Slinky Kate 16th April 2011

Norman

Well-known member
Well from a few years ago when boat reports were rare we now seem to have loads to read ..... brilliant stuff .... Is this because we are all becoming reporters or because theres more to report about .. :D .. probs a bit of both I think .....

Well lets start by saying ... "It's early yet, just the middle of April so don't expect too much set target for today at 6 fish to the boat" ..... ha no chance of that , what with all the reports of fish in abundance we , as I expect everyone else as well, set off today with a feeling of great anticipation for a good catch ..........

With the tide not at its best and the tide times even worse we set off at first light to get as much of the ebb tide as possible and met at RQ Marina for 5.15am, When I say we, Tony and I welcomed the return of Steve (the scotchie hunter), his first trip with Slinky for over a year.

After the short trip from Marina to piers, we stopped off at close in areas and had a few short drops but not a touch so decided it was to be a wrecking day today.

On a serious note, we decided today to carry out a very controlled :) experiment. We chose a wreck, set the drift then simultaneously dropped three different rigs. We decided we would fish differing rigs in an effort to evaluate which over a period of time would catch most .........

Tony dropped a pirk, Steve stuck with tried and tested baited hokkais and I lowered a sidewinder minnow shad .........

after only a short while I struck into the first fish of the day, a small codling of 3 lbd or so on the shad .............

That was it ------ Panic, blood, sweat and tears for the next 4 or 5 minutes as Tony and Steve decided to forget the experiment and went crazy to install shads to the ends of their tackle, I swear before I`d unhooked and turned around they were throwing shads to the deeps with innocent grins on their faces.

The weather was good to us and the sea flat as can be, we travelled far and wide from wreck to wreck picking up a couple or so on each however not the manic tens of fish per wreck that we had seen late into last season.

I stuck with shads all day whilst Steve and Tone experimented with a variety of baits (however I do feel shads won the day on catches).
Steve as ever boated his first fish of the day to find it was ...... yes, a scotchie ... welcome back steve......

Tone boated the first ling of the season with a nice 6lbder well done mate, and I got the best cod of the day at about 7lbd.

At about 11.00am after the tide had started to flood we decided to give St Marys a go as it's had a lot of good press lately, but today for us, it just didn't fish, never mind it was a bit on the cold and windy side as we came inshore anyway so decided to go back to the wrecks .......
What a good decision, there was an onshore breeze some 4 -5 miles out that counteracted the westerly blowing from the shore, this resulted in beautiful calm seas no wind and warm sunny spells all afternoon.
Added to this the fish started to turn on on the wrecks.....
Not a big catch by any means but by the end of the day we had twice the target of 6 to end up with 11 good cod/codling and 1 nice ling.

Highpoint of the day ..... Steve catching his first Shad caught fish ......

Low point of the day - "good luck with the electrical repair Rich"

as ever a few pictures of the day ......

Sunrise, well as close we could get to sunrise as we had to wait for it to get up above some clouds first

sunriseish.jpg



First fish of the day ... to myself :)

normcodshad2.jpg



Steve (back in business) scotchie haul

stevescotchie.jpg



Tony and first ling of the season

toneling.jpg



myself with another shaded cod

normcodmarsh.jpg



Steve with his first Shad caught fish

stevecodshad.jpg



Tony with what he thought on the way up was a ling (and maybe a record)

tonecodbackwards.jpg



so frantic was the travelling and fishing there was no time to relax between wrecks, just barely time to tie the next rig .... :)

steverig.jpg



Tone proving he too can catch cod as well ........

tonycod1.jpg



What turned out to be best fish of the day - 7lbd cod

normcod7lb.jpg



steve with yet another .....

stevecod2.jpg



as ever ... the end result ...... :)

fillets.jpg


A great day was had by all, many thanks to my crew of the day Tony and Steve .......
Great to see the season off to an early start .........

cheers

norm
 
Aye Tony, you are as excitable as Big Tel, but i'm sure Norm will agree its great to see the crew having a good time, makes the day that much better.:)
 
Thanks Norman ,great to be back and I must say I'm totally converted to the shad fishing , I lkike many others was a sceptic but you proved it today with the better catch , all on shaderoonies !

Can't believe I've been fishing on Slinky since 2006 ,your log was a hell of a read today mate.

What a way to start a season ...yeeeehaaaa. :D:D:D
 
Nice one wish i could of spent more time out there today but saftey first at sea.

Nice size cod and ling, great to see Steve back in the pouting i mean fish :)

Good luck next weekend, i am away on holiday so hope to see them catch reports when i get back :)
 
Feels like the season is properly underway now with that slinky report :) can't wait to see the video :D. great stuff:)

Ray
 
Well done lads, great to see Slinky back in action and as usual a great report and photos.

Some nice fish there for the first trip out, a very promising start to the season.

Keep em coming :)

Jonny
 
well done norm...

tyne area fishing well..

sorry to hear about leccy faults on stingray tho... richy must be bustin for a good start to this years season, shame we can't pull boats all over the north east eh? would it be an idea if we we could do this, let the tyne boys fish down here? and let us fish the tyne area?

hey fellas can't we visit each others boats ?

we arn't that far away!
 
A good write-up and pics as ever Norman; team Slinky look to have had a great time.
We tried a similar experiment last Thursday; the sidewinder eel, heavy pirk and set of muppets all caught the wreck equally effectively and at about the same time. Fish came in pairs and were happier taking last year’s frozen mackerel than fresh rag.

From the shore, I counted a dozen boats and eight ‘yaks at 9AM this morning and it was only going to get busier.
 
Ha! Ha!, You gotta Laugh, the plans laid out for the day, then one fish caught to a certain rig, and the plan straight outa the window:D. What happened to all them speed jigs with top hooks Tony, or is that the "plan" for the next trip;):rolleyes:. Great to sea some nice fish and a smile on everyone's faces.
Great in depth report Norm, always enjoy the read. Well done lads.
 
Cracking! Were you's just hopping/bouncing the shads on a shortish trace Norman or retreiving them?


Graham.


Hi Graham, bits of both really, personally my way is (on a shortish trace about 4ft long) to trot the bottom lifting to full rod stretch for three or four trots then wind up about 10ft slowly, drop again slowly and repeat ...... just enough movement to ensure the shad swims.
If you test it on the surface you can see that it takes only very slow movement to cause the tail to "swim" so dont need to work it too fast.

In a blind moment of madness whilst retrieving for a "lets go round again" move I almost called "look there's a fish following my line to the surface" until I realised it was the shad heading up behind the weight :p
Now there's realistic :) :) :)

norm
 
Arthur speed jigs were discussed yesterday but I think they're going to be utilised when the water is a bit clearer and the bait fish are about in numbers...I think that's when they'll (hopefully) come into their own :)
 
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