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Ausfish Platinum Member
gold coast plastics
just new to soft plastics and want to try them around the gold coast/tweed. Only problem is that i dont have a boat, can anyone give me some suggestions on where i should start and what lures are most effective
thanks
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
berkley dropshot minnows in watermelon or blue pearl are pretty deadly on bream, flathead , trevally and many other estuary sportfish. The only suggestion I can give for someone landbased is around the seaway rockwall. should also be able to pickup some tailor when the time is right.
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Ausfish Silver Member
Re: gold coast plastics
Mate pop into Coomera Bait And Tackle @ coomera next to the cheapa auto spares and Dean or Steve will look after yah. Best price on bminnows on the coast with a good range plus a heap of other good fish catching plastices. They are ausfish approved and will gladly help you on your way.
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Re: gold coast plastics
yella,
flathead and bream are easily chased from the bank using softies - where are you based, north or south gold coast? the more places you rty, the more you can find! the lakes on the coast hold plenty of fish, as do the creek mouths and bridge pylons.
to get started give the flatties a go, probably easiest of all the fish to catch on plastics. 3 inch shads (Squidgies, etc) work well on small jigheads
have fun
marty
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
sounds good fellas, i managed to pick up some 3 inch berkley dropshot minnows, and managed top swim them this afternoon but no luck, i tried talle creek but can go anywhere,
whats the best action and retrrievals for these lures? i was slowly retrieving with a few twitches but didnt look to attractive?
any ideas?
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Ausfish New Member
Re: gold coast plastics
Look for anything different and drop a cast as close as you can, is the best advice I can give you be they storm drains, creek mouths, jetties, mangroves, bridge pilons or whatever.
The flatties and bream are pretty compliant at the moment and add the occasional trevally or jack (generally in the REALLY interesting locations) and a double figure catch for an hour is average (for the locals, but for a new arrival 5 or 6 is not out of the question).
Get a good idea of how far you can cast and start casting to a likely looking spot as soon as possible ( without neglecting areas closer which will still produce fish) even if this means getting funny looks from the dog walkers; its equally funny to see there faces when you hook up to a good fish 20 meters from the water.
Hope this helps
good luck
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
The best technique I have learnt is a slow retrieve keeping your plastic along the bottom as much as possible. Three twitches of the tip of the rod and wait like 1/2 second then wind up slack repeat until you get some hits . When you get some hits stop what you are doing and see if the fish will pick up the plastic. If not continue with the above technique all the way into shore. What rod / reel and line are you running ? This can be the determining factor in catching fish Iam serious.
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
ok that gives me a better idea on how to fish them,
i am running a very light 1-2kg spin rod and a very small spinning reel, shakespeare 4 ballbearings,
thinking of hitting the broadwater tommorow morning, il see how i go.
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
Fireline will improve your chances in 2- 3 kg
use whatever jighead for the conditions, but for aroun 3 -4 m of water and sweet FA current run a light jighead but just be sure it gets to the bottom like a 1/16 or 1/8th
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Ausfish Gold Member
Re: gold coast plastics
Yup, 1/12th or 1/8th should see you cast a good distance and keep the SP on the bottom for the flatties. The retrieve Vertico descirbed would be a good one to start with....remember, there is right and wrong when it comes to retrieves
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Ausfish Platinum Member
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
fished for an hour this morning, found a nice little spot where i actaully managed to hook a decent lizard only to be bitten off, well rubbed off i guess. do you guys use stronger leaders when fishing sp's i was using around 6lb line.
i guess the fish just took the lure a fair way down.
oh well it happens i guess ???
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: gold coast plastics
also picked up a spool of 4lb fireline this arvo, is that a little too light?? ???
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Ausfish Silver Member
Re: gold coast plastics
4lb is what 99% of anglers use for bream spinning. The stuff breaks around 8lb anyway. As for leader 6lb is fine for bream (although 4lb will suffice and get you more hits) but perhaps alittle light for sizeable flatties. Leaders really depend on where/what sort of structure you are fishing but.....
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