Fish Activity
Wed 12 Nov 2025 · Australia/Perth
Dawesville Cut
Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 12 Nov 2025. Wind is around — at —. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.
Local Knowledge
The Cut is a man-made channel connecting the Peel-Harvey Estuary to the Indian Ocean, and the water absolutely rips through on tide changes. That current funnels bait through a narrow corridor, and predators stack up along the edges waiting. When it's running, Dawesville is one of the most productive land-based spots south of Perth — and one of the few metro spots where land-based mulloway over a metre is a genuine target rather than a wishful one.
Fish the seams where fast water meets slower water along the channel edges. You'll need enough weight to hold bottom in the current — it runs harder than most people expect. The windows just before and after the tide turns are prime, when fish move into ambush positions along the drop-offs. Don't fish at peak flow with light gear; you'll just feed the snag bottom. For mulloway, fish whole fresh squid or live mullet on a heavy running sinker and be patient through the tide change.
Mulloway (one of the best land-based jewfish spots in the metro area), tailor, herring, bream, and pelagics when schools of bait flush through the channel. Pink snapper get caught off the rocks during the cooler months. Yellowfin whiting on the sandy edges, flathead in the slower pockets, snook on jigs.
The best fishing is often in the hour either side of the tide turn, not at peak flow. Respect the current — locals fish from designated platforms and lower rocks but never wade across. Don't leave bait or fish frames; the pelicans and gulls make a mess fast and the council is active here.
Access & Conditions
Sealed car park at the Dawesville Cut platform and additional parking along Estuary Road on both sides of the channel. The fishing platforms are sealed and railed — among the most mobility-friendly current-fishing spots on the coast. Public toilets at the platform car park. The walk from car park to platform is under 50m on each side. No formal lighting; bring a head torch for any session into the dark. Boat ramps either side of the channel are also fishable.
The Cut faces directly into incoming SW swell at the ocean end — big swell pushes water through the system and amplifies the channel current. Easterly mornings are calmest; afternoon Fremantle Doctor blows directly across the channel. The current peaks roughly 2 hours into a tidal cycle and slacks at the turn — peak flow is too fast to fish on the bottom in many spots. Water clarity at the ocean end is generally good; the estuary end can be tannin-tinted from the inlet.
The current is genuinely dangerous — wading or falling in is life-threatening because the flow pushes you out to sea or into the estuary fast. Stay on the platforms or higher rocks. Wet rocks are slippery; grippy footwear is essential. Big swell on the ocean side makes the lower rocks unsafe. Boats and jet-skis transit the channel constantly; keep long casts clear and never cast over moving vessels. Sharks are present in the channel but have not historically affected fishing safety.
Gear & Rigs
Mulloway: 10–15kg setup with 30–50lb braid, 60–80lb leader, 6–8 oz running sinker on a 6/0 hook with whole fresh squid or live mullet. Tailor: 9–10ft rod, 20lb braid, 25lb fluoro, ganged-hook mulies or 30–40g metals. Pink snapper: 8–10kg with whole baits and large hooks. Bream and whiting: 7ft 4–8lb spin gear with small soft plastics or prawn baits in the slower pockets and edges, fished light around tide change. Heavy gear is a feature here, not a bug.
Seasons
Mulloway are year-round but most reliable spring through autumn, with peak sessions Sep–Mar. Tailor push through summer and autumn (Nov–June) with the strongest run March–May. Pink snapper are a cooler-months target (May–Sep). Bream and whiting are year-round in the slower edges. Salmon push through in autumn. Blue swimmer crabs work the inlet end in season.
If this spot's blown out
- Mandurah (Foreshore / Jetty area) — Drive 20 minutes north for sheltered foreshore fishing when the cut is unworkable.
- Halls Head — Closer ocean-side beach alternative when you want to fish gutters instead of current.
- Coodanup Foreshore (Peel Inlet) — Switch to the Peel Inlet for shallow-water wading and crabbing on the same day.
Frequently Asked
Yes — it's regarded as one of the best land-based mulloway spots in the metro area. The current funnels baitfish through a narrow corridor and big jewfish ambush along the edges. Quality fish over a metre are caught here regularly with the right gear and timing.
The hour either side of the tide turn — both incoming and outgoing — is prime. Peak flow is too fast for most bottom-fishing techniques. Watch the current rather than the clock; when you can hold bottom with a 4–6 oz sinker, it's fishable.
No. The current is strong enough to carry you out to the ocean or into the estuary very quickly. Stay on the platforms, higher rocks, and dedicated fishing structures. Wading is genuinely dangerous here.
Heavier than most metro spots. For mulloway, 10–15kg setup with 30–50lb braid, 60–80lb leader, and 6–8 oz running sinkers. For tailor, 20lb braid and 25lb fluoro on a 9–10ft rod. Light gear gets snagged or swept; bring spare rigs.
- Tim's Thicket 3.7 km
- Falcon Bay 4.0 km
- Halls Head 8.0 km
- Herron Point (Harvey Estuary) 10.0 km
- Mandurah (Foreshore / Jetty area) 11.7 km