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Hydro canal fishing - Twizel

Printed From: The Fishing Website
Category: Freshwater Fishing
Forum Name: Freshwater Fission
Forum Description: The place to discuss all matters related to freshwater fishing!
URL: https://www.fishing.net.nz/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=138507
Printed Date: 14 Jun 2026 at 8:43am


Topic: Hydro canal fishing - Twizel
Posted By: bricker
Subject: Hydro canal fishing - Twizel
Date Posted: 14 Apr 2024 at 9:39am
Just after some background info on Hydro Canal fishing around Twizel. I'm planning a trip for daughter (24 at Dunedin Uni) and I for a weekend at end of June. Thinking of getting a guide on Day 1  - I've done plenty of fly fishing/spinning in UK rivers for salmon and sea trout but she is a relative novice apart from sea fishing in NZ.
If  anyone has any tips, recommendations, feedback, advice etc. that would be much appreciated.
Thanks in advance.



Replies:
Posted By: The Tamure Kid
Date Posted: 03 May 2024 at 8:09pm
G'day. I'm no expert, as I've only visited once, but seeing as nobody else has jumped in - here goes.
I was there last winter (August) and day tripped over from Wanaka while the family skied.
I visited Hunting & Fishing Wanaka for a licence and some sinkers for egg drifting, having researched via YouTube vids and NZ Fishing News articles. I took down my squid fishing rod, and a light spin reel with light fluorocarbon and jigheads as well (for trying softbaiting).

I went to the Ohau system and while slowly cruising canal side I recognised Mike Davis (H&F Rotorua owner and occasional author, fishing show guest etc). I pulled over and it turns out he was part of a group doing a gear testing trip with Shimano, led by a local woman who presumably knows the area well. They were fishing opposite a salmon farm cage zone, using eggs/sinker rigs. 

I gave them a bit of space and rigged up. Long story short, I only caught a small rainbow for my efforts. But they had a tough time of it too. I think they might have hooked one big one, but not much else. It wasn't like they were hooking fish after fish. They fished for hours without much to show for it, like me. I tried a softbait for a while, but wasn't getting far enough over - by what the others were saying you needed to be swinging the softbait right under the edge of the cage, and my casts were falling a little short.

to be honest, I found it pretty average. It's not exactly scenic, being down a canal bank with the salmon cages etc. And the monotony of walking up and down drifting eggs, stumbling over uneven ground, is pretty mind-numbing if you're not catching a 30lber!!

I think a guide is a good idea, as there are miles of canals and no real obvious reason for fish to be in one place versus another. You could spend hours fishing an area that doesn't have any fish. Once I knew the Shimano team had focused on that area, I figured I might as well stay there. Their guide would have taken them to a hot spot to try to get them good footage for their promo vid.

Another local turned up who seemed to know what he was doing, and caught a decent fish. He was using a two fly rig of a big Woolly Bugger and an egg above it, and said it gives the fish a couple of looks - rather than just eggs which they see over and over.

A guide will know areas for salmon, versus areas for trout; and have intel about current flow, and where fish have been located recently. I've seen vids of guys catching in a completely featureless zone without a salmon cage in sight, while other times the cages seem to be the hot spot. Also, there's a spot where people fish off a high dam wall, into swirling deep water, but that looks pretty unappealing to me. 

The backdrop of snowy mountains is nice, but ultimately, I think canal fishing is an acquired taste. I prefer natural rivers, and the action of fly fishing the Tongariro for example. I would have loved to hook a monster, but it was probably unrealistic to expect that across 1.5 days of trying in a completely unfamiliar place.


Posted By: smudge
Date Posted: 03 May 2024 at 8:55pm
Well summed up TTK. I've only fished there once myself ad caught a very small brown. Early early morning and late late evening would be my pick of best times but I really have no idea Big smile

-------------
Best gurnard fisherman in my street


Posted By: OneWayTraffic
Date Posted: 02 Jun 2024 at 8:04pm
Just saw this. There's a Twizel Tekapo fishing group on Facebook, which is sometimes handy, especially if there's just been a 'release' from the nets. 

Overall it's a shadow of its former glory, the days when you could go with the kids and reliably catch a couple salmon every day just by having a bait in the water are gone. Too much pressure, and the farms are better at holding on to their salmon! 

Still it's a great fishery overall, and there's lake fishing as well which can be great if you have a little dinghy or find a good spot where they come in close, and it's a beautiful part of the country. 

In terms of methods it totally depends on the day. After an unsuccessful day I took my son to the fish farm, where you can pay to catch a salmon. That was a very educational 40 minutes, which was how long it took to hook one of the 150 salmon in a smallish netted off pond! We kept on changing lures and colours and eventually I got one to bite, and my son landed it. It was eye opening to see them simply ignore lure after lure. The water was a bit low on oxygen and they close their mouths. 

Best advice I can give is decide what you want to achieve. Memorable trip and fish caught? Go to the farm, feed the salmon and pay to catch one. You will probably end up ahead financially and the daughter will have fun. 

Otherwise just spend a day at the canals, fish slow and deep, and try a combination of lures, colours and methods. Light gear fished deep usually works, but sometimes a spinner in the mid water will catch when nothing else does. There's probably about one trophy fish (think 30lb or more) every 100m but they do move around a bit. The salmon especially school, so if there's nothing happening where you are, don't be afraid to move. On the other hand, right place right time and it's the best fishing you will ever have. 

I've caught plenty of big fish there, but been skunked a lot as well. 




Posted By: The Tamure Kid
Date Posted: 02 Jun 2024 at 9:25pm
Good input OneWayTraffic.

I recently watched a YouTube video by the boys from Fishing & Adventure (filmed last winter by the looks) and I'm pretty sure they were on the Tekapo Canal - on a long straight section just 'upstream' from the main road bridge. I think you have to access it on foot, either from the main highway, or a parking area driven to from well upstream where the road crosses the canal.

A bunch of people walking along a paved road drifting eggs, sometimes busier than your average main shopping street!

But they did catch some stonkers on Glo Bugs. They were put on to the spots by the\Okuma reps including Bryce Helms out of Nelson area. The Tekapo is one of the areas I described in my earlier post that is essentially featureless. Wide flowing canal between steep bouldery banks. 
Tony Orton did a video for Shimano in that same stretch of canal, so it must be an area with a reasonable chance of a trophy.

Check out the video to get an idea of the conditions you can expect.


Posted By: MB
Date Posted: 02 Jun 2024 at 9:52pm
Interesting read. It's on my bucket list. It appeals for some reason. I'm keen to try some techniques I've picked up on in other parts of the world.


Posted By: Helmsy
Date Posted: 13 Jun 2024 at 3:53pm
Yeah that's going back to 2019 that episode I think! Was a great trip for sure. I'm now based back up in Auckland running around for Manic Tackle, but was in Twizel last week and managed a few fish up to around 18lb.

Worth noting that section of canal shown in the F&A episode is now closed from June 1st and re-opens September 1st.

As others have noted, I would 100% be looking at getting a guide, as the fishing this time of year can be super tricky



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