Fish Activity
Sun 07 Dec 2025 · Australia/Perth
Cottesloe Groyne
Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 7 Dec 2025. Wind is around — at —. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.
Local Knowledge
The groynes at Cottesloe break the swell and create pockets of turbulent water where bait gets trapped and predators sit in ambush. The reef system running offshore adds structure that most metro beaches lack. It's a proper short-session spot — fish for an hour at dawn or dusk and you'll know if they're there. The walking-distance amenities (cafes, pub, toilets, showers) make it the rare metro rock-fishing spot you can ease into rather than commit to.
Fish the seam where turbulent water from the groyne meets cleaner water — that's the ambush zone. Cast metals or float pilchards along the rock edge. Don't bother fishing the calm side; the action is in the wash. Light winds and manageable swell produce best. For salmon and tailor, work the seam with 30–40g metals on a fast retrieve at dawn or dusk; for whiting, switch to light gear over the sand patches between reef.
Herring (reliable dawn and dusk), tailor (autumn), Australian salmon when they run through (Mar–Jun), King George whiting and sand whiting over the sandy patches between reef. Skippy work the wash. Snook turn up on small surface lures in summer first light. Garfish in the calmer corners.
Keep sessions focused around the low light windows. If there's nothing moving in 30 minutes, the fish aren't there today. Don't fish during patrolled-flag swimming hours in summer — it's signed and the surf club will move you. Don't leave bait or fish frames on the limestone; they'll attract gulls and the council fines for litter.
Access & Conditions
Park along Marine Parade or in the John Street car park; both are within 100m of the groynes. Sealed paths along the foreshore and onto the upper limestone steps — partial mobility access only, the productive lower rocks are not accessible. Public toilets, beach showers, cafes, restaurants and a tackle shop within 200m. No groyne lighting; for dawn/dusk sessions the streetlights are enough but a head torch is sensible for getting in and out. Parking fills extremely fast on summer weekends.
West-facing groynes fully exposed to incoming SW swell. The spot fishes well in swell up to about 1.5–2m; above that the lower rocks wash and the spot becomes unsafe. The afternoon Fremantle Doctor blows directly onshore. Easterly mornings are calmest and the most productive sessions. Salmon runs in autumn coincide with cleaner water and easterly weather; if there's a southerly storm-front, the sand stirs and the bite drops. Water clarity rebounds 2–3 days after a winter storm.
Wet limestone is slippery — watch your footing on the groyne, especially at dawn when it's still dark. Big swell sets can wash the lower rocks; never commit to a low ledge without watching the swell for several minutes first. Don't fish the groyne in heavy SW swell. Boat traffic and surf craft pass close to the wash; keep long casts clear. Bluebottles drift in during summer northerlies. Sharks transit the area but have not historically affected fishing safety from the groynes.
Gear & Rigs
Tailor and salmon: 9–11ft rod, 15–25lb braid, 25–30lb fluoro leader, 30–40g metals worked across the seam or ganged-hook mulies on a running sinker. Herring: 7ft 6–10lb spin gear with a paternoster carrying #6 hooks, baited with prawn, blue sardine or small mulie strip. Whiting: 7ft 4–8lb gear with a long-shank #6 paternoster on prawn or bloodworm fished over the sand patches. Snook: shallow-running stickbaits worked along the surface at first light.
Seasons
Australian salmon are the headline target — autumn (March–June) is when the schools push along the coast and the groynes are a known interception point. Tailor overlap with salmon season. Herring are year-round with summer peaks. KGW and sand whiting hold over the cleaner sand patches with a Sep–Apr peak. Skippy are year-round in the wash. Snook are a summer first-light surface fishery.
If this spot's blown out
- Leighton Beach — Sand-beach surf alternative south for the same salmon and tailor schools when the groyne is washing out.
- Swanbourne Beach — Quieter surf beach immediately north when Cottesloe is crowded.
- North Mole (Fremantle) — Drive 10 minutes south for serious rock-wall fishing with deeper water and bigger species.
Frequently Asked
March through June, with the strongest pulses typically in April and May. Salmon hug the coast and the groynes are a known interception point — fish 30–40g metals on a fast retrieve across the seam where wash meets clean water.
Yes in manageable swell (under about 1.5m) with grippy footwear and time spent watching sets before committing to a low rock. In bigger swell or after dark in unfamiliar conditions it gets risky — choose a sheltered alternative.
Yes, but not during patrolled swimming hours and not in the swim zone. Dawn and dusk work best for both fishing quality and avoiding crowds; stay on the groyne rocks and away from the main beach.
For tailor and salmon, ganged-hook mulies or 30–40g metals are the standards. For herring, prawn or blue sardine on a paternoster works year-round. For whiting on the sand, fresh prawn or bloodworm on a long-shank #6 hook is the go-to.
- Swanbourne Beach 1.4 km
- Mosman Bay Jetty (Swan River) 2.0 km
- Claremont Jetty (Swan River) 3.0 km
- Bicton Baths (Swan River) 4.7 km
- Point Walter (Swan River) 5.3 km