check out the new remote control Jockey Wheel SmartBar Canegrowers rearview170 Cobb Grill Skid Row Recovery Gear Caravan Industry Association of Australia
Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Barra Bashing


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1880
Date:
Barra Bashing


To all those into Barra fishing as I am  this will make you cry .  These fish are reported to have been washed over the slip way at Moondarra Dam at the Isa .  Crashed onto the rocks and floating up down stream . 


Old story Ya should have been here yesterday

Attachments
__________________

Pets are welcome but children must be leashed at all times



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 136
Date:

Yep ......they sure would make good croc bait.
Why do they call ya Wombat?  Giggle Giggle.
Tell all our international visitors. Har Har.

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 345
Date:

strewth   and i call my misses "Wendy wombat"   2 out of 3 aint bad

__________________
demon dave


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 136
Date:

Well.................I'm no goin near that one Demon.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 2601
Date:

oh well!! there go the big breeding females for next year!! another 5 years before the next generation get old enough to change sex,

wouldnt that be great, to change sex, hell I'd be the biggest floozy this side of the black stump, no-one would be safe!!

__________________
 me, the dragon, & little blue,  never stop playing, live long,  laugh lots, travel far, give a stranger a smile, might just be your next best freind.  try to commit a random act of kindness everyday

 http://daventhedragon.blogspot.com



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1880
Date:

It became my call sign years back, There were 5 of us operating independently and each had to select a unique call sign so we could positively ID each other and as I had the gear on board to make big holes in anything my call sign became wombat.

There was skippy . king brown . goanna and dingo, sadly I'm the only one left .

It may also have had something to do with my days as a single airmen. Single troops always got posted to the worlds hell holes first, so I got around a fair bit in my career , you can put the other bits together . Caught on early "first in gets the pick of the camels".

__________________

Pets are welcome but children must be leashed at all times



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 6882
Date:

Oh dear, dear Dave, be careful what you wish for.
Ask a seahorse what it's like to bear the young.
You blokes have all the fun getting them in there, but you try getting them out again.
I think there'll be enough barra to go around. Nothing better than a feed of wild, estuary barra. The best feed I've had ever was at the little cafe on the jetty at Cooktown a couple of months ago. Grilled to perfection and not mutilated by batter or anything but a nice salad and good chips. Yum!
Cheers Granny

__________________

20ft Roma caravan - Mercedes Benz Sprinter - SA-based at the moment.
Transport has no borders.

Management makes the decisions, but is not affected by the decisions it makes.



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 669
Date:

Fish of yesterday !!
Had a feed of one Flounder at the Black Rock hotel in the 60s that has not been equalled yet
Without a word of a lie it was as long as my forearm, 18 inches, I swear to god
Went fishing for them with the battery on an innertube, light, and spear, in the shallows for months after that, but never that big again

__________________
Mike and Judy


enjoy your sunrises,we only have a limited number


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 345
Date:

aint it funny how something stays as the best u have had.  was staying at Curtain Springs [80 odd ks from the rock] and i had never tried barra, wellllll talk about the best barra   never gone close since   loved eating under a bark type roof amongst the cattle dogs and flies  and the fun in the bar after dark was just the best    was way better than staying at the rock resort,  a bit of true aussie style

__________________
demon dave


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 669
Date:

mayby for the feed, but at 2 bucks for a shower it was not a good place in my book, and that bloody emu walked into the van if you let it
Booked for 3 and only stayed for 2, good halfway point tween the rock and kings canyon

__________________
Mike and Judy


enjoy your sunrises,we only have a limited number


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 136
Date:

Wombat 280 wrote:

It became my call sign years back, There were 5 of us operating independently and each had to select a unique call sign so we could positively ID each other and as I had the gear on board to make big holes in anything my call sign became wombat.

There was skippy . king brown . goanna and dingo, sadly I'm the only one left .

It may also have had something to do with my days as a single airmen. Single troops always got posted to the worlds hell holes first, so I got around a fair bit in my career , you can put the other bits together . Caught on early "first in gets the pick of the camels".

Jeez, hope you picked a good lookin one, they say camels are called Ships of the desert because there full of arab seamen.


 



-- Edited by Road Ranger at 09:02, 2009-03-11

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 554
Date:

I'm gonna get stomped on for this, but I don't think Barra is as good as every-one else seems to think . I think most people have been brainwashed about Barra. Reef fish are very good eating, and there's nothing wrong with Sea Mullet. I don't mind Barracuda either. [ It holds together well when cooked.]
However, for flavour, the very best in my opinion, is Maori Wrasse. Unfortunately, these days, it is on the prohibited list.
Cheers,
xina.

__________________
xina
JRH


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 2951
Date:

G'day,

With the sole exception of anchovies there is not a seafood I don't like, in my opinion they are all damned good.

John

__________________
If I don't get there today, I'll get there tomorrow or the day after.

John & Irona..........Rockingham Western Australia


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1880
Date:

xina wrote:

I'm gonna get stomped on for this, but I don't think Barra is as good as every-one else seems to think . I think most people have been brainwashed about Barra. Reef fish are very good eating, and there's nothing wrong with Sea Mullet. I don't mind Barracuda either. [ It holds together well when cooked.]
However, for flavour, the very best in my opinion, is Maori Wrasse. Unfortunately, these days, it is on the prohibited list.
Cheers,
xina.



Having caught a lot of barra  I have to agree  there are better table fish around.  I think the hype comes from the rough sought of country you needed to go into a few years back but with sealed roads into many barra spots that claim now  is a little hard to justify .  During the  wet season you can catch the buggers in the storm drains.   My kids were raised in the NT and barra fishing was an every week end sport  ,today's  fisho's brag about their barra  fishing exploits  until they see the pic in the kids album .

 



__________________

Pets are welcome but children must be leashed at all times



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 6882
Date:

The challenge to catching barra is getting them in the boat or in the bag. They're tricky, but a lot of fun to catch. That big leap and then down under a snag before you know you've got 'em. Not freshwater or farm barra, only estuarine barra, from sea for me.
Flathead is no disgrace. Great feed on the bbq. The biggest I've seen were way past the length of a fish bin, huge, caught at Clare Bay on the west coast of SA. I was the driver of the bus for a school camp, and we caught 5 like that. Fed the whole mob.
Entre' was stumpy tail lizard nunga style. We caught them on the road on the way back from Fowlers Bay. Kids running everywhere picking them up and let them all run loose around the bus floor. Interesting trip. Food for thought in more ways than one.
Another interesting tale or is it tail? Cheers Granny


__________________

20ft Roma caravan - Mercedes Benz Sprinter - SA-based at the moment.
Transport has no borders.

Management makes the decisions, but is not affected by the decisions it makes.

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us
Purchase Grey Nomad bumper stickers Read our daily column, the Nomad News The Grey Nomad's Guidebook