August 2025 Part 2 -normal service?

Sunday 17th I head off to Bowood with weed rake in tow. I was shocked by the extent the reeds/rushes had encroached on the main channel with by my reckoning at least 9 (NINE) swims were now unfishable due to the rushes and weed growth given there are only 25 swims discounting the Pondtail (2) and Stock Pond (2) it was getting dire. I decided to try peg 8, starting at 9 o’clock with the rake and forty minutes later I had a mound of weed behind me and a narrow strip of channel to fish in out to 10m. Dirty, sweaty and knackered I set up the pole and had my first put in as the bell chimed 10. The next two hours were frustrating as despite me bulking the shot making up the 0.8g four inches from the hook the corn bait was being intercepted by hordes of 2-3 inch rudd so that the float was either not cocking or being taken for a wander as the ball of rudd failed to get the corn into their mouths. I had started with just two balls of groundbait with wheat and corn and made the mistake of loose feeding wheat which acted as a dinner bell to the ravenous juvenile rudd. By noon I had smuggled out a solitary roach and ten rudd for a 1-10 total.

Tuesday and I am back at peg 8 fishing 9:10 to 12:10. Same rig but this time starting with three hard balls of groundbait and a full pot of wheat with a few grains of corn. Loose feeding was a no-no, so any additional feed was introduced via a cup. Again the rudd proved to be a nuisance but I managed to get 2 roach, 30 rudd and ,wonders will never cease, my first half decent bream of the season at 2-10 making a 5-12 total.

What a contrast to last season when bream were seemingly plentiful. The weed has to have had a big say on the change, possibly the bream and tench (still not had one yet) are under the weed feeding on natural food.

Back to peg 8 the next day fishing 8:15 to 11:00, hoping that some bream had arrived to mop up the wheat I had thrown in at the end of yesterday’s session. Same rig and tactics, corn bait and 47 rudd and 3 roach gave me a busy session with 5-10 final weight but also dropped 20+ fish that were just holding on to the corn as they were so small.

Next opportunity was Tuesday 26th, I avoided the Bank Holiday week-end ! I decided to pop down to the Pondtail for a session on the whip but also took the Beastmaster rod set up from the visit to High Penn with hybrid feeder and intended to fish this with a 14mm scopex and vanilla boilie to see if there was any interest- there wasn’t! I set up with a 5m whip but was concerned that the reeds were starting to make an appearance here also, I had a couple at 4m directly in front of me so had to be careful when guiding fish in. Feeding wheat and fishing double maggot I only added a small ball of groundbait once bites slowed down a bit. The carp rod cast out towards the far bank lilies to my right remained “sleeping” but the whip attracted 39 roach and 6 perch for about 5lb. Sod’s Law applied once more and with the carp rod inactive the float shot under and a lift brought back the rig minus the hook- a carp !

Final outing this month was Friday 29th back to Peg 8 for a session 9-11:20. Wish I could report something different but the rudd were still there but strangely inactive, or so it seemed. The weather was cooler with a strong ripple on the water, so much so I was wearing my coat and fleece! The result was just 11 rudd for 1-02, however it was the first time I had been bothered by pike, I had a 4oz rudd taken by a pike of 5-6lb that bit through the line after a minute or so, the feed /fishing area erupted several times as the rudd scattered form the pike turning the water into a boiling mass. Hopefully this augers well for the winter pike sessions!

To date I have fished Bowood fewer times at this point of the season than previously but even so the difference has been concerning, so much so I e-mailed the estate office with my concerns regarding the encroachment of the reeds and the detrimental effect it had and may have on the spawning areas for future stocks plus the water clarity being affected by the filtration effect of the thick reed beds and asked if they had any plans to tackle the reeds. I had an acknowledgement and that it was being passed to the Estate manager – who has not yet replied after 2 weeks!

April/May 2025 overlap

Before my Thai adventure I had a couple of sessions at Rowde. The first I intended to return to fish the same pound but with a feeder, however there then followed a series of annoying glitches to my plan. Firstly I realised I had let my phone at home and when I walked down a boat was moored up exactly in the peg and there was no room to fish so I ended up on the CRT 2 peg that Gareth and I had fished previously. Fishing about 30m out with a basic non-fishmeal groundbait and double maggot I was soon getting plenty of bites on the Shakespeare bomb rod I was using. Hitting the bites however was another matter and a solitary roach and rudd were returned before I switched to worm, this slowed things down and eventually a slow pull on the tip resulted in a bream of 3-06. A small skimmer followed before the boats started and I packed up having fished 10-11:20.

Not to be put off I returned a week later and managed not only to remember my phone but actually get on the spot I wanted to fish.

Same pic as previously but this time I fished 9:40 – 11:20 using a 5m Chinese whip with double maggot over groundbait and loose fed maggot I had bites immediately ending up with 40 skimmers,25 roach,4 perch 2 roach and 2 gudgeon for approx 6lb plus a bream of 4-02 which the whip handled with ease.

I packed up shortly after a boat with Norwegian tourists passed through.

So the time for the adventure arrives! The journey went like this, Tuesday 29th bus from Calne to Chippenham, coach to Heathrow, evening flight to Bangkok arriving mid afternoon on the Wednesday. The first thing that literally hit me as I stepped off the plane was the wall of heat (approx 36C) but the airport was air conditioned and from touching down to me getting into the shuttle cab for the hotel it was 39 minutes- a highly efficient system. Gareth later informed me that the queues used to be 1.5hrs but a surprise visit by the country’s premier changed that as he was appalled especially as tourism is a major economy in Thailand and heads were knocked together and investment and changes made!

Gareth arrived at the hotel at 2am from Shenzen in China and after a short nap and a walk via an underground air conditioned connecting tunnel to the airport/rail station to get some breakfast we met our taxi driver at the hotel at 7:15am. A short 45minute drive sees us arrive at Bungsamran Fishery where Gareth had arranged a session up to lunch time with a guide. We were in Sala 7 which put us almost at the end of the row of salas coming from the reception area. We were a bit early and walked around the walkway where people were already fishing, several large fish were swirling all over the lake.

We met up with the guide Tom and his son Andy (who spoke English) and made our way to the sala. The lake is 80ft deep and the salas extend out in to the lake on stilts so effectively you are surrounded by water. As we got to our sala I spotted a huge shape in the water alongside the sala – an arapaima of 100lb+! The tackle and set up will need some explaining! Firstly the rods are about 5ft in length, matched with a reel of approx 8000 size loaded with heavy braid to a mono leader (to prevent lifting scales), the end tackle is a large sliding float with a wire emstadt type feeder with a short hook link of perhaps 3-4 inches. Bait- there is none on the hook just a foam line wrapped around the hook to form a small bead to “pop-up” the hook, this is the buried in a large jaffa sized ball of “lum” – a fine rice groundbait The groundbait was mixed in a large shallow metal bowl using a drill as we would in this country, the difference being that instead of a whisk attachment it was a simple “T” . The sala has an overhanging room to provide shade and a fan to keep cool! The walkways had a similar style roof which partly explains the short rods!

Gareth and I were sharing a rod and he insisted I had first fish! The rod is cast by the guide and laid down on the floor with the bail arm open and the line hooked over a bottle. The float bobs about like crazy and goes under but it is only when the bottle topples over that you can strike! Third cast, about 10mins, a bite and a firm strike sees a powerful fish take line off the clutch. I eventually managed to get some level of control and pumped the fish back to be netted – a Mekong catfish of 20kg (44lb).

Mekong 20kg

Gareth then had a Mekong of 50kg (110lb), my next was a baby of 10kg (22lb), Gareth follows up with a Siamese carp of 30kg (66lb), I then get in on the carp action with a Siamese of 40kg (88lb) Gareth then has a real battle with a fish that runs approx 150m to the left and is in danger of cutting on the next sala, fortunately the guide on the next sala was able to hold the line off the sala until the fish was clear, approx 15minutes later a huge Mekong has its head in the net, the guide has to swim to the next sala to get the large floating cradle and eventually the fish is safely “landed”.

Siamese carp (40kg=88lb)

A Mekong of 100kg- 220lb. Gareth is wobbly after the fight and has a sit down and drink! So Tom washes himself down and we are back in action. A short while later the bottle topples and I hook a fish that I cannot do anything with and the clutch is screaming, the fish surfaces way down the lake (I used a distance calculator to get an idea of how far as it was possible to identify where it surfaced) – 170m. Now I first began coarse fishing because as a 10year old I won a newspaper competition for fish of the week that gave me a coarse tackle wallet as a prize. The fish involved was a 40lb monkfish caught off the beach at Llangenneth, now this reminded me of the playing tactic of walking back and the going forwards while winding in – mobile pumping rather than static pumping- so that is what I did. About 12 minutes later we had the fish in the net but the cradle was on the sala on the right as they had also had a large fish, but fortunately they swam it back and incredibly another 100kg (220lb) Mekong was “landed”.

100kg (220lb) Mekong

You can see we wore butt pads which were essential plus we wore a glove on the rod hand for protection. Gareth had another Mekong of 18kg(39.6lbs) and I missed a bite as our bait ran out virtually at 1pm which is when we had planned to return to the hotel, gather our things, check out and travel to Jurassic via their taxi.

The draw for swims at Jurassic takes place each evening so it is completely random, Gareth drew ball 8 and decided on Swim 4 for the day. We were both sharing the swim and had three 10ft rods so decided on one predator rod down the side and two carp rods. After an hour the carp rod alarm screams off and I hit into a good fish with the 10ft rod. Eventually I manage to get the fish into the cradle- a Siamese carp of 80lb.

Siamese Carp 80lb

All fish at Jurassic never leave the water so you have to go into the water if you want a picture with the fish – waist deep margins are better than potentially 80ft to a non-swimmer like me!

The set-up at Jurassic is very good with very friendly staff and excellent facilities, however we were greeted with the news that it had been fishing very hard with some anglers blanking a couple of days during their stay! That was borne out by that being our only fish of the day apart from a tilapia of about 2lb that Gareth had on the predator rod- I said we would not count that as his “turn”.

Next day there were fewer on the lake and Gareth had drawn ball 2 the night before and agonized whether to go on peg 1 or peg 16, both renowned predator pegs. Peg 16 had fished well the previous day while 1 had struggled. Peg 16 won but at the start of the day at 7am when rods can go in Peg 1 was quickly into fish! We found that we could not leave mackerel or chicken hearts in the water longer than 3-4 minutes or the tilapia would have left you with a bare hook or a head and skeleton!Four hours in and Gareth gets a run on the predator rod, keeping the rod well under the surface due to the floating weeds he manages to land a red tailed catfish of 30lb.

I should have had a fish but the “run” started and stopped, on retrieve I find a small mussel had closed itself over the point of the hook! That was our lot!

Next day it was back to Bangkok and Gareth went home eventually that night after a three hour delay due to thunderstorms in China and I had a day to recuperate before going back the following morning. An experience I am glad to have had.

Coming up Summer League fun at Boddington and the 3-dayer at Monkhall.

October 2024 Part 1 – WOW!

I am going to start this a bit differently! Gareth, my son in China, had a few days off so what does he do- he books a flight to Thailand for the Wednesday, fishing on Thursday and flight back on Friday!. So he gets there with my grandson Zachary on the Wednesday, spends the night in a hotel in Bangkok, gets a pre-booked taxi to the fishing lake on Thursday (the drive is about 40mins and the drivers waits there for him) and gets to his “peg” – a bungalow/chalet on stilts at the edge of the lake and fishes from the verandah/ staging of the bungalow. All tackle and bait provided as are the services of a guide. The lake in question has a reputation of providing customers with 2-3 fish a day with 10 fish being stated as exceptional. The lake is very deep 40+ feet and the method is like a massive bagging waggler/ pellet waggler with paste.The fish are a mixture of Mekong catfish and Siamese carp. Early on he latches in to a fish and gets it in but the guide has to call for help as it is only the largest fish in the lake -an 80kg (approx 176lb) Mekong catfish, it takes three guides to get the fish out of the water!

Now if this wasn’t enough he goes on to land further Mekongs and Siamese of 20, 30, 30, 25, 40, 30, 13 (carp), 35, 30, 30, 30, 35, 40,40, 35,20,30, 20, 20, 25 (carp) all in KG! 21 fish in total plus he lost a further 15 when they went under the stilts of the chalet! He packed up early with still time left on his ticket as he was shattered! Zachary managed to get a Mekong also with the help of the guide!

Back to our reality! Bowood October 2nd peg 10 started with bait in water at 9:20 until 12:00. Pike rod out and the autumn/winter set up on pole- lighter elastic and 0.12mm to a 0.10mm hooklength and 18 hook! Two balls of groundbait with a few micros and corn plus 6 grains of corn introduced and roach appeared after 10 minutes to be rudely interrupted after a further five with the pike float disappearing! A very feisty fight ensued with a pike of 8-08 giving a very good account of itself given its size!

More roach then the rudd took over interspersed with another pike of 7-06 and a third one of about 5-6lb that threw the hooks!. Ended up with 34 rudd and 6 roach for 5-10 making a total of 21-08.

Friday 4th sees me back at peg 10 fishing 9:30 to 12:00 set up the same as last visit but today was a lot harder. 10 roach 1 skimmer and no rudd! I had two runs on the pike rod, both lost with hook pulls. The first I had on for about 5 minutes- a very big fish that was taking line of the clutch – I am a “back winder” and the clutch only comes in to play under extreme pressure. This fish felt as if it was a twenty and a good twenty at that when it broke surface you could see the thickness of its back and length. The second while smaller was also a double again lost after a shorter fight. I changed the trace after this visit!

Two days later back at Bowood but I was a bit later having to do some errands first and found someone on peg 10, so I slotted in on 8 in order to give the other angler plenty of room. Now peg 8 is a good 18 inches to 2ft shallower than 10 but can throw up surprises! Not today though as no runs on the pike rod and my one bite on the pole produced a massive one ounce roach half way through my 10am to 12pm session! The angler on 10 fared little better with just about 10 small fish.

On to Tuesday 8th back on 10 started at 9:30 and packed up at 11 after 11 roach and 6 rudd as at 10:30 the heavens opened and biblical rain fell so heavy I could not see neither my pole float nor my pike float! I got back to the car just as the rain eased in intensity. Returning home things were just about getting clear, so laid things out to dry in garage and went in to find my wife had to catch a couple of parcels from the postman as he couldn’t get close to the door because of the depth of water that was in the dip in front of the door, indeed he had to throw a stone at the door to get her attention. Fortunately the water had dissipated by the time I returned!

The rest of the week has devoted to drying kit and getting ready for the silvers match I was running at Meadowlands near Coventry. I usually only pay sections in my matches as it encourages everyone to keep going as they know they can still pick up even if the area is poor. In the end 16 fished the match with two no shows, fortunately they had paid the peg fee so my costs were covered. Anyway I ended up with the scales for my section on peg 3.

The picture was taken at the end of the match, the start was marked by a short shower! As you can see the peg was in a wooded section and the tree cover above the peg meant I would need to fish the pole only as a waggler or feeder would be catching the various branches. Calling the all in I started by introducing two balls of groundbait with caster and worm at 11m directly in front of me with a pot of wheat introduced to my right at 2 o’clock also at 11m in the ubiquitous 3 feet of water. I had set up just two rigs, the first with a bulk about 8 inches from the 18 hook with a number11 dropper. The other was set up as a strung out on the drop rig. Both rigs were 0.12mm line to 0.10mm hooklength and 18 hooks, the on the drop float was a homemade chianti style taking 0.5g, the bulk rig was a BGT2 in 0.5g

Starting on double maggot a couple of roach appeared but it was slow so single red maggot produced a faster response include one from a tench of approx 3lb, a few skimmers then appeared and after an hour I had clicked 7lb. I then switched to worm head and began to get skimmers when the inevitable blank spell heralded the arrival of carp!

I then had a frustrating remainder of the match hooking carp (two landed 9lb and 6lb, 2 snapped hooklength and 3 hook pulls) or spooking carp – striking at a “bite” to see bow waves shoot from the swim! I ended up weighing in 9-14 made up of the tench 6 skimmers, 7 roach and 2 perch! The section was close with me being 15 oz from picking up an envelope for 2nd in section! The other irritant was the trees were shedding their leaves (being Autumn and all) so at various points we were being rained on by leaves which made shipping out more awkward as you were constantly trying not to hook a leaf!

Section 1
Peg 3 BGT 9-14
4 Martin Paynter 12-01
6 Deal or no deal 8-12
7 Craig Merritt 10-00
9 Pete Hunt 10-13
10 NOT DRAWN

Now after last months lessons I did go back and reread the post from last years match and did try the close in line to no avail, however Darren who was over the other side on 20 won the section and had best weight on the day (27-12) by coming in to the 2+2 line and finding skimmers when he was being carped out on the long line.

No more matches now until next year, so my focus returns to Bowood!

June 2024 part 2b- Struggles and successes

I had the opportunity to get to Bowood a couple of times before the Pellet Guys Pairs at Makins, so Monday 24th sees me trudge down the field, now occupied by sheep, to Peg 1. The colour had dropped considerably but there was still sufficient for me to give it a go. Shadows moving through the water gave a big hint that the colour would soon be gone but I set up as previously and introduced two cups of loose groundbait with some wheat and about 5-6 pieces of corn. Starting at 8:45 I fished through until 11:45 and things did not look good at small rudd were attacking the corn and their slightly bigger brethren were taking it. Eventually I had a bream of 3-08 followed by further ones of 3-10, 3-02, 3-06, 4-01, 3-06 and 3-02 together with 9 rudd, a small skimmer and a roach this gave me a 25-07 total.

I had brought the rake with me and intended to prepare some swims as Peg 1 would no longer produce with the colour dropping out. To my horror Peg 3 was gone, the posts were there but the platform boards had gone and the access was blocked by reeds! Moving up to peg 4 I was pleased to see it had a good colour and after putting the rake through a couple of times for minimal weed I decided raking would not be necessary for the other swims.

Next day I was back at Bowood, this time at peg 4 and fished 8:50 to 11:20 by which time it was getting very hot and I called it a day. The session was another that you dream about, apart from16 bream I also had a tench of 4-15 and a pike of 5-01 that took a fancy to the corn, combined with 8 rudd a roach and two small skimmers I surpassed the 50lb mark again with 56-06. Groundbait was cupped in loose again but this time I used a 0.5g Chianti style homemade float. Over the five sessions in June I have averaged over 49lb but only used half a tin of corn and a litre of wheat.

So Friday sees me travel up to Makins Fishery, just outside Nuneaton for the Pellet Guys Pairs two dayer. The format is simple in that the pairs are drawn so that there is a Makins regular teamed up with an MFS angler, the Makins anglers are on three lakes and the MFS on a separate three lakes with each lake treated as a section so the pair with the lowest points win after two days. Day one and I draw peg 30 on Lizard which is a nice short walk from the car!

From left to right – left margin, front of peg and right margin. The margin on the left was deep over 3 feet and sloping out sharply, the right margin was a lot shallower but still with a slope. I planned on two areas in front the first at 10m and the second at 2+2 plus the margins, I also set up a shallow rig which went unused! Starting on the short line in 5-6ft of water on 4mm meat feeding meat and 4mm pellets I could only get a couple of roach and one solitary carp when I tried corn over it there was no joy either. The 10m line produced a roach so I ended up looking at the margins, apart from one carp from the right, all my fish came from the left one. Unfortunately the only area I could get interest was very close to the tree which had roots into the water I ended up being snapped 4 times by fish going into the roots despite being on 0.20mm and lost a further two to hook pulls. I did manage to extract eight carp including a koi close to double figures and weighed in 36-10 for joint 5th on the lake, beating the anglers near me.

Day two sees me draw peg 10 on Severn.

The margins looked featureless and on plumbing up were very sharply sloping with no flat spots and about three feet deep. The weather was very sunny and hot and although the point of the island was crying out for me to put a method feeder there I didn’t feel as it would be that productive in the hot weather as the fish were high in the water and were looking as if they may be getting ready to spawn again. Same set ups as previously and the 2+2 line only produce a few twitches before a two pound carp came to the net and that is how it stayed until the last hour of the six hour match. Despite making changes and trying the margins plus straight lead there was no joy apart from two hook pulls and being snapped on the paste by a good fish when I think the lane caught on the jagged dorsal fin. Fish were coming in to the left hand margin but were spooked if they touched the line or each other! Straight lead down the margin with a longish tail produced one liner and that was it. I was now in desperation mode so I cupped in 3 cups of loose groundbait and a cup of micros and began to put 10 4mm pellets in every few minutes. This began to get the fish wait longer and by the weigh in I had somehow managed to get 24-10 which put me 8th on the lake. To put it in context, the angler on my right who had tried the island tipped back as he reckoned he had just over 20lb and the one on my left weighed in 26-08, so I felt I had not done as badly as I feared, just that area was the worst on the lake on that day. Needless to say we came nowhere as a pair!

July beckons with the arrival of Gareth et al for a couple of weeks, so Bowood will be on the agenda.

May 2024 Wanderlust!

A slow start to the month mainly caused by various health appointments, visits from friends and various jobs I had been putting off! As I write this my new passport has just arrived prompted by the impending election (although my bus pass would do) and Gareth’s short trip from China to Jurassic Fishing Lakes in Thailand.

Gareth and family arrived at the lakes on the Thursday evening, fished all day Friday and half a day Saturday before leaving for China. So they draw for choice of pegs on the day before so there is no mad scramble for the “best” areas and Gareth ended up on peg 14 both days. On the Friday he missed a run second cast and then finally latched into a Siamese carp that went 50lb.

Things went a bit quiet as the day got hotter and it was Wendy, Gareth’s wife, that talked him into buying chicken hearts to try. Chicken hearts delivered a whole kilo of them were deposited into the margin and two put on the hook, ten minutes later and a run produces a 85lb carp, ten minutes after resuming it goes again with another at 95lb and a bit later one of 105lb.

He also had a run on the predator rod that resulted in his mackerel being bitten clean in half. Day 2 sees him back at the same peg which again produced, this time a 95lb carp and a 20lb Chao Praya catfish with seven missed runs, probably off the catfish before they had to leave.

Anyway back to more normal sized fish! With the Monkhall festival approaching I decided to make my way there to finalise arrangements and to have a short session on Owl pool which I had not fished before. I decided to limit myself to testing two areas and baits – paste and expander in the margin and at 8m. Feeding micros the long swim was soon fizzing and the 0.16mm line was teamed with a size 14 hook for both paste and margin. First discovery was that there are too many fish in my swim! I was getting constant nudges/liners and the first 4 fish hooked were foul hooked, second discovery was that the new 2mm elastic I was trying was perfect if the fish were lip hooked but was definitely undergunned if foulhooked .

I persevered and ended up with a clutch of F1s up to 2-12 and a few carp plus 10 tench, but at least now I had an idea of what tackle and bait I needed! The time before the event will be preparing the paperwork and tackle plus slotting in a three day trip to Yorkshire!

Another tail hooked Monkhall carp!

April 2024 Part 2 – Away Days!

It was on 19th that I made my way up to Woodland View near Droitwich to have a practice session in preparation of the three dayer at the end of the month. One reason was I had not fished a “proper” commercial for carp for some time and I wanted to check out the new elastics I had bought from China, the second was I wanted to buy the fishery pellets in readiness as I would have enough to do on the first morning with collecting three days of peg fees and pools.

Making a relatively early start I arrived about 8:30 and duly paid the day ticket and bought my 2mm and 4mm pellets at the on-site tackle shop. It is easy to distinguish Woodlands pellets as they are a blue green colour like the water of the pools! I made my way up to peg 37 on Arles and set up a rig for the margin, one for 2+2 and one for 11m. The two non margin rigs were the same depth, so I had a “light” rig of 0.14mm to a 16 with a float taking 4 no 8 shot and a “heavy” rig of 0.16mm to a 16 with a float taking 0.5g.

Starting on the short line after cupping out a handful of micros to 11m and a large pinch on the 2+2 line it was very quiet, I fed some chopped worm and caster on the 2+2 line with some caster and started feeding a pinch of caster every put in. Eventually I began to get the odd bite but decided to try the long line which I had been feeding with catapulted micros and an expander on the hook to no effect. I brought the rig in and made some adjustments, flicking it out directly in front of me I was putting the pole together when the line tightened and a carp of 3-12 took the expander!

I continued at 11 m for a while and had another carp of 4-08.

Arles carp.

I had most success on expander on the 2+2 line with further carp of 5-04 and 5-00 with five small stockies, nine bream, four rudd, a roach and a perch for about 40lb in the four hours I fished. I came away pleased with the elastics and content that I had a plan for Arles.

No further fishing for me until the three day festival and of course on the Saturday it chucked it down, so much so that on Sunday on my way to the venue a lot of the roads were in a state of flood and it was not a pleasant driving experience. Worse still I knew that the rain would have adversely affected the fishing, so I would need to play things by ear as the matches progressed. Money collected, pegs allocated and weigh boards filled out we got on with the draw and the last peg left was mine. I was hoping for a peg in the high 20s or 30s but ended up on peg 5 (the board) which was upwind and hence flat for a lot of the time.

It was hard, very hard and with two hours to go I had four small fish, two carp a skimmer (blade really) and a perch. With Tony on peg 3 also struggling I decided to spend time down the margin, worm produced another small carp to take my tally to about 2lb. I then threw caution to the wind, put corn on and started to drip feed micros in every put in with just the odd piece of corn. The result was two late carp that took my final weight to a level 12lb and 4/5 in section.

Day two sees us split between Ghost and Back Deans, I was left with peg 38 on Deans with the board again! On looking at the section board it really was a deadly section – peg by peg- Carl Liddle (collector of many brown envelopes), me, Barry Gabriel (winner of many of our festivals and others), Pete Bailey (of Garbolino and many festival wins) and Rolly (Fishomania finalist and winner of many matches). I told myself realistically I was last and so decided to just have a pleasant day ignoring what others were doing. I set up four rigs – a margin one on 0.18mm to a 14, the 2+2 I used on practice and two long rigs one on 0.14mm the other 0.16mm both to 16s.

At the start I cupped in a ball of micros with some casters and a pinch of corn at 11m, a handful of micros mixed with caster and chopped worm on the 2+2 line and a half cup of caster and micros down my left margin. I ignored the right margin as there was a goose sitting on 4 eggs right next to where I would be fishing. I went straight on the 2+2 line with an inch of worm, within five minutes I had my first fish in the net, an bream of about two pound. Apart from a brief try on the margin line that produced a solitary F1 I spent the whole match on the 2+2 line apart from a short look-see on the 11m line. I had 23lb of carp over 2lb, 20lb of silvers, mainly bream and 41-08 of F1s and carp under 2lb for a 86-08 total. I was pleased with the day as I had been kept busy and I was even more delighted and shocked at the weigh in- see pic.

For me to have been that close to so many very good anglers was like winning!

The final day arrives and as is custom those who fished one lake on day two would fish the other on day 3 so I ended up on Ghost 16. The previous day we had strong winds coming off our backs or to our side but today the wind was just as strong but blowing directly into us. Once again with the board and once again next to Barry, who said (tongue in cheek) he would never speak to me ever again if I beat him again! Anyway no such chance of that happening. I must add that I set up a bomb rod each day and never picked it up! With the same rigs set up, worm didn’t work neither did expander other than me losing my first 4 fish (possibly foul hooked) and still blanking after 2 hours. Eventually I had a bream on the 2+2 line, but needed to use a heavier float (the 11m rig) to get presentation right, again I went down the margins alternating between left and right, feeding via a toss pot micros and 4mm with just two grains of corn each put in This got me a few carp and I ended up with 46-00 despite losing two in the last five minutes, making me 3/5. Overall the festival went well with me finishing 12/21 and after finishing the match at 3:30, we packed up, did the weigh in sorted the results paid out three days of brown envelopes and was out of the gate by 4:50.

March 2024 – part 2, a BB finish!

h the Bowood season closed it was on the Saturday 16th that I find myself at the Glebe again for the second of the Maggotdrowners matches. The draw arrives and deja -vu, peg 26 sticks to my fingers again!

I decided to ignore the feeder, although I still set it up and went for a pole approach with the 2+2 line as my main attack and the 13m line as a back up for when I wanted to rest the close in line. Starting on the close line having deposited three balls of groundbait laced with 2mm expanders at 13m I introduced one ball and fed a pinch of maggot every put in. Small skimmers and roach along with huge gudgeon began to go in the net but it was not frantic. In the end I stayed on the 2+2 line all match apart from a 10min stint on the longer line that resulted in a missed bite. At the all out I had put 61 small silvers in the net along with approx 11lb of bream, the carp net(s) (nets as carp under 2lb go in a separate net) held five carp 10lb, 8lb, 2x 3lb and a 1lb baby! This gave me 18-11 of silvers, 25-10 of carp for a total of 44-05. This put me 5/10 in the section, 6/20 in the silvers, 11/20 in the carp and 12/20 overall, missing the silvers section money by 14oz. The day was made by Darren who had drawn peg 2, opened up his holdall and realised he had left his pole at home, just having top kits and a no 3 section plus a waggler rod. Undeterred he fished top 2 and later top 3 to walk the match with a superb all silvers catch of 76-05.

Darren talked me into fishing a local match the following Sunday at Pockridge Lake near Corsham so as I had never seen the lake I made my way there on Tuesday to see what it was like. The ubiquitous rain we have been getting had taken it’s toll on the paths, which are apparently used by the public and dog walkers, they were now a muddy quagmire.

I set up on what turned out to be peg 4 in the match and fished at 5m before going out to 10m to see the difference. I set up one rig- a homemade taking 0.6g to 0.12mm main line and 0.10mm hooklength to an 18 – this rig would cope with both swims with the depth of each marked on the pole with different color chinograph pencils. Starting cautiously I cupped in two small balls at 10m and one at 5m, then loose fed a pinch of maggot each put in (pellet is not allowed here until April). I was soon catching small roach at 5m but decided to see if I could get a better stamp so put a piece of corn on and the bites took ever so slightly longer to come but the stamp was much better. The same happened when I went out to 10m. I fished about 3 hours and had 38 roach and 6 rudd plus dropped a few more when swinging in for approx 8lb.

Sunday arrives and I draw peg 7 which turned out to be the point almost opposite Tuesday’s peg.

It was a funny peg as I had the island directly in front, to my left was a bramble lined margin and to my right and behind me I had a weeded margin. I had not bothered to bring a rod having already made the decision just to have a pleasant day on the pole. Starting at 2+2 directly in front was my main attack but also fed two lines at 10m about 5m apart, the right hand one with caster the other with chopped worm, I also set up a heavier rig for the margin in case carp showed plus a slightly heavier rig then the short line for the long line as insurance against the large perch that were reputed to be present. The all in arrived and the first two hours went to plan with a steady stream of roach and small skimmers coming to hand, then it stopped- just like a tap had been turned off. For the rest of the match I rotated through all the lines and had only 3 further fish, one a small perch caught on worm in the left margin and two roach. Strangely I could not get a bite on corn with the fish coming to double maggot. I dropped one fish of about 3oz trying to swing it when I should have netted it but other than that I didn’t lose any. At the weigh in I was weighed first as the match organiser was on 6 and had arranged to weigh me and then for me to weigh his fish. I ended up with 2-13-8 while he weighed 2-15-0! The match was one from the other end of the lake with 10lb, second also down the other end 6lb (both had carp I believe) and third was peg 4 with 4lb which was mainly 2 big perch.

The organiser had said he was thinking of putting another match on in a couple of weeks but this time at Burbrook Lake, Bromham which is less than 10 minutes from home, so I booked on to that one. The following Friday (Good Friday) sees me at Burbrook in gloomy wet weather on Peg 3 I believe, the near bank but towards the far corner. I only took my whips as I wanted to try out a new Chinese float. It was hard with it taking a bit of time to get bites, feeding caster into the 5 feet of water at the end of the 6m whip (Chinese of course!). Eventually I ended up fishing double caster for a small skimmer, a perch, five roach and a chub of about 10oz, for a weight of 2-3lb (no scales).

Easter Sunday sees me at the second of the Bs from the title – Blacklands. Fishing peg 4 I tackled it my usual way with chopped worm at 10m, pellet at 10m 5m away to the left from the worm (11 and 1 0’clock). Fishing a homemade Chianti style float taking 0.6g on 0.12mm to a 0.10mm hooklength and an 18. No groundbait is allowed at Blacklands so loose fed caster close in at 2+2 range and over the chopped worm line with loose fed pellet over the left line.

Basically to cut a long story short, I fished for 3 hours had four skimmers (3 between 1-1.5LB), 2 hybrids of 1lb+ and 2-2.5lb,1 perch and 22 roach. Most came from the worm line, one roach on the pellet line, although the last hour on the worm line saw me fishing double caster . I had made a mental note as I was catching and thought I had between 10 and 10.5lb.

I start of April with another BB- Boddington and Burbrook!

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.