Barramundi
To fish for our barramundi we recommend bottom fishing with deadbaits. Barramundi are also great fun on the fly, and any fish patterns
fished on floating lines down the weeded margins will give you
some heart stopping takes. When hooked barramundi put on a fine display
of jumping and head shaking, so just keep in contact with the fish and do not
slacken off the pressure or they will shake the hook clear. Once netted
the fun is not over, as they will often leap clear of the net or use
their razor sharp gill covers to break through the net. As with all our
fish, photograph in the water, but mind those sharp gill plates and
spiny top fins or you will be off down the hospital having some razor
wounds stitched up. We suggest letting our guides help you to hold the
head end as they are used to the danger when these fish shake their
heads.
General facts on barramundi:
Barramundi are not native to Thailand; they were originally bought here
as a farmed fish for food, then the Thais recognized their popularity
as a fine sporting fish. The barramundi is greenish bronze on their
backs with silver flanks and a cream belly. Barramundi belong to the giant
perch family; they have the perch characteristics of a pointed, spiked
top fin, with razor edges to their gill plates. In the wild, barramundi
move between fresh and salt water during various stages of their life
cycle. Their eggs and fry can only survive in brackish or salt water, and
in captivity they are converted to life in freshwater. They are
carnivores, feeding mainly on smaller fish, crustaceans and shrimp.
Their large mouths enable them to take prey half their body size. When
it's quiet, listen for the distinct thwack noise echo round the lake
when barramundi surface feed, especially last light. Wild barramundi
inhabit rivers and migrate to the tidal estuaries and flats to spawn at
the start of the monsoon season, and the migrating males meet up with the
females, which lay millions of eggs. Barramundi are hermaphroditic; they
are born males, but as they mature a percentage change to females, and most big
barramundi are females. These fish will not spawn in our lake. The
barramundi is recognized as a fine eating fish; they are farmed in many
countries as an important food source from their native Australia to
Malaysia, Thailand, most of Asia and recently in America the
Netherlands and the UK. The Aquabella group in the UK produces eight
tons of barramundi per year for distribution throughout Europe.
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