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Underwater observations on a reef off Port Shepstone

Underwater observations on a reef off Port Shepstone

Conservation at work: Underwater observations on a reef off Port Shepstone. These underwater video frames include an enormous shoal of shad. The Natal Park Board’s biggest achievement. Ever. Their banning of shad fishing during their most vulnerable times – during spawning which invokes mass gatherings – saved the population from literal extinction.

You see, in the seventies, the shad disappeared!

But the Natal Parks Board sprang into action. As their duties called them to. And they literally saved the day for the shad. They came back. Properly!

Check the shad in this underwater video…shot a few days ago…off Port Shepstone.

I have also seen garrick like that. Yip. Wall-to-wall. Sorry to tell. In the late 80s though. But you will not see aggregations of garrick like that anymore. Not with the government’s complete loss of control over the fishing populace in Port St.Johns. Where jigging is the norm during kob and garrick runs. A run of fish btw is when they are spawning and get really hungry.

Ezimvelo

So. When change came about. The Natal Parks Board was rebranded Ezimvelo. They continued to operate just great under Nelson. The personnel at Ezimvelo actually knew us all. Personally. They knew who the good guys were. And the bad guys. And guess what. They got fired.

DAFF

And a DAFF delegation took over. In an unmitigated disaster.

It is now a free-for-all on any beach and we only have this government to blame. How the hell do you build an organisation over decades – that had honed its skills so good that it kept everyone in check? Even us! And then simply fire it. Smells like something very fishy going on in this government all over again. If anybody knows the real story, please enlighten us!

We all respected those ‘green men’ back in the Ezimvelo and NPB (Natal Parks Board) days. Through and through. They were doing their job. And they were protecting the very same resource that we were busy enjoying so thoroughly. They knew what a jigging trace was. They knew the size and bag limits. They knew the species. They knew it all. Decades of hard-won knowledge and intelligence. Gone with the winds of change.

Us

And so now we are the conservationists. Since Ezimvelo got fired – it is only now up to us! Our government is simply not interested in conservation. You should see what they are doing to Sodwana Bay. Literally destroying the place. Bananas in the wetlands.

And so we need an action plan. And have at this point managed to secure a meeting with the director of DAFF down in East London. This is the precise moment that any lawyers, lobbyists and other big-hitters should contact me. So that together a game plan can be formulated. Our immediate goal could to ban fishing in the Port St Johns estuary for the times when the fish come in to spawn. The fish are visible at this stage and it will be very easy to shut down the fishing for whilst the shoals are doing their thing and making babies.

And maybe, during these discussions, to form a kind of watchdog organisation that has some teeth. To keep this dysfunctional government in check. And to restore environmental law and order in places like Port St. Johns and Sodwana Bay.

Discussions that need to be had

Discussion on what types of fishing could be allowed. To allow subsistence fishers to continue to live.

The possible introduction of measures to increase roadblocks and patrols looking for frozen fish being taken out of the valley. These are the actual criminals. The ones who feed the fire by buying the jigged fish. Full of roe. And then hauling them to more lucrative markets in the cities.

Systems that could be put in place to encourage the public to submit photos or videos (the law at the moment protects criminals who have their mugs posted on facey or elsewhere during a criminal act or prior to conviction can you believe it!? They can use this to get off their crime with!) to a central database for use by law enforcement.

Means to educate fishers on the environmental impacts their actions could have on fish.

And the many more items on this huge agenda…

There is a heap to discuss, and many people to involve…but this is the time to sign up to the team if ever there was a moment. Just email me, Sean, on umzimkulu@gmail.com in the meantime and I will form a group somewhere private where we can push this through together.

Hopefully in time for next years spawning season!

We are on Facebook right HERE, and we run an action-packed youtube channel that needs subscribers right HERE.

Read more about the jigging in Port St. Johns going on right HERE.

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Another trophy ox eye tarpon in the Umzimkulu

Ox eye tarpon by Chris Leppan

Another trophy ox eye tarpon in the Umzimkulu

Ox eye tarpon.

Chris Leppan and his trophy ox eye tarpon taken on the Umzimkulu River estuary this weekend
Chris Leppan and his trophy ox eye tarpon taken on the Umzimkulu River estuary this weekend

Just the name should send shivers down your spine. And all the way to your rod tip.

As you shall discover when in a dog fight with an ox eye tarpon. When pulling hard, they vibrate somehow, sending the vibrations right up through your line into your rod tip and down to your gut. It is an amazing sensation.

But that’s not half of it. Acrobatics. Just like its Atlantic cousin, this tarpon goes hell for leather when you pick a  fight with it.

Best you have your equipment in top shape, fresh leaders and extremely sharp hook. They are notoriously hard to hook. Hard, hard bone. Throughout its jaw. Like its cousin.

And here’s the kicker. The Ozzies have got this like weird angling association and they rate fish. They rate Barramundi at 1.2. Blue marlin at 1.5. And an ox eye at 1.6!

Yes. This fish carries more esteem than a blue marlin.

All I can say is I am so stoked I caught one before this beautiful fish by the quasi stunt double of himself and the other Chris Leppan. You see, there are two Chris Leppans around here who both are excellent fishermen in their own rights. One just surfs a lot better than the other though. But ok, this is my trophy ox eye tarpon, 11 years ago, near the Umzimkulu mouth.

But ok, the crew that Chris fishes with, is kind of led by my schoolmate Rory Lawlor. He has assembled an amazing pool of talent and this is evident in just this last weekends catch gallery.

We run an action-packed YouTube channel that needs you to please subscribe to by clicking HERE.

We are on Facebook right HERE.

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PS: Just so you know what I am talking about…this is Chris Leppan, the surfer…aspirated by none other than the inimitable Hate Speech led by our totally untamed lawyer Mr. Russell Stroud.

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Shad attack behaviour in Port Shepstone – the movie

Shad attack behaviour recorded off Port Shepstone

Shad attack behaviour in Port Shepstone – the movie

Shad attack behaviour – the movie was shot on a shallow spot on the backline off Port Shepstone, KZN, South Africa. Near the end of the shad open season this crazy 2020. When they start to congregate to spawn.

The shad, unlike garrick or kob, are given a protected season. This was introduced decades ago when the shad were running out fast. At the end of this month, it is over for shad fishers until 1 December. Somehow this doesn’t make sense since it is the Garrick and kob that the help now. DAFF? Where are you guys on this?

Shad have many names including bluefish and tailor. And its Latin name comes straight out of Asterix and Obelix – Pomatomus Saltatrix!

Anyway, we found a large shoal moving around near the backline at Port Shepstone, and managed to get the GoFish cameras into the water with them. What an amazing amount of fun!

Firstly to have the shad in such a playful mood as they chased our lures from the bottom to the top. We got them on the surface too – like little billfish they mercilessly attacked our lures, often finding themselves cartwheeling through the air and tail-walking. Yes, out here in the blue and flat surface, shad take on a wild new character when cranking a spoon wildly across the top for them to chase.

And secondly, the video material we got out of this session, and some of what features in this video – literally blew our minds!

The GoFish cameras we recently added to our arsenal have completed the mission they were acquired for perfectly…

We can finally see underwater!

The only other people who get this perspective are the spearos and bubble-blowers. But now we can drop a camera down, and observe the goings on on and around the reef, without even getting wet!

Working with the GoFish Cameras

It is not in real-time. Wi-fi don’t work underwater. But we have a cute little computer on the boat that powers off a cell charger and its a quick card switch for us to be seeing what just happened downstairs on the reef below us. There is a wi-fi function on the cameras, however. As long as they are floating in their little life rings, and their bums are sticking up out if the water, you can then live stream in real-time the action going on. This is a very limited function but can be applied to certain limited scenarios.

Now if you buy your GoFish Cams from this here website, you will get unlimited email and telephonic support from me and us here at The Sardine News. We have been using these cameras extensively and have made all the mistakes possible. And we are still making them! Learning every day for sure!

So use the link above or below, depending on your device, to get in on this eye-opening way of working things out on your favourite reef or with your favourite fish!

If you would like to join us down here in Port Shepstone for the season, please get in touch. We are based at the Umzimkulu Marina, right in the banks of the Umzimkulu River – and we are fishing flat out!

We have deep-sea options from backline to billfish on offer. We have the famous Sandspit and The Block to fish from the side from. And then the marvelously fun estuary fishing where we encounter so many different species making every strike that much more interesting.

Please get in touch with Sean on umzimkulu@gmail.com or +27793269671 to work it out. Bookings have come back to normal luckily so think ahead in time.

We are Facebook right HERE and run a full-on YouTube Channel right HERE!

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Illegal jigging at Port St Johns – The Movie

Port St Johns Garrick slaughter: Slipway illegal jiggers Port St Johns August 2020

Illegal jigging at Port St Johns – The Movie

Port St Johns: I was very fortunate to be put in touch with Mr. Bongani Pitoyi, who works at the Department of Forestry and Fisheries, quite some time back. Mr. Pitoyi is a very different kind of DAFF agent. Outside of exercising his conservation duties, he is an avid recreational angler too.

Mr. Pitoyi has also fallen victim to criminal behaviour. Mr. Pitoyi survived an attack on his being whilst trying to catch a fish on the banks of an estuary in the Transkei. Quite close to Port St Johns. He survived, luckily for us.

So Mr. Pitoyi, Bongani, DAFF Agent, takes my call. He is stationed out in the sticks but man it’s a great feeling to know that the minute I dial his number, he enthusiastically answers. Or calls back, network dependant.

And so, with the onslaught of the illegal jigging situation down in our beloved Port St. Johns recently, I got on the blower to Bongani. Who answered immediately. He was way out in the field, but he knew the ins and outs of the situation, and we chatted for quite some time.

We decided, to produce a video. I wanted to do it, to educate the public at large, on the same ins and outs of the unfolding drama. He wanted it, to educate his colleagues with.

Point is, that most of the jiggers, and most of the cops, just do not know the law that well. Or the dynamics of a fish population. And this is not their fault. This is another overall government stumble where the job at hand has gotten out of hand. It is lawless is Port St Johns right now.

And so, this is Bongani and I, with a video presentation, of why and how, and what to do.

A quick summary

  • Don’t get confrontational
  • You are allowed to take photos or videos if the subjects are outside and in public. Photos of in people yards or houses are not allowed, without permission
  • Do not post these pictures on social media, it is against the law, in this case, to fight the law this way.
  • Do not make accusations online. If you post to ask for information on the picture for sure. “Does anyone know the situation in this photo?”, be very clear that you are asking for information as someone who does not know and is looking to find out
  • Never make threats online

Send the pics or video to me on umzimkulu@gmail.com and I will make sure they get to the right people at DAFF and beyond.

Everybody, will appreciate your help, in stopping the scourge of poaching and illegal fishing going on in Port St St Johns right now.

We are on Facebook right HERE. We run a YouTube HERE, that needs subscribers please.

The Sardine News

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Bass on fly tackle

Bass on fly tackle! Fly sailing is a great new way of tackling bass and practising for the saltwater! Niki Tilley with a nice South Coast largemouth bass.

Bass on fly tackle

Bass on fly tackle? To the purists and sceptics out there – it’s a great way to practise for the saltwater! – Sean

And as the southerly and northerly winds start their perennial argument, hanging out in the shelter of a tucked-away bass pond – is a great place to be. Especially along the KZN South Coast inland beat, where we are right now. And the wind is scathing our beaches and coastline. Right now as I write this, its literally blowing a gale at 30 knots plus. From the south. And tomorrow it’s gonna be the same but from the south-east. Even worse! Then it turns north. Even worser!

Luckily, many farmers from around here allow bass anglers to hunt fish in their dams. And many dont! But if you are on the KZN South Coast some time, and you want to go bassin’, we can take you for sure. Paddock and Umzumbe hold some secrets and even close around Port Shepstone there are some gems. That do not get fished very often at all.

And who also hold some lunker sized bass. Even just recently, as the bass start to enter spawning mode, some good catches have been made including one of over 4kgs caught and released just south of Port Shepstone.

But ok, a few stories that might get you amped up…the first from Coty in the States who penned up this real cool article on what it takes to bassin’ on the fly.

https://yourbassguy.com/fly-fishing-for-bass/

And this one, also sent in by Coty…

https://www.wired2fish.com/biology/biologists-world-record-bass-potential-in-south-african-reservoir/

…is well worth a read as it analyses the famed Loskop Reservoir where Wayne Naude caught the current SA Record at 7 something kilos!

But ok thanks Coty for the articles, and you can visit Cotys new website at Your Bass Guy dot Com. Click right HERE to check it out. Looking forward to some more technical stuff from the old USA.

And if you want a bassin trip to remember, get in touch with me Sean on umzimkulu@gmail.com or +27 79 326 9671 anytime and lets chat it out.

Check out our YouTube Channel right here…

Catch us on Facebook HERE!

You can buy all sorts of fly fishing tackle right HERE.

The Sardine News (c) 2020

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