『Sydney Winter Fishing: Tailor, Flathead and Jewies Firing in the Harbour』のカバーアート

Sydney Winter Fishing: Tailor, Flathead and Jewies Firing in the Harbour

Sydney Winter Fishing: Tailor, Flathead and Jewies Firing in the Harbour

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G’day fishos, Artificial Lure here with your Sydney fishing report. We’ve had a classic winter pattern around the Harbour and coast today. Light westerlies early, building into a cool, dry breeze through the arvo, with mostly clear skies and just a bit of high cloud. Temps have been sitting in the low teens early, pushing to around the high teens on the coast. Barometer’s fairly steady, which always helps the bite. First light came in just after 7 this morning and the sun’s ducking out around 5 this arvo, so your proper bite windows are tight. The morning run‑in tide lined up nicely with sunrise inside the Harbour, pushing bait up around headlands, wharves and the bridge pylons. The afternoon run‑out is dragging that bait back off the flats and is worth a look for jewies and flathead along the drop‑offs. Around the Lower Harbour, schools of tailor and salmon have been busting up on small whitebait and pilchards when the tide pushes. A lot of anglers have been into chopper tailor with the odd better model to 45–50 cm mixed with bonito and the occasional rat king. Small metal slugs in the 10–25 g range, tiny white soft plastics, and 3–4 inch jerk shads in baitfish colours have been doing the damage. A fast, jerky retrieve has been key when they’re feeding high in the water. Bream and trevally have been steady around the moorings and deeper structure from Drummoyne through to Rose Bay. Peeled prawn, pilly cubes and chicken breast soaked in a bit of tuna oil have all worked. Light leaders, down to 6–8 lb fluoro, are making a big difference in the clear winter water. A few solid bream to 38–40 cm have come from the rock walls and ferry wharves for those fishing unweighted baits. Flathead are holding on the edges of the sand flats and drop‑offs, especially where there’s a bit of current. Anglers throwing 3–4 inch paddle‑tail plastics in motor oil, bloodworm and natural baitfish colours are picking up fish to the mid‑60s, with plenty of legal eaters mixed in. A slow hop along the bottom has been the go. For the jewie chasers, the bite has been patchy but rewarding. A handful of fish in the 80–95 cm range have come from deeper holes under the bridges and around harbour markers, mostly on live yakka and slimies fished through the tide change. A few have also fallen to larger soft vibes and 5–7 inch plastics worked slowly near the bottom after dark. Off the stones and beaches, salmon schools have been cruising within casting range. Pilchards on ganged hooks, metal lures around 40 g and small stickbaits have all produced. Early morning and late arvo, especially around a tide change, are best. There have also been some nice winter whiting and the odd legal snapper on the inshore reefs for those soaking fresh squid strips and pilchard pieces. Best lures this week: – Small chrome metals and micro‑jigs for tailor and salmon. – 3–4 inch paddle‑tails and jerk shads for flathead, bream and by‑catch snapper. – Soft vibes and bigger plastics for jewfish in the deeper water. Best baits: – Live yakkas and slimies, squid strips, and fresh pilchard for the bigger predators. – Peeled prawn, chicken and pilly cubes for bream and trevally. Couple of hot spots to try: – Middle Head to North Head: working the washes and current lines for salmon, tailor and the odd king. – The Spit and surrounding bays: bream, trevally and flathead on plastics and lightly weighted baits around the bridge pylons, moorings and drop‑offs. That’s your Sydney wrap from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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