Action Fishing Nets
NZ Made Floating Mono Mullet 30m 40m 60m or 100m
Net-Length:30m
Quantity:
Pickup available at Action Outdoors Shop
Usually ready in 24 hours
NZ Made Floating Mono Mullet 30m 40m 60m or 100m
30m
Action Outdoors Shop
Pickup available, usually ready in 24 hours
1/348 Rosebank Road
Avondale
AUK
Auckland 1026
New Zealand
Floating Mono Mullet Fishing Net NZ Made braided lead core bottom rope and floating top rope and floats
Mono Mullet Net Commercial Grade Floating Fishing Net
30m 40M, 60M, 100M in 30md or Custom made from $8.50 per meter
Mesh size 90mm Can be CUSTOM Made in 30md, 36md & 40md and in 100mm
Standard is 30 mesh deep
Mesh thickness 0.5 millimetres mono
Made with
- 5 mm braided lead core bottom rope- Lead inside the rope
- 7 mm floating top rope
- Large Whisper floats with extra flotation
Action Fishing Nets are of the highest quality and slung/mounted to catch the most fish for a given length.
Hi, These nets are made for places like the Waikato River and are designed to float on the surface.
This allows nets to avoid rocks, hollow trees, weeds and other fish-like stingrays that could damage your net on the bottom.
These nets need water deeper than 3.0m to float. Less than 2.5m is like any other set net, as the braided lead core sinking rope will be on the bottom river bed.
Mullet is usually found in New Zealand's North Island coastal waters, particularly in shallow muddy harbours, mangrove swamps, and river estuaries.
Some swim up rivers into freshwater.
FISHING METHODS
Grey mullets are caught year-round, from November to March and around the north of the North Island, usually in set nets and beach seines.
DID YOU KNOW
Grey mullets travel as far as the Karapiro dam up the Waikato River and to Te Kuiti in the Waipa River. However, they must return to the sea to spawn.
SUSTAINABILITY
Grey mullets are distributed worldwide and have been fished by customary, commercial, and recreational fishers for over 100 years. Overseas and New Zealand tagging studies indicate complex movement patterns in adult populations: some schools remain in one locality, while others appear to be on the move almost continuously. Assessing abundance using commercial catch rates has proved problematic, but daily catch rates in the main net and beach seine fishery have been stable over recent decades.