Hobie / ABT Kayak Tournament – Mooloolabah Report
Report from Derek Steele – ACT Hobie Team

Introduction:
The second round of the Hobie / ABT Kayak Tournament series was recently
held under a blanket of tumultuous weather and resounding endorsement. The
Sunshine Coast of Mooloolabah tempted many entrants to continue their
efforts from round one and also brought a new flock of participants far and
wide into the Tournament fold.
Checking in at my hotel on Saturday afternoon I sat on the balcony and
scoped the area from a higher vantage point, I was pleasantly surprised to
see over 12 kayak angler’s fishing the tournament vicinity. The success of
the previous Sydney round made the path so much easier for many, given that
this time the event was being held on a Sunday also allowed many to travel
and pre fish the area, passing on juicy titbits of information to others.
The ABT ‘Who shares wins’ policy was broadcast in full effect with
techniques, tackle and sweet spots disclosed openly.
From all reports the fishing was hard going and the torrential rain of weeks
gone by had taken its toll, many if not all the surrounding rivers in the
area were turned to a coffee cup brown. Still the bream were there and
responding well to various presentations, the tournament day would be
competitive to say the least. An evening gathering heralded the dawning of
the first Queensland event at the local Hogs Breath Café. Steve from Hobie
was more than generous (True to form), picking up the tab for all and
helping sign off an early night for some well deserved shuteye.

Early Sunday morning saw light rain and variant fouling wind easing off
perfectly before our shotgun start, 39 entrants lined the start with
ammunition and information at hand. The field split amicably almost
immediately (A sight worth noting) with two plain courses obviously decided
beforehand. Thoughtful game plans became evident with marinas, boats and
moored boats harbouring (Pun intended) just over half the field while sand
flats, rising tide and mangroves beckoned the remains.
My game plan was to head straight for the tidal flats just under two
kilometres away, under and beyond the path of the Sunshine Motorway Bridge.
It was a bold move that I hoped would pay off early, passing positive
pontoon structure to fish surface lures amongst the edges of the mangrove
lined banks. To help calm the nerves I prefer to fish the early hours of
these tournaments with confidence gained from my local surrounds, overcast
conditions indicated the top water was right but with so many foreign
species available could I manage to entice the Bream to come out and play?
Watching Prawns scatter for their life the confidence mentioned above was
tied and tried on early, a Storm Hopper Popper has proven deadly on large
Bream down south and immediately brought some sort of result. I provoked a
few boils and some short striking, it was a frustrating affair with my
chosen location erupting like wildfire for a minute and then switching off
for ten or so. Glancing around to share the news I realised I was mostly
alone with others being distracted early by the bridges many pylons and back
eddies.
Spending the next hour or so switching between the Hopper Popper and the
popular Ecogear PX45 (Hops vs. walk the dog retrieves) brought little
result, as did the application of any waxy scenting to the buoyancy of the
top water tackle. By creating a slightly subsurface presentation with the
PX45 I finally perplexed my first fish for the tournament, unfortunately
netting a new species / personal best that failed to gain any positive
acknowledgement from my camera (32cm Spotted Grunter Bream).

My structured venture was falling apart at the seems, spying a small band of
competitors approaching I ventured back to try the bridge precent, leaving
an equally frustrated Ken Raley and Josh Holmes to take my previous drift
over the flats. Something rather large was terrifying schools of baitfish
under the bridges girth, as I highly doubted any schools or lonely Bream
would remain around such danger I unravelled the plan some more.
A few small lanes of avenue existed back in mangrove country, one in
particular forming a cul-de-sac teaming with fish. In an enclosed arena such
as this I had to choose wisely, not wanting to suspend presentation a few
natural coloured Ecogear SX40’s were cranked slowly over obstacles. It was
at this stage I met (Apart from swarms of Mosquito midge) what I can only
assume was another new species, the mighty Mangrove Jack. A mistaken tell
tale Bream bump goaded striking early, hooking what I can only describe as
one hell of an unstoppable fish.
The bruising happened in sequential casts, both which resulted in lost lures
and some puzzling yet joyous head scratching. I had been reliably informed
the chances of tangling with both Jack’s and Golden Trevally were quite
high, whilst not the target species my expensive lost offerings and still
born education brought a wry smile to my weather worn lips… My mind wandered
off for a few moments but returned eventually, who would have thought
getting bricked would be so much fun!
The novelty quickly wore off when I finally realised the lure cost and
tournament time remaining, the tide along with the ever increasing wind
began to reverse any slack line which made surface presentations difficult.
With nill result fishing my favourable technique I made the decision to
regroup with the moorings and fish various plastics under the bearded drums
and vertical shaping’s. The balance of the perfect jig head weight was
refined down to 1/32oz, variously rigged on 3″ Gulp Shrimp and 4″ Gulp
Turtleback Worm (.Banana and Pumpkinseed respectively).

Using an Outback enabled me to control my drift a little better and get
right in close; however pitching offerings amongst this structure became a
hazardous affair. After many leader changes and lost jigs I finally hooked
up solid, unfortunately to another Grunter Bream. Whilst floating my way
down towards the ABT arena I bumped into Wayne Robinson who had still not
secured a legal fish. This lead me to believe the tournaments fish count
would be low enough to still be in with a good chance.
The viewing locals joined us on their jetties, pointing out pipes and holes
they knew held bream. For deeper activities I switched to blades, hopping
them around closer to the bottom and up and through the water column. At one
stage I was connected to an unknown fish that took the lure on the drop, not
sure what species it was (I was hoping Bream). Dropping fish was really
starting to hurt but unlike the first half of the morning I found the action
started to pick up a couple of hours after the high tide mark.
With 15 minutes to go I found myself dead in the water, held together only
by the enjoyment of the tournament, the social aspects and the end of a
tough days fishing. Beaching the Outback I emptied the live well of its
invisible holdings and placed my key tag on the board. The vast majority
struggled in the conditions; a few Bream were caught here or there with some
entrants even managing their two fish limit. The weigh in was still as
lively as ever and considering the weather gods were against us the first of
the Queensland ABT / Hobie Tournaments was a resounding success.

Conclusion:
Tournament results were weighed down to only seventh place out of a possible
39, with 32 anglers failing to weigh in fish (Some even incurring dreaded
late penalty points). Richard Creighton’s 0.26kg weight rounded out the
points with a hard earned seventh place. Wayne Robinson scored a single
Bream weight of 0.42kg, taking out sixth and keeping him in the hunt for the
AOY title. Kevin Crawford’s fifth place secured the first of the cash pool
payouts, $90 and a Berkley Diablo rod.
The last of the singular submissions was also the biggest for the
tournament; Chris Martin’s 0.61kg fourth place earned him not only a $100
Big Bream bonus but also $90 and a Berkley Diablo rod. Greg Lewis had
travelled a long way to fish this competition; his 0.655kg two fish third
place sent him directly into the Forster grand final, $130 and a Berkley
Diablo Rod richer plus a little closer to his home on the NSW South Coast.
I was excited to see Steve Fields from Hobiecat fishing the event, showing
that with true determination the ‘Who shares wins’ policy of the ABT can
shine through, even on the bleakest of days. Steve’s tournament tackle
involved the use of 4lb Nitlon fluorocarbon fished straight through on a
Daiwa Advantage 3 rod and reel combo. A combined two fish weight of 0.78kg
was easily enough for second place; Steve pocketed $220 for his troubles and
a fair slice of the ‘Bragging rights’ pie.
First place went to Josh Carpenter, no stranger to ABT events and an
obviously gifted angler. Josh joked about borrowing his mothers Hobie for
the event, putting it to good use in the marina surrounding the Tuna Boats
and the cleaner canals. The stealthy approach of a kayak and the audible
Bream feeding frenzy helped him secure a two fish 0.98kg limit early,
building enough confidence to head to the weigh in early and wait for the
$350 to be paid out… A smart move that ultimately won him the event!
It was a long journey back to Canberra via Brisbane but one made a little
easier courtesy of the Sunstate Hobie BBQ and drinks (Free for all entrants,
thanks Mal). The next instalment of the hugely successful Hobie / ABT series
travels to the Nerang River at Buds Beach, Queensland’s Gold Coast on March
15th. For more details on remaining Hobie Kayak Tournaments for 2009 or any
future and past ABT events please visit the following links:
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Winners were:
7th Place – Richard Creighton 0.26kg – One Bream

6th Place Wayne Robinson 0.42kg – One Bream

5th Place – Kevin Crawford 0.555kg – One Bream
4th Place – Chris Martin 0.61kg – One Bream

3rd Place – Greg Lewis 0.655kg – Two Bream

2nd Place – Steve Fields 0.78kg – Two Bream

1st Place – Josh Carpenter 0.98kg – Two Bream

Bring on Round 3…….