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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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Bad Brad’s Kingfish at Pomene

Greenspot Kingfish at Pomene Estuary

Bad Brad’s Kingfish at Pomene

The legendary kingfish at Pomene have been under threat from overfishing and nets the last few decades, but this last trip we were there, they came alive! Bus loads of them!

I am not sure if they are Big-eye Kingfish, or juvenile GT’s – they look so similair at the size we were catching them – up to about 3 or 4 kg’s.

But the big ones were in there too!

In the mellee we saw at least a dozen metre long GT’s and yellowfin kingfish smashing along with the juveniles – teaching them how to be a proper bad mooded kingfish.

It was late afternoon when Bad Brad of Durban cast his luminous pink popper in the right place, and soon we had out first little trophy. The pink popper thing was hot to trot and it wasn’t half an hour later when he had his bigger fish of the two. They both swam away completely unharmed, and more experienced in life.

The fish were in hunting shoals, moving with the tide and creating a fracas in the deep channel on the far side of the estuary. We would position ourselves up towards the mouth, and drift in with the current – much the same tactic that the kingfish were using. Then as the kingfish cornered the baitfish they attacked from all sides, whipping the water wild, and making a sound like a live Rodriguez concert.

There were fish just everywhere!

And then as soon as they had started, they stopped. Completely. And disappeared. Gone. Silence. In the sunset.

Back to base, where whilst staying in the water chalets, we could hear the very same kingfish attacking right outside our door, intermittently through the night!

The aggressive and intelligent locals – the humpback dolphins, who have been patrolling the Pomene estuary for as long as I have been frequenting it, came to visit. And one time, when I wasn’t looking, a massive explosion of sound and water got me turned around just in time to see a huge black fin slicing the water in a patch of foam and blood as big as a kombi. Now what that could have been? Shark? Huge GT?

This story is not meant to be one telling of the Pomene estuary’s fantastic fishing. No, no. That is long gone. What is left, can be roughly estimated, at about 10% of it’s former glory. When little sailfish were caught right up in the mangroves. Huge yellowfin tuna beaching themselves as they miscalculate the tides and shallows. Brindle Bass would shy you away whilst snorkeling the reefs. Seahorses bouncing around all over. All this in the estuary! Never mind how good the ocean was back then. Couta off the rocks. Huge GT’s in the shallows…

And then the saddest thing, is even after all the effort to protect this prime fish nursery, there come some prospective investors in the area, from South Africa, rent a boat from the lodge, and come back with three little dead kingfish.

Mmmmm.

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Catch n Release in Mozambique

Catch n Release in Mozambique

I was early up each morning, Guinjata a few years back, about 5, meeting up with a little kid from the Free State. We had baitcasters for saltwater, and could pump a dropshot for miles, especially in the prevailing offshores.
What we did was stick a little fly at the leader knot about a metre up from of the dropshot.
The baby Kingies were wild for the combo!
After a few days, a little local kid came down and sat watching us. But not with any enthusiasm.
So after about 20 released baby GT’s, so cute and lively as they swam away each time…the little local boy came up to me with a very serious face on.
“If you let go one more fish…I call police!”.
In dismay, I kind of obliged, and the free stater kid and I walked slowly away.

And then another time…

At Pomene again, but a long, long time ago…you could, at spring low, make the few kilometres by running over the soft sandbanks at dead low tide, to where the estuary mouth narrowed with a strong and deep flow of water. The kingfish love this place, and as we got there…they were smashing the hapless baitfish right into the shallows, and all around our feet!
It was a few casts with a nice big dropshot and bang!
A solid hour later, I was reviving the yellowfin of about 12kg’s, in the current, and across the water, a gathering of locals were admiring my feat- or so I thought.
After a few minutes, the most beautiful kingfish swam away – I was ecstatic.
Only then did my senses come to me, and I looked up to the most irate crowd of locals. They were appalled with me, and amid threats and threatening gestures, I appreciated the small expanse of high running water between us, and turned tail and ran for the tide and safety.

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KZN Spearfishing News by Jason Heyne

KZN Spearfishing News by Jason Heyne

“The ever reliable Jason Heyne reports in weekly with a round up of KZN spearfishing news…this week is  no different, some great catches and good photos, thank you Jason!”

Diving this week has been on and off with early starts required due to the north east picking up every day and this weekend will be no exception. The North East will steadily pick up Saturday and Sunday with the surf picking up and obliterating the inshore come Sunday. Best bet for a dive is early Saturday morning through till mid day Saturday. The best viz has been in and around the middle south coast. Garrick are returning now in shoals so stick to the shallows for a while to bag one. DUC Garrick comp is on tomorrow no weigh in after 4. Guys and gals please be careful where you park your vehicle on the north coast as cars are being stolen and broken into. Try not to stash your keys. As always dive safe and straight spears.

“Enjoy the picture show…”

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Umzimkulu Leopard

Fishing the Umzimkulu River off Spiller’s Wharf yesterday afternoon, local angler Ahmed, pictured, hooked into a beautiful Leopard Ray. It took him a solid 10 minutes on ultra-light tackle.

Fishing the Umzimkulu is made very comfortable at Spiller’s Wharf. There are a choice of restaurants – Bela’s Mozambican themed diner is most popular.

There is safe parking, grass, chairs and 50 meters of river frontage to choose your spot from. This night there were 11 rods in the water, catching grunter and perch.
It costs R20 per angler to fish on the premises.
Many species can be targeted. Catfish, kingfish, grunter, perch, eels, rays, oxeye tarpon, rockcod, shad, garrick, rock salmon and even sharks!

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