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This website was created to house internal and external drafts containing reports associated with the art of angling and our Kayak Fishing Adventures. Based in and around cities and locations throughout Australia, these tales of experience, knowledge and info are for all to enjoy and all content, text and images contained herein are deemed strictly copyright ( (C) 2006 - 2012, all rights reserved ).

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Monday, April 27, 2009

NSW - Googong Dam 27/4/09



Horrible, horrible weather but my Googong curse was broken,

Didn’t expect many of the forum few to turn up so wasn’t the least surprised when I departed alone. Wind was probably 20 knots and pushing more with greater gusts so shelter was priority over anything else. Bradleys Inlet took a lot longer to reach that usual, mainly due to the balancing act I was playing on the 1m waves in the central basin. Once in the inlet things became slightly more secluded, being able to hide in the coves provided respite from the bitterly cold conditions.

Peppering Spinnerbaits in all directions a spotted a following shape that disappeared as quickly as it came (Decent Murray Cod) but for the likes of me I couldn’t tempt him again. Trolling produced nothing for me, not even a Redfin on the Chubby. Seems the 10 degree weather with wind chill was just as cold below the water as well as above (Water temp was 13 degrees, 12 degrees in the shadows), needless to say I had the whole place to myself, no boats, nothing.

Struggling to catch anything but a cold I had some minor success on the Ayu Chubby (Thanks again Luke, legend). However one Redfin decided to spit the lure back at me, narrowly missing my nose. Nothing like a sheer moment of terror to waken you up, felt both sets of trebles brush past my top lip. I retired it then and there, no way was I tempting fate so far from the ramp in such atrocious state of affairs… What to use, what to bloody well use?

Cycling through lure choice, the rocky structures headlining bays were just not doing it for me today. Chose to hide in amongst and cast out into the deeper water, first cast with the now infamous Daiwa Flick Beat IZM produced a good bend, breaking my Googong hoodoo and securing my first Native out of this waterway in three years of trying (Phew, didn’t like those slim odds today). Not a metre plus Murray Cod, but my preferred freshwater species on the cast even.

Went straight home after that, with cloud cover maximizing any left over space the chill started getting to me, even with full thermals and wet weather gear. Can’t say it was a good day for a paddle so don’t blame others for hugging their doonas, pretty happy I managed to get some footage for Ugly Fish Eyewear at all, considering it was all against me. Couple of land based noobs back at the ramp and some loner in a Hobie setting out into the wobbly (Sound familiar Paf?).

The things I do for fun, work would have been almost better… Not!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

NSW - Tallowa Dam, Easter 2009



Introduction:

The centrepiece of the Shoalhaven scheme is Tallowa Dam, a concrete dam completed in 1976. It is located immediately downstream of the junction of the Kangaroo and Shoalhaven rivers. The Tallowa Dam collects water from a 5,750 square kilometre catchment that extends from Kangaroo Valley in the north-east to the upper Shoalhaven River south-west of Braidwood. This water is stored in Lake Yarrunga, which is formed by Tallowa Dam. Lake Yarunga is the main water supply for the Shaolhaven and is one of Sydney’s major regular drinking water supplies.

Tallowa dam holds the water back and this flows into the Shoalhaven River which starts well above the dam wall itself. This lake is stocked with Australian Bass, stocking records vary but 80,000 fingerlings were released there in late 2006 under a NSW government grant deal. It is a paddle only Lake / Dam and access is from parts of Kangaroo Valley, Bendeela camping grounds and the Tallowa Dam wall.

• Height: 43 metres

• Length: 518 metres

• Capacity: 90,000 megalitres

• Catchment: 5,750 square kilometres

http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/research/area ... ay-tallowa

Kangaroo Valley is often used as a thoroughfare to a better place, a journey way to the South Coast areas of Nowra and the boutique locations of Berry and beyond. The Valley itself is one of rolling, lush green plains and tourism delights. Signs like ‘Worlds best Pies’ and ‘Bush Retreat’ scatter the road sides amongst headiness hideaways and thoughtful propositions. Tourism and tranquillity are what holds Barrengary and the valley commune together, it certainly seems to ooze that dreamy appeal but its what lurks well hidden beyond that makes this author drool.

The Sydney Catchment Authority controls access to many of the waterways that are governed by Lake Yuranga and to a lesser extent Tallowa Dam. To help control rural roundhouses the SCA have provided free camping facilities below their topical pumping station at Bendeela. Add to this the camping facilities at Tallowa Dam Picnic Area (Closed till May 30th, 2009) .

Having explored our tenting options at the last minute we were left with only one true destination, the heavy populous presence of the camp ground at Bendeela Picnic Area. Herds of campers and tourists alike crammed the large, landscaped plain shielded by Security Guards from the SCA. At first they were an unwelcome sight but after the second night they proved there silent sentry to no end. Access to the Kangaroo arm of the Dam was envious enough but not explored, after all it was only a daily 20 minute trip back into the township and down a battered Scanzi Road.

Saturday 11/4/09:

Rising at 6am to a quiet surround we hit the road early to dictate time remaining, Jason and Michelle had been patient enough but with dawn upon us it was time to take the trip down to the Tallowa Dam Wall. Being only the second time I have had the pleasure of visiting this destination I was still in complete awe at such picturesque surrounds. The construction of the fish ladder is still ongoing and controls most of the car park, ferrying gear to and fro is easy enough and somewhat more rewarding whence finally on the waters facade.

My good friend Jason Price (Squidder), his partner Michelle (Squidette), Claire and myself launched and paddled eagerly past the Dam wall and onwards to glorification. I had been yearning to expose this destination since it was shared with me early last year, something I was hoping to pass on to associated individuals who share the same passion for experience. The huge expanse of the meeting river system showed us no real beginning and no real end, bank side wilderness varied from bush to rainforest with secluded coves providing personal respite from distance purchased on watercraft.

Rounding the first point closest to the Dam wall, Claire and I had a double hook up of Bass using differing lures and techniques. After freeing weed from the rear treble of a Mini Micro Mullet, my first Bass came from a cast and retrieve whilst Claire’s trolled Stumpjumper was taken on the resulting pause. The overcast weather threatened to rain and kept the eastern bank in shade most of the morning, with Bass taken so early during the trip the rest of the initial daylight hours would surely set precedence for the following day.

As we moved along the arterial walls the gorge structure loomed large, amid sight seeing and pure venture we trolled towards the horizon paying attention not only to our surroundings but to any per chanced surface activity. The Bass were switched on thick and fast, no sooner had one been released over the side the next was being reeled in. While major length and girths was lacking there were a few moments of joy and sadness, a large rogue Bass estimated around the high 40’s mark almost graced my net until hooks pulled in accordance with gambled pressure on light leader load.

As a group we fished apart most of the morning, just as Jason and Michelle came over to see how we were doing on our Tandem Outfitter Claire had a massive hit from within a weed bed. The hit was so fierce that two hooks on the Chubby Deep front treble broke off during impact, rendering the Ghost Ayu patterned lure back to the tackle box. Michelle scouted ahead and found a small landing that had once occupied a campsite of sorts, landing six kilometres after initial departure we cooked up some sausage sandwiches and rested up for the return toil.

It was at this stage we sighted two large Carp in the front of Jason’s Kayak, taken by Michelle on a rather challenging lure choice. Sighting said fish around the weeds she carefully paddled over and cast towards their location, being ambushed by feral species might not sound like anyone’s cup of tea but the resounding fight is thoroughly worth it. I had been trying to land a Carp on a lure since I started Kayak Fishing and had been cruelly defied many times before; to say I was envious of Michelle’s achievements would be an understatement!

Goals are meant to be achieved but when and where are set to be determined (And out of my control), perhaps it was a bizarre coincidence but Claire and I both landed Carp on our return trip (Averaging the same size as previous models). Claire was also severely skunked by a demonic feral intent on freedom and a piercing. Drag peeled far too quickly for either of us to fathom what has happening at the time, our only clue was a polarised Carp mooching amongst branch structure as we braced for an impending impact that left us speechless and slightly poorer for the experience.

Making our way towards a large dead timber forest we started counting how many fish Claire and I landed, making for an interesting competition and lure result comparison. After losing the Chubby lure choice became a little interesting, some well known Bass lures didn’t receive a touch while others more suited to Trout ( Think minnow profile ) cleaned up. Throwing Spinnerbaits in amongst the woodwork brought out a few Bass but follows were rare. Unlike the Bass dams far north the tip to fishing Tallowa is to find rocky cliffs and bushy overhangs and suspend offerings, even surface lures were refused on an otherwise ideal top water day.

During the paddle/pedal back to the ramp we encountered more fish and the numbers just kept building, with other a dozen Bass and a couple of Carp between us it was great entertainment making up for the last few months of difficult fishing and slow results. A quick shuffle of gear and we hurriedly beat the rain, retreating back to Bendeela for a well earned afternoon kip and a curry dinner. It’s a very busy, noisy campground during various festive holidays but would be a prime, quiet base camp on ‘normal’ weekends.

Sunday 12/4/09:

Deciding to pack up our gear after our final sortie we trekked back to the wall and headed in the opposite direction to our previous trip. It’s amazing how close the Bass held to the main basin and how few were landed when the ramp was out of sight. On one side of the arm it was rather shallow with muddy patches due to overnight rain runoff, the other side had the original depth of the river and steep banks (And even deeper snags).

With new lures deployed ( Secret Creek and a Megabass Smolt X ) Claire and I trolled up its reaches sticking close to the edges and running parallel along the weed beds, Jason and Michelle stuck to the opposite side using similar tactics. Once inside the small bays cast and retrieved lures with small buoyant pauses would often bring a fish into sight, watching these hungry genuses strike our offerings so close to the yak was gob smacking stuff. After switching to a top water presentation with the ever reliable Ecogear PX 45, the buoyant, non floating presentations were deemed (As a rule of thumb) more appropriate when casting to structure.

With the sun shining brightly the fish were a little harder to tempt than the previous day, somehow though with little time left we still managed 15 Bass with Claire toughly owning this date. The tight action of the Secret Creek plug and the pumpkinseed colouration triumphed on the day, even out classing the Brown Trout pattern of the Predatek Min Min. Jason and Michelle’s challenging lure choice the day before was once again doing the damage (Daiwa ‘Flick Beat IZM), but this time without the Carp hat trick. While these invasive species were so prevalent in the other arm they were almost non existent in these parts, probably due to the lack of terrestrial activity and sheer abundance of food within a more rainforest surround.

Conclusion:

A previous leg injury to Michelle was aggravated enough to force her in early, easily the biggest days she has had on a kayak since moving to Canberra. Speaking of injuries my bulging lower fifth vertebrae and slight Sciatica behaved itself quite well during the trip, mainly due to my recent gym membership, daily runs and improved core fitness regime (Accompanied by the cycling action of the Mirage Drive). We all moved back to the now busy ramp to pack up our gear and reminisce on such a wonderful venue, stopping briefly below the wall to capture some images of the upper reaches of the mighty Shoalhaven River.

The joys of a quiet weekend paddle could be heard echoing amongst the winds; with a distinct lack of power and electric boats (Not permitted here) it really is a special place begging to be explored via Canoe or Kayak. Even during such a busy weekend we still virtually had the place to ourselves, spotting only a handful of anglers over the entire trip (Most of which were shore based). When the camp ground/picnic area reopens in June of this year I will definitely be venturing here more often, trying to top my previous efforts and rid the population of Carp from Sydney’s secondary water supply.

Tallowa Dam and the Kangaroo Valley district is situated on the Shoalhaven River near Kangaroo Valley, about 200 kilometres south from Sydney, approximately 200km north from Canberra and a leisurely half an hours drive from the coastal township of Nowra. From Sydney, follow the Hume Highway [F5] south towards Goulburn and take the Mittagong to Bowral turnoff. Take Nowra Road towards Kangaroo Valley. Turn right at Kangaroo Valley Just before Hampden Bridge to Bendeela Picnic Area. For Tallowa Dam, continue across Hampden Bridge and turn right.

Famous for its camping grounds scattered around at Bendeela, Barrengarry and the Tallowa Dam wall ( Currently closed due to construction ), the Kangaroo Valley offers many styles of accommodation from Bed & Breakfasts, Retreats, Lodges, Farm stays down to the traditional styling’s of Glenmack Caravan Park / Kangaroo Valley Tourist Park.

NSW - Pejar Dam, Goulburn 28/3/09



A well famous spot before it was recently neglected,

Greeted by aged signs indacating days of old I was pleasantly suprised to see some big Trout rising all over the place, down close to the old boat ramp. Unfortunately for me I arrived about an hour too late and once the sun rose above rises were few and far between. Lots of bait fish of some description, insects galore and a lone Yabby carcass gave me confidence to troll up a storm. I was fishing solo as invitations were ignored or politely refused, for those that dont know its about 1hr 20 minutes drive from Canberra ( Thats with or without a Rebels / Police escort on the way home ).

A famed venue that still holds a few big bruisers ( According to the sounder ), tried many different lures but they only wanted the Min Min shown. Pretty sure if I managed to arrive earlier the J7 Rapala / Rebel jointed would have taken its toll, Pescado's tip off proved popular with 3 of the 4 fish landed amongst the weed beds ( Below 3m, bays and edges ). It really is a joy to fish but it seems to be open to all elements, like all Trout waters seem to be. The Daiwa Heartland S Trout Special 1-3kg really took the sting out of them, even at 35cm - 40cm they were belting the crap out of the pure Minnie.

Something about fishing a new location that makes it so satisfying, not often I drive less than 2hrs to go fishing and with some family appearances scheduled for the late afternoon it was an easy day trip. Would be a good place to fish overnight but it really is quite featureless, couple of big boulders and a maximum depth of 18m in one of the bays. The arms were quite shallow but early on would fire, this would be a great place to fly fish from the bank due to lack of trees or bankside vegetation. All up managed 4 Rainbow Trout and lost about the same... Next time I will bring a gang!

Word of warning though, maximum Blue Green Algae content.

Hobie / ABT Tournament - Gold Coast 15/3/09



Introduction:

With the famed events entering their third round, Queensland received another southern boost from states below for the Gold Coast round of the ABT / Hobie tournament series. Stakes were gaining altitude rapidly with only 10 spots available (Five available here) before the penultimate event at Forster and the Grand Final in late March.

39 competitors gathered from far and wide to endure a frantic waterway left desolate before 8am, many had chances to pre fish the previous days prior with mixed results but from all reports gathered the viewing was a strong, good indication that the event would fire at will. The forecast was brilliant but overcast conditions were non existent which meant finding shade, cover and structure all in the one location the utmost priority.

Game plans were openly shared and options discussed, the waterway loomed large but with enough avenues available it immediately split the field from first light. Many ventured towards the seaway while others stuck to the main Gold Coast strip and the Nerang river structure. The choice for many seemed difficult at first but with the ABT ‘Who shares wins’ policy in full effect, the highly visible Bream feeding so close to the launch site and the spoils of victory so close the scene was set for a tremendous round.

Simon Goldsmith from ABT briefed the competitors before sending them forward to sculpt some winnings and earn a place in Tournament history. Sharing accommodation with Hobie Team Member Carl Dubois I was intrigued with his previous competitive Tournament experience and opted to tag along for the first hour, get some pointers and watch how the 2006 NSW Bream Open champion fashions his fish.

Carl opted to work the shade early, leaving me generous spacing and the opportunity to pull fish from previously undisturbed locations. The waterway was still quiet and that brought misguided satisfaction, what was to come proved that while areas can be hammered by powered craft of all sizes, Bream could still be found using paddling stealth and the highly functional Hobie Mirage Drive.

Hitting the shady moorings proved productive early; with near perfect tides a drift could be maintained whilst viewing upside Bream feeding. Cid landed an undersize Bream early on a plastic before moving off away from the ever increasing presence of competition, seeking shade no doubt. Certain plastics drew aggressive responses while others were ignored, Squidgy Wrigglers in Bloodworm colour, Powerbait T Tail Minnows and cut down Pumpkinseed Gulp Turtleback worms worked a treat.

Another option I chose to follow was the pink Grubbing technique used by many AFC pros alike and as pioneered in Australia by ABT’s Steve Morgan. Worm hooks on 4lb braid and a striking style caught me additional undersize Bream, regardless of leader material, pauses or sink rates. While the fish weren’t big the result was exciting, sub surface grubs retrieved beneath cavernous shoreline concrete precluded a few big bust offs and some great tussles (Still painfully short of the legal minimal 23cm fork mark).

There were times I felt whisked away, fishing these Gold Coast systems sure is off the beaten track I tread heavily. One thing I have learned with the ABT / Hobie series is that mindset is extremely important. Sometimes game plans go askew and forward thinking and strong goals will get you there. Speaking to fellow competitors during the morning I found many were catching fish but the designated species lacked.

The same tackle and lures used positively for these anglers pre fishing the venue were failing on the day,
Picking up undesirable fish of decent size would normally be considered trophy achievements and televised to all; these captures were kept off our chest and out of our minds. The focus of Bream kept many going strong, shallow weed beds, far fetched creek scenarios, rocky reefs and sandy beaches wore away the time with some success. Occasionally a bigger fish would be sighted but due to the abundant noise and lack of cloud cover they were spooked easily, if you could see them they could see you.

Eventually time was up and entrants returned with some stories to tell, lost rods, nets and a hard days fishing all round. Tales of woe aside, some legal fish were caught and on varying techniques (Including surface, sub surface, plastics and popular hard bodied presentations). A total of nine fish were presented for weighing between eight anglers with one lucky, well travelled character bagging not only the two fish limit, the tournament win but also the coveted ABT / Hobie Angler of year (AOY) title.

Conclusion:

Rounding out the top five, Hobie’s Steve Fields secured $90 and a Daiwa / Berkley prize pack for .350gms. Fourth place went to Barry Trap, $90 and a Ecogear prize pack / Team Daiwa Advantage 3 rod for his 0.370gm effort. Hobie State Team Member Carl Dubois took out third place, $130 and a Ecogear prize pack / Team Daiwa Advantage reel. Brian Rutledge took out the big Bream $100 award with his .490gm beast; $220 for second place, a Berkley / Ecogear Prize pack and a Team Daiwa Advantage 3 rod.

The winner was the now ABT / Hobie Tournament favourite Greg Lewis from Burrill Lake on the New South Wales South Coast. Greg’s two fish .680gm limit was well deserved and earned himself $350, Hobie Sunglasses and some Berkley Fireline. Due to Greg already qualifying for the Grand Final (Along with Steve Fields), both sixth place Dave Hedge and seventh place Micheal Maas were both bumped into the top five to qualify and find themselves in contention to take out the final series (A fitting result).

I spoke to Carl Dubois from the Hobie State Team after the tournament to gauge his reaction to fishing in the second QLD series, his techniques and the Grand Final:

“Firstly I have to say how tough I thought the fishing was. I'd heard good reports from other anglers that had pre-fished but I guess the hot, still conditions (as well as the thousands of boats motoring around) weren't conducive to a good bite. The day started okay with two just undersize fish and an absolute roasting from something big within the first half hour but after that I couldn't even get a take”.

“It was two hours before I hooked my first decent fish from under a pontoon near Paradise Island and he fell to a Berkley Gulp 2" shrimp in banana colour that was rigged on a 1/16th oz jighead. When I had him out in the open I could see he was barely lip-hooked so I backed the drag right off as I inched him closer to the kayak. As I slid him towards the net, he gave one last wriggle and voila, he was gone! That really hurt losing that guy as the bites were so few and far between”.

“I tried everything in my arsenal; hard bodies over the flats and along rock walls, blades down deep near bridges and soft plastics on long leaders under overhanging trees and every jetty and pontoon that I came across. Finally, at 10:45 am, I hooked a nice bream that I guessed would go about 28 cms to the fork. Those next 2 minutes were pretty nerve racking as I took my time and eased him into the net. Not taking any chances, I even went ashore before putting him in the livewell to minimise any risk of him wriggling out of my hands and back into the drink”.

“It was such a relief to get that 'donut monkey' off my back and I'll admit that I'd probably started to fish a little too fast as I'd anxiously watched the minutes tick by. I calmed right down and was getting my casts back into the zone and only ten minutes later I was busted up again by something too big for the 4 lb leader. That was it and I had to floor it to get back by 12pm”.

“I was sure that one fish wouldn't be enough to get me onto the podium but while waiting to weigh-in, the banter amongst the other competitors was one of hard luck stories and a lot of Krispy Kremes. Luckily, that one fish was enough to see me take third spot and get an invite to the Grand Final at Forster. To say I was over the moon would be an understatement and I can't wait to spend two days fishing in another new arena. Looks like I'll be pouring over a few new maps”.

The next instalment of the hugely successful Hobie / ABT series travels to Wallis Lake at Forster, New South Wales for the Forster Fishing Carnival on March 21st and 22nd. For more details on remaining Hobie Kayak Tournaments for 2009 or any future and past ABT events (Including the Grand Final) please visit the following links:
http://www.bream.com.au, http://www.hobiefishing.com.au/news_and_reports/1.html