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Spinning for gamefish from the beach in Jeffreys Bay, South Africa

Typical South Africa style spinning equipment

Spinning for gamefish from the beach in Jeffreys Bay, South Africa

On the east coast of South Africa, in the KZN Natal province, that I live in, there are some hardcore fisherfolk. But down in the Cape is where the guys get really, really serious…

Jeffreys Bay, South Africa (c) KC
Keran Coetzer with a Jeffreys Bay sunrise panorama

I was invited to join Jeffreys Bay local, Mikey Meyer. No, not surfing! Fishing. No J-Bay local EVER invites you surfing.

But I was stooooked. Not only was this Mikey Meyer (bespoke surfboard artist and outside charger), but he is also fishing obsessed. Spinning with lures! And I was going fishing with him – at one of his secret spots!

Next morning. Early bells. J-Bay Surf View (where many a world champion has laid his head), and where I am blessed enough to be staying...with a view right out over all the action!

But we weren’t going surfing today.

An Isuzu 4wd with two big dogs riding in the back pulls in. Mikey steps out. Looking serious.

“Morning”…etc…”What you taking?”, Mikey asks.

“Uhhhh…water, two rods, a bag, a dog (Chelsea)…no beer!”, says I.

Mikey goes…matter of factly…”Wetsuit.”

“Uhhhh”, I go…“Ok, booties too, I suppose”

Affirmative headshake action.

Cool.

Into the warm cab. Yak, yak, yak…

20kms.

Mmmmm.

Sharp turn right. Mikey changes from casual conversationalist to US Marine – “Open the gate, let us through, close the gate, get the hell back in!”

I follow orders. Smartly. This oom has kakked me out in the line-up a few times already. Once for having the wrong sized board even!?

Back in the cab. Music is Fleetwood Mac. But no talking as we bounce and weave across this strange but beautiful terrain. Smell of fynbos reminding me where I am in this wilderness.

The Izuzu is fynbos grey specially done for camouflage since we were not on public land anymore. And we soon enough disappear down a track and into a dense thicket. 10 Kms bouncing through the bush!

And then up to some daunting, but striking sand dunes. Huge.

We stop underneath them. Can hear the waves on the other side. Light onshore breeze. Otherwise it’s just birds and nature.

Ok, cool, gather it all up, prepare for a short hike”. Says Mike.

Ready to go.

100 Metres to the dunes. Bush on either side. Marsh. Swamp. Mud.

Chelsea dog in my arms. Carrying all my kit.

Wading through, it’s a metre deep now. Freshwater and muddy, it’s hard going for sure.

But what a place! So amazingly beautiful. Breathtaking.

Finally we trek across the swamp. And now to climb the huge dune. Over the top we go.

The most beautiful and endless seascape of beach and ocean rolls out in front of us.

Letting me take it all in, Mike points north, into the distance, and says, ”Theeeeeere it is…”.

5 Kilometres up the beach!

Mikey’s dogs and Chelsea team up and set forth, Mikey and I bring up the rear.

It’s now like walking on Mars. Weird rock surfaces and dune formations.

Simple desolate beauty. Nobody anywhere. For miles.

Walk, walk, walk.

Finally we stop! Ok, wetsuits. Uh, and booties. Sheeez. Ok, well, stoked. New tackle, new lures, and a all new fishing experience for me! Mikey leads the way and points out the slight variance in the shorebreak contour, a current, a little sand bank point, and some deep water behind. 

Here on this long and distant beach, this is called structure, and we have come miles to fish it.

And so we start up. So many casts. 50 Before a short break. Change lures, chat, swop spots.

2 Hours go by. It is so beautiful. Really amazing. Only like the Southern Cape area can be. Light east is blowing. Things are cool.

Mikey is up to his chest in waves. He casts and casts. My lures, his lures. Fishing HARD! Both of us.

Wading in this deep, in such sharky water. This place is full up. The day before I was winding sharks in the corner at the surf spot Albatross. Some kid was giving his girlfriend surf lessons whilst I was pulling sharks from in amongst them?! Right behind the shorebreak! They never even got out of the water when they both saw me releasing the sharks.

And we were way into the wild. Miles from any form of civilisation. I wouldn’t have been surprised if a dumb White Shark casually strolled past whilst we fishing?!

But then my equipment started to fail. Mainly my fingers though. It had been hours of casting that thin braid eventually cutting in.

I had to get out and warm them often just to keep going.

And then back into the water. Deep into the water.

I was never gonna let Mikey fish harder than me, but I had no chance. He outfished me totally. But Nada. No fish today.

Just frozen fish fingers.

And then. Ha ha ha you would never believe what happened…

I tie on a MYDO SS Spoon but with a treble hook, a bullet-like spoon, in the hope of something buying in on the bottom, the spoon being erratically dragged in from way out the back. Right on the sand.

A few casts in and with Mikey standing right next to me, BANG, I was vas. Whooohooo!

Mikey is stoked, I am over the moon as the fish shows some mettle and has me on my toes and swimming hard backwards for the shore. Barely holding and then these Veedub sized holes that just form are all around and you fall right into them all the time.

But 5 minutes later (my 20lb Braid spinning outfit skrik vir niks) and a stupid sand shark shows itself. A hapless one that I have dragged my spoon over, with ultra-sharp treble hook, and heavy bullet spoon. The spoon is embedded in it’s tail!

What a laugh!

But Hell by now I was too cold at this point and used the whole incident as an excuse to leave Mikey casting his thoughts to the ocean for another full hour, ace out.

I shook my neoprene, donned warmer kit and wondered at the sheer determination.

We get back at lunchtime. Back to work for both of us. Mikey to his surfboard creating factory and me to tying lures.

As he leaves he asks, “In the morning?”


If you would like to try this kind of fishing over here in South Africa – please get in touch with Sean on umzimkulu@gmail.com or WhatsApp +27793269671, anytime! The torture part come free-of-charge!

We are on Facebook at http://facebook.com/thesardine.co.za

Try our YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/umzimkulu1/

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Makulu – Roosta on surfing big waves

Surfing big waves: The Roosta being whipped in from the back back...at Dungeons (c) Craig Chapman

Makulu – Roosta on surfing big waves

The Block isn’t only about fishing. It’s also a very good surf spot. That has been ridden since the eighties.

It’s a big wave spot that starts way out back –  it stands up and breaks hard across a patchy section of reef. Shallow sand bars round off every point break down here on the KZN south coast and waves reel across the bay towards The Sandspit.

In winter time, the water clears as the rains literally stop. The river mouths all close, and it all feels a lot safer than in the summer brown water. There are sharks aplenty at this place, so big boards and assisted surfing is the only way to do this. We use whatever we can get our hands on, but a combination of boat and ski works great and we can carry all the equipment we need out to the back.

Stand up paddle surfers would love this place. We had a Wavejet engine powered SUP here for a while, but the waves were so big that entire two weeks, we couldn’t get out, and when we did we were in big trouble, not having ever Supped before. But for the guys who know what they are doing, this place is perfection. At 4 to 6ft, the waves would be dreams come true for SUP surfers.

Enjoy the picture show…

If you are a SUP guy, check out accommodation at The Umzimkulu Marina…you could paddle down the river, out to sea under the bridge for a surf at The Block, and paddle back!

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A long KZN south coast fishing weekend at the Umzimkulu Marina

Spinning sticks at the ready as Gizmo patrols for anything that moves

A long KZN south coast fishing weekend at the Umzimkulu Marina

These long weekends are just great and this one was filled with enthusiastic anglers from all over the globe. It started on Friday early morning with a 5kg kob taken off The Block on a paddletail. This set the tone for the long fishing weekend to come, and soon the Sandspit was lined with anglers. Who stayed all weekend!

Back up the river, at the Umzimkulu Estuary, Steve from England was over the moon with his pair of sharp-toothed catfish and a perch. Mark and crew were stoked with their perch, grunter and a kingfish.

But the bottom fishing team on the Niteshift had most of the fun with a big musselcracker, a bunch of bright orange cardinal snapper, and tales of huge yellowtail busting them up time after time. Took and entire day though, as the mid morning low tide kept them out there.

Matt Wainwright brought his highly maneuvrable little RIB down for the weekend, and in two sessions had to deal with some serious easterly surf, a feisty hammerhead shark and a couple of yellowfin tuna!

Captain Matt Wainwright scanning for tuna off Port Shepstone over the weekend
Captain Matt Wainwright scanning for tuna off Port Shepstone over the weekend

Overall the ocean seems to be coming alive all over the place after all the rain and brown water.

The only thing out of place, was the lack of mackerel in the usual spots, but we did find a few red eye sardines finally.

Check out http://umzimkulu.co.za for some great KZN south coast fishing options.

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The Umzimkulu River is cleaning up!

Sharene Berry kob killer on the Umzimkulu River

The Umzimkulu River is cleaning up!

After a great time catching eel and barbel in the flood waters recently, the rains have finally slowed and the Umzimkulu River is cleaning up!

So it’s gonna be all about the rock salmon, grunter, perch, kob, flagtail and kingfish as the waters become that murky green the gamefish love to ambush in.

Looking through old albums I found a bunch of photographs of catches and scenes that never made it to be published or even be part of a story…so they have been captioned rather…

Join us this winter down at The Umzimkulu Marina for some filled fish chasing days and nights.

Contact Sean on umzimkulu@gmail.com, or call +27 79 326 9671.

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Port Shepstone things to do

Port Shepstone things to do

Port Shepstone things to do…

Since forever, Port Shepstone’s south bank has been the start of many an adventure up or down the Umzimkulu River. But a few bridges, and many boats later…the floods have made their mark – and you can still stick with tradition, and take a river cruise.

The Umzimkulu is a great big old retired commercial ski-boat with a roof and seating all round. Safety equipment, three motors and qualified skippers and crew make sure of everything.

Various ways are available, to get out on the water…

  • daily trips from Spillers @ R120 pp (call Sean on 0793269671)
  • catered party boat trips (includes Egyptian meal)

And for the fishermen in the family…

  • R120 per hour per person
  • R450 per person night fishing

We have also been doing corporate gigs for companies in Port Shepstone and surrounds. We can brand the boat and prepare it for all kinds of functions or events.

In fact, the only thing we don’t do anymore, are bulls parties. And that’s final!

Contact Sean on umzimkulu@gmail.com or call +27 79 326 9671 for more details.

Umzimkulu Adrenalin

Or check out our official boating and and adventure website Umzimkulu Adrenalin. This is the place to see exactly what it is you can do on your next trip to the waters of Port Shepstone.

Deep sea fishing is on offer. Lots of boats to choose from and fish to target. Our Ocean Safari trips are jam-packed with thrills and you might even get to swim with a dolphin. Estuary cruises for more chilled vibe. And estuary fishing is a great combination of it all.

More things to do in Port Shepstone:

https://thesardine.co.za – never miss a single sardine

https://masterwatermen.co.za – by The Bear

https://portcaptain.co.za – Egyptian food in Port Shepstone

https://umzimkuluadrenalin.co.za – get out there!

https://spillershouse.co.za – BnB and Backpackers

https://fishontheriver.co.za – epic seafood

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