Wednesday, June 25, 2008

GT Pond at 113 Neo Tiew Crest

We had such an enjoyable day fishing the GTs at a private pond at 113 Neo Tiew Crest. The four of us, Lawrence Goh, Andrew Oh, Jo Leng & I went there for the first time to catch the thrill of landing these prize fighters, without having to travel all the way to Phuket or the Maldives. The ones we caught, were about 5-6kgs in size; the largest at the pond being about 15kg. We were restricted to using soft lures whilst the owner, Edward chumed the fish to keep them in a tight group just past the little jetty on the far right of the pond. The idea was to cast into the GT group during the feeding frenzy and strike them before they spit out the lure. It took some practising before we started getting the hang of it and soon we were rewarded by multiple strikes till we each landed between 4-5 GTs each.



Monday, May 19, 2008

Endau Fishing Trip 5-8 May 2008

We went fishing off Endau 5-8 May. To keep everyone on their toes, we collected RM20 each, and had a bet, winner with the heaviest fish takes all. As luck would have it, the only lady who went for this Endau trip, Ms Agnas Liu, landed the winner. She put on a pretty impressive fight. At first I though her drag on the Abu multiplyier was too light untill we all caught a glimpse of this heavy-weight. Well done Agnas.

Friday, February 29, 2008

A Hefty Queenie off Pulau Hantu

( A 5kg Queenfish caught off Pulau Hantu)
As luck would have it, I landed a 5 kg queenie with the help of an old friend of mine, Stephen Lau onboard his Albacore 310HT. We had earlier fished about 100 pcs of selar & tamban off the Yellow buoys south of Jurong Island. They were the largest I had seen in Singapore. Some as big as the ones you would catch off the Unjungs at Tg Pinang. I was glad Queenie took the live tamban offering and gave such a spectacular aerial display, you would think, she was the blood cousin of the sailfish. As usual we divided the fish in half. For those who do not already know, the queenfish makes the most delicious fish & chips. There is none better, I assure you. The taboo about Queenie as a good eating fish is unfounded. The supposed finger markings on its body, are hardly the prints any human can make and it usually numbers more than the 4 fingers and a thimb. The Aussies have been savouring its succelent meat for decades. So next time you land a Queenie, head for the supermarket & compliment the catch with a large bag of frozen fries.

John Lee, a special breed of Angler


(Picture of John with a 3kg local grouper)
I recently had the pleasure to go fishing with John Lee, whom I met at the RSYC. John is happily "retired" and is a superb angler. He owns an Albacore 28' and charters it out for fun. What impressed me most about John is his knowledge of the peculiar eating habits of our local fish. He knows when they feed and is very skilled at anchoring the boat so precisely, he sends the bait right into their homes. It's no small wonder, John always catches the fish. Another remarkable feat is, he hardly travels far to the happy hunting grounds. Many are within visual distance of his base camp. Whatever will John catch next, when the season opens in mid March.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Dogfish at HW

Cyrus with a juvenile Dogfish caught off Sudong at 2100 (HW) last night, 23 Oct 2007. It was released unharmed back into the water. We were looking forward to landing some squid, unfortunately the windy conditions & bright moonlight did little to help. I'm looking forward to the NE monsoon this year, as I intend to search for new & productive spots in our local waters. Many experineced fisherman tell me, the rougher the seas out there, the more motivated the fish will come into our waters to seek shelter & find food. Well lets see what the monsoon brings this year.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Golden Snappers off Sudong

My 12 year old son Cyrus with a 4kg golden snapper

I brought my 2 boys to Sudong last night & came home with 2 lovely Golden Snappers, about 2 & 4kg each. We caught them on fresh dead squid and live prawns, about 3 hours after the lowest tide. These two came in fast & furious and were caught about 5 miins apart. We also caught lots of small squid for bait.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

I finally got back from a long work trip in the US.
Time to fish, I told myself when I got back. We took the Grady TigerCat to the inlet at Sultan Shoal Lighthouse and spent the whole afternoon at a popular spot. Score: 2 juvenile snappers & 1 Queenie. Not a thrilling result. But then a though struck me. I should be catching fish that are there and not hoping for the ones that are long gone. Let me explain. There are plently of small selars at buoys moored at the 10-20 meter sounding line and at the Rigs off Tuas. I have no problem catching those. Its fun too. There are also pleantly of small reef fish off the Southern Islands, I should also start specializing in that field. Too often I wait for that big one to be hooked only to be disapointed. So on the next trip in S'pore, I'll check out who's eating the bait fish and look for new reef spots off the beaten track. As for the big ones, I'll leave that till the Tioman trip. Till then....

The turning point 25yrs ago - Time heals

It all began when I received a single page letter from the MPA in June 1998.The Port Master, then Capt M.H. decided that third party contrac...