It has been a while since I sat down and talked to you about some of
the fun things I have been doing on the fishing scene. Sorry about the
delay but things have been hectic and there has been a bit too much going
on in my life.
Lures have been high on my list of priorities and some of the things
I have been doing with the latest lures have really blown me away. Small
improvements have made a big difference to my fishing. I have been doing
a bit of work with the Halco factory on hard bodied lures of late and
the factory tuning of the little 35 Cm Scorpion has been a bit of an eye
opener and a great success. The original Scorpion was a great lure and
the slow sinking version still has a place in my lure box. If you want
to sink a lure down in the water column and still get it do the sexy tango
then this lure will do the job. Deep snags and deep oyster leases are
ideal places for the sinking Scorpion. Just let the lure sink to the right
depth and then twitch and crank the lure until a fish eats it. In shallow
clear water however I just wasn't satisfied with the lure. To catch large
wary fish in the shallow clear stuff I had to fiddle around with it to
make it a slow-rising floating lure. There just had to be a better way.
Ben Patrick from Halco is a very innovative person and he invited me
to his Fremantle factory to see if we could come up with a version of
the 35 that would really do the business straight out of the packet. With
bream and trout firmly in mind we changed the treble hooks to a lighter
guage for super penetration, downsized the split rings to lighten the
lure, and streamlined the hook-hangers. The metal omega clip and split
ring on the original version were fine in a slow sinking lure but we needed
something radical to provide a strong light towing point that would still
keep the lure in tune after being hammered by fish. The technical department
at Halco came up with a Lexan omega clip that did the job perfectly. To
get the action just right we also changed the bib design. I guess the
rest is history and the little floating Scorpion is now my favourite hard-bodied
lure for trout and big bream.
I recently worked at the Sydney boat show and made some presentations
on the Super Tank. The tank had some barramundi in it and as the show
progressed they relaxed enough to start eating lures. Or should I say
some lures! It was a real blast to tell a couple of hundred people how
the sneaky scorpion was meant to be eaten by fish as it slowly rose in
the water column, and then to have those people actually see barra follow
the lure in slow motion and suck it in. This happened time after time
and it just showed me that we were on a winner with the wriggle and stop
retrieve, and that we were justified in designing a lure to suit that
particular retrieve. It was also kind of neat to think that a retrieve
style designed to fool sneaky old bream also turns other fishy predators
on.
I have a great love of and a respect for hard-bodied lures and they are
probably going to be a major part of my angling box of tricks forever,
but lately I have been putting a lot of effort and energy into soft plastics.
This is a fascinating aspect of the fishing game and one that has been
a bit slow to take off in Australia. Again bream, estuary perch, bass
and flathead were the fish that I based my plastics research on for an
Australian soft plastics range.
The project turned out to be a huge one and I spent many hours over two
years testing and designing lures. I had plenty of help from my partner
in crime Steve Starling who delights in testing lures on anything fishy
and whose input was of great value. Both of us had been scouring the world
(via the internet ) to find the very best soft plastics to catch our local
fish. There were certainly some good ones out there but lures that caught
our local fish well were scarce on the ground. In one way maybe that should
not have surprised us because most of the lures imported into Australia
are designed to catch other species of fish. There is some positive transfer
from the American large mouth bass to our Aussie fish but realistically
the good old bass is a very aggressive fish while our bream and bass can
be very fussy at times. One thing that we did find was that just about
every great lure for our fish was made in one particular factory located
in mainland China. The brands varied but the same guys made the lures.
By pure chance the Rapala VMC group bought the factory and that meant
our designs could now be made in the best plastics factory on the planet.
I had to visit the factory to see the lures being made and that was just
an amazing experience.
To cut a very long story short we looked at everything on the world
market, took notice of the successful features on the very best lures
and incorporated them into three models and about 18 sizes. We worked
on each model until we were happy with it and sometimes this meant a
number of prototypes for just one size of one model. I am not scared
to tell anyone how we did the job because I just don't think anyone
else will have the resources, the time, or the absolute fanaticism to
blow a year of their lives on a lure project for a small country like
Australia. One thing I can tell you is that tiny differences in tail
thickness, shape, and hardness of plastic alter the fish catching abilities
of a soft plastic lure dramatically. Quality control is absolutely critical.
Continued...
I certainly learned a lot on the soft plastic Squidgy program and what
happened when we threw a small Squidgy wriggler into a tank full of barramundi
just blew me away. Not only did the fish eat the lure, they just wouldn't
give it back! We bent the hooks over so the fish wouldn't get hooked which
worked well, but I was unprepared for the way the fish accepted the rubber
lures as real food and refused to spit them out.
On many occasions I pulled the lures away from the fish only to have
them swim forward and eat them for a second time. Wow! I was impressed
and so were the two hundred or so onlookers watching the demonstration.
After the fish acted this way for six days in a row at the Sydney boat
show, a few pennies started to drop and I just couldn't wait to try the
lures again on wild fish. My chance came a few days later as I had to
check out some flathead to catch for our Squidgy promotional video. I
wanted to find some hot fishing without upsetting the fish so that they
would still cooperate for the filming. After the tame barra in the tank
I had enough confidence to fish the Squidgies without hooks. And guess
what? Wild flathead ate the hell out of the lures and just didn't spit
them out.
I now view the lures that we designed and refined as being basically
as deadly as live bait but with the advantage that you don't have to catch
it or keep it alive and you can cast it time after time without it 'dying.'
Plastics don't go rotten in your tackle box either and you can use them
again on the next trip. Now when I fish squidgies for flathead I regard
striking as a formality. You can let them run with the bait and strike
whenever you feel like it! After a while when fishing the plastics with
no hooks, I let one fish eat the lure and waited until he sat on the bottom
with it somewhere in his mouth. I carefully used the electric motor to
follow the line until the big flattie spooked in a cloud of mud. When
he left town I just opened the bail arm on my spinning reel and let the
line pay out. The fish went about thirty meters and then sat on the bottom
again - still with the squidgy in his mouth!
This may be hard to believe but I did it more than once. This performance
would have brought out the men in the white coats if someone had seen
me laughing like a crazy man and rushing around the place on the Minn
Kota chasing fish that had eaten hookless soft plastic baits. After spending
a year or so cutting soft plastics to bits with razor blades and welding
new sections to them, you can tend to go a bit mad. The flathead thing
is definitely out of hand and maybe we have overdone the lures. I think
they may be a bit too deadly for the good of the fish populations.
Bream were certainly high on the target list when we designed the new
plastics and I guess we have learned a few tricks about using them on
sneaky old blue noses. I suspect that bream will hold rubber lures in
their mouths for less time than flathead will and I think that might be
why new comers to soft plastics fishing have trouble getting started on
them. Confidence is the key word here and once you have confidence that
a bream will eat your soft plastic lure, then it will happen. Getting
started actually isn't all that easy because you have to consider a whole
system that suits catching bream.
Even before you start to worry about the nuances of how long to wait
before striking a bream that has just inhaled your squidgy, you have to
get near the fish without spooking it, put together a suitable rod and
reel combination to present the plastic, and rig the plastic to a suitable
jig head. None of these things is particularly difficult to organize but
it all has to be done before you can consistently catch fish.
I think most anglers are putting the system together well enough to make
a bream eat a soft plastic lure, but detecting the actual moment when
a fish eats the lure is still a difficult hurdle to overcome for many
neophytes. This could be because most anglers are expecting to feel a
bite or an aggressive take. After all, people who are already fishing
metal lures and hard-bodied lures all feel it when a fish aggressively
belts a lure, so they expect to feel the same thing when a bream hits
a soft plastic lure.
The trouble is that bream rarely hit a soft plastic lure hard. I have
seen plenty of them eat soft plastics over the last few years and the
take is nearly always the same. The bream swims up behind the plastic,
puts his nose almost on it, and then sucks it into his mouth where he
crushes it with his powerful teeth. This suck makes the lure travel from
the lips to the teeth which amounts to about an old fashioned inch or
less. The good news is that this 'suck' is one of the fastest things on
the planet and if you watch your line carefully it is both detectable
and identifiable. The way to see the bite is to lift the tip of your rod
to make your squidgy swim up off the bottom and then to drop your rod
tip to allow enough slack line for the lure to swim back towards the bottom.
Watch the slack line as the lure swims down and eventually you will see
a tiny, but lightning-fast, twitch. This twitch means that a bream has
sucked your lure into his mouth and you need to strike before he spits
it out again. The problem with bream is that they tend to suck the lure
in and then stop dead in the water before they taste it and ultimately
reject it or swallow it.
What this means is that many fish can eat a soft plastic lure and reject
it without the angler ever being aware that he has had a bite! The latest
generation of soft plastics has great fish appeal with lifelike look,
feel and taste so an increasing number of bream suck them in and actually
try to swallow them. During this process, a small percentage of the fish
actually hook themselves and pull hard on the line. These are the fish
that most beginners catch, but the frustrating thing is that only about
one fish in ten that take a lure will be hooked without the angler striking
actively at the 'twitch'. One of the nice things about bream on soft plastics
is that skill is rewarded. If you stare at that slack line just above
where it enters the water, hard enough and long enough, you are going
to start noticing the takes. After a while the whole process seems to
almost circumvent the rational part of the brain and you get so tuned
in that the line flicks as though a mosquito has run into it and your
arm just shoots skywards by itself and hooks the fish.
Continued...
There is definitely something very 'Zen' in this type of fishing and
although the fish may be only humble bream, catching them in this way
elevates them somehow and seems to generate a powerful addiction akin
to sex or drugs or gambling. Catching bream on soft plastics is the cocaine
of fishing - it starts as a bit of fun but before long you just can't
leave it alone and you notice that you have just blown thirty grand on
a new boat and a stack of thousand dollar Ian Miller bream busters.
I have been refining my bream techniques as well as far as the type of
line I like to use in different situations. I still like to use the four
pound fireline with a fluorocarbon leader as my main strike weapon but
I have been doing a lot more work with the ultra light stuff. There is
no doubt in my mind that this spider web gear puts more fish on the end
of your line. I have been having great success on 1 kilo Sensation from
berkley in deep water or very clear water.
I don't even use a leader on this stuff even though going 'bare-arsed'on
big bream is a bit scary. The obvious problem with the ultra-thin line
is in landing the fish and using the stuff around snags or oyster leases
is right out of the question. In the last bream comp at Forster I fished
a baitcaster, big Halco scorpions and Fins braid of ten kilo to try and
drag big fish from the heavy jungle. Where the light stuff really shines
is in the deep water. When I find fish on my trusty Furuno sounder in
twenty feet or more of water, I have no fear of using the super light
line. All my really big catches of bream in the deeps have relied on light
mono. I don't pretend to know why it works so well but I suspect that
the transparency of the line must help.
God knows what a bream is actually able to see in deep, sometimes dirty,
water but I think their senses are probably a lot better developed than
we suspect. All I can tell you is that it is worth learning to fish the
fine, clear stuff. With a bit of practice you can pull pretty hard on
one kilo line and each individual fish comes in relatively quickly.
Bream are tricky fish - I have certainly said that before but the more
I fish for them the more I believe it to be true. The reason we have so
many different sizes of squidgy is that one particular combination of
lure size, jig head and colour will fish on the day. If you fine-tune
your system to suit exactly what the fish want on any given day, you will
enjoy a lot of success. I will give you a bit of an example.
The other day I was fishing a rock wall that dropped into about a meter
and a half of water, then dropped again to about five metres. I was using
a squidgy wriggler No 2 with our smallest jig head and catching a few
fish. After a while I realised that all my strikes were coming from the
shallows before the major drop-off. I stuck with the little jig head but
went up to a number 3 wriggler in the same colour. This slightly larger
lure swam down just a little bit slower on the small head and the fish
responded to it much more aggressively in the shallow water. Sometimes
the reverse happens and you can put a slightly smaller tail on the same
size head to make it drop a little quicker into deeper water. Keep thinking
and experimenting when you are fishing plastics because bream especially
respond to fine-tuning.
I used to think that that getting kids hooked on fishing instead of on
drugs was a good thing but now I am starting to have my doubts. The latest
studies show that bream on lures is more addictive that heroin and quite
possibly more expensive when you start shelling out for those bream busters,
sounders, boats and motors. Ah well, that's life. In the next five minutes
I am going to hitch up my trusty boat and drive ten hours to check out
the Manning River before the next bream tournament. I am seriously thinking
of switching over to that heroin, it just can't be any more expensive
than a bad bream habit.
See you next time Bushy.

Stop press!
Almost forgot to brag about my biggest ever bream to date! I hate that.
This one was a fat-as-mud pregnant black bream taken at Mallacoota inlet.
My mate Wrighty and I were fishing up the Wallagaraugh River and I have
to say that wrighty was kicking my butt a bit too convincingly. Unfortunately
he couldn't resist the temptation to rub it in and was giving me heaps
about how badly I was going. Big mistake Wrighty. Just before we finished
up I threw a cast into a pile of snags and mentioned that I had caught
a few good ones here before. The line gave a bit of a twitch and I set
the hook into what looked to be a pretty decent fish.
I had caught one four pound two about a week earlier and I reckoned
that this one was every bit as big. We put the fish in the live well
and called in to the Wallagaraugh Retreat campground to borrow some
scales. Both our jaws dropped when the fish pulled the needle down to
2.1 Kilos. Catching this fish was just pure plain arse, but I'll take
luck over skill any day. We only snapped a couple of quick shots of
the fish and I have a pretty stupid look on my face, but what the hell
- two kilo bream don't come along every day!
We released the fish after we weighed it and I spent the drive home
explaining to Wrighty that catching a few little fish from the back
of the boat while you are being chaufered around hardly makes you a
star fisherman. On the other hand you surely must be pretty good to
catch only one fish and to make it two kilos!
The fish took a No 2 squidgy wriggler in Avocado colour. The four pound
two ounce fish from the week before took a No 2 Squidgy wriggler in jelly
prawn colour.
See you later I am off fishing - Bushy.