27 December 2013

Viaduct Costcutter open, 27/12/2013

Today saw me and Tony taking a trip down to Viaduct for a cost cutter open, it was being held over campbell and cary but with the wind forecast all I wanted was a peg with a bit of respite so that I could try a few things out.
Peg 79 was my destination for the day, and all the info that I was getting was that there were carp in the area and that they were coming on meat and bread. With the wind forecast to increase at lunch time I decided on a simple plan of a bomb attack with a skimmer feeder as a back up, due to recent form I also pulled a waggler out of the bag and plumbed around a bit to get an idea of the depths, I found that it was around 3ft on the top of the bar in front of me and went down to 4 1/2 ft almost everywhere else.
I had a few minutes before the start so also pulled a rig out of the box to fish in front of the platform to my right, the plan for this was to fish at the base of the shelf where the keepnets would normally be.  I decided to feed dead maggot, corm and meat on this line so as the all in i cupped in a quarter of a cup of grub and then cast the bomb baited with meat out around 30 yds.  
Not alot happened for the first hour and a half, I was getting plenty of liners but I could not find a way to convert them into bites until I dropped on what must have been a small pod of fish as I had 3 bites in 20 minutes and landed 2 carp for around 20lb both on meat. That was it for a while and the liners stopped on the top of the bar, I thought about trying the feeder for skimmers but hearing that Mr Tucker on Campbell had been catching well from the start meant that skimmers would not cut it today, plus I felt that the swim was too shallow for them.
I had a go on the waggler and lost a foul hooker so back to the bomb and out of curiosity I tried towards the aerator on the right hand side of my swim, as the lead was falling through the water I could feel it bouncing off fish and I thought that I had a bite on the drop but it was nothing. So out went the bomb again, this time it got to the bottom and after 6 minutes the tip went round, I lifted and felt solid resistance and after an epic struggle that saw the fish try to swim around everything, get snagged and do several long runs I finally managed to net half of this:
25lb 10oz of Scary Cary magic, the next 3 casts saw me land another 2 fish and then that was it, the last hour and a half saw the wind die down so I tried to find the fish with the waggler but they had gone and I only saw one more carp caught from the lake for the rest of the match.
At the all out I thought that I would have 60lb and so it turned out when the scales came around with my total being 60lb 6oz, this was enough to take the customary quid off of Tony and also for second in the match behind Tucks on Campbell. So again not a bad day at all.


22 December 2013

Todber Christmas match,Park lake, 21/12/13

This weekend I was off to Todber for my annual pilgrimage for the Todber Christmas match, at the draw it was a who's who of match fishing in the south west with the likes of Nick Chedzoy, Mark Poppleton, Ken Rayner, Chris Perry, Mark Harper and finally Des Shipp. Since it was another Christmas match, I was in it for the fun so I waited until close to the end on the draw and managed to pull out peg 9.  I do not know the venue that well but was not too impressed as I thought that 5, 6, 7,or 37 would have been better and the weather was pants so the top corner where the guys could fish across with the pole easily looked better.
However I was there to give it a bash so I decided on a three point plan to try and overcome the fresh breeze from right to left, I set up an 8ft Commercial King F1 Wand to fish a scoop feeder across, then a 2+2 line straight in front where I would fish pellet and a margin riog at the base of the marginal shelf down to my left.
There was bags of time before the all in and I was soon ready to go, bait list was 2mm and 4mm pellet mixed, a few expanders and a few red and white maggot, the al in was called and I potted in a small ball of pellet in front and then around 100 maggots down to my left. I then cast the feeder across and set a stopwatch onto 5 minutes, it counted down to about 3 minutes and the tip ripped round with carp number 1 on, and this was followed by 6 more of his friends in the first hour and a quarter before bites dried up.  I seemed to be about the only person catching on the method, bar Mark Harper on peg 5 who was admitting to 4, and on chatting to the guy in the next peg i can only assume that it was due to the fact that I was feeding pellet around the feeder and not alot of them, everyone else seemed to be sending out quite big lumps of groundbait that I could see. Whatever it was a change from a 6mm hard pellet to double dead red saw another carp and 2 F1's in the next 15 minutes before another quite spell.
It was at this point I decided to rest the far side and try the 2+2 line with pellet, I had been using my big cup to keep it topped up and as I lowered a 4mm pellet under the 10X11 MW F1 slim the float dipped and a small roach came straight to hand, unperturbed I dropped in again and this time the float dinked and a fair bit of pink reflex elastic came out the tip of the pole as a small carp did its best to get rid of the hook.  It failed and my day was set from then, it became a  case of trying my pole lines for a few minutes and if the float did not go under re feed and then sit on the tip for a little while.
I ended up with around 15 carp, a handful of decent roach and a skimmer at the end of the 5 hrs and I was unsure where that would put me, I had been watching Mark Harper catching a few lumps on corn throughout the day and I was sure that the far side would have seen some better weights. The scales did Mark before me and he managed 46lb, I had 2 weighs for 48lb and that was good enough for second on the board as when they reached Des Shipp it turned out that he had managed a few fish from his short pole line over the last couple of hours I believe and that was enough for 53lb.

We all went back to the shop for the prize giving and it turned out that Des, Mark and I had the top 3 spots on the day, It had been a close match with only 2 fish separating the top 3 so I was glad to be up there in such esteemed company.
Many thanks to John and the guys at Todber for running it again and to all the other anglers who braved some atrocious conditions on the day, I will see you all there again next year.

08 December 2013

Withy Teams of 4, 7/12/13

It was back to Witherington farm for my first Teams of 4 since I have been back, and it was time for my second breakfast in a week. Team for the day was myself, Steve, Les and Gerry and it was decreed that I would be back on Selwood.  I was happy with that but not so happy when after we had filled in all the team sheets and paid our money that it turned out that we could have swapped a couple of anglers around, that aside it was good to see a few friendly faces and have a bit of banter before the draw.  Steve did the honors for Browning Andover Green and I had peg 7 as my destination for the day, I challenged Ian R for a quid and giggled a bit as he was sat on 14, not the best peg for him.

I decided to concentrate on skimmers for the most part of the match so set up a groundbait line at 14.5 m in a slight depression, a small groundbait feeder for towards the island and finally a margin rig for towards the platform to my right that was empty.  I prepped some pellet, mixed my groundbait and then decided to pull a method rod out of the bag, just in case.  
I had decided on a positive approach for the day so at the all in i fed 6 balls of groundbait with 2 mm pellet and dead maggot at 14.5 meters, I fed around 40 caster, the same of micros and half a dozen grains of corn down the edge to my right and then sent out a 4 hole drennan cage feeder 1 m short of the reeds on the island.
Not alot happened on the feeder apart from a couple of liners and I saw that the carp were up in the water, so I grabbed my method rod, cut off the feeder and set up a pop up bomb rig with a 12 inch hook length. Three 10 mm punches of bread went on the hair and out it went towards the island, I was going to be leaving the casts for 15 minutes but silvers soon put paid to that as twitches on the tip soon gave way to it going around with a skimmer on the end.  Nothing on the next cast so it got thrown up the bank for the time being and I went out onto the skimmer line, it was at this point that Kev in the peg to my right lost his second carp on the pole line, and since there was nothing happening on the skimmmer line I decided to set up a new rig to see if I could start a pellet line, keeping the pole at 14.5 meters I found a slight rise 6 inches shallower than the depression, in line with a bush on the island.  I fed a few pellets and chucked the feeder out to give the new line a chance to settle, this time the tip went round with an odd bite that seemed to swim towards me as I wound in, next thing I knew a 10lb + carp swirled by my feet turned and before I could loosen the drag my 0.12 mm hooklength parted seeing me gutted.
I went back onto the line but this time nothing happened, so in desperation I went down the edge, I had a small cup on the end of my pole and i filled it with 3 grains of corn, 20 caster and the same of micros, dropped the rig on top and 15 seconds later the float dipped, i struck and was attached to carp number 1. It tried to get under the platform but the Reflex 10-12 elastic soon pulled it out of its lair and carp number 1 was scooped up and into my net, at around 6 pounds it was a good start and it was followed 5 minutes later by its twin. The successful rig was a 4-8 MW carp slim on 0.18 mm mainline and a 0.14 mm hooklength terminated in a size 1 Tubertini 175. 
I went back around the pole lines with not alot happening until I cast the bread out to the island with about an hour and a half to go and the tip went round again, carp number 3 was soon followed again on the tip by his baby brother, then I had a skimmer on the feeder and another carp down the edge.Then disaster as I bumped another margin carp off and all of a sudden the line died, fortunately Kev pointed out that my skimmer line was fizzing like a Jacuzzi so I had a quick look on there for another skimmer but then I lost one by trying to rush it in, I hoped that that would not be critical and then went down the edge for the last 5 minutes a couple of liners and then the all out.
As the scales came around it was a tale of woe, all around the lake, my 5 carp and 3 skimmers went 31lb and that was winning until we got around to Johnny Gray on peg 11, he had 4 carp and a few skimmers for 41lb, my final hurdle was Ray Haywood on peg 15 as he had been catching steadily until a pole breakage prevented him from fishing to the island, lucky for me though as he weighed in 28lb. 
This was enough for me to take second in section and second overall as the other lakes had fished hard all over, the team news was not good however with both Steve and Les on the Green team suffering bad results and I managed to take a quid off Ian from the Blue team as he was last on the lake.
Next stop will be the great carp hunt again in a coupe of weeks as work will be getting in the way first but ce la vie.

AAF Gp2 Fur and Feather,

It was time again for the fur and feather run by AAF gp 2 at Witherington Farm Fishery, and as there were only 33 of us we were going to all be sat around the inner and outer snake. Kev ran the proceedings with his ragtag team, John, Chris and myself (must stop volunteering) and all went well, a fantastic breakfast was dispatched (don't tell the missus) side bets were made and the draw was on. A section was the inner, B and C were on the the outer, I was drawn B2 on the outer snake, four pegs up from the car park on the right hand leg. 
Getting to my peg I had Kev sat to my left on the flyer end peg, John sat on the wides at the corner to my right so straight away I was against it and looking at best for third in section. Thinking that I knew best I decided to set up a method rod, light skimmer rig for the track, a heavier rig in case the wind picked up, an across rig and a margin rig. I prepped my pellet , mixed my groundbait (50:50 Mussel Betaine feeder and Etang both sieved) and nipped of to the shop on a brew run and was still almost ready for the all in. 4 bvalls of groundbait were shipped onto he track line and then across I went trying to dob a carp at 16m, I managed a couple of small roach on bread and triple maggot so went onto the groundbait line at about 45 minutes. This was a good call as I managed to start to put a few small skimmers and roach together, the rig I was using was a 10-11 MW F1 slim on 0.16 mm mainline to a 0.10 bottom and an 18 Tubertini 808. This was working well and I was starting to enjoy myself, Kev to my left had been struggling until he started his 4th line and started to hook and land a few carp.
My silvers would never keep up so I had to start looking for a carp in my mind so out went the method with pepparami on the hair and 2 mm pellet around the feeder, not alot happened really, by sitting it out for the carp I watched my match tick away as the tip stayed motionless, I managed a couple of small carp by casting to various spots across and I had a few more silvers to try and keep in touch with the rest of the field but basically I blew it. 
This was hammered home when I watched none other than Father Christmas (Graham) slipping the net under his 4th or 5th carp with an hour to go 4 pegs to my right. I was resigned at the end, but it was really only a fun match so I chucked the tip out and packed up my top kits and pole with 30 minutes to go, in this time I had a small carp and my groundbait line suddenly turned into a Jacuzzi, lesson learnt?  Probably not!
The all out was called and I helped out on the scales ( well I was packed up), Kev took top honours in my section with 25Kg, I had 7 and a half and managed to ounce John Goddard from my right ( although he had me on the ropes until my last gasp carp).  Overall Kev won it, Si had 22Kg for 2nd, I managed 8th overall and took a quid each of Tony and Pez (Christmas money sorted) a box of mince pies and a tub of chocolates. Nice.
Many thanks to Kev and his team for running it and I can't wait until next year.

07 December 2013

Great carp hunt Pt2

I had a week off so I was going to try and get my 20lb carp, I had Monday night and Thursday night so two venues were selected and away I went.
Monday saw a visit back to Little Haynes at Todber Manor, I think that the carp gods are against me at the moment as the weather forecast was pants with freezing conditions promised straight after a few milder days.



Overnight the temperature as promised dropped right off and at one point my thermometer read minus 6 degrees C!!??  Needless to say I didn't catch even though I was working hard and recasting on fish at 2am! the view in the morning was beautiful though with the frost and Cat ice.





Thursday I decided to try a new venue and made the pilgrimage to Oxfordshire, Braesenose 1 was my destination, After another 24hrs of watching and working as hard as I dare I was still biteless, but no one else on the lake had caught so I felt a little better after that.


I moved three times in the night to try and find the fish and all I had to show for it was a few liners, but the lake itself is impressive, the pegs comfortable and the fishery gives the Armed forces a 50% discount on day tickets. I will be back there soon.




ATWL round 5, K&A Marlborough.

On this round last year I managed to weigh over 40lb from this canal so I was hoping for a good draw on the day, it didn't quite pan out as that though, I ended up going to the same car park as the week before but on the other side of the bridge, by about half a mile. It felt like a ten mile walk though as I had bruised my ribs the day before in PT so I was not an impressed bunny when I finally got to my peg.

As you can see there was no far bank feature, that coupled with he fact that I could see the bottom at 3 ft discounted the far side completely. I had Gary Williams of Swindon on the end peg to my right with a far bank tree and the Daiwa Gordon League lad on the other end peg was in a line of trees so had loads of features. In fact about 3 of the pegs looked better than mine so I was looking at a long slog for 4th in section.
I decided to again keep it simple and aim for small fish, so I plumbed up a bread rig at about 6m, a squat line at 10.5m and then two worm lines both down the track, one to the left the other to the right at 13m.
At the al in I fed a small ball of licky at 6m, then 4 balls of groundbait were dispatched across loaded with squat and hemp. I decided to feed the worm lines just before I went on them for the first time, so was soon expectantly awaiting a bite on the bread line I would love to say that the float went under and my day was plain sailing, but that was not the case. I waited for what seemed like an eternity for a bite and then only managed a few fish from the inside line before having to chase them, I managed a bonus 4oz perch off a worm line but the rest of my 50 fish were very small. I had to chop and change line regularly to keep the fish coming and I struggled to get a run of fish together on the squatt line, that was frustrating. The match could not finish soon enough and as I was on Boards the fun of following them down began, I managed to weigh 2lb 15.5oz for joint second in section with Gary on the next peg, we were both well of the pace of the other end peg who won the section with a good 4lb+ weight.  
Back at the football club and the team had not done brilliantly but we had a few pick ups but going into the last match we were in a 3 way tie for third so it is all to play for next week.

ATWL practice, 17/11/13

This was a quick practice open before the main event next week, the sections were on Marlborough waters so I had half an idea what to expect. The draw saw me off to the Farmers section and I was on peg 3 so I had 3 pegs to my left and 2 to my right, both of the pegs to my right had good far bank features as did the peg to my left so I was aiming for 4th in section straight away.


I decided on a simple match and plumbed up a bread rig at 5m, 2 squat rigs for 10m and a 2 worm rigs for the track and the far bank. At the all in a ball of licky went in, 4 balls of groundbait and 10 chopped worms and a few caster across the far bank. 
I managed 20 fish off the bread line before I had to move across but Pike put paid to me having a really good day and after I would get a better fish there would be a strike over my squatt line and then tiny fish would appear for 10-20 minutes. I tried both worm lines to rest my main line but I had no indications at all on either rig, I did however, get a few fish on bread in the last 30 minutes but it was not enough. I ended up with 108 fish for 4lb 12.5 oz for 3rd in my section of 6 behind a big 5lb and a 6lb weights from the trees to my right.

I learnt alot that would hopefully help out the team for next week.

13 November 2013

AT WL round 4 Bristol Avon,

My drive to Melksham in the morning was full of trepidation for this match as the river had been carrying extra water all week and it had been raining again overnight. I was unsure whether or not the match would be going ahead so I had also packed some big wagglers and whopper droppers so that I would have been able to spend a few hours at Shearwater wasting bait if needs be. Talk at the draw was of how high the water was and how fast, It had been deemed safe by the peggers, but they had moved a section from Melksham to Chippenham due to the Forest section being unfishable.  We all respected a 2 minute silence before the draw and then the good stuff as Barry and Dave went up to conduct the draw, It was an alright draw with number 5 being where we would be sat for the day, I was on K5 which as it turned out was around 500m from the draw venue as the crow flies. After a 2 minute drive, a 10 minute walk (I used the wrong car park!) and then another 10 minutes trying to find the peg number I was at my peg.

As you can see it didn't look too bad and I thought that with the speed of the flow and depth of water that I know is in that area that a simple match would be best, I set up a feeder rod to fish across with bread for the opening 20 minutes, a 3m whip to fish down the inside in a small slack, a flat float for 6m out just into the flow and a waggler to chuck to the far side looking for chublet and bleak if it was hard.  I mixed 4kg of groundbait and then started to check that my kit would be right for the job, it was at this point that I discovered that my 3g Flat float was woefully inadequate so I put on the biggest one I had (8g) and over shotted it by quite a bit. This was a little better and I thought that I may be able to present for a short period over the top of a baited patch so the plan stayed the same.
At the all in I potted 12 balls of groundbait onto the 6m line full of chopped worm, caster and dead pinkie (i was hoping to snag a bream on this line), a small nugget of groundbait and a few pinkies went in on the whip line and then I cast the feeder full of bread over to the far side. This time the feeder did not work and after 20 minutes I went on to the whip, this proved to be a good idea with 6 Roach and 4 Perch coming to the bank in the next 40 minutes, but the swim was slowing drastically.
I decided to rest it by having a look on the flatty and I discovered that the float was still too light and in order to be able to get the bait down I had to slowly trot the rig over the area, 5 minutes was enough to convince me that that was a no go for the day so I started casting the feeder onto the pole line. This allowed me to present a static bait at least but there were still no indications at that point. I started top rotate the swims and found that I would get a quick bite on the whip and then nothing until it had been rested for a length of time. By doing this coming into the last hour I was up to 14 fish, I was on the feeder at this point and out of the blue I missed a quick bite, I tried one more chuck in that stint to no avail, rotated the swims again and managed a small perch from the whip line then twenty minute from the end and without seeing a bite I lifted into my biggest fish of the day on the tip, a roach of about 5-6oz, and then before you knew it the all out was called. We were on scales so I got to see how the section had fished, hard is the answer with the top 2 pegs being 1&2 and both having to go for the bleak in front of them for over 4lb. There was an invisible barrier between them and the last 4 pegs as we had no bleak to show for it, I managed 2lb 5oz for third, then there was another low 2lb and the bottom 2 both had ounces.
The team on the day was 4th which keeps in 4th overall, a point behind Swindon Talisman, the goal posts have changed and we are after being best of the rest behind Garbolino Blackmore Vale and Daiwa Gordon League.

09 November 2013

Jefferies Cup 2013

It was off to march for the annual Jefferies Cup competition, I was picked up by Chri Glover at 0330 and off we trundled, we made good time and even with a quick stop off to refuel we arrived in plenty of time. Plenty of banter was had at the draw venue and it was soon to business, Jon Hatch was B team captain for the day and he returned to Bri, Daz and myself peg 2, I got A section as I was car sharing with gloves so off we went.
Parking was simple, and we soon found our pegs, Gloves was on 12, which was in a far better area but we went a quid any way. It was made worst when the REF angler to my left who had helped to peg it in the morning and had been told that we were in the worst end of the section.
 On the whole the peg looked alright, but I had a small problem as I had only packed rigs for a proper river, the swim was 4 ft down the middle and my lightest rig was 0.75g, I set this and a 1.5g up in case it towed a bit, both Dino Premiers on 0.12mm main line and a 0.08mm bottom to a size 20 hook. I decided to fish ground bait down the middle so I mixed 3Kg of bait and then looked down the peg for a worm line next to the cabbages on the inside. This rig was 0.18-0.14  and a size 14 hook, under a 0.7g slim float. Finally I plumbed up across and tight to the boat, it was a little shallow so I pulled back half a section and put on a bread line with the same line and hooks as the ground bait line, but a smaller 0.6g float.
At the all in (that was 15 minutes earlier than I was expecting) I fed 3 balls of ground bait with squatt, pinkie and hemp in at 10M, then I potted a small ball of licky across with half a pot of hemp.  I went straight on to the ground bait line and started to catch straight away nothing massive but it was a fish a put in, I found that by chopping and changing hook baits as well as the depth I was able to string a few better fish together from time to time. About an hour in I fed the worm line with 4 lobs finely chopped through a bait dropper, and 10 minutes later I was pulling out 4 perch to 6 oz for nearly a pound in short order.
At about half one what flow there had been disappeared and I was left with rigs too heavy to really catch but by chopping and changing around all three swims and hook baits and depths I was able to keep fish going in the net. The afternoon was miserable with trashed rigs, rain and swans causing havoc so when the all out was called I was quite happy to finish.
To cut a long story short I had 6lb 15 1/2oz for 9th in section, I got beaten on both sides (by 1 1/2oz to my left) but I managed to get a quid off Gloves. Army A managed 4th but we were well down the running. Always next year.

08 November 2013

Shearwater tackle test

I have been waiting to try out my new Browning Black Viper feeder rods for a few weeks and finally the opportunity arose, Tony and myself got to the lake at around 8 o’clock and decided to fish off the woodland bank about halfway along where I judged the depth should be around 10 feet deep.

My tackle for the day was simple, a 14ft Black Viper feeder and Black magic reel for fishing in the middle of the lake at 60+ turns and an 11ft Black Viper rod with an Ultimatch attached.
My groundbait was a 50:50 method mix and micro pellet that I prepared the night before and as soon as the platform was in the margins I was fishing.


I started the session on a 45g Guru elasticated method feeder with a 10cm hooklength made of 0.20 Cenex line to a size 14 Guru QM1. My hookbaits were banded pellet, white Boilies and pepparami all mounted on a baitband, the pepparami and Boilies have the band pulled inside the bait and the pellets were banded as normal around the pellet.


The day started quite slow and after about 30 minutes of casting every couple of minutes to the clip at 60 turns I decided to try dead maggots as hook bait. This resulted in a small skimmer, so as I was not blanking I decided to bin off the maggot as bream were not my target (Tony had other ideas).
I changed to a skinned piece of pepparami and this was the changing point of my session as I pulled into a carp and a couple of better skimmers in the 2-3lb class over the next hour or so. Then lifting into another bite I just hit solid resistance that I could tell instantly was a good fish, I got it halfway back before it decided that it would run past my line clip and then take another 15 minutes to land.




The Black viper performed admirably and the only time that My casting suffered was as a direct result of my not paying attention whilst casting.
Over the course of the day I extended out to 65 turns and regularly hit the clip well above the water so I think that with a bit more practice and getting used to the kit it wont be long until I am fishing at 80+ turns.



I finished the day on 10 Carp and 9 bream, Tony had 14 Bream and 3 Carp I think and so therefore won the Bream match. He was fishing a lot closer, at 40 turns and only managed to mug his carp out from down the edge on the method close to the end. All in all a very enjoyable day, and one to be repeated very soon.

Start of the great carp hunt.

The last couple of weeks have seen me mainly sorting carp gear out so that I could fish a winter ticket on a gravel pit just north of Swindon.  I have done a couple of trips to Todber Manor with mixed results.
Dusk over little Haynes
Little Haynes



A Wadmill Double

Wadmill in the rain

Wadmill again

 But the day was finally upon us that would see me in pursuit of Giant Carp again.  However, my first visit saw me failing to even see a carp, forget a lighter so I packed up, bought one and set up again and finally the weather tried its best to soak me whilst I was sleeping as the wind swung into my bivvy as I slept.



The point 















Car Park swim
















The following day it was back to Todber again, this time on the paddock lake.  It has a good head of carp to just over 30lb and cats to 80lb so expectations were high as my brother and I had the whole lake booked. ( There were meant to be 6 of us).

We set up in pegs 2 and 3, I put John into 3 (the best peg on the lake) and proceeded to cast towards his swim with a pva bag . This rod gave me the only 2 bites that we had for the 24 hours and they resulted in two nice looking mid doubles.

A Paddock Double
















The Saturday night saw wind and rain of biblical proportions and I thought that I was going to end in Kansas at any time. It was a good giggle and a nice reminder of how social fishing can be.
Paddock Peg 2

16 October 2013

Back in the swing at Bishops Cannings

Today saw me pointing the van North East of Devizes to find the Crown Inn in Bishops Canning for the draw of first AAF Gp2 match of the year and my first match after my stint away. It is good to see a thriving match circuit in the army, we had 43 anglers on the bank today, some of which had travelled up from Exeter to fish. I was saying hello with a few old faces and putting the landlady to rights about otters until the booking in was done and we were left to wait for the draw. Whilst waiting to pull my peg when the phone rang and I had to half sort out my van insurance, ‘I won’t keep you for a moment’ was the quote and she was right as it was 30 minutes, I need to apologise as I was trying to sort out my life as people were trying to run a draw but the long and short of it was that I was on peg A13? And I would need a call back later about the insurance. I around 400m down from the Bridge at the Bridge inn, and it looked a bit like this:



As you can see by all the features I fancied it for a few fish so set a target weight of 3Kg, my plan was 4 lines, a worm rig next to the boat in the track, a worm rig across under the small bush to the right, bread at 5m and squatt across at 10m in 2 1/2ft of water.




The plan was simple and I was ready with time to spare, so I had a chat with a couple of guys up the bank before getting settled for the 1100 start. At the all in I fed a small ball of bread at 5m, 4 balls of 50:50 Canal and Etang (both Browning) with 1/4 of a pot of hemp and a good helping of squatt on the long line. I also potted in 10 worms and 20 casters on both worm lines before shipping out an 5mm punch onto the short line, it took less than 3 seconds before roach no.1 was on its way to hand, and this continued for 20 fish in the first 27 minutes. It was at this point that the fear of someone starting one of the boats to my right got too great and I had to have a look before the fish went, in 10 minutes I added 5 perch from 3 to 12oz and it was a great boost to my net. They quickly disappeared so it was back to the bread line where the fish had suddenly turned transparent, I fed some more bread and that did not have the desired effect so it was out onto the long line to try and get some squatt fish put together.

Well the squatt fish were there in numbers and the rest of the match passed quite quickly with me taking a run of squatt fish and then trying to snag a bonus off either of my worm lines (and another 10 minutes on the phone about insurance!!). The rain that had been with us at the start eased and dissipated letting the sun through and there ended the sport. I ended up feeding soft balls of groundbait and fishing straight over the top for tiny roach with the odd better fish thrown in but in no real pattern. I did snap up on a decent fish and also bumped off a couple of slightly better fish ion the squatt line but as I was trying to get back into the swing of things and fishing as an individual I was not to bothered.

I also spent far too long trying to bag another perch from either of my lines but again I was fishing as an individual so nothing ventured nothing gained. I didn’t gain anything but had fun trying anyway.

The all out was called and I managed to follow the scales down from around peg 4, one thing was obvious and that was that there were bigger fish at the top end of the stretch with loads of 2 Kilo weights coming out for far fewer fish. Getting down to my end I had Bri Shuttler pegged to my left and he had managed 2.130, I scrapped 2.930 and Dave Griffiths to my right had 1.740Kg. My weight was enough to scrape 2nd in section beaten by a 3.050 from peg 2, it is now clear just how important those 4 lost fish were!!



It was good to get on the bank again and I hope that I can continue my run into the second match on the Bristol Avon at Chippenham.

30 September 2013

Be prepared Pt 2, Bait

In this part I am going to look at the preparation and care of baits that I use on a regular basis, I am going to look at each type of bait in turn starting with live baits.

Now by live baits I am not talking about small fish but thing like worms, maggots and casters, I am going to start with worms as these are pretty easy to look after.

Dendrobenas:  These usually come supplied in a hessian sack when you buy a 1/2KG or more and this is the perfect container top store the worms in as it allows them to breathe naturally and also with a little bit of thought it is possible to keep them alive in the medium provided for up to a month.  The best tip I have been given is to feed them cold mashed potato as it keeps them big and juicy for longer. For storage a cold concrete floor out of direct sunlight i.e. a garage floor should be fine, just don’t let them freeze in the winter!

Lobworms: These are a slightly trickier animal to deal with in that I tend to collect them upto 2 nights before I fish with them, I will then store them in soil and cut grass until the match making sure to keep them cool but not cold. Check them regularly for dead or broken worms and that way you should be able to extend their life for a couple of days. As I say though I very rarely try to keep them for longer than 48hrs as I have been unable to extend their life in a bait tub for any real length of time, this winter I will be trying a worn sack though. I will keep you updated.

Maggots and Pinkies: These are so similar that I am going to cover them in the same paragraph, put them in a bait tub with about an inch to the top and stick them in a fridge, like this they should be good for about a week.  This can be used to your advantage as well especially when fishing for small fish (especially Bleak) as the skin of the maggot will get tougher and therefore they should stay on the hook for longer, the maggots also build up a resistance to the cold so they should be livelier for longer in cold water.  I also like to de-grease my maggots when I am fishing on running water as it helps them to sink faster, the way that I do this is by cleaning all the sawdust/ maize from the maggots, and then I riddle off all the dead, casters and large rubbish. Once this is done I will add a really good quantity of turmeric to the maggots, this not only removes the grease from the maggots making them sink quicker but also gives white maggots a subtle bronze colour that big Roach love.  I will leave this in the fridge overnight before the match, and then as I am sorting my bait I will riddle off all the excess turmeric (this prevents you from turning very orange).

Dead Maggots: There is only one way that I use to numbers of maggots and that is to riddle them clean, put them into a plastic bag, add a flavour if I am going to then I put them into the freezer for 24-48 hrs. This produces much better dead’s than boiling them as they keep their shape and colour for longer. If however I only need 1 or 2 at a time then I will rub them against my thigh whilst fishing, and that provides me with hook baits when I want a change.

Squatts:  These are the larvae of the common house fly and as such they are considerably smaller than normal maggots and pinkies, sometimes they come from the shop and they are positively tiny, as long as you get your bait a couple of days in advance I have a tip that can give you some of the biggest squats on the bank, feeding them.  This was shown to me on my first national and it has never left me (thanks Gaz the bait man), it is simple but I have tweaked it slightly to try and get the best results with minimal fuss.  I will usually have a pint of squatt for a normal canal match, the first thing that I do is sieve off all the brick dust that they will be stored in, this is to be saved for later. The next step is to riddle them into a shallow tray, whilst they are going through the riddle I will prepare their banquet. Bread and milk is all that you need I tend to soak the bread in the milk until it is properly sodden all the way through and tries to fall apart as you lift it, a good tip here is to use milk at room temp as too cold and it will affect the squats appetite.  Once the squatt are riddled and the bread soaked, I place the bread into the squats and leave them to it, I will keep a bit of an eye on them as they can climb out of the tray of they are wet so beware. I will leave them for as long as possible as the more they eat the bigger they get, about 3 slices of bread should be enough for a pint of squatt but experiment and if they will eat more then why not give it to them, I have tried 6 slices before on a good batch and some of them ended up the size of pinkies! Once they have eaten all the bread or you have run out of time, chuck them back through the riddle and then put them back into the brick dust and into the fridge. Storage wise, keep them in the brick dust and dampen it slightly to prevent them from shrivelling up too much, the colder the better (but not freezing) as they will go into suspended animation and not get any smaller.

Casters: I always use shop bought caster, but not every shop knows how to turn their own or how to look after them, I use 2 shops in my local area, Premier Angling in Chippenham and Reids Tackle at Witherington Farm.  I will think nothing of going on a 2hr round trip if it will get me the best quality bait for a competition.  Things to avoid are small dark casters as these will probably all float and if they are supplied in a vacuum packed clear bag as this causes bag burn. You need a good mix of colours light to dark and the gold standard is casters that are given to you wrapped in a paper bag inside a sealed plastic bag as these will not suffer from Bag Burn. If you are concentrating on carp then it is not as important, but confidence in your bait means that you will have more confidence on the bank and this can only help you catch more fish.

That’s it for live baits, there are probably more but I am struggling to remember them, I am now going to move onto particles starting with my favourite.

Hemp: I will cook up bulk lots of hemp from time to time, usually doing 6-8 pints at a time, I do it the normal way, big pan soak for 24hrs and then simmer until the kernels start to split. Simple. There are a couple of things that you can do to increase the potency of your hemp for carp fishing and it involves me putting my Speci Hunter hat on, Chilli and salt are both added to my carp batches as I have more confidence in it pulling the fish from further away.  If I am carp fishing you will usually find hemp somewhere in my kit as just through the noise of one fish feeding on it make one hell of a racket under water and will draw fish in from quite a distance. Try that with soft pellet!  For roach I will freeze the hemp into 1 pint bags and take a couple every time I go fishing, hook baits are a different kettle of fish though, before I bag up the batches I will sort through and select some grains that are only just starting to split, These are separated into another tub and I will pierce the flat end of the grain to aid hooking. Hooked in this way a grain of hemp can stay on the hook for upto 10 fish, something that you cannot do when hooking then the traditional way through the split.


Tares: I try to find shop ready tares wherever possible, the best come in a small green bag and I forget their name but they are perfect.

Sweetcorn: This is the easiest bait that I use, open the tin, pour into bait tub and then cover with water, if I fancy giving it a kick then I will add a flavour or some salt to it in the bait tub.

Meat: For feed I use Morrison’s own brand and a MAP meat cutter in 6,8 and 10mm depending on the venue and size of carp that I am targeting, I will rarely do anything to the loose feed meat apart from store it in the fridge at home and on the bank I will cover it in plenty of water, on hot days it sometimes pays to only put a small amount on your tray at a time and top it up throughout the day as it can go off in the sun.  Meat for bomb hookbaits is a different prospect, I will take a tin, thickly slice it and then use a multitude of different sized punches to get different sized pellets of meat. I then split them down into small re-sealable bags and then flavour the meat in different ways. The fun part of this is finding out the best flavours so I am not going to spoil that for you.

Pellets, both expander and soft can be prepped on the bank, the only time I really prep my pellet the night before is if I want mushy feed pellet, I will take ¼- ½ a pint of 4mm pellet and cover item with an extra half an inch of water sat on top of them, put it in the fridge overnight and in the morning you will have sloppy pellet, perfect for hard days in the winter.

Groundbait for roach and small fish is best mixed on the bank, if however, you are after bream or other big fish then the longer you can let the bait rest the better as it creates an inert bed of feed for them to graze over. I will mix my bream groundbait the night before and it usually consists of 50/50 Browning Etang and Betaine Mussel mix, although the colder it gets the less fishmeal I put in and I will swap the Betaine mussel mix for No1 or Canal. Top tips when using ground bait is always use a drill!  I have found nothing better when mixing 4-5kg of groundbait and leam together, make sure that it has enough guts to do the job and that the whisk will get into the corners of the bucket that you use. If you do not have a drill then be prepared to riddle it a couple of times to get it to do the job you want.


So that’s it, I am going to save some bits for another day, but if you have any questions then please by all means drop me a line and I will try to answer it. Until the next time, tight lines.

22 September 2013

Being Prepared pt1

So I am sat here waiting for time to speed up and for me to be able to get home and I am thinking about all the things that I need to do when I get home, now some I am not going to share with you, but I am going to cover the sort of preparation that I go into before a match.
I am going to start with some of the general stuff and let’s look at hardware, namely poles, rods and reels and what I do to maintain them at peak performance.

Poles:

I am not renowned for looking after my kit but if there is one thing that I spend a bit of time on every so often it is my pole, every month or so I will take it apart and clean the gunk off all the sections with soap and hot water. Once this is done I will flush the inside out of each section again to try and prevent any bits of grit and gunk from sticking between the sections and possible damaging the carbon.  This also goes for all the top kits and at least once a year I will pull out all my elastics and give the inside of the top kits a clean through with hot soapy water.  Once the sections are clean I will then polish all of the sections to help them slide trough my hands, especially important if you are trying to dag over 100 small roach from a far bank line. I the past I have lost small fish through my pole sticking in my hands or my elastic not retracting back into my pole but this alleviates a lot of these problems.

Another important part of the pole is the elastic, and I have heard many times (usually by people who have something to gain by selling loads of elastic) that it needs to be changed every few weeks or couple of months. This I believe is rubbish, yes if the elastic is damaged or perished then it needs changing but not before.  I check my elastics, solids and hollows by running the most used part (the last 3 feet at the connector end) through my lips to feel for damage, if it is a little rough I will not worry too much unless it is a very important match, if it feels jagged then I will either cut off the damaged bit and use the spare on the winder bung or swap it completely.
The way that I elasticate the pole also helps with fish losses, 90% of my elastics are through a long top 2, use No.2 for small canal roach as it helps stop the fish from splashing and spooking their brethren when you are trying to string a few together. My next is No. 3 again through a long top 2, this when I need a little more power than the no.2 but is still soft enough so you rarely bump fish off on small hooks. I have landed carp to 8lb on no.3 elastic and a 0.07mm hooklength!!  Next step is No.5, this is my ‘go to’ elastic on rivers for rigs upto 2g and bagging bread rigs on canals. I also like it for skimmers on canals, again to glide the fish from in the swim and to try and make it last 1 or 2 more fish. After I go over 2g then I will up the elastic to No.6 to try and strike through the float cleaner or a decent hollow for Flat floating. I also have a couple of top kits with No.5 through a pull bung of some description, for the days that I am using 0.07mm bottoms on commercials for roach and Skimmers.

The next level is hollow elastics and theses are mostly from the Browning Reflex range, I use the pink for commercial silvers and bonus canal fish on caster, Yellow for most of my carp work especially shallow as it allows the fish again to exit the swim with the minimum amount of fuss and by using a puller you can land anything on it as long as your terminal gear is up to it. The blue is used for carp of 8lb+ for general fishing, the green for paste and bagging down the edge. Finally I have bought a new margin pole so that I may be able to extract some very big fish from the margins on Orange Reflex and I am also going to experiment with a solid 16 Cenex elastic as well (watch this space).  My final couple of top kits have yellow and blue Reflex through a tip section, These are for flat float and perch fishing as they are forgiving but powerful enough to set big hooks into a fishes mouth when needed, my favourite is the yellow as that is what I used last winter when I had my 40lb Kennet and Avon bag, That included 3 massive perch that were dealt with no problems.

That concludes my pole, let’s look at rods, ‘what do you need to do to a rod’ I hear you cry, well I like to keep my trotting and pellet waggler rods well-polished on the blanks as this allows the line to flow through the rings far easier. So what, well how often does your waggler trundle towards the chub bush in your swim only for it to drag off line as the line runs off some water on the tip?  It doesn’t happen to me now but it used to years ago, the other reason for keeping the moisture off you rod is that it will let you cast lighter floats further, quite handy on the pellet wag or if trying to mug shallow carp next to islands!!  This believe it not also works for feeder rods but the difference is negligible at distances less than 60 yards. Another thing to look at that is often overlooked on rods are the rings, and it is worth checking all the rings on a rod from time to time for damage and also to give them a clean as a build-up of gunk or a crack on a ring could damage your reel line and lose you a match!

Moving onto reels, these are expensive and technical bits of kit that are full of working parts, I service mine once a year by opening them up and lubricating it in the right places with the correct grease or oil.  If you are not confident doing this then there are company’s out there who will do it for a cost or the manufacturers after sales department. I will again change my line when it needs it, if it has been abused for prolonged periods of time or if it looks/feels damaged. I again try to keep my choices of reel lines to 4 main types: Cenex slow sinking in 0.14 and 0.18 for float work, Cenex feeder in 0.16-0.22 for the tip, Daiwa sensor in 4lb for the pellet wag, 8lb for summer carp bagging on the tip and finally braid for long range fishing on the tip, I have used several and am still to find one that I am truly happy with, currently I am using Drennan feeder braid.

Other things to check are keepnets before any match take them out of the shed and look for small holes that could let fish out or be made into bigger holes by the fish!  Barrows, check the tyre pressures and give any screws a quick splash of WD40 or similar from time to time (not many things are worse than cold hands and a cold stuck hand wheel).  Pole rollers need checking from time to time for signs of damage and to make sure that they rotate efficiently, I am not bothered if they squeak as that tends to put off anglers around you, especially when you start bagging and all they notice is squeak, squeak of the roller.


That’s about it for hardware, I could start going on about cleaning of clothing and luggage etc but that would be very hypocritical of me.
In the next part I am going to look at bait until then 'Tight Lines'.