February 2024 – Part 2 the rise and fall…

With Gareth and family safely back in China I made preparations for a Maggotdrowners match at the Glebe on Saturday 17th. I had talked Darren into having a go and arranged to meet him at Moreton in the Marsh so he could follow me up to the Glebe as it was his first time. We arrived on time without incident and Darren drew peg 20 and I was on 26. My preparations had not been done that well as I realised that I had left my pole cup in the other bag when I had been out with Gareth, fortunately Darren lent me a spare. For some reason I forgot to take any pictures but I started on the feeder tight across and was patting myself on the back when the feeder was going down the same hole each time – a rare incident! Anyway a roach, skimmer and monster gudgeon made the way to the net by the time we reached the 30min mark while peg 24 had about 4 carp in this time.

The match had been split into two payouts- silvers only and everything counts -with each section getting a silvers and overall winner, you could win one but not both. I had set out for silvers as I wanted to see if I could get the usual bream of 1.5lb to 3lb feeding as being February I suspected the carp may be more bunched up. Hence, I had fished maggot on the feeder and had primed a long line at 13m and a short line at 2+2, the long line with groundbait, 4mm pellet and corn, while the short line received one ball of groundbait and a pot of micros with a few 4mm expanders and a few maggot. Tackle was unusual for me as the long line was normal with a 0.8g homemade float on 0.14mm line, a 0.12mm hooklength to a 16, the short line however was again homemade but took just three no8 shot spread in the last 3 feet again to a 0.12mm line and 16 hook.

The feeder was put up the bank and I had a look on the long line and began to pick up small skimmers of only an ounce or two on maggot or expander at 13m but although I was putting fish in the net along with one better skimmer of a pound it was not fast enough due to the size of the fish. So on to the 2+2 line again it was a case of small skimmers interspersed with the odd roach and gudgeon no matter whether I had maggot or expander on the hook, but expander brought the bites faster. I stayed on this line for the rest of the match but the fish were very small in comparison to the usual silvers at the Glebe. After three hours I hooked and landed a carp of around 8lb but it was the last 40 minutes when the silvers got pushed out by the carp. I caught two carp of a similar size to the first but then I managed to snap my hook off in the bank side vegetation and instead of just tying on a new hook I took the hooklength off and replaced it with a similar one but with a narrower gauge 16 hook – a big mistake as I lost three carp on the bounce as the gauge of wire was pulling through and not holding the carp. I managed one further carp of about 3lb. I was on the board for the weigh in and Darren had had a good day – sticking on the 2+2 line and feeding and fishing maggot he had caught consistently all day and ended up winning the silvers pot for the section. Looking at his fish I guessed I had caught a similar amount but mine were a great deal smaller. I ended up with 15-11 of silvers and my 4 carp went 29-10 that put me 6th overall, and 5th in the silvers.

Darren went home pleased with his day and looking forward to the next on 16th March! It was only at the end of the match that we discovered that Roy Marlow, the owner and ex-Likely Lad, had died on the bank the previous day, a true loss to angling.

Events and weather then conspired against me, with a recurrence of my dodgy knee and monsoon type weather at times I stayed in until the following Siunday when I packed the haversack seat and took a rod bag with a waggler and feeder rod up to the Stock Pond at Bowood on the premise that it would do me good and was the only place likely to be fishable. It was fishable but no-one told the fish!The main lake was muddy after all the rain and it looked as if they had opened the sluice as the water level was lower than normal. I squelched my way up to the Stock Pond and despite it only being 1C on arrival I expected to get a few bites- how wrong can you me – 9:30 to 11:30 fishing and not a bite on either waggler or lead. There had been one hardy pike angler on the main lake when I walked up but he had gone when I walked back.

Tuesday sees me pluck up the courage to go to peg 10 at Bowood, there was a lot of debris and large sticks on the platform and walkway which gave credence to the theory that the rain over the last week or so had risen the level to over the platform and the sluice had then been opened to alleviate the situation.

There was an undertow from right to left against the strong cold wind again a cold night and only 1C on arrival. I fished in my usual manner, the pike rod was untroubled but I did prevent a blank with 3 roach, 2 rudd, 2 skimmers/blades and a micro-perch for 0-06. Two other anglers came after me on the other bank but I did not see them catch, Oh for a period of settled weather! It has to be said that apart from one bite that took the float under the rest merely moved the tip a mm or so which meant I needed to concentrate hard on the float.

March means 14 days maximum of Bowood to end of season and then the return to the Glebe.

February 2024 – The big and the small

Well the month starts with Gareth and family spending some times at Newark (antiques fair and fishing) and Castleford (family and Rugby League match). In the few hours that he managed to get fishing he had some success.

Anyway on their return it was The Tuesday that I had my first excursion of the month as a dodgy knee required some rest and a visit to the doctors. So Gareth and I fished Bowood from 2:30 to 4pm, I plonked him on 10 and I had 9. Nothing much to write home about for me with 4 roach, 6 skimmers/blades and 15 rudd for 1-15. Gareth on 10 had about 50 silvers but my day was made when he had a run on the pike rod and he hit a fish that was keeping down and felt heavy, I suspected a good double but Gareth’s face was a pictuire when it surfaced and I subsequently netted it – a new PB of 17-05.

Wednesday sees us back at Bowood from 2:30 to 4pm only taking the pike tackle but with a very heavy water colour after rain there were no runs although there was fish moving. Next day following yet more rain we gave Bowood a miss and headed for the Marden at Hazeland, fishing any slacks we could find in the top field that was high and rising still with chocolate water. The third spot we tried Gareth had a Minnow on red maggot – we were just using leger rods and lowering our weights into the slacks.

Buoyed by the relative success of saving a blank I had a go in the same spot and had probably the smallest fish I have ever cleanly hooked – just about an inch long, I then had a second even smaller drop off probably just holding on to the maggot.

The weather prevented any real attempts at fishing over the next few days although Gareth had a go after the pike on the canal at Rowde without landing any although he hooked 3, but the Sunday sees us on the canal at Horton from 9:30 to 11:45 just fishing the whips. It was hard going, made even harder by the numerous canoes that were practicing for the Devizes to London race and paddleboarders! However we managed to scrape together 12 fish each, mine consisted of 8roach, 1 rudd, 1 gudgeon and 2 perch for 1-03 while Gareth’s 12 weighed 1-02!

Monday sees us back at Bowood with me on 9 and Gareth on 10. Fishing 2:15 to 4:15 but this time just taking the whips and the pike rods. Gareth fished a more conventional homemade chianti style float whereas I stuck with my Chinese varieties. Whip fishing resulted in 13 roach 11 rudd, 8 skimmers/blades and a micro perch for 3-06 after a slow start. Gareth went off like an express train but then slowed right up (probably a pike sitting there) and had 1-12 but he then had a pike of 9-06 which was , I suspect, the culprit of the slowdown.

I also had a run and the fish came in steadily rather than spectacularly, as it got closer I could see that the line had wrapped under its body safely netted it went 17-06! We speculated whether it was the same fish Gareth had but it was unlikely.

With their return to China due on Wednesday, Gareth had a couple more fruitless pike sessions, one at Bowood on the Wednesday morning and the other on Tuesday afternoon on the Canal at Froxfield where he did at least see a couple of pike but they just nudged the bait and were not interested in the smelt. Normal service now resumes after their safe return to China!

Zachary does it himself!

January 2024 Part 2 – A tale of a lake and a river.

With the imminent arrival of Gareth and family on the Saturday I took the advantage of going to Bowood alone armed with ice breaker (sash window weight and chain on rope), as several days of sub-zero temperatures had certainly frozen it. Arriving at peg 10 with -2C temperature I set to work but after 30 minutes of hard graft I was in no way near to being able to fish!

The nearside ice was opaque as it was a double thickness – the top layer had partly thawed then froze again so once I broke through the top layer there was a second layer below it! I have fished this peg when I have broken ice an inch thick and caught both silvers and pike but the last time I fished anywhere where it was this thick was in Finland and they were driving cars on it! I gave up after taking these and went home!

Picked Gareth et al up from Heathrow on Saturday evening and Sunday he was itching to get fishing but with Bowood frozen and the river out of sorts we decided to give the river (the Marden) a go at Hazeland, fishing the disabled area by the car park. Fishing for about an hour an three quarters I blanked on the float but Gareth on the straight lead managed to winkle out a small roach and dace.

Monday sees us fishing Bowood from 1-3pm. I was not hoping for much as overnight heavy rain and the melting of the ice did not bode well. In fact it was at least 18 inches up, heavily coloured with the inlet brook a torrent and added to that very strong winds. Needless to say we blanked without a bite!

Tuesday was a very short session on the Marden at Hazeland, just intro the section 1 field, both fishing lead in slacks after the flow had increased. I had a minnow and a trout while Gareth had a clutch of minnows in the hour or so we were there.

Various necessities prevented any further fishing until Friday fishing 9 to 12 Gareth on 10 and myself on 9. I fished my usual way with the same rig using a homemade float, 0.12mm line to a 0.10mm hook-length to an 18 and managed to put together 5 roach, 5 skimmers/blades and 27 rudd for 1-15, no runs on the pike rod. Gareth had 30 silvers for 1-10, but as we packed up he had a run on the pike rod and ended up with one of exactly 7lb.

Sunday sees us at Hazeland fishing by the boom, again Gareth on the lead had 4 roach plus a bonus chub of 1-12, while I saved a blank on the waggler with a solitary roach.

Monday – back to Bowood but another regular has beaten us to the favoured swims so we made our way over the other side of the lake and after the long walk Gareth settled on peg 19 (first peg after the island) and myself on 20.Fishing 9 to 12 again. Depth was the same as fishing the other side but Gareth had a steep drop off at 10 where he fished whereas my peg seemed to slope towards Gareth, so I opted on a flattish spot at 10m also. The wind was a bit cold but using the same rigs I managed 20 roach, 4 ski8mmers/blades, 7 rudd and a rare gudgeon for 2-05. Gareth had 27 roach and 3 rudd for 1-15. As he was reeling in a jack pike take a liking to his sardine but didn’t take it properly and the chance was gone!

So Tuesday 30th sees us back at Bowood for an afternoon session from 2 to 4pm.This time Gareth put me on 10 and he fancied 9. Usual tactics saw 7 blades, 2 rudd, 6 roach and 2 gudgeon for 1-03 was part of the catch- I also had a surprise bream of 2-05 which at one point made me think I had a pike on as it was moving so slowly. I also had two pike of 5-04 and 11-13. The larger pike came in very subdued, partly I think as the line was wrapped under it’s body, but it woke up once in the net Gareth managed to video the “fight”. Gareth had a similar run of silvers and a pike of 5-02.

A few days off now as Gareth and family go off for various visits elsewhere in the country, before more Bowood prior to returning to China.

January 2024 – A tale of two lakes

It has been a slow start to the new year with a heavy cold and weather conditions preventing me from going more than two times. First out was a visit to Blacklands, prompted by the weather conditions making the river unfishable and Bowood equally so for a variety of factors. Anyway the wife suggested going to Blacklands as it was close so who am I to argue!

Friday the fifth sees me on peg 4 on Heron lake at Blacklands, the first peg beyond the now overgrown bench peg! The water was very coloured and the slope down to the peg was quite slippery so I was happy to get down in one piece.There is a groundbait ban at Blacklands and I did not have any worms so my attack was going to be pellet and maggot/casters – these were the white maggots left over from Monk Hall back in September that had been stored in my bait fridge! I set up one rig on a top kit with a Chinese hollow elastic that equated to a 6-8, a chianti style homemade job to 0.12mm line and 0.10mm hooklength to an 18 barbless.

I primed two swims at 10m the left hand one with a decent amount of 2mm expanders and the right hand one with about 50 of the maggot/caster mix, there after I loose fed over the top of both lines. It was cold and the water very coloured so I was not surprised when I didn’t get an immediate response, however after two hours of inactivity I was stunned when the float went under with double maggot which produced a little hybrid of about 3oz. Ten minutes later I had another bite which I hooked but lost on the way in. A further ten minutes passed before a third bite produced a bream of about 2 to 2.5lb, I had inexplicably forgotten to put the scales in which I was to regret!

Another lost fish followed soon after before pulling out of a better fish possibly a carp but may also have been one of the big perch that frequent Heron. A lull followed and after a couple of cups of coffee the float dipped and I hit into a solid fish that I guided towards me slowly but with no great drama until it realised it was hooked and decided it didn’t like it – this was the start of a ten minute battle which ultimately saw me shuffle the carp into the net -just! It was too precarious to unhook on my seat so I took it up onto the flat grassy bank behind to unhook. My guess was it was between 15 and 18lb having weighed similar fish in the past, a quick photo and back it went, leaving me to have another cup of coffee and to take the decision to pack up and go which may appear strange but there is a reason behind my madness! Heron has very specific tackle requirements based on carp fishing but out of camping season they turn a blind eye so I can fish for the silvers, I don’t want to spoil the opportunity for others as if they see me on the cctv hooking/ landing carp consistently then they may change their mind about allowing silvers fishing!

Moving on to the Monday I ventured to Bowood peg 10 although I did have reservations given we had experienced a run of sub-zero temperatures overnight and day temperatures not getting much beyond 1C. On arrival it was -1C, the water was highly coloured with a max of three inches visibility in to it. The water from pegs 3 to 6 were covered in a layer of ice with the early pegs clear due to the flow of water coming into the lake from the tiny brook. All the pegs were covered with debris so the water had obviously risen over the platforms but now was some two feet below the platform so the sluice at the far end of the lake had clearly been opened to reduce the pressure on the dam at the end of the lake.

Having outlined my excuses you can guess what is coming! Fishing from 9:15 to 12:00 not a bite, no sign of any fish either on the pole or on the pike rod, even trying jigging a maggot under the platform, normally a blank saver with small fish, failed. So a trudge back up the hill fishless! Since then been a bit under the weather with a heavy head cold and have got to go to Heathrow next Saturday to collect Gareth and tribe who are visiting for a couple of weeks. Hope the fishing improves by then for him!