Fish Activity
Wed 11 Feb 2026 · Australia/Perth
Shelley Foreshore (Canning River)
Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 11 Feb 2026. Wind is around N at 0 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.
Local Knowledge
Shelley Foreshore is the Canning's classic wading water — extensive sand flats lined with seagrass, broken up by rocky patches and the looming structure of Mount Henry Bridge. Bream patrol the weed edges on the rising tide, flathead sit on the sand lanes ready to ambush, and the bridge pylons hold fish when the flats go quiet. It's the go-to for Perth bream anglers who'd rather wade than sit on a jetty.
Wade out carefully onto the flats on a rising tide — subtle soft plastics or small hardbodies worked along weed edges and over rocky patches are the bream recipe. For flathead, drag soft plastics along the sandy lanes between the weed. Step over to the Mount Henry Bridge pylons for a structure change; tailor and tarwhine hold in the current lines, and mulloway move through deeper water after dark on a rising tide.
Black bream (weed-edge sight-casting on the flats), flathead (sand lanes), mulloway (deeper water, after dark), tailor (autumn), tarwhine and herring around structure, and yellowfin whiting on the cleaner sand patches in summer.
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. The flats look uniformly shallow but the drop-off into the main channel is closer than it looks; wade no deeper than waist. Don't crash through the seagrass; it's protected habitat and spooks fish for hundreds of metres.
Access & Conditions
Park at the Shelley Foreshore reserve along Beasley Road. Sealed paths along the foreshore — partial mobility access; the wade-fishing positions are not. Public toilets at the foreshore reserve. No formal lighting on the flats or Mount Henry Bridge area; head torch needed for dawn or dusk sessions. Parking is generally easy outside summer school holidays. Public transport is feasible: bus stops on Manning Road within 10 minutes' walk.
Canning River position with significant tidal influence; the rising tide floods the flats and is the prime fishing window. Easterly mornings are calmest. Water clarity is excellent in the lower Canning — among the clearest in the metro river system. Reduces in the days after heavy rain. The seagrass is a defining feature; learn to read weed edges versus open sand and fishing improves immediately.
Stingrays cruise the flats; shuffle when wading. The drop-off into the main channel is closer than it looks — don't wade past waist deep. Slippery rocks at low tide; watch footing. Cobbler spike badly; release with care. Mosquitoes and sandflies at dawn and dusk in warmer months. Boat traffic on the Canning is light but be aware of moving vessels in the channel.
Gear & Rigs
Bream: 7ft 2–6lb spin gear with 4–6lb fluoro leader (light is right in clear water), 1.5–2.5 inch unweighted soft plastics or small suspending hardbody minnows worked along weed edges. Flathead: 7ft 6–10lb gear with 2–3 inch paddle-tails on 1/8 oz jigheads dragged along sand lanes. Whiting: light 4–8lb spin with surface lures or lightly weighted prawn baits on the sand patches. Mount Henry pylons: 6–8lb fluoro leader for bream, heavier for tailor and mulloway.
Seasons
Black bream are year-round on the flats with peaks in spring (Sep–Nov) and autumn (Mar–May) when fish push onto the flats to feed. Flathead fish best from late spring through summer along the sand lanes. Yellowfin whiting are an October–April flats fishery. Tailor push through autumn around the bridge pylons. Mulloway are year-round in the deeper water; most reliable late summer through autumn at night.
If this spot's blown out
- Deep Water Point (Canning River) — Drive 5 minutes east for the Canning River drop-off and crab water.
- Canning Bridge (Applecross/Mount Pleasant) — Drive 10 minutes downstream for the Swan/Canning junction with bridge pylons in current.
- Pelican Point (Crawley, Swan River) — Switch to the lower Swan flats for the same wade-fishing style with pelicans for company.
Frequently Asked
Yes — wading the flats on a rising tide is the headline land-based feature. Stay no deeper than waist; the drop-off into the main channel is closer than it looks. Wade carefully and shuffle to avoid stingrays.
Rising tide at dawn or dusk, particularly through spring and autumn. The fish push onto the flats to feed as the water comes up; weed edges and rocky patches are the ambush points. First-cast accuracy is critical — clumsy presentations spook the hole.
Yes for the foreshore reserve fishing in shallow water with adult supervision. Sealed paths, public toilets, grassed picnic area and gentle wade fishing all suit families. Heavier setups for tailor or mulloway aren't really the local game.
Cobbler are subject to specific Swan-Canning size and bag limits (minimum 430 mm, daily bag 8) and periodic seasonal closures — verify current DPIRD rules before keeping any. Handle with care if releasing; the dorsal and pectoral spines deliver a painful sting.
- Deep Water Point (Canning River) 1.6 km
- Canning Bridge (Applecross/Mount Pleasant) 3.2 km
- Applecross Jetty (Swan River) 4.1 km
- Narrows Bridge (Swan River) 6.1 km
- Point Walter (Swan River) 6.2 km