Captain
Ivan Bennett

Member since November 2016 Sydney, Australia
Background
I have been a fisherman since I was a kid, when I developed a love for the seas and everything that lives in and on the oceans. It's my passion! I have been a member of the Sydney Game Fishing Club for over 30 years, and have fished competitively along the East Coast of NSW from Bermagui to Ballina for the various game fish species found along our coast. I started my chartering business in the year 2000.
Techniques
I love all types of fishing and over the years have had experience in all forms of fishing form Fly fishing to Heavy Tackle Game fishing on the Barrier reef. My two loves are Game Fishing for Marlin and Tuna as well as all the other great ocean wanderers and Fly fishing in both salt and fresh water...

Hey, I'm Captain Ivan Bennett

Sydney, Australia
Background
I have been a fisherman since I was a kid, when I developed a love for the seas and everything that lives in and on the oceans. It's my passion! I have been a member of the Sydney Game Fishing Club for over 30 years, and have fished competitively along the East Coast of NSW from Bermagui to Ballina for the various game fish species found along our coast. I started my chartering business in the year 2000.
Techniques
I love all types of fishing and over the years have had experience in all forms of fishing form Fly fishing to Heavy Tackle Game fishing on the Barrier reef. My two loves are Game Fishing for Marlin and Tuna as well as all the other great ocean wanderers and Fly fishing in both salt and fresh water...

My Charter Listing

Excellent
4.9 / 5
(22 reviews)
Sydney
 2 bookings in the past week.
 Instant Confirmation
trips from US $1,541

Fishing Reports

Ambition Report 1st.Aprilโ€™24
Ambition Report 1st.Aprilโ€™24
Apr 1, 2024 Sydney
The Marlin bite here off Sydney continues as it has over the last few weeks with lots of reports coming in yesterday as well. Most boats out there are finding fish and more than a few experiencing multiples strikes. Most of the Marlin are Stripies but there is the occasional Blue as well as larger Mahi Mahi among them. We generally associate Striped Marlin with the shelf area, between eighty and one hundred and fifty fathoms where the bait congregates. However, this latest run has found the Stripies in numbers out to and over the thousand fathom line. There have been sightings of Yellowfin but they remain aloof though a few have been taken. I took George and his son Chase out today they saying it was their one-time chance to catch a Marlin. So, if it was going to happen today was the day. I put the lures in at eighty fathoms and trolled out towards Browns where there had been lots of action. At around four hundred fathoms we raised our first fish, a Striped Marlin which played with a couple of lures and did what Stripies do. We tried teasing it but no go. Expectation was now high, the guys had now seen their first Marlin and all eyes were glued to the lures. The second strike was a screamer but it only lasted a few seconds, the line snapping for no apparent reason and I sadly I lost one of my Brads. My only conclusion being that the line had tangled on the outrigger clip, one of the many ways to lose a Marlin. We continued on heading wider without seeing much but hearing that the action was further North, so off we went. It took a while for the next strike, but when it came it really took off, I thought it was a Blue. A long greyhounding run then sounding. George had the rod and was worked hard but he wanted to give his son a shot so they swapped over. This was a tough fish and Chase did a good job eventually bringing it to the boat and it was a Stripy a very very good one. The next fish hit us as we crossed the shelf on our way home. George took this one and made quick work of it. It put up quite a spectacular show much to the joy of George and Chase whose ambition, no pun intended, had been satisfied. Tight lines, Ivan
Continue reading
Ambition Report 28th.Marchโ€™24
Ambition Report 28th.Marchโ€™24
Mar 25, 2024 Sydney
I Took Sean and his brother Kevin from Ohio out last Monday with high hopes of finding the Marlin and Yellowfin that weโ€™d seen over the previous weeks. Recently weโ€™ve had a really good run of Marlin with both Blues and Stripes being found in good numbers. The Bait Station as well as the shelf area holding heaps of bait, attracting the Stripes. Out wider Blues caused havoc amongst the many sightings of Yellowfin even though few of either have been caught. Once reaching the shelf I trolled out seeing very little bait and bird activity, in fact it wasnโ€™t until we were in four hundred fathoms that we saw anything. Meantime Huss on โ€˜Finfinderโ€™ called up saying they had Yellowfin busting up in five hundred fathoms. That was motivation enough and it wasnโ€™t long afterward that one of the rods took off. Ron and the guys were yelling Yellowfin but all I could see was a really good Mahi Mahi running and jumping away from us. What I hadnโ€™t seen was a bust up of sixty kilo plus Yellowfin beside us. Finally, the hooked Mahi Mahi got the crewโ€™s attention and after a good fight Sean landed a 1.4 metre Bull, one of the best Iโ€™ve seen in a very long time. As we headed out we saw more and more birds and scattered bait, expectation was high. We were soon rewarded with a heavy strike on the rigger and the โ€˜Blue Illusionโ€™ was taken and racing off with a nice Blue of around 130 kiloโ€™s attached. The fish put on a great display which sadly cannot be fully appreciated from the video below. After releasing the Marlin I continued out hoping for Yellowfin. The further out we went the more birds we found, all working over a wide area. Occasional the birds would come together and the Yellowfin would bust up drawing us and the birds towards them. It was incredibly difficult to reach these bust ups in time to present the lures to the fish they were so short lived, only a few fish being apparent. It seemed as though there were only a few small schools of Yellowfin moving very quickly chasing small schools of bait. However, I did manage to get close to one of the bust ups while the fish were still up. We had swirls behind the lures but no hook ups, exceedingly frustrating. However, while chasing the Yellowfin we did pick up another big Mahi Mahi. I went out again on Wednesday with Mat and some of his friends from San Francisco. We went out hoping the Marlin, Yellowfin and Mahi Mahi were still around but this time in a better biting mood. It was a lot rougher this day so I headed for the Bait Station to give us a more comfortable ride out. There was as expected plenty of bait but after working the area for some time with no action moved further offshore. As I trolled out it became apparent everything had changed, no birds, no bait, no nothing. I trolled out to five hundred fathoms then turned South toward where we were on Monday. As I made the turn Ron yelled out Yellowfin. I turned around just in time to see a big โ€˜fin out of the water trying to eat Brad but alas it missed. Everyone was awake now and with great expectations.I worked the area for a while with no result then continued South. Well, we were just about done for the day when โ€˜Lumoโ€™ took off with yet again another big Mahi Mahi. Compared to Monday the ocean was dead, everywhere was dead, the bait was gone and the birds were not to be found. I could think of a myriad excuse for our lack of success and why it was so i.e. full moon, water colour, wrong tides, too sunny etc. The facts of the matter is that here off Sydney especially there is nothing to hold bait other than Browns, the Bait Station and the Southern Canyons. We are at the mercy of the vagaries of the East Australia Current and its unpredictable spin-offs creating an ever-changing fishery. So there is reason to be optimistic tomorrow will be different and maybe even better. Tight lines, Ivan
Continue reading
Ambition report 11th.Marchโ€™24
Ambition report 11th.Marchโ€™24
Mar 12, 2024 Sydney
Autumn has always been the best time of year for Game Fishing out of Sydney. Generally speaking, this is when we encounter the larger fish of the species rather than numbers. Although having said that this Autumn has been exceptional, so far. Over the last couple of weeks both Blue and Striped Marlin as well as Mahi Mahi have shown up in numbers off Sydney. The Mahi Mahi as is usual are found around the various F.A.Dโ€™s with live bait producing the bigger fish, being the first boat at the spot helps as they can become spooky when there is too much boat traffic. As for the Marlin, they could be anywhere. Usually however, if you find the bait youโ€™ll find the Marlin, but not always. Sometimes youโ€™ll find the bait before the Marlin, as a friend of mine, Steve Baker (Fly By Night) did. He found heaps of bait well North of the โ€˜Bait Stationโ€™, worked it for several hours for no result. The next day Rob Molnar in his boat โ€˜On Callโ€™ had a blinder of a day raising fourteen Marlin in that same area. On the day Steve found the bait North of the โ€˜Bait Stationโ€™ I was out with Jamie McKay on โ€˜Ground Swellโ€™ fishing an area a couple of miles South of them where there was scattered bait. We had a great day too. Weโ€™d already bagged out on Mahi Mahi and ended up raising eight Marlin of which we tagged three, all Blues ranging from 130 kg. to 180 kg. We should have had two more but for a broken hook and another mishap which I will not go into, if you want more info just ask Jamie. From what I heard on the radio almost everyone fishing for Marlin over the last week or so have caught or raised Marlin with many being pack attacked by Stripies. Around the shelf area where the bait tends to stack up is where most of the action for them has been. But out around Browns both North and South out to four hundred fathoms there have been Stripies and Blues with the occasional sighting of Yellowfin tuna. Frustratingly Stripies are habitually finicky when it comes to lures and tough to hook so โ€˜Bait and Switchโ€™, live baiting as well as skipping baits is the most effective method to hook them though teasing them on lures works too. What to me is most interesting is the water temperature. We were reading 28.5 degrees which I confirmed with other boats. In the past weโ€™d consider 27 degrees too hot and look for cooler water. Yet here we are with a great bite and much hotter water. I suppose one answer is that our on-board gauges have a limited range over which they are accurate. Another potential answer is these above high temperatures are only a surface layer of maybe only a metre or two in depth leaving the bait below in a more comfortable zone. Well whatever is happening the fishing is great and if it keeps up the S.G.F.Cโ€™s annual Peter Goadby Memorial Tournament on the 13th. and 14th. April will be awesome. It is at this tournament where we have regularly weighed Blue Marlin over two hundred kiloโ€™s with several over three hundred kiloโ€™s also Yellowfin tuna over seventy kilo. For those that chase sharks big Tigers are a regular at the weigh station. So, the Marlin are there and if you donโ€™t go โ€ฆ Tight lines, Ivan
Continue reading
Ambition report 15th.Decemberโ€™23
Ambition report 15th.Decemberโ€™23
Dec 15, 2023 Sydney
I was keen to get out today after being out last Monday when we raised a Striped marlin but sadly missing the hook up. However I was surprised today to see how conditions had changed. On Monday the inshore water temperature was around the 23 C which is unusual enough for this time of year but offshore at 300 fathoms I read 25.2 C a temperature more normally found in February and March. Even allowing for error in my temperature guage the STCโ€™s were showing 24.7 C, so it couldnโ€™t have been too far out. Today the inshore waters were a more normal 21.7 degrees but dirty green probably from the rainwater runoff. However offshore, past the shelf, it was still over 24 degrees and a beautiful blue. The colour which induces confidence even if it is unseasonably warm. We trolled towards Browns where we raised the Marlin on Monday when in roughly the same area the rigger with โ€˜Pakula Lumoโ€™ took off at a rate of knots. Surprisingly even though both Ron and I were watching the lures neither of us saw the hookup. The Marlin jumped once and just raced off on one huge run leaving poor Cuyler (I hope I got his name right) an awful lot of line to get back. He did eventually get the Marlin which turned to the boat and released it. Then while Ron was resetting the gear the rigger with โ€˜Pakula Lumoโ€™ went off again sadly this time it didnโ€™t hook up. We had another strike later in the day on โ€˜Bradโ€™ by what I thought was either a Wahoo or a Spearfish but again no hookup. It was only because of the water temperature that I even considered a Wahoo a fish not often seen around Sydney these days. What this unseasonal warm ( hot ) water might mean to the Sydney fishery is going to be anyoneโ€™s guess. Will it continue to warm up?, seems most likely. Will it bring more tropical species down here? , hopefully but whether this is good thing or bad thing is another question. Will is push our Striped Marlin fishery South?, I hope not. I am sure there are many other questions and likelyhoods but whatever the end result it will be interesting. Tight lines, Ivan
Continue reading
Ambition report 26th.Novemberโ€™23
Ambition report 26th.Novemberโ€™23
Nov 24, 2023 Sydney
I took Joe and his wife, from Florida, out last Friday on what turned out to be beautiful day at sea. The sea calm and the rain cleared as we headed out. Joe had experience having caught Sailfish and Mahi Mahi in his home waters in the Carribean. However he hadnโ€™t caught a Marlin and that was his ambition, no pun intended. So we headed out and after hearing of Mahi Mahi around the FADโ€™s did a couple of circuits around the Sydney FAD with no result so headed out over the twelve mile to the shelf. Just past the twelve the current picked up and the temperature started to climb and the water turning that beautiful blue and 22.5 C. I started to mark bait around the shelf and out to around 140 fathoms but it was very patch and obviously not being harassed. On approaching Browns I saw another boat and it looked like they were fighting a fish which was confirmed when I saw a Marlin jumping. Turns out it was a boat called โ€˜HotRodโ€™. Later on they told me that they had a 2.5 metre Blue Marlin on board which had sadly died during the fight. Spirits were now high and expectation great. Further out as I was watching the Mutton birds migrating South I could see that some patches were circling and indeed working an area. I concentrated on them for a while and though it was obvious they were on something I couldnโ€™t make out what it was and nothing was marking on the sounder. Subsequently as I move further North I saw several more patches of birds working the same way. I have in the past seen similar behaviour when the Mutton birds were chase Flying fish in that hey scare the fish into taking flight then pounce on them. Then Ron screamed out Marlin! and there behind the short corner was a Striped Marlin coming up behind โ€˜Evilโ€™ mouth open and ready to eat. Ron dropped the lure back but no hook up. The Marlin came back onto the lure, Ron teased it a little then dropped it back and this time hooked up and the fish took off. It was a very stubborn fish and I actually thought it might be a Blue which stayed deep and made Joe really work for it. However, he did eventually get the fish up and we released a good ninety to a hundred kilo Striped Marlin. It was getting late by then so I turned for home anticipating my next trip out into the blue. Tight lines, Ivan
Continue reading
Ambition Report 30th.Octoberโ€™23
Ambition Report 30th.Octoberโ€™23
Oct 29, 2023 Sydney
At last something to write about. Though over the last couple of weeks a few Striped Marlin have shown up the last couple of times Iโ€™ve been out have been a misery of bad weather with cold and green water. Though there was plenty of bait around there was little if any bird activityโ€ฆ the water just seemed dead. Yesterday was a whole different kettle of fish, no pun intended. I headed out towards Browns put the gear in at the Twelve Mile, trolling out from there. The water wasnโ€™t a great colour but at least it wasnโ€™t that dirty green and the temperature was increasing with the current coming in from the East and the bait was building up. I was several miles North of Browns when I saw a heap of birds working, they werenโ€™t going South with their migrating mates. It took a fair while to catch up to them since out there the current was going North and with the Northerly wind it made for a less than comfortable ride. I did catch up eventually and found they were chasing a school of Striped Tuna one of which took old โ€˜Bradโ€™. I decided then to go downwind to Browns to ease the pain for one of the guys who was not feeling very well. As it so happened after only a few minutes we had a double strike on the riggers with โ€˜Lumoโ€™ and โ€˜Illusionโ€™ hooked up on Yellowfin. The fish were around twenty to twenty-five kiloโ€™s. We got one in but sadly lost the other at the boat when it took a last desperate run. On the radio I heard there were a couple of boats around the โ€˜Bait Stationโ€™ and that they were working over large schools of bait. I stayed out in the deep water hoping to find the Yellowfin again. As I went North the temperature increased and the current swung more to the East. I didnโ€™t find the โ€˜fin again but around mid-day a solid strike on โ€˜Lumoโ€™ resulted in a good-sized Striped Marlin charging in at the boat. We actually thought it was coming aboard when it slammed into the starboard corner forcing Mark to duck for cover. It was a very active fish and Ace who had been very sick all day had to hand the rod over to Mark who brought it to boat. I kept trolling North to give us a better run home and on the way marked incredible amounts of bait, the sounder virtually blacking out. Then again from eighty five to sixty fathom found birds and dolphins rounding the bait up. With all the bait out there and with that warm Southerly current pushing down it canโ€™t possibly be too long before the scene comes alive. Optimistic! maybe, too optimistic! probably but you never never know. I also had confirmation from Rob the owner of โ€˜On Callโ€™ that they had caught a good-sized Mahi Mahi and saw a couple of Striped Marlin wide of the shelf on Sunday too. This reminds me that over the years large Mahi Mahi have become a common capture during November. To me indicating the warm edge is not far away. Tight Lines, Ivan
Continue reading

Customer reviews

Rating summary
Excellent
4.9 / 5
out of 5 stars from 22 reviews
Boat
Excellent
4.9 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience
Excellent
4.9 / 5
Photos & videos by reviewers (35)
Trip of a lifetime!
Trip of a lifetime!
Trip of a lifetime!
+32
Angler rating
19
2
0
0
0
Anglers claimed
Good experience
95%
Friendly captain
100%
Recommend this charter
95%
Appropriate for children
75%
Satisfied with the boat
100%
Caught fish
78%
Sort by:
Featured  
Showing:
5 of 22 reviews
George M.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Trip of a lifetime!

VERIFIED   NEW  10 Hour Game Fishing on April 1, 2024
Captain Ivan and mate were a pleasure to spend the day with and possessed exceptional knowledge on the fishery .ย  My Son and...
George M. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Ivan Bennett Captain replied

Nancy G.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Dream come true!

VERIFIED   10 Hour Game Fishing on November 24, 2023
Captain Ivan and Deckie Ron made my husbandโ€™s dream come trueโ€ฆ.he caught a Marlin!!!ย  During the โ€œfishingโ€ time onboard,...
Nancy G. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
1 person finds this review helpful
You and 1 other person found this review helpful
Nancy G. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
1 person finds this review helpful
You and 1 other person found this review helpful

MARK P.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Stripped marlin and yellowfin tuna oh my!!!

VERIFIED   10 Hour Game Fishing on October 28, 2023
The Ambition Team was great and very accommodating for weather reschedules.ย  Once on the water they did not disappoint.ย ...
MARK P. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Ivan Bennett Captain replied

Chris C.
Kensington, NH
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Awesome Day

VERIFIED   10 Hour Game Fishing on April 23, 2023
Captian Ivan and his mate made a wonderful experience for us.ย  He is very knowledgeable, experienced and always had a smile...
Chris C. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Ivan Bennett Captain replied

Bryan T.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

February fishing trip

VERIFIED   10 Hour Game Fishing on February 27, 2024
Bryan T. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
Bryan T. recommends Ambition Charters
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful