Lee Point Trip report - Goldens, Macks and queenies
Spent late Saturday afternoon helping Canadian Pete, putting in a 24 volt battery system and his new toy - an 80lb motorguide GPS guided trolling motor.
What a huge electric thruster. You can even get 36volt version now. I remember buying one of the first models available in Australia - a hand tiller one I had on a canoe to fish Hinze Dam on the Gold Coast – it was a no combustion engine dam. Would have been late 80’s early 90’s
How things have changes. Track memory, anchor points, home points all at the touch of a button
The scary thing was drilling those holes to hold the plate down and getting it right!
so absolute
Once that was done – the rest was easy.
Still a few more things to do – wiring on trailer a bit iffy and get another 120amp battery (using one
of mine at the moment)
So with that done a little sleep and up at 5;30am to get on water at Dinah Beach ramp before the sunrise.
Weather was going to be windy but manageable in Peter’s higher sided, thicker hulled boat when compared with mine.
We head out to Lee Point with a short stop in Caitlyn Bay – just in case some Golden trevally in that same corner on that same stage of the dropping tide – but not today.
Once out to Lee Point several other boats were there but none fly fishing
Around these boats, fish were readily seen busting up bait that was huddled for shelter over a reef that was being exposed by the dropping tide
The other boats were casting lures and baits for no effect except some small yellow tail pike
Second cast I was on to a mackerel, Peter not much later.
We had double hook ups and at least one of us hooked up most of the next two hours.
The other boats – almost nothing. You could hear them talking about how they wished they had taken up fly fishing.
we had a great time, watching the mackerel react to the flies in very clear water. they were just rolling around in amongst the bait. You could even pick the fish you wanted to cast to - awesome fun!
It was almost embarrassing the fish numbers we were catching (when compared to the other boat working the same area – Golden trevally when you let the fly sink right down to edge of reef, - yellow tail pike, queenies and mackerel depending on the stripping action you put on the fly and location of cast. used clousers in white, blue over white, and surf candies blue, charteuse, and all white. I don't think fly type mattered as much as size, stripping action and location cast to.
While Nothing big - heaps and heaps of fun - Queenies to 45cm, mackerel to 50 (but quite solid in the hand not skinny like previous outings), Goldens to 40cm (kept a few of these Goldens for dinner)
We ventured off to find bigger fish. Found some tuna but they were quite sporadic and only in ones and twos. Bust up here, bust up over there – chase them and they wold bust up where you once were!
No luck with the tuna - quite frustrating to see them and not get them!*(^*^$*^%#^&%#
Spent rest of day visiting our favourite spots around the harbor for not much else – a queenie or two, a Mack. Once Peter got a small Strippie that got muscled by a huge dark shape that stayed connected for a while before breaking the leader and shredding part of the fly line.
So tough day but plenty of fish early on – best part no one but fly fishers getting in to the fish at Lee Point – GO THE FLY!!!!
When is the next trip???????????
(four weeks of school holidays coming up next week so should get more SWOFFING in
I hope - as usually something goes wrong with the my boat in the first trip of school holidays and I don't fish for the rest of the holiday break!
I hope - as usually something goes wrong with the my boat in the first trip of school holidays and I don't fish for the rest of the holiday break!
Here is a very bad bit of filming of a small golden under the water just before netting and release
Juvenile Goldens are so vibrant in their colours and in their never say die fighting style that makes them feel far bigger then what eventually you get in the net!
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