Iluka – The Clarence River and the Bundjalung Headlands – June 2024

June started with some light winds and swell so I could fish on the headlands. On the dawn falling and low tides I fished for tailor. I focused on metal slugs and big hard bodied lures. When the tailor slowed down I swapped to the lighter gear to fish for bream in the wash. I even caught a few mini queen fish on the metal slugs. During daylight there were plenty of small jewfish around and they kept things interesting by regularly hitting the bream soft plastics.

In the river there was ample bait schooling close to the banks. There were flathead everywhere and at dawn and dusk there were also schools of junior giant trevally marauding around and the odd decent sized tailor. I spent a few dusk sessions fishing for the trevally on Goodwood Island. I experimented with a few different lures and concluded that the favourite was the DUO Realis Pencil 110mm surface lure. I fished it with plenty of jerks and pauses. The trevally were not huge (the biggest was around 45 cm), but they are so much fun to fish for, especially when they strike a surface lure.

I caught a few keeper jewfish out on the headlands at low tide on the day of the new moon, on the 6th June. The bottom of the tide is the easiest time to fish on most of the ledges I frequent. I caught the two mid 70’s cm fish in successive casts at about 12.30 pm. The fish may well also bite on the top of the tide but unless its a very calm day with a low high tide, I cant get to them.

For the first time in a while both of these fish were very fat and the one I kept and gutted had a belly full of “yakkas” (yellowtail scad). Hopefully the bait will hang around for a while.

Iluka – The Clarence River and the Bundjalung Headlands – May 2024

In Iluka, the mullet netting really got going in May. There were some big hauls at the mouth of the Clarence River and round on the beaches at Shark Bay. However with the fish plentiful everywhere it seems that prices were well down on last year. Beach hauling looks increasingly like a hobby or a tradition rather than a profession. Only the hardiest pro fisherman are still at it. The resource is sustainable but when the fresh fish is retailing at $2/kg only the export of the roe to Japan makes the process worthwhile. City dwellers are always clamouring for more fresh fish, but they just won’t eat mullet.

As the mullet rested near the river mouth, the bigger jewfish and ever present sharks got stuck in. A tidy 16 kg mulloway was weighed in at Iluka Bait & Tackle. It was caught after the full moon, in the middle of the morning, close in to the wall on the riverside, while slow rolling a Reidys hard bodied lure.

We had a far amount of rain in May but the weather was quite warm. A few storms kept seas fairly high for most of the month. The tailor moved up the river following the bait on the high tides and the dive-bombing seagulls would show you where they were. There were plenty of flathead in close to the banks.

The longtail tuna were still coming and going. I spent a couple sessions around the tide changes casting big surface lures for them. From time to time they came close, but never close enough to cast at. One morning I decided to try fishing the riverside of the wall. I put in an hour of casts with a few soft plastics for no results, so I swapped to a Halco Max 110 mm vibe type hard body. I rig these with single hooks so that I have a chance of getting them back when fishing off the rocks. On my third or fourth cast a speedster grabbed the lure and took off. From the tail beats I could see it was a tuna. The swell was light and I was able to go down quite close the waters edge as the fish ran in ever decreasing arcs. Finally I pulled it up onto a flattish rock and reached down and grabbed it. It was a solid mac tuna.

I put in some sessions fishing at Iluka Bluff and landed a some more decent tailor. There were also a few trevally around. When the tailor slowed, I dropped down to the lighter gear – 12 lb leader and 1/6th ounce jig heads. I cast these around in the wash a found plenty 35 cm plus bream. The jewies were also on all the headlands.

May was another great fishing month.

Iluka – The Clarence River and the Bundjalung Headlands – August 2023

August was a great month for winter fishing in the lower reaches of the Clarence River. The mornings were cool with mainly light south westerly winds. The water temperature was a degree or so warmer than August the year before averaging about 20.5 C.

The warmer waters may have been attractive to the flathead. I caught plenty through the month in virtually all sections of the river. I caught the occasional bream but it has definitely not been a good bream year. There was plenty of bait and the cormorants and pelicans herded it around in the shallows.

Out on the rocky headlands there were plenty of tailor. There was ample bait schooling up and when the tailor were biting they did not much mind what lure I threw at them. Quite often I was fishing for a jewfish/mulloway with a big soft plastic when a tailor grabbed the lure. Sometimes I landed it and sometimes it just ate its way up the plastic and then bit through the leader. Either way I would then swap to a hard body and a few casts later I would get another one.

The resident eagle at Woody Head is getting increasingly bold when it comes to stealing fish. On one occasion he picked up a tailor that was still hooked. I had loosened the drag and thrown the fish in a rockpool while I went in search of my pliers. The eagle saw its chance and grabbed the fish and flew off. I heard the screaming drag, grabbed the rod and after a brief tug of war, it dropped the tailor back in the water with the lure firmly in its jaw. It was slightly easier to land second time around.

I could not find any jewfish in August. They were no doubt there but I was away for a week or two at the end of the month, so I did not fish as much as usual.

Iluka -The Clarence River and the Bundjalung Headlands – July 2023

July brought more cool mornings but quite consistent south westerly and south easterly winds. These usually turned northerly in the afternoons. The month started off with sea temperatures a degree or so cooler than usual at around 18.0 C.  We had a few quite misty starts. We started the month with a full moon and a pretty wet week.

The tuna were still visible, jumping around out beyond casting distance. The pro fisherman thought they were hanging around because there was a huge school of pilchards in the area. I have hooked a few but never stopped one.

When the swell and wind was light enough I had some great rock fishing sessions, particularly in the lead up to the full moon at the end of the month. I caught tailor and mulloway. The mulloway took soft plastics and the tailor ate anything I threw at them.

The small tailor were everywhere in the Clarence River and the trevally were marauding around. There were still plenty of flathead in close to the banks, feeding on tiny jelly prawns.