Archive for the ‘North West Dams’ Category

Hartebeespoort Dam, green or clean?

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Two to three years ago I got quite excited about the efforts to clean up Hartebeespoort dam, since then it is as if all efforts , like most things our local government attempt , died a silent death! Altough I couldn’t find any time to fish this weekend , I pushed aside a few minutes in order to take some photographs of the dam and the surrounding areas. As reported in one of our previous posts (Ifafi, sewage problems continue at Hartebeespoort dam) we decided against fishing Ifafi, De Rust or Roos se oord because of the water quality and reported problems surfacing again. So being in the Hartebeespoort dam area this weekend , the big question came up , GREEN or CLEAN? And the answer is??

The Hartebeespoort dam water quality

The Hartebeespoort dam water quality

It is probably important to know that this dam was once a clean well preserved tourist destination. Now? Now it’s only a tourist destination, a green, money generating, polluted tourist destination. As rightfully said by my brother-in-law, only a scratch-and-sniff patch can truely provide our readers with the full effect, because it is not only the green colour but also the ‘wonderful’ smell completing the Hartebeespoort-dam-effect as we know it today.

Driving towards the famous tunnel, the traffic gave me a chance to get out of the car and walk around the bank.

Driving towards the famous tunnel

Driving towards the famous tunnel

Notice the empty beer bottle in the photo below.

Pollution at Hartebeespoort dam

Pollution at Hartebeespoort dam

Despite all the bad reports on Hartebeespoort dam I still have a desperate longing to at least try fishing the various venues and we probably will. Recent reports in ‘The Tight Lines’ gave positive reviews on resorts such as De Rust and it might be worth while spending a few hours fishing these venues.

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Fishing Raaswater – Reader’s Report

Monday, March 29th, 2010

One of our readers, Ali Adnaan sent us a report on his fishing trip in Raaswater. Thank you very much for taking the time to write this! Following below is his report:

Hi Guys,

Firstly, sorry for the late report, but after such a fantastic weekend of Fishing  then getting back to work and with having such an over load of work to finish, I just did not get the time….

So I was supposed to leave early  on Saturday 20/03/10. We had everything packed and ready to go. Unfortunately things did not go according to plan and due to some delays, instead of leaving at 7:00 we only left at 12:00…

Raaswater Dam

Raaswater Dam

None the less, finally, after a 2 hour drive we finally reached our destination. Within a few minutes, after helping the wife unpacking, I shoot of to the Jetti, which I booked only for the Saturday. Within 5 mins had my first catch.

Raaswater Barbel

Raaswater Barbel

Throughout Saturday we caught +/- 15 fish but all relatively small. Mostly yellows. Two babel for Saturday. After a lovely braai we called it a night at around 12:30 pm… Even my little nephew and niece caught. They arrived at about 4:00 pm

Another Raaswater Barbel

Another Raaswater Barbel

Finally after a good night’s sleep we got up at about 5:00 and by around 11:00 we had already caught over 40 fish, the majority being yellow ones, weighing about 3.5kg.

A nice carp

A nice carp

The rest were all about a kilo and under. Due to it being such a successful weekend, we hardly got the time to take pics of all the fish caught.

Another carp

Another carp

Just as I thought the weekend could not get any better, we landed a +/- 7kg babel. Unfortunately the picture does not do any justice, but it put up a good fight!

This barbel put up a great fight

This barbel put up a great fight

Unfortunately Monday was a quiet day and we only had a few bites but we did not manage to land anything….

All in all it was an excellent trip!

Tight Lines


Klipdrift dam,Lakeview Resort

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

This post was send to us by Theo Greyling. As you all know we do not always have the time to visit each and every dam requested by our readers and we appreciate any contribution. Thank you Theo for the very informative and complete discription of your experience at Klipdrift dam.

Here is his story…

Well, we at last made it to Klipdrift Dam. We at least had one day of good fishing although the wind nearly blew us away.

Venue: Lakeview Resort, Klipdrif Dam
Closest town: Potchefstroom
Date: 26 – 28 February 2010

Friday Saturday Sunday
Wind Very windy Windy Quiet
Temp low 16 17 18
Temp high 26 27 29
Rain No No No
Clouds Over casted Cloudy Clear

Morning Afternoon
Fishing data 60-100m >100m
Bait used White dough & FX Floaty Plain Mielies and Egg Yellow Almond Mielies
Bomb jams Gumtree Green/Yellow Flourocine
Bait dips used Gumtree None

SA Powder used every time.

We were up and out of bed by 4:00 AM Friday morning because I still had to go to work for a few hours before we could leave for Klipdrift dam. The sheer excitement was building inside of me as the morning progressed and for some reason every minute felt like an hour. 11:00 AM finally arrived and I shot home (5:00 till 11:00 AM plus over time the week before made up for the 2 to 3 hours I cut the day short)
When I arrived home, my wife had packed all the last bits and pieces (what a diamond she is) and the only thing for me to do was to hook the trailer,wait for my brother Schalk and off we went.

When we got to the gate at Klipdrift Dam an hour and 30mins later we were told to turn around… and pay at the Café first, luckily just across the road.The dam fees were a bit of a challenge to understand as there were day-fees, children-fees, extra vehicle-fees, overnight-fees and extra person-fees. After we eventually paid, we moved on back to the dam entrance gate. Although the Café has some angling accessories , day-to-day stuff and a small yellow pharmacy (or a bottle store as some of you may know it), we had everything we needed.

Driving down to the water was a bit shaky due to the road conditions, it’s apparent that they had a lot of rain in the past few weeks and the original dirt road looked like a messy-muddy-deurgetrapte-road.
Anyways, at the water to the left are the stands with electricity points and trees available, and to the right are the stands without electricity trees. The R60 difference wasn’t worth the shallower water, and the generator couldn’t possibly use R60 of fuel per day, so it was decides, to the left. The guys sitting at the stands with electricity had it though than us to land fish.

We picked a spot, and by anonymous vote stopped at Stand 68. All the stands on the right side look very similar and very small (tiny in fact for a family of 6), although some flush toilets and water basin cabins are available 100m to 200m apart, so we sat close to one because of the children mostly.

Right, it was now time as usual to get the tent up so that the trailer could be unpacked (the tent was packed at the top of the trailer) so we could get to the fishing gear quickly.A friend of ours, Pieter Bezuidenhout had his tent rigged in no time. We were still getting our tent up, while he was getting his rods ready for the first cast. Pieter, like most boertjies, offered his help, but I denied, and said he should break the ice first (you know, catch the first fish so we don’t blank). Not even 30min later Pieter had his first fish on the line. Not very big, but a fish non the less. We struggled to get the tent anchored because the wind was quite strong. It was actually very unpleasant, but did not bother us much as we have been looking forward to this trip for a long time. So we just carried on. (Our neighbours actually had to throw out their gazebo as the wind got a hold of it and bent it to pieces.)

We eventually had our tent up and the rigging of the rods started. I mixed some white flour with the dam water, and rigged the traces with white dough and FX Floaty as backing (a tip from some forums on the internet). They were dipped in Gumtree and the mielie-bomb got a bit as well. With the wind straight in our faces I only managed to get the bait out about 100m, although my brother and Pieter said it was more to the 150m mark. Not sure, but at least I got the rods in the water. After about 2 ours of fishing, I landed 2 small fish on the exact same bait. By this time we had to get the fires going as the kids were getting hungry. The wind kept on blowing, with some quieter bits in between which did not last more than 10 minutes at a time. With the wind blowing like that, all sorts of grass and twigs got blown onto the bank, and made it miserable to fish, so I decided to leave my rods out of the water for the night. (Luckily I did because the wind grew stronger during the night and could possibly have made a mess of things.)

I was up again early the next morning before dawn, and started rigging the traces the same as the day before. It took a while for the fish to get active again, but I got my first fish of the day soon after the sun made an appearance. (The wind still blowing strong. Not lekker.) Some friends (Jeanne, Etieen & Alicia) joined us for the day, but were unlucky and didn’t catch anything, even after trying the bait combination I used. After a few 200-300g carps between Pieter and myself, I decided to change to mielies. Our neighbours caught bigger fish (2kg+), on mielies and the decision to use mielies mainly stemmed from that because I was getting tired of catching the small ones.
The top hook was baited with 2 plain mielies (van Heerden’s) and the bottom with 3 small 10 year old Almond and Egg Yellow mielies, with some flouro-jam on the mielie-bomb. It took some time, but after about 2 hours caught the first pan-sized carp of about 2kg.The second rod also delivered a 1.5kg carp. My brother managed to land a few fish on this combination as well.

One of the beautiful carps caught by Theo at Klipdrift dam

One of the beautiful carps caught by Theo at Klipdrift dam

Now it was time to make some breakfast… what a challenge again due to the wind factor. Luckily Pieter had his 3-burner gas-braai in the trailer which produces more gas pressure than the conventional gas-braai. At some point we even had to move around to the other side of the tent just to try and get away from the wind and keep the gas-braai going.

Preparing breakfast at Klipdrift dam

Preparing breakfast at Klipdrift dam

After breakfast I baited the rods again with the mielie combination used before, which delivered a few extra carp between 1 & 2kg (mostly on the Almond pitte this time). As the day progressed, the wind got quieter but so did the fish. I managed to land 2 more fish of 2 and 2.5kg, but had to pull out all the stops with getting the bait out far enough. At this time the fish retreated into deeper waters and only found myself and the guys with canoes and bait boats catching some.

Another Klipdrift dam carp

Another Klipdrift dam carp

At night time, the fish were really nowhere to be found, so I decided not to put my rods in the water.The wind eventually died down, and we were able to get a better night’s rest.

Up at dawn again, and time to fish with a perfect day ahead of us. Or so I thought with the fresh morning smell in my nostrils. Little did I know fishing would almost be non-existent.Sunday proved to be one of those days, no one catching fish except the guys with the canoes and bait boats taking their bait out at least 300m. Not even a P4 bullet, baited, will get that far, no matter who you are. I tried several baits, dips, riggs etc, but only got one little yellow fish when I tried the white dough with FX floaty and Gumtree dip again. Earthworms, Floaties, Brown bread, Dough, Mielies dipped in TCP, Behoedmiddel, Strawberry, Banjo, FX, Almond, Garlic, Cinnamon etc were tried, but nothing… only a couple of small pushes like the fish pushed the mielie bomb around.The day in itself was perfect, weather wise, but fishing became almost imaginary. My youngest (with the assistance of my wife) managed to catch the last, and only second fish for the day, 2 hours before we started packing up; a 600g carp on an Almond mielie again.(We even got new neighbours on Sunday, but they did not last 4 hours until they decided to leave again because the fish were not biting.)

This dam is very shallow at the Lakeview Resort side. Some guys even walked in 80-100m to get their bait out. Even at these distances the water only came up to their chests.

It will be interesting to see what the SAs will deliver at this venue mid March 2010 as it seems the more noise on the bank, the deeper the fish retreats. Logical I suppose. The resort was packed on Sunday with a lot of kids swimming in the dam, thus also contributing to the bank noise, so it’s understandable for the fish to seek quieter waters. The wind was also a factor of cause, a little wind is good for fishing, which obviously also dampens the noise, plus adds oxygen in the water which makes the fish more respondent and lively.

All-in-all I was not very impressed with the resort. First of all, 30 – 50 calls to the resort’s land line (018 290 1104 ) to “book” were fruitless. Luckily I found a cell number (082 215 1413) on the internet , but even this was fruitless, as the owner of that number never returned with a booking or reference number as he said he would, and was somewhat rude when I spoke to him (Perhaps I caught him on a bad day.) We were told when we paid our fees at the Café; Telkom fixed their lines just that morning, so hopefully any future bookings can be made with fewer issues.The shallow water has a lot of green algae and loose grass (nothing like Bloemhof or Harties) but makes it difficult to fish. (A tip: Keep the rods high on the stands with the rod tip at quite an angle to try and clear the first few meters from the bank in order to prevent the line from dangling in the algae and floating grass being washed back by the waves.) The smell from the dam from time-to-time is also very unpleasant. I suppose if the fish played along on Sunday as well, I would have written a more positive report, but the fact of the matter is; the resort has a lot to upgrade before it would become one of my favourite fishing spots, especially at those resort prices.

Best of luck to the guys and gals in the 2010 Freshwater Bank Angling SAs as this venue is very unpredictable from one day to the next. Fishing in itself is very unpredictable, but when things change so much from one day to the next, it obviously makes it even more so challenging. Hard work and dedication should see you through. Don’t expect tons of fish, but work hard, and you will be awarded.

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Ifafi, sewage problems continues at Hartebeespoort dam

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

As you all know our fishing trips planned for the weekend of 20 and 21 February didn’t really go according to plan! Our trip to Rietvlei dam was a disaster and our trip to Ifafi quickly turned into a NO-GO when we read about the sewage problem that was yet again (or should I say – STILL) posing a huge health hazard! Sewage ran from the road into stormwater pipes, into Hartebeespoort dam between Melodie and Ifafi. The sewage pump at Ifafi have apparently been removed in November 2009 and wasn’t replaced since, the same is true for the sewage works at Rietfontein and Venice Village. According to the Kormorant an additional problem is that the water quality tests were not performed according to legal requirements.

It is a real dissapointment that this issue is once again seeing the light of day, especially since resorts such as Ifafi and De Rust was starting to become the popular fishing destinations they once were!

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