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Silver Trevally are a handsome fish, good to eat, and a strong fighter. |
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For
pier fishing, or when fishing from a boat, anglers may fish on the
bottom with a paternoster rig (as shown on the right), with the a
bomb style sinker tied to the end of the line with one or more
snoods or hook droppers coming off above the sinker.
An alternative rig for pier fishing, where the bait is suspended
mid-water or deeper, consists of a hook tied to the end of the line.
The only additional weight requirement for this rig is a small ball
sinker, or large split shot, clamped onto the line a short distance
above the hook.
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The
fillets taken from baitfish like pilchards are excellent bait for
silver trevally (as shown on the left). They may be pinned at one
end when fished unweighted in a berley trail of similar pieces, or
they may be stitched onto the hook when fishing on the bottom. The
bait is more difficult for small, nuisance fish to remove when
baited like this.
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Whole
baitfish like anchovy (whitebait) and sprat (as shown on the right)
are good baits for silver trevally provided they are baited
correctly. This one features hook placement behind the head and a
half-hitch on the tail.
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Strips
of squid, cuttlefish, or pieces of tentacles, particularly the
extensor tentacles, (as shown on the left). make good baits for
silver trevally provided they are baited with the point of the hook
well exposed. Note that the hook in this bait is first threaded
through the top of the strip, then in, and out from the same side of
the bait.
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Soft
baits like marine worms are great bait for silver trevally should
you be able to get them (as shown on the right).
Other baits taken by silver trevally include the flesh of mussels,
and other bivalve molluscs, crustaceans like shrimp and peeled
prawn, and – probably best of all – crayfish tail.
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