South Island Autumn Bite: Kahawai Schools and Deep Trumpeter Action
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概要
Tides are lookin' prime: high tide hit Kaikoura at 8:17 AM, next one's 8:45 PM—fish love that incoming flow, stirrin' up the feed. Fish activity's heatin' up post-winter; reports from NIWA and local charter logs show kahawai smashin' pilchards in schools off the coast, blue cod stackin' up on reefs, and trumpeter makin' a comeback in 20-40m depths. Recent catches? Blokes at Akaroa pulled 15kg hauls of blue cod and terakihi last week on berley trails, while Oban anglers on Stewart Island boated 20+ kahawai per session, plus a few hefty bluenose. Tarakihi numbers are solid too, with limits hit daily around Banks Peninsula.
Best lures right now? My go-to's the 40g chromed kahawai slug for speed trolling—rips through the schools like a wounded baitfish. For bottom bouncin', a glow-in-the-dark paternoster rig with pink worms or fresh paua guts. Live bait? Skipjack or jack mackerel chunks on a single hook—irresistible. If you're jiggin', try a 100g knife jig in silver UV for those deep trumpeter.
Hot spots to hit: Peel Forest River mouth for drifting kahawai at first light—easy access, big bags. And don't sleep on the Ninety Mile Beach reefs near Dunedin; cod are thick there on the high tide slack.
Tight lines, stay safe out there, and respect the limits. Thanks for tunin' in—subscribe for more South Island secrets! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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