4WD Touring Australia – June 2018

(Ben Green) #1

066 | 4WDTouringAustralia


TOURING FISHO


MAINTENANCE, TACKLE,
TECHNIQUES,SPECIES
AND MORE FISHY GOODNESS.

RIGHT: Make no mistake, a decent sized kingie will get the biceps burning.

KING


SI ZE


The yellowtail kingsh, seriola lalandi, reigns supreme in the south.
They’re a top order predator throughout much of their range, and a
primary target for southern sportshermen.
They grow big, pull harder than they’ve any right to and are pretty
good on the plate, fullling the triplet criteria for a peoples’ favourite.
What puts the mighty kingsh in a class of its own is its propensity to
mix it up in shallow inshore waters.
Most heavy-duty pelagic gamesh of this calibre haunt the shadowy
offshore depths and it about with the currents. While kings are
certainly encountered in deep offshore waters, they’re more than
happy to follow the schools of baitsh into the shallows each summer,
nding themselves square in the sights of landbased anglers and the
tinnie brigade.
While kings range up the east coast sporadically as far north as the
Queensland border, they’re caught most prolically on the New South
Wales central and south coasts.
They’re snaveled in decent numbers by Victorian and Tassie-based
anglers these days too, while record-sized specimen roam South
Australian waters and are occasionally caught by west coast shos
between Albany and Perth.

PAT WILLIAMS


Battling yellowtail kingsh from the shore is the
ultimate challenge.
Free download pdf