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Fish Activity

Karratha (Nickol Bay / Hearson's Cove)

Wed 17 Jun 2026 · Australia/Perth

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Karratha (Nickol Bay / Hearson's Cove)

Wednesday 17 Jun 2026
Bite Score
68
Medium Fish Activity
Summary for 17 Jun 2026

Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 17 Jun 2026. Wind is around SE at 21 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.

Feeding Windows
Best times to fish based on activity score.
Peak
12:30 pm → 4:00 pm
69
3h 30m
Good
6:00 pm → 9:00 pm
61
3h
Good
6:00 am → 9:30 am
58
3h 30m
Weekly Bite Forecast
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Local Knowledge

Why locals fish this spot

Karratha is the Pilbara's regional hub, and its fishing is a tide-driven inshore game built around Nickol Bay, the town creeks and the calm water of Hearson's Cove on the Burrup. Tides run four to five metres on the springs and the whole fishery moves with them — threadfin and queenfish off the flats and river mouths, mangrove jack tight in the Nickol River and Cleaverville snags, flathead and bream over the sand. It is the land-based and small-boat counterpart to Dampier's archipelago twenty minutes west — less glamorous, more accessible, and reliable for anyone who can read a run-out. Hearson's Cove is the sheltered family beach; the creeks are where the fish actually live.

How to fish this spot

Launch from the Karratha boat ramp into Nickol Bay and work the Nickol River mouth on the run-out — paddle tails and shallow hardbodies for mangrove jack and the odd barramundi, float-rigged mullet for threadfin, metals and stickbaits for queenfish and trevally as the tide starts to run. Cleaverville's creek and the rock platform west of its ramp give land-based access to deeper water for trevally and queenfish. Hearson's Cove is a wade-and-cast flats spot on the run-in — light stickbaits for queenfish and small trevally — and Airport Creek behind it holds threadfin and jack. The bite follows the tide change; slack water is dead.

Common catches

Threadfin and queenfish are the bread and butter, with mangrove jack from the Nickol River and Cleaverville snags, flathead and bream over the sand, and trevally working the current lines. Barramundi turn up in the Nickol River over summer. Spanish mackerel and the bigger pelagics are a short run offshore for boat anglers, and the Dampier Archipelago grounds are within reach on a settled day.

Access and tips

Time everything to the tide — the run-in and run-out are the windows, and the bite shuts at slack. The Karratha boat ramp is the practical launch for the Nickol Bay creeks; Hearson's Cove is a beach launch and a family swim spot more than a fish factory, so set expectations. Cleaverville's rock platform is the pick of the land-based options for deeper water. The Burrup's afternoon sea breeze flattens the morning window, so launch early.

Access & Conditions

Getting there

Karratha is the Pilbara's main regional centre, around 15 hours from Perth by sealed road or a short flight, with two supermarkets, multiple tackle shops, fuel, an airport and a hospital. The Karratha boat ramp on Nickol Bay is sealed with parking; Hearson's Cove, 35km out on the Burrup, has a sealed road and car park and is the easiest, most kid-friendly spot for a swim and a light cast. Cleaverville, north-east of town, is unsealed and 4WD-friendly with a creek ramp and rock platform. The Nickol River and back creeks suit a tinny and an angler who knows the tide.

How it fishes

Tides run four to five metres on the springs and shape the whole inshore fishery — bigger than Onslow, smaller than Broome — with the run-in and run-out the productive windows. South-west trade winds blow most afternoons in the dry season, so morning launches before the breeze are the working hours. Cyclone season runs November to April with serious storm risk. Nickol Bay and the creeks colour up after a blow and through the build-up; winter water is clearer.

Hazards

Saltwater crocodile sightings are occasional and rising across the Pilbara, including around the Karratha creeks and Nickol River — fewer than Broome, but real, and the trend is upward. Treat the mangrove creeks and any tidal water as potential croc habitat, and don't wade the creek edges or clean fish at the water's edge. The four-to-five-metre tides expose mud and strand boats, so launch and return with the tide in mind. Stonefish and stingrays sit in the shallows at Hearson's Cove and the flats, so wear reef shoes. Bronze whalers work the bait schools, and cyclone-season planning is essential.

Gear & Rigs

Threadfin and queenfish: 8–10kg spin, 20–30lb braid, 30–40lb leader, float-rigged mullet, 20–40g metals and 3–4 inch soft plastics on the tide change. Creek jack and barra: 7ft 15–20lb baitcaster, 30–50lb fluoro, paddle tails and shallow hardbodies tight to snags. Flathead and bream: 4–6kg spin with small plastics and lightly weighted baits over the sand and drop-offs. Offshore pelagics: heavier spin or overhead with stickbaits, metals and single-strand wire trace for mackerel.

Seasons

Karratha sits in the North Coast Bioregion, so the West Coast demersal closure does not apply — North Coast rules run a 5-fish demersal mixed bag with emperors capped at 3, plus species size and bag limits. Threadfin, queenfish and trevally hold year-round; mangrove jack are best September to May and had their limits reset in DPIRD's 2025–26 reform, so check before fishing. Barramundi show in the Nickol River over the summer wet under WA's barramundi rules — confirm the current size and bag. May to September is the comfortable visiting window.

If this spot's blown out

Frequently Asked

Where do you launch a boat at Karratha?

The Karratha boat ramp on Nickol Bay is the main sealed launch, with parking, giving access to the Nickol River mouth and the inshore creeks. Hearson's Cove on the Burrup is a beach launch for small boats in settled conditions, and Cleaverville to the north-east has a creek ramp. Time launch and retrieval to the tide — the four-to-five-metre range strands boats on the mud at the bottom of a big low.

What can you catch at Hearson's Cove?

Hearson's Cove is a sheltered, family-friendly beach more than a fishing hotspot — it fishes lightly for queenfish and small trevally on the run-in across the flats. The better fishing is in Airport Creek behind the cove, which holds threadfin and mangrove jack, and in the Nickol River and Cleaverville creeks nearby. Wear reef shoes for stonefish and stingrays on the flats.

Is the fishing at Karratha different to Dampier?

Yes — Karratha is the inshore, land-based and small-boat side: Nickol Bay, the town creeks and Hearson's Cove, with threadfin, queenfish, mangrove jack and flathead on the tide. Dampier, 20 minutes west at Hampton Harbour, is the gateway to the Dampier Archipelago and the offshore reef fishery for emperor, coral trout and mackerel. Many anglers base in Karratha and fish both.

Are there crocodiles around Karratha?

Occasionally. Saltwater crocodile sightings are recorded across the Pilbara, including the Karratha creeks and Nickol River, and the resident population is slowly expanding. Numbers are far lower than Broome, but the mangrove creeks and tidal water should be treated as potential croc habitat — don't wade the creek edges and don't clean fish at the water's edge. Check City of Karratha and DBCA alerts before fishing.

Nearby fishing spots
Other spots close to Karratha (Nickol Bay / Hearson's Cove).