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First sardines 2022 season have been spotted!

First sardines 2022 season have been spotted!

First sardines 2022 season have been spotted!

Confirmed sightings have been reported in from between East London and Mazeppa, by to Brad the Pilot. Who flew that area early this morning. Then at Qora Mouth, validated sightings were made deeper off the coast. With bird activity being reported as odd – gannets flying up and down as if the sardines are already everywhere.

Prognosis

According to the many sardine spies and reporters stationed up and down the South African east coast, we have a problem. It is not permanent.But it is playing a big role in why we are having little to no sardine action close in and towards KZN Natal at the moment (last year this time nets were already in)

And it’s…

Dirty water!

Yip, that poison soup left behind after the two floods we recently survived, is not going away. There just has not been enough current to move the huge plume of septic runoff down the coast like usual. It is still siff brown right up and down the coast.

A spearo therapy business would take off right now.

Huge surf

The other factor has been the absolutely huge surf pounding the coastline recently. It has been relentless along the entire coastline.

Only a calm sea will entice those little guys int the shallows.

Warm water

24 Degrees on most days that I have been out there. Sardines like it cold. Like own to 19 or so. We will need a few days of east winds to cause the upswelling that drops the temperatures to these levels.

And then we need a few days of gentle west winds to calm the ocean.

So these three factors together could be the reason we ain’t seeing any sardines close in. And that the likely conclusion is that the sardines are already here and travelling north.

Very far out to sea.

Only when we can tick off all the required conditions as explained above, is when we may see some sardines on the beaches!

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Sardine Run 2022 Sightings Map Explainer Video

Sardine Run 2022 Sightings Map

Sardine Run 2022 Sightings Map Explainer Video

Sardine Run 2022 Sightings Map Explainer Video : Yip! It’s all happening!

Or is it?

Well, you came to the right place to find it all out!

The Sardine Season is well underway, but where are the sardines? Our network of reliable and well–undercover sardine spies are currently lying in ambush right up and down the eastern seaboard of southern Africa. Starting in the southern Cape, and up through the Transkei Wild Coast, we have the impending sardine waters under constant surveillance. 24/7. We have infra-red night vision technology and airborne units.

Dead whales, no sardines…but the game has just begun.

Make sure to Subscribe to us one way or the other…

YouTube Channel

The Sardine News – this is where the map is at

And our sponsor, the Fishing Pro Shop, where you can get the best price on Shimanos! And a whole lot of other cool and sought-after brands. All tried and tested by the Pro Team who work there. Menlyn,Pretoria.

Sardine Run 2022 Sightings sponsored by Fishing Pro Shop

Thanks for playing!

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SKZN Fishing Report 22 May 2022

SKZN Fishing Report 22 May 2022

SKZN Fishing Report 22 May 2022

SKZN Fishing Report 22 May 2022: the sea finally returned back to a normal state down here in Southern KwaZulu Natal. Only after weeks and weeks of that ugly poison soup brown water being hemmed in close to the shore – did the current return last week.

With vengeance.

The water shot back up to 23.8 Celsius (from 19) and was full-up with ‘couta lights (bio-luminescent plankton that signifies the presence of hunting couta). When this current kicks, it really kicks. At about 4 knots offshore, makes things tricky for navigation and fuel consumption. But this is the gamefish water. Purple ink.

Unfortunately, more mud is on its way so we can just hope that the current is strong enough. Mhloti is out of bounds BTW. More flood destruction as another little cut off low hit Durban last night. Out of the blue!

Croc couta at Hibberdene

But a croc’ ‘couta came out this past week! Featured image. By local kayak angler Shaun Simpson. Off Hibberdene. Really nice fish looks like 25kgs or so, maybe more?

Hibberdene does clean up faster than most places down here since there are not any major river mouths north of the place. And those pinnacles and backline rock formations are exactly the turf that the couta like to hunt in. Many, many outsized couta have come from these reefs.

Including these two monsters, taken along while back, in June, 2007. When the sardines had just arrived that season. From the rocks!!!

You can read all about that incredible day right here…

Back to the present…

Sardines

There are NO sardines yet. Don’t believe anything you read in the mainstream media. And watch out for false sardine news on the social shark nets too. It’s unbelievable how stories grow and get completely out of control as the Dunning -Krueger effect kicks in.

As The Sardine News (marketing for Umzimkulu Adrenalin), we have sardine spies stationed up and down the entire coastline. Make sure to be a part of this community to never miss a single sardine this year and every year to come. Since 1987, we have been doing this. Back then we were a printed tabloid!

Anyway, sardines don’t do brown water so we are gonna have to wait until the current takes it all away.

Shad

The shad have most definitely arrived. But we have only been catching them out deep. Away from the poison soup. Some magnificent chases out there along the backline reefs too. Things are getting back to normal. And the shad will come in close with the effect of the current’s long overdue return.

Rock Salmon

Ian Logie cracked the first decent fish of the Umzimkulu Estuary winter season. The water clears up and these fish are available on artificial. Or live bait. As what felled this guy, down in the mouth area.

Fishing report 20 May 2022 featuring Ian Logie again!
Ian Logie strikes again! 4.5kgs.

There has been a big Zambezi Shark terrorising everybody at night time here. ALso spotted during daylight hours, this aggressive fish has been making huge splashing noises as he chases the plentiful perch, mullet and whatever other fish, that have come back him into the estuary recently.

The other estuaries that still function, like Mpenjati and Mtamvuna, are also going to be hot as the dry season sets in.

Get in touch if you would like some of this action!

Sean on +27793269671 or umzimkulu@gmail.com to arrange some fishing. Or check the menu above.

More fun apps/websites:

Umzimkulu Marina – self-catering in Port Shepstone

Spillers House – BnB and Backpackers right on the Umzimkulu River

The Sardine News – never miss a single sardine

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“Working on Sunshine – Whoa-aoh”

Solar panel on the TSLA Turtle for powering the electric outboard

“Working on Sunshine – Whoa-aoh”

“Working on Sunshine – Whoa-aoh” – time to feel good! Feeling defiantly efficient today as load shedding did NOT stop me in my tracks this time around. I hauled a big battery off my solar-powered boat and plugged it in via a neat little 800 Watt inverter. That I normally use for inflating boats and tyres and things.

Never even squeaked as I plugged my whole office in, via multi-plug. Lighting up my computer, big monitor, phone and a camera. What’s more, it really is FREE. Because since my little portable power station double functions with real work on the boats, the capital layout was made already. All it took really was carrying that damn 105 amp hour battery up the stairs!

And plugging it all in.

Working on sunshine

I have been fortunate enough to have lived on solar power for a long time. And have built up experience in all kinds of installations. Boats, lodges, research stations – all running on solar because there is NO grid out there on the edge.

But working on sunshine really is simple. Solar panel(s) to charge controller to battery(s). Batteries to inverter and the lights come on.

  • Solar panel(s)

The solar panel that lives on my boat, must have generated an acre’s worth of charged batteries since I had it. For about two years now it has been pumping FREE power into my batteries day after day, relentlessly. I can go 18kms with just two batteries. Taking 12 people or more. The economics are staggeringly good. All that petrol and oil saved from my pocket and the environment.

Panels pump out differently according to the power of the sun. So you cannot attach one straight to your battery or it might explode due to over-voltage charging. Or suffer damage from under-charging.

This is why you need a charge controller…

  • Charge controller

The brains of the operation. Starting out at a few hundred rand, the very basic ones are just fine for little camping or office operations. They have input ports for the panels. And outputs to the batteries. And output to your main power *loom.

*This is not a necessary step and can become quite complicated as the output of charge controllers is limited according to price. The more you pay, the more the system can output.

All we want this to charge a battery really. So we can ignore that output port for now. Plus the *inverter has enough technology built into it, to prevent battery damage during use.

  • Batteries

You are gonna need some heavy battery power (and inverter) if you want to power a big chest freezer or hot water geyser. But just a small fridge, a computer, charging station, and some lights – too easy with one 100 or so amp-hour camping battery. This is all I am using to stay productive today as we endure yet another load shedding session here in South Africa.

You can use a car battery just fine. But it’s not purpose-designed like a camping battery. Also known as non-starting batteries, these are the ones you want. Deep-cyle. As in slow charge in, and slow charge out.

You can NOT ever allow any battery to drop below 10.8v. That ruins everything inside the battery. And renders your guarantee useless. Battery manufacturers have a tell-tale inside the battery that tells if the charge level dropped below 10.8v – rendering the battery and the guarantee defunct.

You have been warned! You really need to know your batteries and their charge levels at all times. And then build it into your schedule to harvest as much sunlight as you can whenever you can. Or using the mains.

  • Inverter

This used to be the expensive piece of kit we all need. But now it’s cheap. I paid R850 for the inverter under my desk humming away merrily right now.

At a rated 800w, it runs my air pump (300w) with aplomb. My smoothie maker runs slightly slower but it churns out fruit juices too without any complaint (350w).

The inverters all come with a failsafe to protect the batteries you are using. When the voltage drops below about 11.8v, the inverter turns itself off. Sounding a rather annoying alarm btw. This is time to simply swap out a battery, and put another one back on charge.

High-end equipment often is available as integrated units with the inverter and charge controller all in one box.

Powering your household?

Just buy more and more. It’s that simple. Except for your inverter, the rest of it is all scaleable infinitely. More batteries. More solar panels. Until you have enough power to plug in a fridge. And then eventually a geyser.

  • Fridge/Freezer 400w
  • Mini fridge 100w
  • Fan 50w
  • Kettle 800w
  • Fryer 1000w
  • TV 100w
  • Vacuum 800w
  • X-Box 100w
  • Geyser 3000w

These are all rough averages and you can get more power-hungry kettles and things. You need to start becoming aware of the power required to run your machines, and what it is you are trying to achieve, and adapt.

Remember that most charge controllers and inverters these days have onboard USB charging ports. Often 5A or more. So if you power your laptop, phone, tablet and even lights, with USB, you are really beating the duck curve.

Powering your office or factory?

It really is not a challenge anymore. Buy big inverter sizes right from the start. And grow the rest of your operation into its capacity. Then you can buy another inverter and so on.

Using battery-powered tools eases the transition to solar too. Since you only have to recharge batteries, as opposed to supplying direct power to the juice hungry grinder or drill you need to be running. Battery management is now gonna be your thing.

However, if you do want to plug straight in, the following list tells you what requirements you might have. If you operate two of these machines at the same time, add the two up to get your final requirement.

Workshop
  • Belt sander 1000w
  • Grinder 1200w
  • Small grinder 650w
  • Drill 800w+
  • Welder 250 to 8000w
  • Lathe 100w +
Office
  • Projector 250w
  • Computer 300w
  • Coffee maker 1000w
  • Aircon 2600w
  • Printer 800w

All of the above figures are averages. You can get very powerful computers, and normal ones, that use half the energy. You need to check your desired energy output, and then match it up with your inverter and battery bank.

A word of caution – inverters always over-rate themselves. So my 800w inverter, will most likely only handle 600w or less. And if you turn two appliances or machines on at the same time, that initial surge needed to get the magnets or whatever spinning – overloads the system and it will kick out with an alarm.

You can order your very own Solar Starter Kit from us right here at The Sardine News website.

Working on sunshine!

More fun apps and websites:

Umzimkulu Adrenalin – we will get you right out there

Spillers House – BnB and Backpackers

Umzimkulu Marina – self-catering in Port Shepstone

Port Captain – Egyptian themed and flavoured

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“Surf Launching in Southern Africa” – NEW YouTube Channel

Surf launching is dangerous

“Surf Launching in Southern Africa” – NEW YouTube Channel

“Surf Launching in Southern Africa” – NEW YouTube Channel. We have taken the deep plunge and have fired up a new channel that will feature as many surf launches as we can find. You as the viewer can watch and analyze each launch over and over. And learn a little each time.

If you have any surf launch videos that we can use for this purpose, please let us have them! Email to umzimkulu@gmail.com or WhatsApp +27793269671. Each video received will be rewarded with a R200 voucher that can be used at Umzimkulu Adrenalin, or Spillers House. Both are in Port Shepstone.

We have fired the all-new channel up with launches from our area, down here on the KZN south coast, so far. At Shelly Beach – the Sonny Evans small craft harbour. And the Umzimkulu River mouth, in Port Shepstone. We have published 8 videos so far, and plan to upload once or thrice a week until our library of launches runs out. And then we will have to go and get some more!

Future launch vids are coming from Pomene in Mozambique. And closer to home, here at Sodwana Bay.

So put your lifejackets on and hold on tight…this video will lead you to the others. This is Digby Smith with a textbook beaching at Shelley Beach, KZN, South Africa.

Digby Smith hitting the beach right – Shelly Beach. KZN. South Africa. Click HERE to go the channel where you can Like, and more importantly, Subscribe. It’s FREE!

You can also easily click the following link to the channel, where it’s easy to Subscribe and look around at the other videos already available.

Surf Launching in Southern Africa

At the risk of repeating myself (apologies in advance), it’s a hell mission to get to 1000 Subscribers. At which point, we as creators on YouTube, only just start to count. So please help us beat the algorithm back into its cage and chase that Subscribe button.

More fun apps/websites by The Sardine News:

The Sardine News ~ Umzimkulu Adrenalin ~ Umzimkulu MarinaFishBazaruto

Get your own app or website right here.

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