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Cyclone DINEO is here

Cyclone DINEO

Cyclone DINEO is here

Cyclone DINEO will very likely hit Inhambane and surrounds, head on. Tomorrow?!

Winds were predicted as low as 120 to 140 kmh, but this is all changing fast as the tropical storm eagerly upgrades itself. It’s winds tomorrow are now being shouted about at up to 200kmh.

So it’s all very serious if you live there, or are holidaying there now.

Signs of the trouble permeated an otherwise lovely summers day in Vilanculos, as deep dark clouds started to form up and move in, reported by Carlos Carvalhos of MozInfo.

The weather in Natal is glorious today – the odd shower, that’s it.

We will endeavour for more photos and news updates, as the next 24 hours progresses.

Stay posted.

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Self catering accommodation options in Tofo

Surfing Tofo shorebreak: Team Mom and Dad Plomaritis leave a few for the kids

Self catering accommodation in Tofo

There are some great self catering accommodation in Tofo and Tofinho these days.

Since the quiet little beach village became the most fun town this side of the equator, a boom in available self catering accommodation in Tofo and Tofinho area has left us with options aplenty.

Here a few choice spots right close to all the many surf spots, dive operators and fishing charters…

Casa Algodoal – perched right over the main beach at Tofo

Casa Frenzy – a few kilometres along the beach to total privacy in the bush

Lalaland – also tucked away behind a sand dune, very exclusive

Casa na Duna – looking straight up the barrel of the mighty Tofinho surf break.

Each place is unique in it’s own right, so click on over to their respective pages by following the links above, and book away!

Self catering means you can hook into the local mercado downtown beach way, buy a wide variety of locally produced fruit and vegetables at super prices, and flavour that with any choice of a variety ranging from fresh prawns and crayfish, daily caught linefish to other treats like my favourite – clams!

Further back on into town, at the famous landmark junction called Babalaza, there is another market with decidedly more fishy flavour. All kinds of prawns, big and small, can be procured here. Take your own scale! Scallops can be found amongst fresh piles of sardines, anchovies and sometimes even mackerel. The variety of fish to use for bait includes halfbeaks and silkies, or wolf herring to the non-Durban. Funnily enough the locals call them walla walla?!

The supermarkets that have spring up like speedbumps all around the place literally have everything. Along with locally produced and supplied goods like farmed fish (saving the oceans), coconut oils and coffee.

What more could you need? Whatever it is, you’ll probably be sure find it in the market!

 

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Alternative surfing accommodation in Tofo

Tofinho

Alternative surfing accommodation in Tofo

With the flurry of investment that has been going on here in Tofo the past decade, surfing accommodation in Tofo presents many options nowadays. Surfing accommodation defined as being in close proximity to all the breaks in the area – there are 14 with names here in Tofo so far, many more without.

Tofinho is the main draw card but with surf tours, jet skis and SUPs littering the once lonely line-up, it is nothing more than a decoy to hide what really happens around here.

Accessibility is one issue. Local knowledge the other.

We go by boat. And I live on these waters.

Our 4WDs will get us to at least some of the places we like to surf. The others are way out to sea. Sandbanks that run for miles. Superbanks without names. An ever changing stretching swathe of sandy coastline that goes for miles and gets moulded and brushed continually by weird currents, backwashes and rips. Interrupted occasionally by a cranking right hand reef break or slab or superbank.

If you are planning a trip over here and aim to score some really-hard to describe freaks of nature type waves, then time it with us.

February it hots up as the cyclonic systems hanging around Madagascar start to line up and spit the swells to us in the exact right direction. It’s a short period hard ground swell that hardly lets up. Paddle outs and takeoffs are brutal. You better be fit. Very hard barreling waves that are super fast over shallow sand. Hectic sections, but makeable. Thick lips. Sweet beatings. Roasties.

Casa Algodoal puts you right in the sweet spot
Casa Algodoal puts you right in the sweet spot – Krusty performing.

You gonna need 3 weeks or more, we don’t like coming back at this time, through to June, when the south swells and systems take over again. Boring. Back to Jbay. And Tofinho. Etc…But you can join us wherever we are easily enough. We arrange all of that for you. Just fly into Inhambane airport.

You got to come prepared for survival. Waterproof everything. Your own medical kit. All manners of communication, charging and entertainment equipment. Very strong boards and leashes. Tent and hammock. We gonna be camping, sleeping on the boat, the beach, and then a well-deserved lodge a few nights every now and then.

We gonna catch our meals and eat meat at restaurants we encounter. There are many local stores that carry beer, milk, fresh veggies, fruit etc…wherever we go. It’s an amazing lifestyle that for a few months of the year also produces waves like you will dream about forever after.

To get in touch, email me on umzimkulu@gmail.com

Alternative surfing accommodation in Tofo - in da barrel
Alternative surfing accommodation in Tofo – in da barrel

 

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Tofinho to Barra surf fishing in Mozambique

Tofinho to Barra surf fishing

Tofinho to Barra surf fishing

Walking the 3km stretch Tofo and back from our lodge in Praia do Congiana, put us right in the action every day.

And this day was extra special.

As we walked past the exposed rocks and made our way past the sandy channels, I spotted the first one. A bonefish!

Then the second, third and before our eyes came the multitude. Hundreds became a thousand and more, as the sleek silver bodied torpedo-like fish shoaled past. In 30cm of water. Heading towards the estuary at Barra I presumed.

Walking into the shallow crystal clear water and I was 2 metres from the river of fish. They just kept coming! 10 Minutes of non-stop bone fish?!

Bonefish are plentiful here in Inhambane. Huge bonefish. That are regularly taken from the rocks at Tofinho. Jimmy Bonefish, our extra articulate artisinal fisherman here, catches them aplenty. He is a great guide and clambers over the razor sharp terrain with grace and speed. Sometimes the fish he hooks – kingfish and cobia, are too big to angle from the headland, and on many occasions, whilst living in that dear little house in the corner, I saw Jimmy running wild – rod high in the air, as he made the 100 metre dash to the easier waters of the beach!?

Jimmy is the undisputed king of Tofinho point. Read all about his antics here. And all about the bonefish here.

Then a little way north, the rock shelf starting at The Dragon (a great little kingfish haunt), extends to become the Tofo beach headland. This stretch is patrolled daily by Pedro, who takes snapper, lemonfish, bonefish and stumpnose. And sells them to tourists or in the market. Lives a great life.

The rocky point of Tofo is difficult to fish. So much water moving around. But, it is where the marauding shoals of gangster stumpnose hang out. I am talking of the outer ledge. The inner ledge, has a very comfortable fishing spot from where you can tangle with huge garfish or the odd kingfish. And maybe a stumpie too.

The corner right into the beach – where the row boats launch, every year, becomes a hot spot. Huge kingfish chase torpedo scad right in amongst the bathers in December. It’s at about Christmas time, when this placid corner becomes a stage.

There the long beach to Barra point starts, with so much on the way…there are dotted reef patches all along, that are sometimes exposed and sometimes under the sand.

It was a while ago, when my brother Roosta and myself were holed up at Fatima’s with malaria, when we asked Samual, the barman, for a piece of Lula (squid) from the kitchen. The ocean had been eating away at the beach in front, and the old concrete wall that still stands today, had us casting way over the little backline. It wasn’t 10 minutes before a healthy yellowfin kingfish swallowed the bait and I was vas. It was a beautiful fish, maybe 7 or 8kg’s – we all enjoyed a free meal that night!

Enter Joao. He used to be the wildest dude around – but something happened and he has gained control again. He is the best. The very best. I was walking the same stretch again, and upon encountering Joao, noticed he was just staring out to sea one day. I snapped him out of his trance and asked him what was going on. He slowly broke off his raptured stare, and muttered – “Kingfish”. A big GT had taken all his line! Hand line that is. Joao has a rod now, with minimal line of course, that he fishes the long beach with, daily. To the tides and conditions. Joao has a nose for fish – that is – he knows the waters and the fish so well, he knows exactly when and where to catch them.

Joao takes a ball sinker, and ties it on leaving a long stretch, 2 metres or so, that the hook goes on. Then with “cotton” stripped from a plant leaf he carries with him, he ties on a piece of crayfish, and chucks it out just over the shorebreak. This trace rolls very nicely with the ever present north bound current, and so Joao walks his rig down the beach, until a fish jumps on. Sometimes Joao has to stop fishing because he can only carry so much back to the market!

This current leads you on to the more rocky areas further along the beach, where I saw the bonefish before. Little pickhandle barracuda frequent here too – easily taken on fly or small spoon.

Then the bay at Congiana. High tide and low tide produce starkly different pictures. Low tide and you can walk right out to deep sea. On a flat day, you may aswell be casting from a boat. Shoals of bluefin kingfish move along the ledge hunting. It’s mainly sight casting to them – thrilling stuff. Anything could swim by!

And then when the huge tide moves back in again, the little bay that forms on the inside of the rock ledge fills right up. Great for snorkeling (watch that current), or for light tackle spinning. 7 Kingfish in one session fell to a guest at our lodge behind the dune. All released.

The Barra bay is immense and is dotted with the most beautiful pieces of reef. The crystal water makes spearfishing a chosen occupation for many of the locals. They swim out for miles and shoot anything, anything – that moves. This has had an effect and the Barra point is devoid of the busyness of a beautiful reef. The very last piece of the ledge, before it falls away to form the ribbon of reefs leading to “Far” reef, still holds kingfish and cobia.

But further up the beach towards the mouth of the Inhambane Bay, is another story. Baitfish shoals congregate along this stretch, easily marked by the many dhows throwing nets. And it is in these nets that the secret lies. King Mackerel swim right into these shallows to hunt, and get caught right in the nets with the karapauw and halfbeak. Three or four at a time! Barely a cast from the shore?!

Barry Krause is a well respected angler from the KZN South Coast, but when he suggested chucking a line out in front of his house in Barra, he was scoffed at. Even the locals smiled and shook their heads. Until Barry came back later that evening with a huge stumpnose and tales of more that he let go! Barry and his mates have their fishing holidays in their cool little group of houses, way down towards WhiteSands. They fish Barra very successfully – at night.

Casting into the mouth at WhiteSands puts you right in the highway of fish coming in and out of the huge Inhambane Bay. Cobia, kingfish, queen and king mackerel, garfish – the whole lot, swim through here, and readily take a lure in the almost murky water.

It would be a great day for you, to start at sunrise at Tofinho, with your two favourite sticks and a well stocked bag, and slowly work your way past all these spots (and anglers as named before), finding yourself ready for a sunset pick up at Whitesands.

It’s about 10kms that you will never, ever forget.

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Astonishing surf at Tofinho today 

Surf at Tofinho today

Tofinho is known to be fickle and downright difficult at times.
But not today.
She came alive something reminiscent of the fabulous August surf we had a few years back.
Uncrowded, and very little current, the waves were perfect. So perfect there wasn’t even one camera anywhere. Everybody was surfing and mesmerised by the scene rather than capture any of the real surreal things going on.
Standouts include but not more to Mienie Ho, Chris Wood, the dude on the stinger, Gabriel Piesse and as usual Craig Harburn.
The swell has been very strong lately which made for a torrent of water and sand screaming down the point, making paddling an absolute nightmare.
The past few days have been very difficult indeed and it does not look like its gonna let up all.

The shot above is of a medium set coming in around the top of Tofinho Point today. Named Backdoor , this place was heaving waves at 10ft onto the shallow ledge.

No takers. Ever.

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