Tue
23 Jun
Activity
Moon Phase
1st quarter
Moonrise
12:37pm
Major Windows
6:41am – 8:41am
6:20pm – 8:20pm
Minor Windows
12:08am – 2:08am
11:37am – 1:37pm
Fishing Forecast Location
Today's Fishermans Bend fishing forecast is based on the current solunar and weather signals. Drizzle may slightly improve feeding. Especially during solunar bite periods.
Updated local time
Moon Phase
1st Quarter
Estimated Fish Feeding Activity
38%
Possible bite intensity is 38%, suggesting quiet fishing conditions.
Daily Timing
Sampled indicators for Fishermans Bend place conditions in the quiet band at 38% potential bite intensity.
Solunar Score Today
38% Potential Bite (Feeding) Intensity
Major 1
06:41 – 08:41
Centre · 07:41
Strength · 46.2%
Underfoot transit major
Major 2
18:20 – 20:20
Centre · 19:20
Strength · 87.8%
Overhead transit major
Minor 1
00:08 – 02:08
Centre · 01:08
Strength · 40.2%
Moonset minor
Minor 2
11:37 – 13:37
Centre · 12:37
Strength · 39.1%
Moonrise minor
7 Day Solunar Forecast
Compare daily bite activity, major feeding windows and moon conditions to help plan upcoming fishing sessions.
Weather
Conditions here can shift quickly through the day, so use this as the broad weather picture alongside the separate wind and pressure sections below.
Right now
Partly Cloudy
13.3°C
Today
Maximum
15.4°C
Minimum
8.0°C
Rain
0.9 mm
Pressure
Pressure is most useful when it shows movement. A stable, rising, or falling trend can add context to the rest of today’s fishing forecast.
Right now
Interpretation
Pressure trend is still building from recent samples. Current pressure is available, but there needs to be more readings before it can be interpreted.
Pressure is only one signal. Wind, tide, solunar timing, water movement, and local structure still matter.
Recent readings build the pressure trend used for interpretation.
Wind
Wind direction and strength can change how exposed a location feels, especially around open water, beaches, piers, and headlands.
Right now
Current speed
8.4 km/h
Direction
NE
Today max
11.0 km/h
Reading the wind
Wind direction and strength can affect comfort, casting, and exposure around this location.
Wind gusts can be stronger than the average wind speed, so it's worth checking the gust forecast if you're planning to fish from an exposed location or need to know about potential changes in conditions.
Even modest wind can affect comfort and casting, especially where the water is exposed.
The marker shows the current wind direction, while the daily outlook below shows whether conditions are likely to build or ease over the coming days.
Fishing Reports
Recent catch activity for this location.
Reports analysed
6
This year
6
This season
2
Species mentioned
3
Reported species
Reports in Fishermans Bend centre on a tighter cluster of species, led by Black Bream, Pinkie Snapper and Snapper.
The leading species here reflect report mentions for this location, not a complete catch survey.
Based on local Getfished fishing report species data.
* Note that report summaries will sometimes display the same species under different names. This is because they are being reported that way. This is intentional.
Share of the displayed top 3 species mentions for this location.
The Yarra Estuary on the Port Melbourne side of the river is often known as “Fishermans Bend.”
As you might suspect from the name, it’s a good spot to go fishing. It’s a great spot to take the kids fishing.
Historically, the area was the home of the General Motors Holden Plant. The spot where Australia’s first mass-produced car was made.
Generally, I stick to the embankment just to the north and below the Westgate bridge, but below the Westgate Punt Service dock.
There’s a channel to cast out into for deeper water. Be careful of snags as the Yarra River estuary here contains quite a few rocky snags at and below the drop-off to the shipping channel.
Flathead, bream and mullet are the target species for many fishos here. Pinky snapper is also amongst the more common catches here.
For those up to the challenge, the prized mulloway does frequent the Yarra Estuary right up to Richmond.
While there is a small floating pontoon jetty, I do not recommend it. Larger boats (like tugs) can and do put out some pretty big wakes at high speed – despite posted speed restrictions. This jetty becomes a bit of a trampoline at this point. Not for the faint of heart.
Expect the Northern Pacific starfish (Asterias amurensis) to steal fresh and frozen bait. You may even reel some in.
This pest hitches a ride from Southeast Asian ports on ships in their water ballast. When the ships purge their tanks, the juvenile starfish are purged with the water. They’ve managed to infiltrate Port Phillip Bay, the Yarra and even the Maribyrnong River as far upstream as Essendon!
Your bait is going to be thrown about by both commercial and private boats and ships. It’s not unusual for a container ship to suck the water away from the bank, then it all comes back in a rush. Some wakes can produce some sizeable wash. This can cause sinkers to become snagged on rocks and other structures.
So a ball sinker has worked for me here, rather than pyramids, beans, etc. I also tend to rig the sinker as a break-off so that if the sinker snags, I don’t lose the whole rig.
This is an issue throughout the Yarra Estuary system and also at other nearby locations, including the famous Warmies fishing hotspot.
Parking facilities are fairly good in early mornings, evenings and weekends. However, there’s hefty competition for parking spots during the week after 8:00 am.
Toilets, however, are some distance away (2km) and were being rebuilt on my last visit. Expect to travel back to Port Melbourne or even South Melbourne if you need to avail yourself of these.
The tide can be strong. The incoming tide seems to be great for mullet and pinkies. The slack and outgoing tides have worked better for me when it comes to targeting flathead.
But like all fishing, there’s a range of factors involved. Including time of year, moon and what food is prevalent for predator species.
I’d definitely recommend smaller hook sizes for most species. Consider hook sizes between 4 and size 10, depending on your target species.
Sounds small, but many of the fish in the Yarra estuary system have smaller mouths.
If you’re using berley, the smaller fish will bring in larger fish anyway.
You can always change up to a larger rig later.
Smaller rigs are great for kids, too. They’re more likely to “catch a fish”, albeit small, than with a larger tackle setup. That helps sustain their interest – and makes their – and your – day more enjoyable. Plenty of Mullet year round in the river which fit the bill for the kids perfectly.
I’d definitely recommend using berley in the Yarra River estuary. Attract the fish to you. You’re going to find that easier than casting about any which way. Aim your rod at a likely spot, then focus your berley there.
You can cast a berley cage out on your line. Used either a running sinker or a paternoster rig.
Try a fine breadcrumb berley mixture infused with tuna oil, a few drops of aniseed and even a touch of garlic can work well. Just keep in mind – a little flavour goes a long way – and too much drives the fish away. Be subtle. Experiment!
Berley cages spread the slick around your bait, without “feeding the fish”. Increasing your chances of a hookup.
Fisherman’s Bend on the Yarra River Estuary can be extremely productive for fishing. It’s one of Melbourne’s historical hotspots and can produce good catches to this day. I have caught species ranging from mullet and bream, pinky snapper and even small 7 Gill Sharks over the years.
I recommend it highly.
There’s often plenty of free parking. However, toilets are a long walk away. So plan to drive (last time I tried a few years back, they were closed when I got there around 1:00 pm on a weekday)
Like most spots in the Yarra Estuary and Maribyrnong River system, I’d not be inclined to eat what I catch.
That’s due to over a century of industrial abuse that, sadly, has continued at times right up to the present day. While effluent outflow is now controlled legally, and dumping/leaks are subject to large fines, the fact is that it still happens. Sometimes it at least appears to be a case of not what you’ve done but who you know.
No. Because a forecast cannot truthfully guarantee whether fish are biting at a specific spot right now. Getfished shows the current fishing conditions instead: tide movement, solunar timing, weather, wind, pressure, marine conditions and fising report, derived, species history.
Use this information to make informed decisions about where to fish, and to compare conditions across nearby locations. We hope you enjoy using Getfished to find your next great fishing spot!
| Latitude | -37.8271 |
|---|---|
| Longitude | 144.9033
View on Google Maps |
| Nearest city | Melbourne |
| Distance | 7.00 km |
| Platform | Estuaries |
| Rivers | Yarra river |
Nearby options
A small selection of other saltwater locations from the same region.
Fishing report summaries are derived from Getfished’s structured fishing report database system. More information on this on how we collect and structure fishing report data can be found on our Fishing reports information.
Forecasts are based on the Getfished Meteorological and Solunar Forecasting System, which combines data from the BOM, and other sources. Our custom software systems use these inputs to establish solunar, tides and other forecasts for fishing conditions.
For more information on our systems and data sources please see our Datasources page. You can also Contact us for more information or details on commercial reuse.