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Thread: Estuary Fly Fishing

  1. #1

    Estuary Fly Fishing

    G'day
    I have just started fly fishing the estuaries of the gold coast chassing bream, tarpon, trevally, queenfish, giant herring and jacks. I havn't had great luck and i was hoping that you could tell me some good flies and colures that are productive.

    Thanks T-roy

  2. #2

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Gidday T- Roy

    Mate all of yur natural colours will work , along with chart/white, yellow/white and try a couple of red/yellow.

    Just like every sort of fishing its all about being persistent and fishing teh areas that will hodl fish.

    BAsically everywhere you would throw a bait or lure, throw a fly.

    Good luck.

  3. #3

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Thanks for the advice mate

  4. #4

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Sorry T-roy

    JUst read back over my post.

    The flies I mainly use are clousers in size 4 and up to a #1.
    Mainly use synthetics these days as teh flies dont get wrecked as easy.


  5. #5

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Clousers will work well - don't deviate too far. Also try straight straemer patterns and small lefty's.

    I have found that in the lefty's the natural fibres are still the best - white tail feathers splayed and peacock herl for the back - use any red synthetic for the throat.

    In clousers or streamers also try pink and white in combination - works well on blues / jacks.

    remember if you are targeting jacks that you cannot strip line fast enough. When you think you are retrieving as fast as you can then you need to find a way to double that pace on every retrieve - exhausting but exhilirating.

    Also don't discount poppers - excellent as a struggling baitfish imitation when pulled less fast through the surface to give that popping action. Both on a floating line, clousers could be an intermediate line - still a medium fast to very fast strip though - species dependent.

    All pelagics will take a fly - you just have to present it as if it is escaping food. Likewise with fish that feed on smaller food like crustaceans etc - same concept applies. As always in flyfishing : "MATCH THE HATCH"

  6. #6

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Thanks mate

  7. #7
    Nick_Currey
    Guest

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Suggest you look up some prawn/shrimp flys, in natural or soft pink colour - no2 hook. These resemble the humble ol prawn which will catch most of the bottom species you mention. Need to fish on the bottom with a slow "flick, flick, draw type action. Suggest a no2 sink line or line with good sink tip to get it down. Work the drop-off edge of sandbank drop offs and structure, especially for bream and jacks - the edge of pontoons etc

    For the tarpon, tailor, queenies etc, they are on smaller size so a No1 clouser or white deceiver (to resemble a whitebait/herring found in goldie system) will work. Look for fish chopping or working bait. Suggest a intermediate clear line and let fly sink into/through boiling fish and then strip, usually gets hit on the sink.

    Good luck

    Nick

  8. #8
    R_K_HILL
    Guest

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Go around bridges (but not standing on them)

  9. #9

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    Hi T-Roy
    You have selected the hardest fishes to hook up not impossible but, for starters I sugest to fish for flathead on the sand flats, myself I mostly use clousers and baitfish type flies, prefered colours white or chartreus, it doesn't mean the other colours don't work.
    good luck .

    vince.

    Ps. T-Roy Why don't you go to the SEQFF club they have a meeting tomorrow 7.30 pm its at mermaid bowls club Markeri st. we have club outings casting very nice friendly people, you learn a lot.

    SEQFFC member.

  10. #10

    Re: Estuary Fly Fishing

    try a dynamite a-bandit

    or the throbn rodney


    both great lures for estuary bream

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