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Scott
May 30th, 2004, 12:44 PM
I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
questions if I may.
I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.
For example, at low tide, high tide, just before high tide etc etc. Dawn,
dusk, day, night - that sort of thing. Full moon, new moon, the day before
or after blah blah blah.
I have always known fishing is more than dumb luck but the more people I
listen to, the more confusing it gets.
Any help?

Scott

Steve Paris
May 30th, 2004, 09:20 PM
"Scott" > wrote in message
...
> I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
> questions if I may.
> I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
> fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.

Best 'time' is always an hour before and after dawn and dusk, no matter
what the tide or moon is doing. Some types of fish prefer the full moon,
some no moon, depends what your after. Go to your local fishing tackle shop
and ask them to steer you in the right direction. Cheers.

--
Steve Paris L/S
Tropical Cairns Nth Queensland
Australia.

Madeyes
May 31st, 2004, 09:33 AM
I'm in the same boat (pardon the pun) as Scott. All I've caught since
Christmas is 1 carp, 2 x 6" trout cod (which went back), 2 x 6" river
blackfish(which also went back), and 1 shrimp. One day I'll catch something
to eat!!!

Madeyes.

Scott > wrote in message
...
> I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
> questions if I may.
> I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
> fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.
> For example, at low tide, high tide, just before high tide etc etc. Dawn,
> dusk, day, night - that sort of thing. Full moon, new moon, the day before
> or after blah blah blah.
> I have always known fishing is more than dumb luck but the more people I
> listen to, the more confusing it gets.
> Any help?
>
> Scott
>
>

John
May 31st, 2004, 11:29 AM
On Sun, 30 May 2004 11:44:21 GMT, in aus.sport.fishing you wrote:

G'day Scott,

>I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
>questions if I may.
>I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
>fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.
>For example, at low tide, high tide, just before high tide etc etc. Dawn,
>dusk, day, night - that sort of thing. Full moon, new moon, the day before
>or after blah blah blah.
>I have always known fishing is more than dumb luck but the more people I
>listen to, the more confusing it gets.
>Any help?

You could ask a million fisho's this and probably get a million
different answers.

I don't know much about beach fishing but I do a lot of estuary
fishing mainly around Port Stephens and the Hunter River. Dawn and
dusk are when fish are most active. If you're after bream night time
is when the big ones bite. Flathead are more active through the day,
whiting mostly through the day but I catch the odd one or two of a
night and they are always good fish. Blackfish through the day when
using a float and weed bait, because you can't see the float of a
night (a well lit area or bright moonlight I guess it would work,
anyone ever tried it?), and they do sometimes take a yabby of a night
sometimes even a prawn. Leatherjacket seem to prefer the day as do
mullet and garfish.

I don't think moon phases make much difference. I've heard people say
bream won't bite with a full moon but I've caught plenty under a full
moon. Jew specialists are always talking about moon phases but I don't
target them and have only caught the odd few when fishing for
something else.

Tides are a matter of opinion, I prefer the run out, I don't know why
I just seem to have more luck on the run out but I don't think it
makes much difference. When the water is slack fish tend to stop
biting. The one exception I know of with that is soapy jew which only
seem to bite at the turn of the tide.

I think the best advice anyone can give someone about fishing is to
use live bait whenever possible. Yabbies or pink nippers (depending on
where you live) are good bait for most estuary species, a yabby pump
is a good investment. Bloodworms and squirt worms, live prawns and
poddy mullet are all excellent baits. You're pretty much wasting your
time with a pack of frozen service station prawns. If you can't get
your own bait at least take a drive to your local co-op and get some
fresh prawns.

The other piece of good advice is to fish as light as possible. A huge
sinker generally means no fish, just use enough lead to take the bait
to the bottom. If you're after bream of a night try using no sinker if
the water isn't running too fast or a small ball sinker (number 0 or
00) running right down to the hook.

All this is just my opinion and what works for me. One thing I do know
for sure is, have fun...if you don't catch a fish there's always
tomorrow and like the old saying...a bad day fishing is still better
than a good day at work.

JC

David Barwell
June 27th, 2004, 10:43 AM
You need five things to be right before you will consistantly catch fish
successfully........
1.) Right Moonphase
2.) Right tide
3.) Right time of the tide
4.) Right location
5.) Right bed.

Miss anyone and you can expect poor catches, unfortunately with our busy
live styles we tend to go fishing when we have time not when its time to go
fishing.


"Scott" > wrote in message
...
> I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
> questions if I may.
> I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
> fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.
> For example, at low tide, high tide, just before high tide etc etc. Dawn,
> dusk, day, night - that sort of thing. Full moon, new moon, the day before
> or after blah blah blah.
> I have always known fishing is more than dumb luck but the more people I
> listen to, the more confusing it gets.
> Any help?
>
> Scott
>
>

David Barwell
June 27th, 2004, 10:45 AM
opps ......should read 5.) Right bait !!!

"David Barwell" > wrote in message
...
> You need five things to be right before you will consistantly catch fish
> successfully........
> 1.) Right Moonphase
> 2.) Right tide
> 3.) Right time of the tide
> 4.) Right location
> 5.) Right bed.
>
> Miss anyone and you can expect poor catches, unfortunately with our busy
> live styles we tend to go fishing when we have time not when its time to
go
> fishing.
>
>
> "Scott" > wrote in message
> ...
> > I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
> > questions if I may.
> > I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
> > fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.
> > For example, at low tide, high tide, just before high tide etc etc.
Dawn,
> > dusk, day, night - that sort of thing. Full moon, new moon, the day
before
> > or after blah blah blah.
> > I have always known fishing is more than dumb luck but the more people I
> > listen to, the more confusing it gets.
> > Any help?
> >
> > Scott
> >
> >
>
>

Fishbulb
June 28th, 2004, 07:52 AM
"David Barwell" > wrote in message
...

> opps ......should read 5.) Right bait !!!

> > 5.) Right bed.


I dunno, the original 5.) sounded pretty good to me.



--
Free-range country-killed gluten-free organic message.
No artificial colourings or preservatives.
If you are unsatisfied, return the unused portion of this message
to the place of purchase for a 100% refund.

Dean
July 1st, 2004, 12:20 AM
Sounded good here too. Maybe it is the fish smell that helps???



love the free range thing - should add non genetically modified



"Fishbulb" > wrote in message
...
>
> "David Barwell" > wrote in message
> ...
>
> > opps ......should read 5.) Right bait !!!
>
> > > 5.) Right bed.
>
>
> I dunno, the original 5.) sounded pretty good to me.
>
>
>
> --
> Free-range country-killed gluten-free organic message.
> No artificial colourings or preservatives.
> If you are unsatisfied, return the unused portion of this message
> to the place of purchase for a 100% refund.
>
>

Fishbulb
July 1st, 2004, 08:18 AM
"Dean" > wrote in message
...


> love the free range thing - should add non genetically modified


Done!

ObFish: Depending on the weather, plan on taking the kids to reduce the
local Redfin population this weekend. Not sure what they enjoy the most,
catching the fish or digging for worms to use as bait.


--
Free-range country-killed gluten-free organic non-genetically modified
message.
No artificial flavourings, colourings or preservatives.
If you are unsatisfied, return the unused portion of this message
to the place of purchase for a 100% refund.

JeffNZ
July 8th, 2004, 11:38 AM
and number 6 .................a big slice of luck!!!!

JeffNZ
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Check out these amazing copper fish art:
http://www.gift4myman.com/site/876260/page/45030


"David Barwell" > wrote in message
...
> You need five things to be right before you will consistantly catch fish
> successfully........
> 1.) Right Moonphase
> 2.) Right tide
> 3.) Right time of the tide
> 4.) Right location
> 5.) Right bed.
>
> Miss anyone and you can expect poor catches, unfortunately with our busy
> live styles we tend to go fishing when we have time not when its time to
go
> fishing.
>
>
> "Scott" > wrote in message
> ...
> > I have recently become interested in fishing and would like to ask a few
> > questions if I may.
> > I am wondering if there is a general best time for fishing. When I say
> > fishing, I mean beach or estuary fishing.
> > For example, at low tide, high tide, just before high tide etc etc.
Dawn,
> > dusk, day, night - that sort of thing. Full moon, new moon, the day
before
> > or after blah blah blah.
> > I have always known fishing is more than dumb luck but the more people I
> > listen to, the more confusing it gets.
> > Any help?
> >
> > Scott
> >
> >
>
>