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Thread: Brisbane River - Boggy Creek

  1. #1

    Brisbane River - Boggy Creek

    If you have children of school age you will know that most officially classified biological weapons are far less toxic than the coughs and colds they bring home. I succumbed this week and I have been feeling like crap. I missed my usual fishing session on Thursday, so I decided to put in a couple of hours this morning, close to home, at Boggy Creek, on the Brisbane River.
    For those of you who don’t know it, Boggy Creek is a small arm off the Brisbane River on the north side of the Pinkenba Shell oil terminal. You can fish all along the northern bank, but I usually start by the small pedestrian bridge that leads across to the refinery. You cannot fish on the bridge as it has security gate and belongs to the refinery.
    I find this creek fishes best for a couple of hours on either side of the high tide and it is a great spot pre-dawn. There is a small rock wall on either side of the bridge and the channel narrows significantly at this point. This has cut a fairly deep channel under the bridge. There is always plenty of bait under the lights and once the tide is running there are large swirls, eddies and sections of slack water where the big fish lurk.
    I started around 9.00 am - the wind (from the southwest) was getting up and the run out tide was really moving. The water was fairly clear so I started with a 3” GULP Pearl Watermelon Minnow on a 1/6th 1 jighead on 10lb leader. My strategy was to cast out, upstream and let the plastic float with the current down under the bridge. I would jig it every 5 seconds or so to stop it getting snagged. There is plenty of manmade structure under that bridge ranging from tyres to shopping trolleys. After a few prospecting casts I switched to the GULP Pumpkinseed Minnow Grub. I find the paddle tail pattern is good when there is a strong current. The tail moves realistically even when the plastic is at rest on the bottom and it is almost irresistible as it sinks. Sure enough - second cast a hungry Pike wallops the plastic. This scenario played out a few more times and then I cast over towards the far rock wall. On the retrieve there were a few nudges and tickles and then a solid hit and hook up. As I brought the fish in, a great school of Pike scattered before it. It turned out to be a 28cm Bream with a Mohican fin! I released him after a picture or two and then decided to move up the bank towards the Brisbane River.
    There are a number of openings all along the bank from which you can fish. I stopped at each one and did a semicircle of casts in each location. When I reached the mouth of a small drain I was a bit more thorough with my coverage and on about the 6th cast I pulled up a 35cm Flathead. I let him go and got another smaller one from exactly the same spot. The water was getting very shallow now and it was blowing a gale so decided to give up for the day. It was good to get the rod in the water and find a few fish – even if there was nothing for dinner.

  2. #2

    Re: Brisbane River - Boggy Creek

    plenty of nice flathead in that area thats for sure, good work off the bank session would of been fun to get out for a while. tight lines

  3. #3

    Re: Brisbane River - Boggy Creek

    Good going MM.
    When I saw the title and then the first line about biological weapons I thought it was going to be a warning 'cause you ate some boggy ck fish
    Got to agree about the winter lurgy though. I have fought it for 2 weeks now and getting over it.

  4. #4

    Re: Brisbane River - Boggy Creek

    Thanks for the report, even if it's not an area that I'm likely to fish myself, it's nice to read a report with some fairly detailed process on how you caught the fish!
    And hey, while you didn't catch dinner, at least you weren't at work!

  5. #5

    Re: Brisbane River - Boggy Creek

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