Monday sees me try something different, armed with the seat-bag the pike gear and a 7m Chinese whip I headed off to the other bank and peg 22 (almost opposite 10) where I have seen fish scattering previously. Pike rod went out but on plumbing up with the whip, the expected 5ft of water had become 2.5ft despite the rain we had been having. I surmised that the sluice had been opened a bit too long! Added to the low level it was weedy, clear and very windy. A 1.5g Chinese float with a 0.10mm hook-length to an 18 and maggot ended in 20 rudd and no pike runs for 1-08.
It wasn’t until a week later that I returned, back to peg 10 fishing 10am-12pm. The sardine bait was put out at about 20m and I set the pole up. I had just had a couple of roach in the first couple of drop ins when another member came by and stopped off for a chat before heading to the top field. I had taken my eye off the pike rod to turn towards him when he says your floats gone! My first run of the season, in fact the first for more than a year! The top kit was put down and a strike met with a firm resistance and after a short scrap a 9lber was in the net, at which point chaos ensued- I was out of routine and forgot to pick the rod up when I started to take the pike off the platform to unhook – goodness knows what the guy thought as I must have looked a right numpty. Anyway the pike was safely unhooked and weighed with the net adjustment showing the pike was dead on 9lb. The subsequent photos did not come out well as I think I must have smeared the lens with my wet hands! Anyway there was no more pike action but 18 roach, 16 rudd and 9 littler skimmers kept me busy for a 2-12 total.
Friday sees me back at Bowood peg 10 again 10-12 but this time no pike action although seeing the egret fly past, the kite swoop overhead and the kingfisher catch fish opposite did provide compensation. The pole produced15 roach,11 rudd a perch and a small skimmer for 2-06. It is noticeable that the roach are becoming the dominant catch now rather than the rudd. The perch was also noteworthy, not because it was large but the fact that it was unusually in the 2-3oz bracket whereas the usual size for the main lake is either microscopic (size of my thumb) or over a pound (on rare occasions)!
So last day of the month and I decide to give the Pondtail a go. Well I lasted an hour on the 5m whip, the temp was 3 Celsius on arrival at 9:30 and starting at 9:45 I had not had a sniff by 10:45 despite trying worm and combinations of maggot so I packed up and am writing this instead!
December is around the corner with lots of days taken up with family things but I’m sure I’ll get a few days in!
Like a demented addict I return to peg 10 at Bowood and usual method I tried to stick on corn but after a while started alternating with maggot to no real avail. Basically it was dire with 4 bites and four fish, all rudd , three on maggot and one on corn for a miserable 3oz.
Friday sees me go to the K&A canal at Semmington, walking up to the pump area by the flyover. This was always a good bream spot before they added the new viaduct and I wanted to see what it was like now. Fishing 10-12 I set up the pole to fish at roughly 6m where the slope ended and introduced a ball of stodgy groundbait to counteract the flow and depth and a few chopped worms, loose feeding wheat and the odd maggot over the top. Starting on double maggot on a 16 below a 1g float in the approx 6ft of water with a bulk set 2ft from the hook and a single no8 dropper I immediately started catching, first 4 put ins resulted in skimmer,skimmer roach, skimmer. This carried on with small skimmers for a while until a lull was broken with a better fish that turned out to be a perch of 1-12 that stretched the no 10 elastic. (Number 10 is not usual for a canal I admit but for this area and depth of water I followed some advice given by Ian Didcot many moons ago, namely that the heavier elastic would set the hook better compared to the more usual elastics used). Swapping to a piece of worm the fish kept on coming until a boat driven by a New Zealand Captain Pugwash came straight down the inside almost running into my net while heading for the moorings at the lock. I was not pleased and suggested in future he did what other boaters do – keep out then hard turn in, drop off member to tie up front rope and pull mid-barge rope to level up and secure. To make matters worse a second barge then came and did the same but stopped to my left with its bow in touching distance of my landing net (I actually had to move it to prevent it getting hit). I struggled on while they waited for their antipodean friend in a third barge to catch up. They then managed to churn everything up while going through the lock. I gave it another ten minutes but decided to pack up, finishing with the perch plus two small ones, a gudgeon, a roach a rudd and lots of small skimmers for a 4-13 total.
Following Wednesday sees me back at peg 10 Bowood, a glutton for punishment or more like a dog that won’t give up his bone! Still heavily weeded, may be almost mid November before any piking can occur, I set up usual fashion and tried maggot, worm, corn and wheat and caught on all of them, ending the three hours with 15 rudd, 8 roach, a hybrid, 3 perch and two skimmers for a level 3lb.
Friday sees me head for High Penn for a change, fishing the middle of the East bank.
I had taken just the margin pole and plumbing up found about 10feet of water. A couple of walnuts of groundbait were introduced and a sprinkling of wheat with the odd maggot loose fed. and the couple of hours shot by with the 1g float regularly lifting or going down.The 11 roach, 9 perch and 14 rudd went 4-09 with the best fish being a roach of 0-12. Unfortunately the carp cruising around stayed out of pole reach, perhaps I’ll take a waggler next time!
My focus then moved to getting sorted for the Maggotdrowners match at the Glebe on October1st.
Right, firstly an apology, there will only be one post this month for obvious reasons if you get to the end of the post! Saturday 5th sees me get to Boddington in good time to collect the money and sort the draw.There were three let downs so having originally booked for 10, then increased it to 11 and then 13 we ended up with 10 fishing! I was left with peg 38 in the bag- yes one away from when I came up previously! This time we were faced with a heavy (15mph) wind directly into our faces and I began to regret the fact that I had left the whips at home and had just a pole and waggler set up as the pegs either side had about 10 fish apiece before I had a bite!
Some clarification on my rigs may be in order as I was not fishing a traditional pole rig as I had converted one of my Chinese floats by adding a spring eye to the tip that could be removed if required so I had a 1g olivette 3-4 ft from the hook and 4 no8 droppers spread out below that with a 16 hook to 0.10mm. The fish finally found the three balls of caster laced groundbait and feeding casters while fishing double maggot I managed to start to put some fish in the net with some better net samples, oddly I did not get a single perch. At the end I knew I had been beaten either side but I weighed in 11-11 and was happy with a pleasant days fishing despite having approx 30% more fish bumped off due to the wind.
The results can be seen below, the only one not to weigh in was Ian who lost his landing net and first part of his handle in to the depths as it worked loose and despite best efforts he could not retrieve it. To his credit he continued to the end but tipped back and helped with the weigh in.
On to Wednesday and I paid Rowde a visit on the K&A canal. Parking up in the lay-by I had gone light again with just the whips and my seat plus of course landing net and bait. The first pound was full of boats, the second pound is not fishable as there are power lines, so on to the third pound which is about 40-50m wide and has 3 CRT fishing pegs that I did not fancy so continued on the the fourth pound and set up a 6m Chinese whip with one of my favourite orange Chinese floats and a 0.10mm hooklength to an 18. I had decided to experiment with feeding just micros after the first 5 minutes of introducing a dozen or so maggots with hookbait being double maggot.
You’ll notice the back rest of the seat is missing- lost some time ago when Gareth borrowed it! The canal here is about 30m wide as we are just below the infamous Caen Locks. Starting at 9:45 and packing up at 11:30 (reason for that coming up) I had a pleasant session resulting in six perch, two rudd, five roach and twenty one skimmers for approx 3-04.
At one point a boat came through into the pound and then proceeded to go through my swim three times while waiting for the lock gates to be opened, at this point I put the whip down on the deck and had a cup of coffee. The boat finally got into the lock and I continued catching until disaster struck, I lifted into a bite, felt a good fish (possibly a bream) and the line snapped a foot from the tip of the whip. Clearly when I put the whip down it must have caught on something that weaken the line at that point. I packed up at this point and trundled off home!
Now the reason for the title and no second part this month is that Gareth contacted me and asked if I would like to go fishing in Thailand with him as he had a couple of days holiday with the Chinese celebrating May Day, he would pay the airfare and fishing and I would just need to sort out a hotel for my arrival so I could get some rest before the fishing! Spoke to Mrs J who said go! So I have been sorting out various things in the mean time but the fishing will be two days at Jurassic Mountain Centre on the Specimen Lake, but before that a morning on a lake near Bangkok fishing for Mekong catfish – the same one that Gareth had the 80kg fish from last year. Expect pics and report in May (if I catch!)
So Bowood is no more, until June 16th, so the canal is available for piking until the end of March so Tuesday18th sees me heading to Rowde with the rucksack bag, a 3m whip and a pike rod, large oval landing net and unhooking mat (compulsory on canal for pike) and fold-able groundbait bucket with bait. I was planning to fish the first pound away from Devizes from the road bridge, on arrival there were several boats moored up and I ended up in a large gap well away from them about half way down the wall.
Loose feeding on the whip I began slowly with a a solitary roach and a perch before one of the boats moved off and went through the swim, it took over an hour before the next bite but I then had a further roach and two perch before I hooked a decent fish that I had on for a few minutes before the hook pulled, I suspect it was a good perch. Only other bite was a missed run on the pike rod to a smelt. I packed up shortly after to end the short session as the bank was getting increasingly busy with walkers.
Rest of the week I was tied up with various things but Saturday sees me travel up to the Glebe for a Maggotdrowners match. This was to be a 6 hour match with everything counting. I arrived in good time and ended up drawing peg 8 which I didn’t mind as I have fished it before albeit in the summer months.
I set up a feeder, a rig for 13m, one for 2+2 and a margin rig. Feeding the 13m with three balls of groundbait with a smattering of 2mm and 4mm pellet plus a few grains of corn. The other lines were loose fed with pellets. Although the day was quite settled and warmish everyone was struggling apart from peg 1. The feeder lasted half hour before moving on to the pole as others on the feeder were also biteless. From the start at 11am to 3pm I had two bites that resulted in two skimmers plus I had lost two carp in the first hour that were foul hooked. From 3pm to 4pm I lost a further carp which I had on for about 5minutes that was a real lump before the hook pulled but did manage to put a carp of about 4lb in the net plus a further two skimmers. In to the last hour and I took a chance and chopped up some worm that I put on the 13m line , worm on the hook resulted in four further carp (why didn’t I try worm sooner?). At the weigh in my skimmers went 4-12 and the five carp 27-07 for a 32-03 total and 3rd in section. It had been a good day until 15minutes from the all out when we had a biblical rain and hail storm that soaked everything!
Tuesday 25th sees me back at Rowde, this time taking the 5m Chinese whip and float with the intention of feeding micro and fishing expander, I also had the pike rod but that did not get any interest.
I started on maggot but fed micros and bumped four good fish early on, possibly perch but after a small skimmer on maggot I changed to the expander and ended up with 7 skimmers (best 1-01), 6 roach and a rudd for approx 2-08.
I waited under Monday 31st and headed off to Boddington as I was running a silvers match on the Saturday and wanted to check the water level and have a word with the bailiff about adding a couple of extra pegs. I set up on peg 39 and was pleased to see that the water level was up to the first platform down.
Fishing at 10m I had about 10ft of water and as it was very calm I fished a light 0.3g float set to fish on the drop with a 0.10mm hooklength to a 16. Three balls laced with caster were introduced and caster loose fed over the top with a further ball being added every 45minutes or so for the 3 hours I fished. It was frustrating at first as the top I had chosen was just not right as I bumped ten fish before changing for a lighter elastic which sorted the issue. I chopped and changed trying different things but still ended up with 25 roach plus a perch of 1-01. There were a couple of quiet periods when there was possibly a pike in attendance but I did not hook any.
I packed up at 1pm to get home avoiding the usual traffic around Oxford. Next month sees the Boddington match and a surprise!
The high winds, rain and freezing temperatures have been so far this month limiting me to just two excursions so far. Friday 3rd sees me head to peg 10 at Bowood in bright sunshine but the air temperature was -2C on arrival lifting to 2C just under 3 hours later. The Pondtail was still frozen after the cold days and nights we had been having and there was ice still on the main lake all the way down to just after peg 7. It was very still with a gentle breeze rippling the water at times but fishing from 10am to 12 produced not a single bite or run. Fish were starting to show (silvers and pike) at the edge of the ice around peg 7 which was just about fishable when I left; I should really have chanced it and fished up to the edge of the ice rather than going to the deeper water but hindsight is a wonderful thing.
Eleven days then pass before the next visit as a further deep freeze put a firm lid on the lakes and I resolved to let the ice melt and for the temperature to be stable for a couple of days before venturing out.This time I went on peg 9, mainly as there was a couple of pike anglers on the far bank, one of which had his pike float about 20 yards from peg 10. There was still thin ice on the lake up to peg 5 and I was tempted to fish there but knowing that it was only 3-4ft deep did not appeal.
I got a bait in the water by 9:55 and fished until 12. I mixed up one 250ml cup of dry groundbait on the wet side to act as an attractant and fed a single ball with some pinkies. Ten minutes in and the float dipped under and a small roach came to be resident in the keepnet. Just after this the swans swam by and the pike float bobbed almost as if their wake had caused it but I was not convinced. A couple of minutes later the run materialised and the strike resulted in what felt like a decent fish, until it let go- I obviously struck too soon in my haste!
No further runs which was annoying as the water was constantly erupting with small fish evading marauding pike although one of the anglers on the other bank had a pike which from a distance looked to be around the 5-8lb mark from just up from peg 5. I had an interesting time on the pole ending with 3-03 comprised of 33 roach, 20 rudd and 7 skimmers/blades – yes they were small! I did catch a couple on a Chinese honey jelly ball that I had bought, I will try these further as I bought them in a variety of flavours.
NO pictures this time as I did set the video up for the session and the weighing but on playback there was nothing!
September 1st arrives and being a Sunday I decided to just grab the 10′ waggler and the seat bag and have an hour on the Pondtail. You may remember that the bridge at the start of the lake partly collapsed last winter and it has slowly been rebuilt with a compound formed for the plant and materials that cut off both pegs. During the summer peg 2 became available again but today the compound had been radically shortened and both were now available- except peg 1 was hidden behind a forest of 3 foot nettles that I will tackle at a later date, so peg 2 it was.
Fishing the waggler at about 15m with double maggot I managed 26 roach and 6 perch by loose feeding wheat after a single ball of groundbait was introduced. The fish pulled the scales down to 3-15. The other picture is looking down the Pondtail towards the main lake. As an aside I had bought a Chinese carbon extending landing net handle to go with a net head I had bought some time ago (the threads are smaller than in UK). It allows the user to set it at any distance from 60cm to 3m, it is on the heavy side compared to the more conventional handles but is very robust and ideal to stick in the pocket of a rucksack – it worked well on this outing.
Tuesday 3rd and I decided on peg 7, still weedy but I felt there was still a chance of bream and tench while the weed remained.Fishing 9:15 to 12, it was not hectic and despite the pike activity I managed 14 rudd, 3 roach a skimmer and a bream of 3-04 all on corn for a 5-06 total. I did lose a large unseen fish in the weed that I am sure was foul hooked from the way it fought.
My focus now shifted to preparing for the three day Pairs at the Glebe, although through a series of events the pairs became seeded teams of three. We had been lucky to negotiate pools 5,6, and 7 rather than 1 and 6 which was our original allocation so my preparation for pairs went out of the window and I drew up new sheets and lists for the Teams of 3! Monday 9th came, I collected in the pools and explained the rotation of lakes Group A (the superstars!) would fish 5 then 6 then 7, Group B, 6,7 and 5 while my group (C -the poolsfodder!) would fish 7,5,6.
So the last peg in the bag for me was 104 – not brilliant but hey-ho. Arriving at the peg it was very windy and I opted to set up a feeder for the far side,four pole rigs to cover 11m, 5m and two margin rigs. Line was mainly 0.18mm for out in front and 0.20mm for the margins. During a brief respite from the wind I managed to remember to take some pictures!
Starting on the feeder, in 20 minutes there were no indications so that went on the rack and the pole went out to 11m where I had fed 3 balls of groundbait, micros, 4mm pellets and corn. To say it was slow was an understatement, after 2 hours I had managed two skimmers. Tony on my right was fairing no better, the 5m line produced a solitary carp of 3lb and a skimmer so it was to the margins I looked. I had primed the left one with hemp and corn while the right had been given micros and corn with the odd 4mm. The last two hours saw me pinch a carp from either side and by rotating this I managed to get 37-10 of carp and 11-07 of skimmers for a 49-01 total, losing just 4 carp. Tony pipped me by a pound and an ounce weighing in 50-02 with fewer fish but of a better stamp, leaving me last in the group!
Next day sees me on pool 5 peg 78, however the weather had taken a turn for the worse and we had heavy rain and wind all day. I had unfortunately looked at my phones weather forecast which suggested the odd light shower so had put on my over-trousers (which have a hole in the crotch area- you can see what is coming!) rather than my bib and brace which is watertight but more awkward for calls of nature! Needless to say by the end I was absolutely soaked from the waist down.
I did manage one picture during a brief break in the weather before the start but it was all downhill from this point on. Setting up exactly the same rigs I decided I needed to attack the swim more late on so mixed up 1.5kg of groundbait which for me is a lot!First cast on the feeder sees a 4lb mirror carp in the net then nothing so after 40 minutes on to the 11m line for a couple of bream then nothing.Basically with an hour and a half to go I had clicked 25lb in my nets, at this point I but 5 full cups of groundbait with maggots into the right margin and put 6 maggots on my size 14 hook and went in on top. Three minutes later the float started to wobble and eventually went under with an angry carp attached. That is how it played out, for the last hour or so- catch a carp cup in a pot of groundbait and maggots, repeat.I had clicked 37lb in one net and I usually start another net if it is close to 40lb simply so that I can lift it (the net limit is 60lb) I had just put a couple of carp in the second carp net when I landed a lump of a fish that they reckoned was the largest caught on that pool that day, although not weighed a conservative estimate was 15lb. The all out called, the weigh in showed I had 5-11 of silvers, the first carp net that I clicked at 37lb was 37-03, the second net I had clicked at 39lb weighed 46-01, now I had given myself 12lb on the clicker for the lump so it could well have been closer to 20lb than 15lb! My weight of 88-15 put me 4th on the lake. I then spent the night drying off my clothes!
The final day sees me on peg 92. Now dry and in the bib and brace the continuing very heavy wind and rain (once the all in was called! ) saw me struggle as on day 1. Nothing on the feeder and mainly skimmers at 11m with the odd carp, going in to the margins late on fishing as on day 2 I had the frustration of hooking 7 carp and losing all seven, most I am sure were foul hooked by the way they went. I was glad when I called the all out! My paltry net of 22-02 of silvers and 20-09 of carp put me last with 42-11. My “team” did little better so we finished last as well!
The month finishes off with another 3 day event, this time at Monkhall near Bridgnorth.