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ah yeah sorry that is what I meant.It's more likely that the oil spread by the water flow attracts them.
But hey.Whatever works
They don't really get a feed from the holes in the can eh lol.
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ah yeah sorry that is what I meant.It's more likely that the oil spread by the water flow attracts them.
But hey.Whatever works
They like the canals as theres a lot of easy food there.ah yeah sorry that is what I meant.
They don't really get a feed from the holes eh lol.
I imagine people keep their dogs out of the canals if there are bull sharks about. I saw a program on TV where one attacked a horse being trained in a river, a long way inshore. They are aggressive sharks by all accounts.They like the canals as theres a lot of easy food there.
Same as old/injured sharks.They have scraps from the homes on the canals.
Dont have to hunt or compete for the scraps.
The crabs are great eating tho..
Exactly Plenty of dogs were attacked in my time on the Gold CoastI imagine people keep their dogs out of the canals if there are bull sharks about. I saw a program on TV where one attacked a horse being trained in a river, a long way inshore. They are aggressive sharks by all accounts.
Jeremy Wade River monsters hey.I imagine people keep their dogs out of the canals if there are bull sharks about. I saw a program on TV where one attacked a horse being trained in a river, a long way inshore. They are aggressive sharks by all accounts.
As a kid in Hellyers Creek, back of Beachaven, I used to go eeling in the mudflats. Find a small chanel and work my way along it looking for the ledges and eel holes. One arm up one end the other up the other end and hope to grab a head and a tail, throw the eel onto the mudbank , grab it and into the sack. We got some big ones. This was 1967-68, we found a Samoan family a few streets from us that would give us 50cents for a sack full. That was big money to my mate and I, coke was 5c a bottle from memory and so was a jelly tip. Had no fear then, now, I don't like handling them.Jeremy Wade River monsters hey.
Great show that, his Eels in NZ episode was one of my favorites.
Grew up with stories of giant Eels, went out many a night trying to catch one. Saw two monsters and got busted off a couple of times by an unseen leviathan in the Takanini Milk factory creek - makes for a good tale. A giant was caught there once, made the Local paper, the courier, but no picture, no weight given, just a claim it was 8ft in length (the size Wade was chasing on his NZ episode was an footer).
Everything at night is more sinister, strikes and bust offs seem bigger. Take the poundage of line broken - how forcefully you were dragged towards the waters edge and you have to formula for a good yarn.
My old man and uncles swear they caught an Eel in the King Country that was more like an Anaconda than an Eel for its sheer length and size, my Grand parents being superstitious told them to bury it and it was not for eating.
I lived on the West Coast of the South island for a couple of years - a place called Rotomanu (pretty close to Gloriavale). The farm I ran had a creek at the back of the property, it was surprisingly deep. When it rained heavily (which was often) - you could ride over the paddocks adjoining the creek and see these giant eels grouped in the ponding hollows in the pasture. It was a very odd sight, scared the shit out of me the first time I came across them.Jeremy Wade River monsters hey.
Great show that, his Eels in NZ episode was one of my favorites.
Grew up with stories of giant Eels, went out many a night trying to catch one. Saw two monsters and got busted off a couple of times by an unseen leviathan in the Takanini Milk factory creek - makes for a good tale. A giant was caught there once, made the Local paper, the courier, but no picture, no weight given, just a claim it was 8ft in length (the size Wade was chasing on his NZ episode was an 8 footer).
Everything at night is more sinister, strikes and bust offs seem bigger. Take the poundage of line broken - how forcefully you were dragged towards the waters edge and you have to formula for a good yarn.
My old man and uncles swear they caught an Eel in the King Country that was more like an Anaconda than an Eel for its sheer length and size, my Grand parents being superstitious told them to bury it and it was not for eating.
Thanks for the report bro.Had a coupe of early morning sessions off the rocks at Lizard Bay, a walk over the hill from Opito at the northern end of BOI. Only small snapper.
Bought a boat on the weekend, Stabi 1550 fisher, a little big boat , ideal for solo missions or one other person. The wife and I went out this morning as the wind was 5knt variable, I decided to make the 45m trip each way across the bay to Bird Rock which is about half a km from hole in the rock. It shelves up from 70m to about 30m near the Bird, lots of schools of trevally and maomao and of course kingis. We had about 8 drifts before heading in with 6 snapper, all pannies except for a 7kg model and a decent trev which we have just consumed as sashimi. Excellent day, snapper in beer batter tonight, I'm the cook as usual and a fridge full of coronas.
Shame there is no football on.
We were targeting snapper on the bottom. We have often caught porae, blue cod and pink maomao on the bottom and the odd king, but not targeting them. In the deeper water currents are weird, sometimes top and bottom, so no drift is the same. We had a drogue out and needed an 8 oz sinker, 3 hook ledger rig. We left without any bait, too tight to buy it, so took half an hour to catch 15 or so jack macs on the sabiki for fresh bait.Thanks for the report bro.
You beauty, that was good mission with the big snap and Trev.
Did you try target the Kings specifically?
Was that all softbait fishing bro?