hahaha steve apparently we were typing about the same thing at the same time
hahaha steve apparently we were typing about the same thing at the same time
I'm that critical of noise on any of my boats, lake or sea in stealth mode. I run a tiller operated motor for charter trips in super calm quiet water as the noise from the electric steering motor on the bowmount is enough to spook fish. The tiller is silent to steer.
A few years ago I did a story on sonic berley and although it hasn't worked on barra it has worked on most other estuary fish. My mate Leggy and I would head up to Corio for the day charged up with Jim beam and bad manners with midnight oil on fairly loud, his quinny used to vibrate and put a pulse into the water around the boat, hence the term sonic berley.. we caught so many fish from salmon, jack, queenies, tarpon, cod, bream, flathead, fingermark and steelies at the blackbanks but no barras...whenever the fish were slow and we knew they should be going off on came the oils and the fish followed..
SL
Last edited by ifishcq1; 29-05-2008 at 08:33 PM.
IFISHCQ2
I guess I would want to get closer to the Oils as well
Don't know much about barra ( learning slowly though ) but I've had a few thoughts on their relatives, Australian bass and yellowbelly. When I fish for bass I make as little noise as possible. I guess barra would have a few similar traits in regards to what sort of noise or water disturbance spooks them and what makes their ears prick up...if they had ears that is
I know that yellowbelly get spooked by unfamiliar noise. from about twelve years old, every Saturday morning, because my Dad worked on the weekend, my Uncle Jack would pick me up and we'd head out onto the Condamine chasing yella's. Uncle Jack was a gentleman of the first order and he taught me a lot for which I'm eternally grateful. But he would have to be one of the worst fishermen to ever walk the face of the earth.
If the fish didn't bite within the first five minutes he'd start off by flicking his rod into the water with a dirty great sinker on the end, over and over again.
Then he'd jump back into the boat and proceed to do dohnuts with the two stroke roaring, while yelling " THIS"LL WAKE EM UP MATE "
When this started I'd grab my rod and my crayfish and go for a walk up the bank to find my nice quiet spot and start bobbing for yellas.
Guess who brought home the bacon most times ???
I was always taught by my Dad and my Grandpa to keep it quiet.
My thinking is that the fish would put up with a certain amount of disturbance, say a lure splashing into the water may sound like a small bird or other struggling creature which may trigger the fish to investigate, especially a large fish like a barra. Anything that creates too much disturbance could be seen as a danger and see them heading off in the other direction.
Although when we fish for bass early in the morning my little boy likes to sing, and the fish don't seem to mind at all.
That's what I reckon, for what it's worth.
Warren Steptoe that made a clear point in one of his recent Modern Fishing articles about fish spooking from the noise of the Servo steer electric motor. not the motor itself but just noise of the servo unit when changing direction. The common point in these reply's is that in some situations, the fish will not tolerate the less unnatural noises that they usually will in other situations. Perhaps the common point is the shallow situation or very calm, still conditions that make them feel vunerable to predators. remember that in the wild they are not always the apex predator and this underlying "programming" may come to the fore when in situations where they may feel a little exposed.
Firstly, thanks for all your thoughts and experiences.
I for one have always adopted the stealth approach and will remain to do so. As mentioned, it’s just frustrating when I yell at my brother for stuffing up a spot by making too much noise and 2 mins later, he has this cheesy grin on his face and all I can hear is the sound of braid peeling of his reel. All I can do is or or pretend I can't see the net .
Thanks for your response Johnny – as you said, statistics don’t tell the full story. From speaking to a couple of guys on our last Awoonga trip who you guided for the day (you may remember them, maroon boat and one guy was in a wheelchair) you put them onto a 115. They said the most important thing that they learned on that day was STEALTH!
A mate who got me hooked on sportfishing many years ago has caught a lot of barra at night using a technique that he swears by. One angler using a noisy surface lure and the other angler casting behind his lure with a shallow diver. The guy using the diver gets nearly all the hook ups as he recons the surface lure stirs them up. When fishing points etc, he has discarded his anchor and has melted down lead into the shape of a dome which he uses as an anchor as he recons the lead makes a lot less noise when it hits the bottom. He also only uses rope and no chain to eliminate as much noise as possible. He drifts in on the point from a distance before dropping the lead and slowly lets out rope to minimise noise. He also gives the spot about 30mins before getting serious to allow the barra to 'settle' again.
As a lot of you have said, the sound of a lure hitting the surface is a lot different to an outboard motor, dropped pliers, slammed esky lids etc.
I will be wearing my kung fu slippers at Monduran next week to further minimise the noise created by walking around the boat Ninja fishing.
Thanks Pete, he turned a big six yesterday. Couldn't be more proud of my little fisherman, but catching those barra has had some interesting demands coming from him. We'll be in the market for a boat shortly, but he's told me that if it's not a Skeeter, he's not getting in it. I'm thinking of getting an edgetraker and putting Skeeter stickers on it. That might work.Your boy Caleb certainly is a special one
Sorry to highjack the thread a little bit there Black sheep.
I was in a creek near 1770 on a week long fishing trip mid winter about 4 yrs ago now. Every day of the week until the 2nd last day we spotted a bloody huge jack under a substantial iron bark tree snag but he would not move from the snag or take any interest regardless of how much we put livies or lures near him. Eventually he would sink slowly straight down out of sight in about 12 feet of water. This was the largest jack we had seen for the trip and between matey and myself we were boating 6-10 jacks a day working over the top end of the system.
2nd last day after tormenting ourselves with the big fella yet again i put the bow of the boat into the snag and gave it a fair nudging around for twenty seconds. We drifted off about 10m and started working lures again. We picked up a few cod and several bream and one trevally from the snag that we thought only held the big jack.
When we had enough of that snag we fished upstream for another hour or so then came back down to the snag using the outboard and we were not quiet at all. first cast bang the big fella hit the deck.
Noise in some instances will make a difference and I think that fish sometimes prefer noisy environments like road bridges with lots of traffic, they hold excellent stocks, yet foot bridges in close proximity hold less fish.
Jack.
Sorry to highjack the thread a little bit there Black sheep.[/quote]
LGM - not a problem mate. Tell Caleb he has a choice of a Skeeter or University - think I know which will he'll pick .
Big Ren - I recon Vin will have the flippers on in case he looses another rod overboard .
Roo - don't know about the crane but certainly the praying mantice works for me. I only wax on and wax off in private .
Tunaticer - I agree mate. BTW - how big did that Jack go??