Hi peeps...this was sent to me Trekkers hauled in

Blaasop

Sealiner
Dorado 75, I thought so too, but why then the minimum size difference between cob caught either side of Augulhas?
 

Marthin

Sealiner
Blaasop... they had to choose a cutoff point.

The kob we get around cape town and up to Henties, is the silver kob. Same as in the pictures. These are sexually mature at 31cm or something. East of augulhas they are offshore and they come into the surf zone west of augulhas and up north. This is also why East of Augulhas you are allowed 5 from the boat if not mistaken, and it's also 50cm in stead of the usual 60 from shore, same as our usual shore based fishing west of augulhas but just one over 110. This is because the fish over 110cm is likely to be a dusky kob.

The dusky kob is usually the one caught from shore east of augulhas. They only mature at 95-110cm. Because every angler east of augulhas would start a small riot if they were only allowed to keep kob if it's over 110cm and the guys in the western cape could keep fish of 50cm, it seems the authorities made it 60cm, and you only allowed 1, in an effort to minimize the damage.

Hope that makes sense.

Silver west of augulhas, mature at 31cm = breeds quicker vs Dusky/daga kob east of augulhas mature at 95-110cm = breeds slower = can take less = taking big fish out the estuaries like the breede & Gouritz = serious damage
 

Blaasop

Sealiner
Marthin, thank you very much for that useful information. Yes, pity one still see pictures of those monster Breede fish being killed after capture. I'm no tree hugger myself, but fail to see the purpose in that. 
 
Walt wrote:
lada wrote:
2 weke terug het ek 2 bootjies in die Strand by die jetty sien uit kom.Die 2 bootjies was op Toyota Tazz se dak gelaai.In die bootjies was 20 + ondermaat kobies.Sulke gebeure is alledaags.Dit is hartseer.
lada,Welcome to Sealine.Sorry,but has this anything to do with treknetting?
YEP IT DOES, shows you the impact of recreationals. Let me give an exsample: white steenbras on the coastline of Namibia where no trekking is active? who is to blame now? even with hundreds of km's coastline protected and two confirmed breeding areas, sandwich harbour and conception bay closed to all.
 
classifieds wrote:
strandwolf: so many years of experience but you dont know that white steenbras and west coast steenbras are different species with different sexual maturities. apples with apples pal.
Inever said this was or is the same specie, the fact is that the recreational targets both.
 

Breads

Senior Member
strandwolf wrote:
Walt wrote:
lada wrote:
2 weke terug het ek 2 bootjies in die Strand by die jetty sien uit kom.Die 2 bootjies was op Toyota Tazz se dak gelaai.In die bootjies was 20 + ondermaat kobies.Sulke gebeure is alledaags.Dit is hartseer.
lada,Welcome to Sealine.Sorry,but has this anything to do with treknetting?
YEP IT DOES, shows you the impact of recreationals. Let me give an exsample: white steenbras on the coastline of Namibia where no trekking is active? who is to blame now? even with hundreds of km's coastline protected and two confirmed breeding areas, sandwich harbour and conception bay closed to all.
 

No trekking, but when I was at Terrace Bay last, the trawlers were on the horizon during the day, at night their lights just beyond the shore break. Asked the officials at the camp about it, just shrugged their shoulders.


 
 
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