Heck guys when I see a grinner I see two slab baits to be sent down on the next drop ,fresh and full of flavour Love the way you announce the new boat Mark nothing tricky no song and dance just straight up we are getting a new boat , most channels would draw it out over a few videos , something big is going to happen etc. Good on you ,keep it up
Hi mate, I enjoy watching your videoes because they are honest, but a tip from me who here in Tasmania has to deal with harsh conditions with wind and current , is get a good sized drift anchor (drogue) put 2 to 3 meters of chain and at least 6 mtr of rope you will control your drift accurately with a little practice.
Your pigfish is a gold spot wrasse, similar but slightly different to a pigfish. They grow to about 4kg and are delicious. The red one is a yellow lip butterfly bream, excellent flesh bait or whole/chunk for other reefies, especially red emps out off Fraser. Actually pretty good eating in their own right if you get one up towards 30cm or so. Look forward to seeing the new rig hit the water. Bigger boat mean bigger fish!! 😂
We have a unique situation here in Washington and Oregon, of red enamel hooks, bare hooks, and catching fish, as they think the red color looks like a small nematode worm. Do you have fishing with bare red hooks and the same fish biting reactions ?
Seqld is absolutely trawled out from netting and piss poor greenies management. Lots of grinners and sharks. Move to fnq plenty of good fish but still lots of sharks I'm glad I left miserable gold coast.
I'm looking at the (said) number of saltwater fish in Australian waters, and you must be fishing somewhere else, on a mud flat, or missing kelp bed or coral reef. The variety of fish literally is mostly bottom fish, coral fish, sharks, tiny teeny fish, ... and then some salmon, hake, and eel. I would have thought with Australia being near the Indian and South Pacific you would have all kinds of tropicals. Otherwise, being near the Antarctic current you would have cold salt water fish like we have here in the Pacific Northwest U.S. Trigger fish, angler fish, a couple of breams, barramundi (ok), blue salmon (what is a BLUE salmon ?!), scorpion fish (like lion fish - catch and kill off these invasive bastas !), there isn't much of anything to really catch !!! Time to go crabbing - if you have anything worthwhile in calling a crab, unless you go for coconut/robber crabs or red crabs !
Heck guys when I see a grinner I see two slab baits to be sent down on the next drop ,fresh and full of flavour
Love the way you announce the new boat Mark nothing tricky no song and dance just straight up we are getting a new boat , most channels would draw it out over a few videos , something big is going to happen etc.
Good on you ,keep it up
Mark get yourselves a sea anchor maybe a bigger one for the new boat great when wind is a pain
Great video, couldn't stop grinning the whole time!
Hi mate, I enjoy watching your videoes because they are honest, but a tip from me who here in Tasmania has to deal with harsh conditions with wind and current , is get a good sized drift anchor (drogue) put 2 to 3 meters of chain and at least 6 mtr of rope you will control your drift accurately with a little practice.
Should have kept grinners as they are great crab bait :)
job fish that what it is
Your pigfish is a gold spot wrasse, similar but slightly different to a pigfish. They grow to about 4kg and are delicious. The red one is a yellow lip butterfly bream, excellent flesh bait or whole/chunk for other reefies, especially red emps out off Fraser. Actually pretty good eating in their own right if you get one up towards 30cm or so.
Look forward to seeing the new rig hit the water. Bigger boat mean bigger fish!! 😂
the orange fish I believe is a ruby snapper but that's what they call them in America I can't quit remember the name for here an Australia
can't wait to see the new boat, you guys are awesome, love your vids
The guppys are quaking in there flippers..
How about a few sea shantys!! :-)
We have a unique situation here in Washington and Oregon, of red enamel hooks, bare hooks, and catching fish, as they think the red color looks like a small nematode worm. Do you have fishing with bare red hooks and the same fish biting reactions ?
Why don't you keep the grinners?
If they are not tasty, then you could always use them as bait.
Did you out fish the entire fish population there ? Only having small bottom fish ?
Seqld is absolutely trawled out from netting and piss poor greenies management. Lots of grinners and sharks. Move to fnq plenty of good fish but still lots of sharks I'm glad I left miserable gold coast.
Stop throwing the grinner back
Throw em in a bucket and throw out later on
Yep never throw them back. They become awesome cut bait or salted trolling bait. C&nts of things.
Baby grinner got a picture of one 3 ft long i Haight as round as soft drink can
I'm looking at the (said) number of saltwater fish in Australian waters, and you must be fishing somewhere else, on a mud flat, or missing kelp bed or coral reef. The variety of fish literally is mostly bottom fish, coral fish, sharks, tiny teeny fish, ... and then some salmon, hake, and eel. I would have thought with Australia being near the Indian and South Pacific you would have all kinds of tropicals. Otherwise, being near the Antarctic current you would have cold salt water fish like we have here in the Pacific Northwest U.S. Trigger fish, angler fish, a couple of breams, barramundi (ok), blue salmon (what is a BLUE salmon ?!), scorpion fish (like lion fish - catch and kill off these invasive bastas !), there isn't much of anything to really catch !!! Time to go crabbing - if you have anything worthwhile in calling a crab, unless you go for coconut/robber crabs or red crabs !