Cape Le Grand (Lucky Bay / Hellfire Bay / Thistle Cove)
Sun 19 Apr 2026 · Australia/Perth
Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 19 Apr 2026. Wind is around N at 9 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.
Local Knowledge
Cape Le Grand National Park sits 56 km east of Esperance on the South Coast — a DBCA-managed park of granite headlands and white-sand bays that includes Lucky Bay, Hellfire Bay, Thistle Cove, Rossiter Bay and Le Grand Beach. Lucky Bay was voted the world's best beach in 2023 and is famous for the kangaroos that lie on the sand at dawn. The fishery is two things at once: an everyday land-based bread-and-butter run for herring, skippy, whiting and squid, and a serious Southern Ocean salmon migration window that fires twice a year. The drive from Perth is around nine hours via Esperance.
Lucky Bay and Le Grand Beach: walk the gutters at change of light for the salmon run, spinning 40–60 g metals into the white water, with ganged mulies as the bait alternative. Hellfire Bay rocks and the granite outcrops at Thistle Cove: heavier rock-fishing gear for samson, pink snapper and the occasional jumbo salmon, with whole squid or fillet bait. Sheltered corners of Rossiter Bay and the eastern end of Lucky Bay: light spin gear with prawn or pipi for King George whiting on the sand patches and squid jigs over the weed. After-dark sessions in deeper gutters for mulloway with whole mulies or live herring on a running sinker.
Australian salmon are the headline — 2–5 kg autumn fish through the main March–July migration and 5–8 kg summer fish through November–February. Tailor overlap with the autumn salmon. Herring, skippy, garfish and squid are year-round bread-and-butter. KGW from sheltered sand patches, samson and pink snapper from the rocks, mulloway from deeper gutters at night.
Fish Lucky Bay before the tourists and 4WDs arrive on the sand — change of light is both the best fishing window and the only quiet one. Vehicle access onto Lucky Bay is permitted on the firmer wet sand only; do not commit a 2WD to the soft top. The kangaroos are habituated to people but they are still wild animals; do not feed them. Esperance is the closest town for fuel, ice and tackle — there is nothing inside the park.
Access & Conditions
Sealed access from Esperance via Fisheries Road and Cape Le Grand Road, around an hour to the park entry. Standard DBCA vehicle entry fee applies on a per-day or annual park pass basis. The four named beach car parks (Lucky Bay, Hellfire Bay, Thistle Cove, Rossiter Bay) are sealed with toilets and information bays at each. Lucky Bay has a sealed boat launch trolley track and a campground with bookable sites through DBCA. Le Grand Beach is the long open stretch on the western side. Drive from Perth is around 9 hours via Coolgardie–Esperance Highway plus the run east to the park.
South Coast Bioregion exposure — Southern Ocean groundswell is constant and weather windows shift fast. Lucky Bay is east-facing and partially sheltered by Cape Le Grand itself, which keeps it fishable on south-westerly blow-outs that wash out Le Grand Beach. Hellfire Bay sits between two granite headlands and sets up rougher when the swell wraps in. Easterly mornings are calmest. Water clarity is consistently high — clean Southern Ocean water with white sand bottom. Tidal range is small (under a metre).
White sharks are present along this entire coast and the Esperance region has had attacks; never fish alone on remote rock platforms. Hellfire Bay rocks and the granite outcrops are slippery with weed and washed by cross-swell. Soft-sand 4WD bogs at Lucky Bay are common — deflate to 18 psi or less and stay on the firm wet sand. Mobile coverage drops out across most of the park. Some sanctuary zones overlay the Recherche Archipelago offshore — Cape Le Grand itself is land-based fishable but verify South Coast Marine Park zoning before any boat work.
Gear & Rigs
Beach salmon and tailor: 11–13 ft surf rod, 25–40 lb braid, 30–50 lb fluoro and 40–80 g metals on a fast retrieve, or ganged 5/0 mulies. Whiting and bread-and-butter: 7 ft 4–8 lb spin with #6 long-shanks on prawn or pipi. Squid: 2.5–3.5 jigs over the weed in the sheltered corners. Samson and pink snapper from rocks: 15 kg setup with whole fresh squid or fillet bait. Mulloway at night: 12 ft surf rod, 30 lb braid, 50 lb leader and a 6/0 single on a running sinker baited with whole mulies or live herring.
Seasons
Australian salmon are the year's headline — a March–July main migration with 2–5 kg fish stacking through the gutters, and a November–February summer run with averages of 5–8 kg. Tailor overlap with the autumn salmon. KGW are year-round with a spring-autumn peak. Squid year-round, herring and skippy year-round with summer peaks. Pink snapper are a cooler-months target from the rocks. Cape Le Grand sits in the South Coast Bioregion — the West Coast demersal closure does not apply, but South Coast rules do, including different size and bag limits for snapper and dhufish. Verify current DPIRD South Coast rules before targeting demersals.
If this spot's blown out
- Esperance (Esperance Jetty / Bandy Creek / Cape Le Grand / Twilight Beach) — Drive 1 hour west for the Esperance Jetty, Bandy Creek and town fishery.
- Hopetoun (Mary Ann Haven / Two Mile / Four Mile / Starvation) — Drive 3 hours west for quieter beaches and Fitzgerald National Park gutters.
- Bremer Bay (Town Foreshore / Bremer River Mouth / Point Gordon) — Drive 5 hours west for the sheltered town bay when the south coast is blown out.
- Albany (Emu Point / King George Sound / Salmon Holes) — Drive 6 hours west for the Salmon Holes platforms and the closest big-water sound.
Frequently Asked
Two windows. The main migration runs March through July with average fish 2–5 kg stacking through the gutters at Lucky Bay and Le Grand Beach. The summer run from November through February produces fewer but larger fish, averaging 5–8 kg. Change of light at both ends of the day is the best window in either run.
Yes, on the firmer wet sand only. Soft-sand bogs are common on the upper beach — deflate to around 18 psi, stay on the wet sand and avoid the dunes entirely. The kangaroos lie on the dry sand; give them space. Standard 4WD beach etiquette applies and DBCA rangers do patrol.
No. Cape Le Grand sits in the South Coast Bioregion, well east of the closure boundary. South Coast rules apply with their own size, bag and seasonal limits for pink snapper, dhufish and the broader demersal mixed bag. Verify current DPIRD South Coast rules before targeting demersals from the rocks or a boat.
Yes. Cape Le Grand is a DBCA-managed national park with a per-vehicle entry fee — pay at the park entry or use a DBCA annual pass. Camping at Lucky Bay and Le Grand campgrounds is bookable through the DBCA Park Stay system and fills out fast in the cooler months and over school holidays.