Marina East Arm Open

By , 23 June, 2010 17:06

[stextbox id=”info” bcolor=”cc0000″]Marina East arm now open[/stextbox]

Just heard from the Tackle Box at Brighton Marina that the East arm is now open for night fishing tonight and tomorrow night; not sure about the weekend yet though.

Marina East Arm Closed

[stextbox id=”info” bcolor=”cc0000″]Marina East Arm Closed[/stextbox]

Brighton Marina East arm is having concrete repair work done during the evenings and so will be closed to access and fishing until further notice.

I’ll update when it’s re-opened.

Mackerel Carpet

By , 18 June, 2010 08:49

Picture of a mackerel shoal - click for larger imageHad an early session on the West arm of Brighton Marina this morning from 4.30am, to bag some mackerel – bait for a bassing session tonight and some for the smoker. The water was flat calm and crystal clear and weather-wise, there was no wind and an overcast sky.

I set up in bay10 and cast out a set of small Sabiki style feathers which were immediately hit by mackerel, first cast and a full house of five fish; from then on, it was fish every cast – some singles but mostly a full string. They were everywhere, the water seemed alive with the blighters. I must say, it makes a nice change to see so many; up until now, they seem to have been quite sparse when I’ve fished over on the east wall, at least now, you can be guaranteed to get enough without having to work for hours to catch them.

Picture of a mackerel shoal - click for larger imageOnce I’d caught enough for my needs, I stood against the edge and marvelled at the site of the shoals working along the arm. Looking down into the gin clear sea, I could see individual fish chasing the masses of fry which were being corralled up against the wall. It was like watching one of those TV programmes you see, featuring Tuna attacking Sardine shoals, only in miniature. This is one of the things I love about fishing; you get to see the wonders of nature that many people will never experience and that we anglers all too often take for granted. The photos I took don’t really convey the ferocity of the feeding and shoaling but do give just a hint of what it’s like.

It promised More

By , 13 June, 2010 16:58

I’d been looking forward to yesterday all week; with the bigger tides and the arrival of mackerel in numbers, the prospects for a good nights fishing on Brighton Marina, after bass were pretty good. I arrived on the East arm and headed out and found a space in bay 59, arriving at about 7pm. The place was extraordinarily quiet for a warm, sunny Saturday – hardly anyone out there, anyone would think  there was some football tournament on.

There was a hint of an Easterly breeze but it was literally just a whiff. The sea was flat, clear and the tide was just into the flood and coming up to a midnight high, conditions looked promising. I set up a rod for bait gathering using a set of small  Sabikis to get a few mackerel at dusk. I then set up a scratching rod, using a size 4 two hook flapper baited with lugworm and tried  this at varying distances throughout the session.

Won’t rabbit on as there isn’t really that much to report, I packed up at 3am after a disappointing 8 hours of inactivity – the final tally was one black bream (a keeper), one schoolie bass and a Pout that all fell to the lugworm. The mackerel bait was never even touched except by crabs. An evening that had promised a bit more, failed to deliver.

Marina Session

By , 10 June, 2010 15:57

I haven’t been out for a few days, so thought I’d have a go down at Brighton Marina after work yesterday. Arrived on the East arm at about 8.15pm with a predicted high tide at 10pm – not ideal, as I prefer to fish from low tide up. Anyway, beggars can’t be choosers, so got myself sorted in bay 28 and had a look at the water. The mayrot had disappeared but the water was choked with masses of floating weed, moving in the West to East current (this did thin out over high tide and the ebb). The sea was flat calm with virtually no breeze in the clear sky.

One rod was set up with a size 4 two hook sole rig baited with lugworm on one hook and ragworm on the other and cast out about 30 yards. Tried for some fresh mackerel and only managed three by the time darkness fell.

First fish was a very small smooth Hound pup which took the ragworm and was quickly followed by another. Then had a surprise mackerel which took the remains of the lugworm that was being retrieved for re-baiting. A schoolie bass then took a fancy to the lugwom a few casts later.

I packed away the mackerel gear as darkness came and swapped it for a long link running ledger rig which I alternately baited with either mackerel head on a single 6/0 or fillet on a 4/0 pennel in the hope of a decent bass. To be honest, I would have been better saving the mackerel for taking home for all the good they did. The baits were either clogged with weed or savage by crabs, with no interest shown by Billy bass at all.

My painstakingly built sole rig was utterly destroyed by a snotty eel which had taken the ragworm and then spun itself into a sort of cocoon of tangled line and slime. I managed to cut away the line and release the bloody thing which would no doubt make someone else’s life a misery later on.

The only other fish of the night were a brace of Pout and another small smooth Hound pup followed by nothing. By about midnight, my enthusiasm was flagging, a brisk easterly breeze got up and the bait ran low, so gave it another hour before calling it a night.

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