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Jewfish fishing at Sydney Opera House
Posted: 08/01/07 21:56:58 (Australia/Sydney)
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▲TopFishing Sydney Harbour
My first ever decent fish that I caught as a kid was a bream taken on a piece of bread off a water front park on the Manning at Taree. We had pulled up for lunch with the family on a trip home from Coffs Harbour, and like most kids, wouldn’t eat the crust on my sandwich and proceeded to pick it off in small pieces and toss them into the water. It wasn’t long till I had a boiling mass of bream at my feet going nuts over the crust. I bolted back to the car, grabbed a handline and within a few minutes had a nice bream of about 2 lb flapping on the grass. Up until a few days ago I had always considered it to be a bit of a novelty but all that changed with a few trips rock fishing with northern beaches legend Big Al Bellissimo. I rang Al to see if he would do a segment on my new DVD ‘Local Knowledge’ and he suggested “how about something using bread bait”.
Generally the key to successful fishing is in sourcing the freshest most natural baits, equally important, identifying out target species primary food source. So what’s the go with bread? Its processed human food made from a substance that has no resemblance to any natural food found in the sea. Not only will fish eat it but, at times, they will go absolutely nuts over it even when more conventional baits have failed. Al has taken Bream, Drummer (both silver and black), Luderick, Salmon, Kingfish, Trevally, Bonito and a whole heap of other non angling targets. I’ve caught Bream, Flathead, Mullet, Gar and small Jewfish in the estuary.
It seems like that there aren’t many fish that wont eat it and even more bazaar most species, even bottom feeders will rise to the surface to take a floating bread. Fishing with Al we pulled Luderick, 4 Bream including one to 2kg and a 3 kg Black Drummer in one session. All of them slurped the bread off the surface. Al’s technique is to burley heavily with bread and then fish with small pieces of bread, unweighted under a small bobby cork. Putting the bread on the hook is the tricky bit and it has to be done right if you are to be successful. The crust is striped off a slice of white bread. It has to be white as multigrain falls apart too quickly. Then he selects a piece about 5cm square and squeezes one end of it round the hook forming a dense dough but being careful to leave the other end fluffy. This achieves a bait that stays on the hook once wet but, due to the fluffy airated end, still has enough buoyancy to stay afloat. He has tried sinking baits but gets best results when the bait stays afloat. Its visual fishing as you nearly always get to see your bait taken off the top.
The harbour is firing. While Kings are not in big numbers yet, the average size is way up. We are averaging 80cm fish and there have been plenty caught and sighted at 1m. I even heard from a reliable source that there was a school of about 6 kings over 1m swimming around the Roseville boat ramp. Up stream locations are working better at the moment as is usual, for this time of year. Try Middle harbour and the area around fort Denison with fresh squid which I might add are hard to catch at the moment.
Big schools of salmon are still feeding around the heads but are still hard to catch. The water temp has just hit 20 so they should be a bit easier by the time you read this.
There are some whopper tailor on the troll at Rushcutters with a few kings mixed in with them. The kings generally wont take the lures we are throwing at the tailor but will nail a fly or stickbait.
Our luck continues on big jewfish with another 50lber from the harbour. My regular customer Josh Reynolds landed the beast on a Penn 750 spinfisher and 40lb braid within sight of Sydney Opera House and you guessed it – right on the turn of the high tide on fresh squid.
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