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Fishing Lake Jindabyne ... HELP!


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Hey raiders

In three weeks, me and my family are going up to thredbo for a week and are taking a trip or two to lake jindabyne and i am very intrested in fishing for trout and hopefully bagging one on fly. ill be land based but i dont know what baits, lures, flies to use and rigs, etc. Or maybe even go on a charter (PM's only) if there are any around there.

any advice appreciated

cheers thefisherman6784

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The best time of year to sight fish . Start at hatchery bay you can walk all the way to hayshed bay . You need a high pressure system for clear sky and large woolybugger

in black or brown when you sight a fish take your time the fish will come back along the same beat .I have found that if you cast next to a rock and give it a short strip when

it only just visible to the fish they will take it.Give it too much of a look they often swim away . When you are looking for fish they will mostly be 2-20 feet from shore!

Good luck

Reno

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Also don't forget to add some flashback pheasant tails bead heads, brown hairs nymphs, a generic midge pattern, royal wilds and caddis drys and parachute Adams if there's a hatch occurring also williamsons goldfish is a killer wet pattern

The trick to fly fishing is watch a fish and work out its beat mce you know where the fish wil pass place a cast there and as it gets close twitch the flu it will either take or spook! If they are rushing have a dry/ nymph dropper combo and be ready to place a cast to the immediate area a fish rises and watch for the take they make take your dry or ignore it for the nymph use the dry as an indicator of the take I recommend long leaders of 12 feet plus if you can turn them over

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I used to fish Jindabyne a lot about 15 years ago when I went skiing a few times a year.

I nearly always went for two weeks in September.

I had some young kids then so walking the shoreline and sight fishing was a little difficult.

When I got a few hours spare I used to fish two places.... one with a fly rod and one with baits.

More experienced trout fishermen may provide some up to date info on this as I am 15 years behind the times and I am out of touch with

seasons, restrictions , rules and fresh water fishing in general ( hmmm ... doesn't sound like a good recommendation does it!)

Anyway...I picked these tips up from the locals and they worked for me.

Down from the Village centre on the shoreline of the lake is as good a spot as any.

A few hours before dusk take a can of corn kernels with you and some worms. A running sinker rig will be fine but go light as possible.

Toss some of the corn kernels as far out as you can ( the local I met used a slingshot but I just threw them out)

Bait up with a few worms and a single corn kernel on the end and basically just wait.

This worked for them when I watched them one day and it worked for me the next day and pretty much every other time I went.

On the fly...

Close to the dam wall on the Jindabyne side there are a few tracks that lead down to the water. There is a pipe which often bubbles up with water from somewhere else...no idea really but I have seen it with no flow and small schools of browns swimming up the pipe. Other times the water level is much higher and there is a real eddy at the pipe which is under a fair amount of water.

We used to cast trout egg patterns which were bright orange in colour into this eddy for good catch of browns.

Like I said, I am out of touch a little after 15 years but this is what the locals showed me and it was always a winner.

Cheers

Jim

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Oh and don't be tempted to go charging into the water wading preferably stand a rods length from the water and cast also use trees and hills or rocks behind you to camouflage your silhouette on the horizon and try to avoid casting your shadow on the water all helps in not spooking fish and if fly fishing try to minimise your false casts

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My advice would be to go to Steve Williamson shop near the caravan park in Jindabyne and have a chat. He is always happy to let us know what is working at the time.

Don't forget to give plastics a go. We have caught nice trout using Squidgie Wriggles Rainbow Trout pattern.

http://www.fishraider.com.au/Invision/uploads/post-1141-1211723786.jpg

Caught trolling

This one I spotted and after a couple of cast it attacked. Great to see in the crystal clear water.

http://www.fishraider.com.au/Invision/uploads/monthly_05_2010/post-1141-127478003246.jpg

Don't forget to take the family to the trout hatchery.

This was taken in May as they were schooling ready to spawn. Hopefully there will still be some hanging around for you to see.

post-1141-0-44128900-1410393142_thumb.jpg

Good luck and enjoy your trip

Lyn

Edited by Dalucius
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  • 3 weeks later...

They should all do fine as most bream lures work a treat on trout! The other good lure is the wax wing! Using the lures on sunset into far when the fish move in to the shallows to feed is a good way also try tying a small wolly bugger off the end of a tassie devil about 15cms behind and slow retrieve it's a deadly technique we used in nz lakes

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Yep, they will be open. That looks like the Thredbo River, certainly be worth a few casts to see if any Rainbows are up there on their spawn run.

Just on the Jindabyne aspect, we fished Wollondibby Inlet (where Curiosity Rocks are) on the weekend. Dad and I got a few fish, but we assisted a young guy land a 3.2kg Brown. He had also accounted for a number of Brook Trout the previous day. Wollondibby is a good place to start spinning, it is easy access and despite the pressure it cops always produces good fish.

Cheers

Windy

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Okay Dpi regs state all trout streams open on the start of the October long weekend and close midnight the Monday of the queens birthday long weekend so that's Saturday the 4th your allowed to fish from! Go to DPI site and have a look to set your mind at ease! Matt and I know cause we will be casting the long wand first thing Saturday along with every other fly fisher hell bent on a trout fix on a stream!!!!

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Just read up on it luderick -angler and am now certain that I can cast a line anything after 12am Saturday till the season closes

Apparently people camp out on the river in under -5 sometimes just to get a line in strait away

Where will you be fishing luderick -angler and matt

Maybe we could meat up sometime for a fish

Can't wait to go to the tackle shop and get some flies

Hope I get one

Once again, thanks everyone for your help

It is much appreciated

Cheers thefisherman6784

Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

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Hey buddy I will be I the swampy plain at khancoban as for flies don't buy too many I'll tie you up a few when I get back!!! For the thredbo get some tungsten bead hare and coppers and brown tungsten bead nymphs in varying weights you need to getvtocthe bottom also get some small size 16 orange glo bugs and unweighted hate and coppers the rig is to tie the bead head on then a trailing nymph off the bend attach an indicator at the tip of the fly line! I recommend hitting google and researching indicator nymph fishing as for tackle stores there's a few at Cooma on the way out of town to jindabyne and there a good one in jindabyne it self I will pm you

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