Come to the South Coast of KZN South Africa and enjoy the fishing. Go deep sea fishing when the weather is good, do some rock and surf fishing when you can not go to sea, or fish in one of the estuaries when the weather is bad.
Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Yellow fin Tunny caught off Shelly Beach
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Shelly Beach, Margate, South Africa
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
I am going fiahing at Shelly Beach, KZN South Africa


We are hoping to avoid the tax collectors out there, as the sharks have been busy these last few weeks taking a rather larger than usual share of fish before they can be landed onto the boats
This blog, is in place to promote fishing, and tourism associated with the use of our beaches, along the South Coast (Hibiscus Coast) of KZN South Africa, and we have opted to use the hashtag #4u2gofishing to promote cross platform conversations in platforms such as twitter, facebook, Google plus and Pinterest and others. So I will be posting my own personal fishing stories here, and if you want your stories here send me an email to 4u2gofishing@info4u.co.za
We have a Google Plus community at
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Shelly Beach, Margate, South Africa
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Colourful wrasse caught at 10 Downing street, Uvongo, South Coast KZN

used a no 10 hook and prawn bait. Trace was a standard christmas tree trace with two hooks and a 2 ounce sinker.. caught this fella on the top hook, and he had me tangled in the rocks for a while, but I just held on and he pulled the sinker loose himself.
Surf was small, and there was no side wash at all. I had a few other bites, but this was the only one that took the bait nicely.

Now on a more serious note, the issue of the proposed marine protected area (MPA) for the south coast is still happening, but it has moved further north to the area around the Aliwal shoal, apparently some where between Umkomaas and Scotsborugh, but I will need to confirm this.
The guys from the Department of environmental affairs seem a bit too quite for my liking, and nobody is being helpful, which makes me a bit nervous, as the original issue apparently came about because an Environmentalist group in the Scotsborugh area requested this. Once again things are not clear, and nobody is talking openly so I will need to do a bit of old fashioned investigation...
When I know more I will let you all know whats going down with the MPA for the KZN South Coast.
In the mean time you can check out other fishing stories using the #4u2gofishing hashtag in your favourite search engine, or take a peep see at our Google Plus page +4u2gofishing or the 4u2gofishing G+ community You can also follow me on my personal Google Plus profile at +Frank Gainsford
or check out some fishing pics that others have shared with us on our pinterest board
If you want to add a story here, or have your pics added to our pinterest board, give me a shout, as I am looking for some help with the 4u2gofishing project.
send any info request to 4u2gofishing@info4u.co.za
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Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Bronze bream set free on freedom day
I have been neglecting this space since the guys who asked me to set up a marketing platform for fishing on the South Coast of KZN changed their minds when they heard that the government was wanting to introduce an MPA (Marine Protected Area) along the lower South Coast, and that all fishing may be banned.
It turned out that the MPA was put on hold, while the issues were being investigated. this came about due to the immense pressure that some local groups put on the department of Environmental Affairs, who wanted to put this MPA in place. Finding the latest developments on this MPA is a bit difficult, as all concerned seem to be very tight lipped at this stage, so I will be asking around over the next few days then make a new post and tell all you guys who read this blog what the latest development is.
In the mean time I went fishing on April 27, (Freeddom Day) on the rocks just North of Uvongo, but South of Orange rocks, where I was lucky enough to catch this bronze bream. I used a combo of crayfish tail and mud prawns, or as some call them cracker shrimps, as bait, and used a running trace with both sinker and hook lines at 400 mm (40 Cm or about 14 inches) hook size was a No. 4 old style mustard hook.
This Bronze bream was 310 mm big, but I tossed him back into the water live and healthy after dislodging the hook from the side of his mouth, much to the displeasure of some onlookers who wanted this poor fish for the pot.
Back to the issue of the MPA Proposed for the lower South Coast... After the meeting held in early January there has been no feed back, besides the minutes of the meeting, from the conveners of the meeting or the committee elected to deal with the issue, from a tourism and business perspective. I will be asking around during the next few days, and hope to let you know more about the issues associated with this Proposed MPA in the near future.
I will also be doing a bit of marketing and post a few pics of the fish caught and the boating that takes place at the SONNY EVENS SMALL CRAFT HARBOR at shell beach. After all this blog was put in place to market the fishing activities along the KZN South Coast, so I might as well get on and do some tourism marketing here.
If you have a story about any issue along the South Coast of KZN that you would like to read about here send me an email at 4u2gofishing@info4u.co.za and I will make it happen. you may also phone me directly on my cell 0725955111. Remember this blog is all about getting fishermen to come and spend their fishing time along the KZN South Coast, so tell me what you want to read here and I will make it happen.
hashtags for this post = #4u2gofishing #marineprotectedarea
It turned out that the MPA was put on hold, while the issues were being investigated. this came about due to the immense pressure that some local groups put on the department of Environmental Affairs, who wanted to put this MPA in place. Finding the latest developments on this MPA is a bit difficult, as all concerned seem to be very tight lipped at this stage, so I will be asking around over the next few days then make a new post and tell all you guys who read this blog what the latest development is.
In the mean time I went fishing on April 27, (Freeddom Day) on the rocks just North of Uvongo, but South of Orange rocks, where I was lucky enough to catch this bronze bream. I used a combo of crayfish tail and mud prawns, or as some call them cracker shrimps, as bait, and used a running trace with both sinker and hook lines at 400 mm (40 Cm or about 14 inches) hook size was a No. 4 old style mustard hook.
This Bronze bream was 310 mm big, but I tossed him back into the water live and healthy after dislodging the hook from the side of his mouth, much to the displeasure of some onlookers who wanted this poor fish for the pot.
Back to the issue of the MPA Proposed for the lower South Coast... After the meeting held in early January there has been no feed back, besides the minutes of the meeting, from the conveners of the meeting or the committee elected to deal with the issue, from a tourism and business perspective. I will be asking around during the next few days, and hope to let you know more about the issues associated with this Proposed MPA in the near future.
I will also be doing a bit of marketing and post a few pics of the fish caught and the boating that takes place at the SONNY EVENS SMALL CRAFT HARBOR at shell beach. After all this blog was put in place to market the fishing activities along the KZN South Coast, so I might as well get on and do some tourism marketing here.
If you have a story about any issue along the South Coast of KZN that you would like to read about here send me an email at 4u2gofishing@info4u.co.za and I will make it happen. you may also phone me directly on my cell 0725955111. Remember this blog is all about getting fishermen to come and spend their fishing time along the KZN South Coast, so tell me what you want to read here and I will make it happen.
hashtags for this post = #4u2gofishing #marineprotectedarea
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Sunday, November 30, 2014
Fishing Orange Rocks Uvongo KZN South Africa
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Garic by Algy Dooling |
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Ernest throws back Hammer head |
Fishing Orange Rocks in Uvongo along the South Coast of KZN South Africa is always a great experience
I have not blogged here a while, as I have been busy writing my book on #FUFISM or Functional User Freindly Integrated Social Media, and took a break to clear my mind, as I was getting stuck and thinking in SQUIRCLES.
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Pieter Herbst with his Yellow tail. |
Yesterday Pieter Herbst caught this 4 Kg Yellow tail on live shad
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Ernest Botha with Hammer Head Shark |
The Shad Season opens again tomorrow, (one December 2014, and I am looking forward to eating a few smoked shad before they disappear until June / July next year.
Sunrise at orange rocks this morning.
Read more about fishing on the South Coast of KZN South Africa by searching the hash tag #4u2gofishing or visit our fishing community on Google plus at https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/113105142481933358360/+4u2gofishingBlogspotteam/posts
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Saturday, October 18, 2014
MPA proposed for KZN South Coast
Issues with the propsed MPA (Marine Protected Area) along the hibiscus Coast of KZN South Africa

We will be using the hashtag #4u2gofishing for marketing the fishing opportunities within the area as well as the issues around this new MPA ( #MPA ) (Marine Protected area) that has been proposed, which some are already working on. the hashtag #marineprotectedarea will also be used in our efforts to get the public aware of all the issues at stake here
MORE COMING AFTER SOME RESEARCH
Just as many of the issues were side stepped during the implementation of the 4x4 ban, so many issues are currently being side stepped here, and this blog will be our preferred platform to address these issues and get the necessary public support to take up the issue at the highest level, as this is bad news for business along the Hibiscus Coast . Most people do not realize the amount of tourism that is connected both directly and indirectly to the fishing industry, and closing the entire Hibicus Coast to fishing will result in many thousands of job losses.


MORE COMING AFTER SOME RESEARCH
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Tuesday, September 30, 2014
During last week I went on a road trip to St. Lucia along the Elephant Coast of KZN South Africa to put my eyes on the St. Lucia Estuary and the water levels in Lake St. Lucia, as I have been hearing very conflicting stories about these issues from people in St. Lucia.
We traveled up to St. Lucia on Wednesday 24 September and came back home on Saturday 27 September. We stayed over at BUDGET BACKPACKERS in Mckenzie street (the main road) and were confronted with a town that had no municipal water supply. Fortunately the management at BUDGET BACK PACKERS has installed a 5 000 liter JOJO water tank, and they had water, but it was only on for an hour in the morning and an hour in the evening, so we had to plan our days around the times that we could shower.
Lake St. Lucia has plenty of water, but the mouth is still closed to the Indian Ocean. The Umfolozi River mouth was open, but it was busy closing fast due to the very low river levels. The back channels that are supposed to be in place to connect the St. Lucia lake system to the Umfolozi river system is apparently open, but the water flow during tide changes is very minimal and hardly noticeable in the lake levels.
The channel that the IWPA (iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority) dug open to connect the Umfolozi river system to the lake system a few months back has sanded up and wind erosion of the beaches has contributed to this in a big way. There has been massive sanding up of the region and this is very evident when we visited Cape Vidal, where the beaches have grown considerably and now stretch a good 100 meters plus from the Vidal on-ramp, and even cover the small reef that usually protected the launch site from the south east point of Vidal bay. Many areas of mission rocks were also sanded up but not as seriously as either Cape Vidal or St. Lucia.
During our short stay in St. Lucia many asked why I had stopped fighting the 4x4 ban issue, and asked me to take up the fight again. some also pointed out that the IWPA was doing many strange things, and that they are due to start mining the mouth of the St. Lucia Estuary system in the near future. This still needs to be confirmed, but I have not heard about any PPP (Public Participation Process) for this activity, and have not seen anything about an EIA (Environmental Impact Assessment) for this in terms of the ICMA (Integrated Coastal Management Act) and the NEMA (National Environmental Management Act)
The fishing was actually quite terrible during our short stay in St. Lucia and the wind was blowing North East for most of the time. When the wind did die down, it was only for very short spells, and a BIG SOUTH WEST BUSTER was predicted for Saturday Night and Sunday, so we packed up and left early.
By that time I had spoken to a few of the locals and had gathered all the info that I was going to get from people on the ground who were not active in politics or town management issues. The IWPA (iSimanagliso Wetland Park Authority) has not changed their attitude, and is still making things uncomfortable for ther domestic tourism market. They still support the 4x4 ban and still call domestic tourists visitors, so that they can confuse all official reporting issues around tourism numbers.
The IWPA is still not playing the game, and they have not held very many PPPM (Public Participation Process Meetings) where the water levels, and a solution to the non tidal motions in lake st. Lucia are discussed.
I will need to do some extra research around these issues and write a new post about those during the next few weeks. In the mean time go over to our Google Plus page (4u2gofishing) or search on Google using the hashtag #4u2gofishing
We traveled up to St. Lucia on Wednesday 24 September and came back home on Saturday 27 September. We stayed over at BUDGET BACKPACKERS in Mckenzie street (the main road) and were confronted with a town that had no municipal water supply. Fortunately the management at BUDGET BACK PACKERS has installed a 5 000 liter JOJO water tank, and they had water, but it was only on for an hour in the morning and an hour in the evening, so we had to plan our days around the times that we could shower.
Lake St. Lucia has plenty of water, but the mouth is still closed to the Indian Ocean. The Umfolozi River mouth was open, but it was busy closing fast due to the very low river levels. The back channels that are supposed to be in place to connect the St. Lucia lake system to the Umfolozi river system is apparently open, but the water flow during tide changes is very minimal and hardly noticeable in the lake levels.
The channel that the IWPA (iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority) dug open to connect the Umfolozi river system to the lake system a few months back has sanded up and wind erosion of the beaches has contributed to this in a big way. There has been massive sanding up of the region and this is very evident when we visited Cape Vidal, where the beaches have grown considerably and now stretch a good 100 meters plus from the Vidal on-ramp, and even cover the small reef that usually protected the launch site from the south east point of Vidal bay. Many areas of mission rocks were also sanded up but not as seriously as either Cape Vidal or St. Lucia.
During our short stay in St. Lucia many asked why I had stopped fighting the 4x4 ban issue, and asked me to take up the fight again. some also pointed out that the IWPA was doing many strange things, and that they are due to start mining the mouth of the St. Lucia Estuary system in the near future. This still needs to be confirmed, but I have not heard about any PPP (Public Participation Process) for this activity, and have not seen anything about an EIA (Environmental Impact Assessment) for this in terms of the ICMA (Integrated Coastal Management Act) and the NEMA (National Environmental Management Act)
The fishing was actually quite terrible during our short stay in St. Lucia and the wind was blowing North East for most of the time. When the wind did die down, it was only for very short spells, and a BIG SOUTH WEST BUSTER was predicted for Saturday Night and Sunday, so we packed up and left early.
By that time I had spoken to a few of the locals and had gathered all the info that I was going to get from people on the ground who were not active in politics or town management issues. The IWPA (iSimanagliso Wetland Park Authority) has not changed their attitude, and is still making things uncomfortable for ther domestic tourism market. They still support the 4x4 ban and still call domestic tourists visitors, so that they can confuse all official reporting issues around tourism numbers.
The IWPA is still not playing the game, and they have not held very many PPPM (Public Participation Process Meetings) where the water levels, and a solution to the non tidal motions in lake st. Lucia are discussed.
I will need to do some extra research around these issues and write a new post about those during the next few weeks. In the mean time go over to our Google Plus page (4u2gofishing) or search on Google using the hashtag #4u2gofishing
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Saturday, June 28, 2014
Man OVER BOARD at SBSBC during launch Sat 28 July 2014
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surf launch at shell beach |
The fishing was not that good, and only peckers were nibbling on our bait so I threw a spoon for a while and watched some skiboats launching. at about one chime after seven (quarter after seven) we decided to call it a day and go home to some mielie pap.
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Shell beach launch site |
None of us had a camera, or a mobile phone, as we had come fishing, and were prepared to get a bit wet if need be. What a pity as this was quite a thing to watch. These guys with the tiny boat were definitely not experienced fishermen, and we could see from that way that they pushed their boat into the water that there would be an incident at launch. We stood around discussing past deep see fishing incidents and cackled about all the mistakes that we our selves had made collectively over the years, especially the ones where copious amounts of liquid beverages (Alcohol) were involved during our younger days.
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NSRI base at Sonny Evans Small Craft Harbour |
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launching a boat at SBSBC |
The passenger realised that the smelly stuff had collided with the wind making machine and took it upon himself to ensure that he would be clear of the boat should it decide to fall on his head by diving over board. Some how the skipper managed to keep things under some form of control, and the boat swerved this way and that but he was out in the open ocean and did not even realise that his passenger was missing for a good few seconds.
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Sunrise at Shelly Beach Skiboat Club |
WE watched idly as we were in no position to do any thing, the guys in the tower at the Sonny Evans Small Craft harbor had obviously also witnessed the incident and the NSRI (National Sea Rescue Institution) has a base right there, with some body already driving down the beach with a safety crew to help the swimmer if need be.
We had a good cackle about this, as most of us had at some point in our lives experienced something similar ourselves, all 5 of us being well into our fifties and remembering the old days back in the 1970's and 1980's when these types of incidents were common place all along the South African coastline and there were no safety nets like the NSRI to help-out when things went wrong.
Thanx for reading this post, and if you are interested the #4u2gofishing project has a Google plus page at +4u2gofishing which is in place to support this blog and help us have better fishing experiences all along the KZN South Coast.
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Friday, June 27, 2014
Fishing at Orange rocks - 27 June 2014
Went down to Orange rocks, at Uvongo along the KZN south Coast this morning and was rather disappointed. The wind was up just a little, and it was rather over cast so I was thinking that there should be a shad or two in the district, but there were not even peckers. Some other guys were using bait and they were bringing back their bait just as they had thrown it out.
Threw a spoon for about ten minutes then decided that I was wasting my time and came home.
The water looked so nice at orange rocks, but there were definitely no fish looking for something to eat, so we took a drive to St. Mikes at the swimming pool. We sat in the car and checked the water out. There was quite a bit of sand churning up in the waves, and that is usually a bad sign for the fishing, so we watched the guys surfing for a while, then came home. The waves were not big at all, but they were surfable and there were about 8 or 10 guys surfing.
Maybe later this afternoon....things may be a bit better.
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