Nagg
Depends on how long your stay is. If its a week or so I
strongly reccommend you dont fish the first half day at least.
Familiarise yourself with the environment, the conditions, and the facilities.
Learn the fringes if you are going to fish the basin, or conversley if you will be fishing the timber set up a milk run so that you can work on patterns.
Check out the
submerged vertical timber, or at least find as much of it as you can
hint hint. 6-14 feet of water is ideal. THiS IS BARRA MAGNET IN ANY BARRA DAM.
Thorough searching, sounding and travelling on the first day will set you up for the rest of the week. It may suck not fishing, but you will be happy with yourself a few days down the track.
Go into the depths of the sunken forests, look for the slightest indication of submerged horizontal timber, as well as looking at the crowns of tree's to see if there has been a recent split and deposit into the water. (This is what the Barra are holding on, not verticle tree's)
If you see a tiny piece of timber protruding, take your time and work up to it, it may contain the mother load of barra's.
The further you delve into the woods, the less likely that someone has already beaten you to the right stuff and either pulled or spooked fish off it.
Go deep into the sticks, work slow and keep your eyes peeled!!!
If I was going for a week, I'd be bouncing timber with rattles ie classics, scorpions and the like combined with silents like extractor 11's, and any other timber lures you can get your hands on that will dive around 10 feet.
I'd be in the jungle all day til the light fades then hit the main basin points and looking for an afternoon edge bite.
I dont know the timbered area's well enough to come home at night, even with GPS. There's enough dialled in error to bring you undone in any GPS track.
So the relative safe trip back to the ramp would dictate how I would finish the day.
I'll leave the rest up to guys who fish Monduran all the time, over to you Steve, Foxie and crew.
Cheers
Jas