Fish Activity

Sat 27 Jun 2026 · Australia/Perth

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27 Jun
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Pelican Point (Crawley, Swan River)

Fishing forecast for Perth · Saturday 27 Jun 2026
Coords: -31.9795, 115.8235
Bite Score
60
Medium Fish Activity
Summary for 27 Jun 2026

Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 27 Jun 2026. Wind is around at . Solunar feeding windows are listed below.

Feeding Windows
Best times to fish based on activity score.
Peak
11:00 pm → 12:00 am
62
1h
Weekly Bite Forecast
Pelican Point (Crawley, Swan River) + nearby Perth spots, every Thursday 6pm.
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Local Knowledge

Why locals fish this spot

Pelican Point is the shallow end of the Swan — a sand spit with weed beds and flats running out into Matilda Bay, right alongside UWA. It's where Perth bream anglers cut their teeth. Wade the flats, sight-cast to fish you can actually see, and try to ignore the rowing eights going past. When the wind is up everywhere else, the flats stay fishable.

How to fish this spot

Light gear and subtle presentations — this is clear, shallow water over sand and weed, and the bream see everything. Small soft plastics or hardbodies worked slowly near the weed edges are the go-to for bream and flathead. Yellowfin whiting love the sand patches on the incoming tide in summer, worked on tiny soft plastics or prawn baits on light gear. Herring and tailor move through the edges at dawn and dusk.

Common catches

Black bream (the headline — weed edges, incoming tide), tarwhine, yellowfin whiting (summer sand flats), flathead (sand–weed edge), herring and tailor through the edges, and the occasional pink snapper pinkie or mulloway for people fishing dark.

Access and tips

Light tackle wins here; heavy leaders get refused. Swan-Canning cobbler are subject to size (430 mm min) and bag (8) limits and periodic seasonal closures — verify current DPIRD rules before keeping any. Watch for sailing club traffic on weekends and don't back-cast into cyclists on the Matilda Bay path. Don't crash through the seagrass; it's protected habitat.

Access & Conditions

Getting there

Multiple car parks along Hackett Drive and the UWA Crawley campus access roads; the closest to the productive flats are at Matilda Bay Reserve. Sealed paths along the foreshore — partial mobility access; the wade-fishing positions are not. Public toilets at Matilda Bay Reserve. No formal lighting on the flats; head torch needed for dawn or dusk sessions. Parking is generally easy outside summer weekends and university semester rush hours. Public transport is excellent: UWA bus stops are within 5 minutes' walk.

How it fishes

Lower Swan position with the sand spit pointing roughly north into Matilda Bay — easterly mornings are calmest, the afternoon Fremantle Doctor blows directly across the spot. Incoming tide is the prime window because it floods the flats and pushes bait onto them. Slack tide is slow. Water clarity is excellent year-round; reduces only in the days after heavy rain. The seagrass is a defining feature — learning to read weed edges versus open sand is the local skill.

Hazards

Stingrays cruise the flats; shuffle when wading. The flats look uniformly shallow but the main channel drop-off is closer than it looks; wade no deeper than waist. Slippery rocks at low tide near the spit; watch footing. Cobbler spike badly; release with care. Sailing-club traffic on weekends — keep long casts clear of moving vessels. Bluebottles drift up the river occasionally in summer northerlies.

Gear & Rigs

Bream: 7ft 2–6lb spin gear with 4–6lb fluoro leader (light is right), 1.5–2.5 inch unweighted soft plastics or small suspending hardbody minnows worked along weed edges. Yellowfin whiting: 7ft 4–8lb spin gear with surface lures or lightly weighted prawn baits on a long-shank #6 paternoster. Flathead: 6–10lb gear with paddle-tails on 1/8 oz jigheads worked along sand–weed edges. Tailor (autumn): 9ft rod with ganged-hook mulies at the channel edges.

Seasons

Black bream are year-round on the flats with peaks in spring (Sep–Nov) and autumn (Mar–May). Yellowfin whiting are an October–April fishery on the sand patches. Flathead fish best from late spring through summer along sand–weed edges. Tailor push through autumn (March–June) along the channel edges. Pink snapper pinkies and mulloway are occasional after-dark targets in the deeper water.

If this spot's blown out

Frequently Asked

Where are the bream at Pelican Point?

Along the weed edges and over the sand-and-weed mosaic on the rising tide. Sight-fishing in clear water is the local style — wade carefully, present cleanly, and the bream are right there. First-cast accuracy matters more than fancy lures.

Is Pelican Point good for whiting?

Yes — yellowfin whiting hold on the cleaner sand patches from October through April. Fish on the rising tide with surface lures or lightly weighted prawn baits on light gear. The visual takes are part of the appeal.

Can I wade-fish at Pelican Point?

Yes — wading the flats on a rising tide is the headline land-based feature. Stay no deeper than waist; the main channel drop-off is closer than it looks. Watch for stingrays and respect the seagrass habitat.

What's the best lure for Pelican Point bream?

Unweighted 1.5–2.5 inch soft plastics in natural colours worked slowly along weed edges, or 35–50 mm suspending hardbody minnows. Light leaders (4–6 lb) and clean presentations beat heavy gear every time in the clear shallow water.

Nearby fishing spots
Other Perth spots close to Pelican Point (Crawley, Swan River).
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