.

However, should an estuary become closed to the sea and stagnant, delineatio­n between salt and fresh becomes more distinct, the deepest levels becoming oxygen-depleted and toxic.

So, any significan­t delay in opening such an estuary to the sea increases the propensity for this toxic layer to mix with, and poison, the formerly habitable layer.

 ?? Picture: Mark Sesar ?? Adrian Cole shows the quality of whiting currently on offer. These were caught off St Leonards.
Picture: Mark Sesar Adrian Cole shows the quality of whiting currently on offer. These were caught off St Leonards.
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