Sunday 31 October 2010

Sunday 31st October


You have to wonder if the fish know what's going on, after two weeks of frosts the last few days have been mild with temperatures up to 16 degrees C!

Walking around before the draw it was the first time I didn't think the pegs around the back of the island would be the place to draw, with leaves being out in the main bowl of the lake and carp, loving floating leaves, being underneath them. Pegs 44 and 70 with the little island between them looked to be where most of the fish were. When I went to draw pegs 66, 68 and 70 were left, I'd have been happy with any of them. It was only when I noticed that 46 was still in that I saw it was in my hand, I've been wanting that all summer! I was fairly happy with it mind.

I decided on three areas to target, 13m long in the open water, a 2+2 line and down the edge. With the colour dropping out I wasn't expecting the margins to go, but it was still an area to target just in case. The rigs for the long line and closer line were near identical, both with .3gr NG Floats Deckers on .15 line to a .13 hook-link and size 20 Fox Series 2's. The longer line had a 13 hollo elastic while the closer line had black hydro. The depth difference was only four inches (about six and a half feet) but having different rigs meant I could keep the line nice and short above the float on both with the calm conditions. I had a shallow rig for the long line, set about three feet it was a 4x10 Preston PB2 on .13 line to a 20 Fox Series 2. Elastic was 13 hollo. Last up was a margin rig. I fished this at 8m down the edge, a touch further than I would normally due to the water clarity. In three feet of water it was a 4x12 Preston Somo on .15 direct to a 20 Fox Series 2 and fished on 15 Hollo.



On the whistle the long line had half a dozen grains of corn and a small pinch of hemp, the 5m line a dozen grains of corn and the margin had the same as the long line plus a few micros. Unsurprisingly, no indications came quick and after a few minutes I started to toss-pot in grains of corn in ones and two's with a few grains of hemp. By the time I started doing this I'd watched the three anglers opposite all catch a fish, plus peg 44 to my left fishing to a lilly bed. It was forty minutes in to the match when I had my first liner, this was followed next chuck by another liner which I left and for a split second it pulled on the end before coming off! There were signs of fish cruising and on the hour mark I picked up the catty and started flicking odd casters over the long line.


I gave the deck rig a few more minutes but with no bites I picked up the shallow rig. I wasn't feeding a lot with the catty, just casters in two's and three's every minute or two just so something was falling through the water. I missed the first bite I had but after ten minutes a bite saw me connected to a fish and after a brief scrap a common of about 3lb was in the net. I gave the shallow rig another half an hour after, trying it up and down in depth and past the feed but all it produced was a small roach. Going back on to the deck rig and I had a bite almost instantly on corn and soon another 3lb common was in the net. Topping up with two grains of corn and six of hemp it took perhaps five minutes before another bite saw me attached to another fish identical to the first two. The next drop and as I was lowering in the rig something grabbed the bait and wrenched the elastic out but within a couple of seconds it came off.


The lost fish saw an end to bites so I had my first drop on the close line which I'd been dripping odd grains of corn on to by hand. A ten minute spell on this produced nothing so I also had a brief go in the margins, giving it just five minutes without any indications. I topped the edge line up and again tried the long line. No bites on the deck so I dropped the shallow rig over it (I'd been dripping casters over it still) but the only bites were from 1oz roach which tended to come off! Pegs 48 and 70 were both catching steadily and were well ahead of anyone else but behind them nobody was running away with it and nobody else I could see had more than four carp.

Nothing followed for a spell and with two hours to I decided to stop feeding casters long (I find it works earlier, plus we'd had some cold showers too so I decided catching 'up' was unlikely) and gave the swim a decent pinch of hemp and corn to try and kick-start it. The margin was lifeless so I gave that a decent pinch of bait too. With an hour and a half left I had the first sign of life on the 5m line and a few minutes after that I had a lively 3lb'er. Odd indications followed after but no bites so I rotated round the other lines but had no signs. With an hour to go 44 and 70 had slowed but were still getting odd fish and were well ahead, but with 3rd looking up for grabs I decided that the 5m line would be the best chance, especially with the light dropping, and it had been the only line to show signs of life for a while too.


With just forty minutes left others had started nabbing odd carp, and I then missed two bites in a row on the close line. I decided to nudge the float up an inch to try and hit them, and it worked with the float burying next drop and a better fish being on the end. After a decent fight a ghostie of about 5lb was in the net. With half an hour to go I put a small pot on the pole to keep the feed tight and the last spell of the match produced four more carp, all of that same decent stamp. The last one was in the net with four minutes to go but I didn't have enough time to get another to let me finish up with an even ten! I just needed a few more minutes.....


When the scales got to me peg 44 was top weight with 40lb 12oz, a bit less than most people thought they would have. Pulling my nets out people were saying it looked close but I knew there wasn't enough, with my fish going 37lb 4oz. This was comfortably second until peg 70 opposite weighed in 39lb 2oz and I had to settle for third, close, but no cigar!


I was quite pleased in the end, despite being just one fish off a win. I didn't realise I'd be so close but my late larger stamp fish pushed them near and just goes to show that you shouldn't give up. Perhaps I could have nabbed a fish on the bomb in the long dead spells but with anglers opposite chucking feeders to the middle it wasn't the quiet area I like beyond the pole to fish it, as I would barely have been casting past the pole line. You can't win them all!

Monday 25 October 2010

Sunday 24th October


While I'm sure this time last year it definitely only seemed like Autumn, this year there has certainly been a touch of winter! Looking out at 11pm Saturday night revealed a clear, cold night and a full moon, and together I find they don't make the best conditions for fishing. What turned out to be a very slight touch of frost at 7am in my back garden got harder the nearer we got to the venue too, making me fear a hard day.

I was very surprised on walking round to find that the lake held a decent colour, and all round unlike the last time when it seemed patchy. I was fairly pleased with my draw, with peg 12 in my hand. It seems to be a peg that holds smaller fish, but on a cold day they are often more reliable. It's also an area that's been in decent form of late too.

I had four rigs up for the day, two for the island (14.5m was enough to reach into the small bay), a track rig at 6m and lastly a margin rig. I was going to fish quite light across but plumbing up revealed a fair size obstruction coming out from the bank to the left of where I decided to fish, while to the right are some submerged tree stumps, which point towards the near bank and to the left, meaning you're fishing behind them to reach the island. The main rig was a 4x10 Preston Chianti in not quite 3ft of water, on .15 line to a .13 hook-link (I was using a hook-link because of the snags) A size 20 Fox Series 2 hook and Preston 15 Hollo elastic finished the rig. Quite strong considering, but I wanted to get them out! The other rig for across was a 4x10 Preston PB2 set a foot off the deck. Line was .13 direct to the same hook as the last rig. I had a softer 13 Hollo elastic on this, to stop the fish splashing but would scale it up if I was losing fish. The middle line was a .3gr NG Floats Decker on .15 line to .13 and the same hook, again on 13 hollo, while the margin rig was the same as the far line deeper rig. Depth down the track was about five and a half foot, with three foot down the edge.

For some reason or other I wasn't quite ready at the start, so I fed the track line with a golf ball of crumb with a few micro's in, while the margin had a pinch of hemp and pellet plus four grains of corn. Some six or seven minutes later I shipped across on a 4mm expander with a tiny fruit-shoot lid pot filled with a few micros and a tiny pinch of crumb. It was probably only a minute before my first bite and a mirror of about 14oz was in the net, after freeing it from the snag which it bolted strait into!. After that fish no bites were forthcoming, and I began to have bad thoughts over the times I've had a fish first drop and it's proved to be the only one.....

Half an hour after starting, while I had been dropping in tiny amounts of crumb with just three or four micro's in, I slipped a grain of corn on the hook. I had a liner almost instantly before foul-hooking and losing a fish a few minutes later as I lifted the rig up. Another foul-hooker a few minutes later, which I again lost, led me to try the shallow rig. I did eventually get a bite on this fishing caster but from a fat perch about 4oz in weight. I went back on the deck after that and on the hour mark I had a slightly bigger carp of around a pound and a half on pellet, followed a crucian of about 10oz. Bites again faded after this and despite plugging away for another half an hour all I managed was two missed bites.

With just hour an hour and a half gone I decided to drop in on the track line on pellet. I waited only short while before a bite led to a sluggish resistance from a (very welcome) skimmer of about a pound and a quarter. No more followed so I topped the line up with another small ball of crumb, topped the margins up with a small amount of bait and went back across. A flurry of missed bites on the deeper rig led to try shallow again, and I missed the first two bites on that before shallowing up and connecting with a plump crucian nudging a pound in weight. This was followed shortly after by a common of about half a pound before bites tailed off for a bit, leading to spells on all three lines which didn't produce. I took the maggots (you know it's getting cold now!) out of the cool bag but all they produced were tiny wasp-like perch so I gave that idea up.

On the midpoint of the match I decided to try caster on the deck across, as I had dripped a (very) few in while using the shallow rig. I deepened the rig up to lay 3cm of line on the deck but this gave no joy, so with nothing to lose I slipped a pellet back on without changing the depth. That proved to be a good idea as a run of three carp, all about 2lb a piece followed, before predictably the bites slowed. The next fish coming took three times as long for the bite and it resulted in a crucian of about 8oz. With the sun on the far bank there were signs of fish moving shallow over the bait so I dropped in on the shallow rig, but I was very surprised to have no response at all on this. In the end I dropped it as far left as I dared, near the brambles growing behind the tree in the water visible in the pic. I eventually had a bite here and after a bit of a tussle my biggest fish of the day, a common of about two and half pound was in the net.

The next hour was somewhat slow, with just an odd small crucian or carp falling to pellet, nothing bigger than 8oz falling. The two closer lines were totally unproductive, even on maggot so I plugged away across. With just over an hour to go, with the sun (and temperature) dropping bites really started to fade away. I decided to slip on a grain of corn and a sharp dink on the float saw me attached to a very sluggish resistance which I expected to wake up any second. Halfway back and I realised it wouldn't as what seemed something very breamy plodded around and them surfaced, a skimmer of about 2lb! That proved to be the last proper bite, and I plugged away across due to lack of bites from the other lines. I had two liners which led to me alternating between the deck and shallow rig but I finished the match without adding anymore to the nets.

I was pleased to have had a few bites, as the three anglers I could see had all struggled, while I guessed I'd have around 18lb. However, one angler on the 20's was admitting to three decent carp, while another admitted to three carp and end peg 40 was admitting to three lumps. Given that one of those pegs weighed in three fish for 28lb in the last match I wasn't sure of framing. I was one of the earliest to weigh and was surprised lifting out my silvers net with it going 11lb 8oz, a couple of pound more than I thought. I was Damn close with my other net prediction of five carp for 10lb mind, as they went 10lb 1oz! As it turned out my 21lb 9oz total was enough to win, with peg 40's three fish going 18lb 2oz and 16lb odd being third.

Yes, winter has definitely arrived!

Monday 18 October 2010

When Jack Frost Comes Knocking!


With the first frost forecast I wasn't really sure what to expect on Sunday, but I did know that from walking around the lake I fancied a draw from 62 to anywhere in the 70's, with the sun facing them from early, and the fact that they would be in the sun all day I reckoned on those being the pegs to draw. The other side of the lake was distinctly cooler, with a touch of frost present on the ground between pegs 48 and 51.

For some reason I found myself in the draw queue about half-way down, earlier than I like to be, and when my hand came out of the bag I was somewhat disappointed to find peg 48 in my hand! In to the fridge it was then! Peg 48 has been somewhat a strange peg for me in the past, but generally it does one of two things; fishes well, or fishes hard!

With plenty of time to set up I decided on four rigs. I had two for the island, the first a 4x10 Preston Chianti on .15 line direct to a size 20 Fox Series 2 hook. The second had the same float and hook but on lighter .13 line. The stronger rig was matched to Preston 15h lakky, while the lighter was on a 13h. Depth here was not quite 2ft tight at 13m. The third rig was for 5m. Depth here was about 4ft and in the flat calm conditions a .2gr NG Floats Decker was plenty. Terminal gear was the usual .17 line to a .15 hook-link and an 18 Fox Series 2 hook, fished on black Hydro. I was reluctant to scale down on this line as when it goes on this peg they tend to be big fish. Last up was a margin line for 6m along the bank to my left. In not quite 3ft of water a 4x12 Preston Somo (I've changed the bristle to a plastic one) was used on .15 line direct to an 18 Fox Series 2 hook. Preston 15h finished this rig.

Just before the whistle I had the sun on my peg (not the water though!) to make a nice picture, but by the time I started I was most definitely in the shade again. The far line got just a pinch of 4mm pellets, while the 5m line had the same but with a few grains of corn. The margins had a pinch of hemp, a few grains of corn and just six small cubes of meat. I was reluctant to feed more at the start with the cold, after all, I could always step it up if I needed.

It took about five minutes for me to get the first indication on a 4mm expander, but I missed it. Strait back in and my suspicions were confirmed as a roach of about an ounce nabbed the pellet. I slipped on a grain of corn and started to drip a few pellets in to try and make a response. By this time everyone I could see opposite had a fish (carp) and some were even in t-shirts! With no sun on me I had my fleece zipped right up! After forty minutes or so a liner led to a bite on corn, and after a short but spirited fight a small mirror was in the net. Size-wise, I debated on which net to put it in (carp under a pound and silvers in one net) before decided it was just over a pound and put it in the big net. At least then both nets had fish in them! I tried dropping in without feeding next chuck, but after five minutes without sign I went back to dripping pellets in, but with no joy unless I went back to a small expander which produced an odd 1oz roach.

On the hour and a half mark I decided to come away from the island and drop in on the 5m line which I had been flicking odd grains of corn on to. I had a liner here which led to me staying on it a bit longer, but with nothing else after another ten minutes I abandoned it for the far line, after topping up the margins again. Practically on the two hour mark on the dot, the sun reached the island where I was fishing and the result was near instantaneous! Shame I missed it! Next drop and this resulted in another pasty mirror, a touch bigger than the first. I was starting to think about putting a few fish together but but that was the end of that with the next hour bite-less, and the sun once again left the island.
I felt upon leaving the island that I had nothing to lose in upping the feed, so I cupped in a quarter of a pot of pellets before dropping in on the margins. This was fruitless too so I decided that with an hour and forty or so to go to give that a decent pot of bait, giving it half a pot of casters and some come (something different) before dropping in on the 5m line. I had a bite instantly here and a common of about 2lb was the result, but no more followed. Going as I had with the other lines, with nothing to lose that too got a bigger amount of bait.
I decided to go down the edge on corn, and this produced knocks so I decided to switch to caster. Two small roach in as many drops were followed by and identical bite next chuck which saw considerably more elastic come out. A lively fight saw a ghostie of about 6lb in the net and the end of the bites here. Thinking that as caster had given the best fish smaller biats may be the way I put a quarter of a pot of choppy and caster in, but the only sign I had until the end here was a tail waving at me ten minutes before the end, which promptly disappeared when I lowered half a worm in front of it. The only other action of note was a flurry of missed bites on the 5m line. This led to me both deepening up and shortening the line above the float and when I did then hit one, it was a fully scaled mirror that weighed all of about 2oz! After this the tail waved at me and when that done it's disappearing act I did something I seldom do- packed up early!
As it happened in the end, for those that sat in the sun it fished quite well, with corner peg 62 winning with 60lb odd, with some near 40lb weights behind and quite a few 30's. I wasn't the only one who struggled and the others in the shade to my right mustered (I think) seven carp between three of them. Still, there's always next week!

Sunday 10 October 2010

Sunday October 10th

With the weather being pretty decent all week I was hopeful of a decent days fishing, although walking round the lake before the match it was noticeable that the colour had dropped out of the water in certain areas. I was happy with the draw when number 14 was in my hand, with a nice long margin and the water still holding a reasonable tinge of colour compared to the later numbered pegs.


Plan of attack was the usual areas- a rig for across at 16m (a 4x10 Preston Chianti with a plastic tip in 3ft of water), a 5m line (using a .3gr NG Floats Decker in 5ft of water) and a margin rig for 13m to my left towards a corner ( a 4x12 Preston Somo, again in about 3ft of water) The margin and far bank rigs had floats with finer tips than those I've used of late with the water cooling down. The rigs were all on .15 (hook-link in the case of the deep rig) with 18 Fox Series 2's on them. Elastic was Preston 15h on the two shallower rigs and black Hydro on the deeper. With a few minutes to go I also decided to put up a shallow rig for using against the island, a ploy that works well for me when it's a bit cooler. A 4x10 PB2 float on .13 line direct to a 20 Fox Series 2 and Preston 13h was the lighter set up for this. Putting this rig up meant I wasn't ready at the start, hence why the pic is after the match!


I fed the margins with a pinch of hemp, corn and meat, while the 5m line had about a dozen grains of corn. First drop across was when any bait went in, with three grains of corn and half a dozen 4mm pellets topped off with a little groundbait. I started to get odd signs after a minute or so and after five minutes by first bite produced a skimmer of about 2oz. The next drop resulted in the pellet being shredded by small fish. A switch to a grain of corn produced a missed bite before giving me a small common of about a pound and a half. Floating leaves started to be a problem then and I had to re-plumb a little further along to get past where they were gathering!


I missed two or three bites on corn in the new area before I connected with one, and after a very lively fight a common of about 4lb was in the net- hooked neatly in the tail root! Bites faded after so I took the opportunity to top up the margin line before trying the shallow rig as odd carp were browsing among the drifting leaves but it bought no joy, and the same happened with a five minute try on the 5m line. Back across and a quick bite on corn on the deck produced a common of about 3lb before bites totally faded.


I plugged away across until the two hour mark when I had a try on the two closer lines. The 5m line produced nothing while a liner on the margin line led to to give it longer than I was going to for no reward! A spate of knocks that never developed on the deck across led to try the shallow rig again, shallowing it up to a foot deep before slipping double caster on the hook. I missed a sharp dig first drop, but a few minutes later another bite led to a ghostie of about 3lb. The next drop produced an almost instant bite and a better fish was the result with a chunky 5lb'er making it's way to the net. The next drop didn't go to plan though and a missed bite saw me attached to a snag in the water. As I shipped back to try and free the rig I heard a muffled "pupf" as I reached the no5 section and looked up to see the no2 section of the top-kit broke! The first time I'd used that top on the pole too, and while I'm aware the match-lite kits are only rated to a 12 I don't think a 13 hollow elastic was overdoing it!


I couldn't get a bite across after this so I decided on a drop in the margins. I missed a bite before the next one resulted in a crazy fight from very old looking torpedo shaped 3lb'er. I missed two or three more bites after before a switch to a small cube of meat had an instant result and produced a carp of about 5lb. I did have a few liners after so I topped up with a pinch of bait and went back across. Two carp in two chucks on the shallow rig (now with heavier 15h elastic after the miss-hap!) was the result, both shallow on caster and both around the 4lb mark. Bites faded on this after, and with the sun off the water now due to the tall tree's behind I decided to try the on the deck. With no joy on this I had a drop on the 5m line, but this was strangely quiet so it was back in the edge with an hour and a half to go.


I had a frustrating spell of missed bites here, both on corn and meat, which led to much rig tinkering. In the end I took a shot off the rig and waited a bit longer! This produced two good fish in a short while, the biggest perhaps nudging 7lb before I started to miss bites again! Eventually, with an hour to go carp number twelve fell, although smaller than the last two at not much more than 2lb. I then had to sit the last hour out as I couldn't get a bite off any line on any bait, and I have to admit I got quite worried as the peg to my right had six carp in as many drops from their margin swim before that died too with twenty minutes left.


On waiting for the scales I knew peg five had a few, and the main danger apart from that was peg twelve who'd had that late spell of what looked to me good fish. When the scales got to me those two had weighed in 34lb and 30lb, and my dozen fish went just over a pound more than my guess of 47lb, nudging the scales to 48lb 4oz. With nobody else having much more than 20lb it was enough for the win, but despite that I have to say I was still a little frustrated over the amount of missed bites! I wont fret too much over the busted top-kit, hopefully my tackle dealer and Garbolino will deal with that nicely for me!

Monday 4 October 2010

100 Not Out!


Doesn't time fly! And for my 100th post it was back on the same lake as I started this blog just over two years ago.

Walking around the lake and thankfully the tree's were sheltering it from the worst of the wind, with barely a ripple on the surface despite the wind howeling through the tree's. I quite fancied peg 14 as the leaves were gathering in the corner in 15 and, providing it stayed fishable, I thought long down the edge would be a good bet. I didn't draw it though! I had mixed feelings about peg 20- it used to be a proper flyer but it's recent form hasn't been great and it hasn't done a weight above 20lb for a fair time.

My first line of attack was at 16m just to my left on the island, on the edge of the bay visible in the pic. In previous times on the peg I've caught tight in the bay in a foot of water but the colour has dropped out slightly so I fished in about 2ft of water here. Rig was a NG Floats XTM on .15 line direct to an 18 Fox Series 2. Lakky was Preston 15h. Second rig up was for the margins to my right at about 9m. I had near 3ft of water here and gear was a .2gr DC5 on .18 direct to a 16 Fox Series 2, again with 15h lakky. Last up was a rig for 5m. In not quite 5ft of water rig was a .3gr NG Decker on .17 line to a .15 hook-link. Hook was an 18 Fox Series 2 and lakky was black hydro.

On the whistle I fed the far line with about twenty 4mm pellets and a pinch of loose crumb, while the 5m line had a quarter of a pot of corn with a pinch of hemp. Lastly, the margins had a third of a pot of hemp, meat and corn. Dropping across on a 6mm expander and I had a bite after only a minute or so. I played the common of about 4lb to the net before it got stuck round a straggly lilly in the edge and pulled off, trashing the rig in the process! Not a great start! On with a fresh rig and it didn't take long to get another response, and a solid 3lb common was soon in the net. Topping up with half a dozen pellets and a pinch of crumb saw another solid common join the first in the net in a matter of minutes before a spell of missed bites ensued as the rain started.

The rain heralded the start of a very frustrating spell where I was still getting bites but missing them. I tried corn on the hook, changing depths and the shotting and cutting out feeding the crumb, but in the next half an hour I probably missed ten bites. Eventually I caught a tiny roach on pellet but I'm sure they weren't the cause of all the bites! The swim faded after this and the bites died totally. I had a brief drop on the 5m line but ten bite-less minutes here saw me back across. I decided to try some choppy to kick-start the swim but all this bought was a few 2oz perch before that too faded.

It was the half-way mark in the match before any signs of life appeared. I saw a fish cruising in the very shallow water in the margins to my right so I dropped in on a cube of meat. It didn't take long for a bite and soon a nice chunky 5lb common was in the net but no more followed, and for the next hour I couldn't buy a bite anywhere. Eventually, a single grain of corn in the margins tricked another chunky 5lb'er. I missed a bite next drop and that was the end there for a while.

With just under two hours left I decided to feed a new swim on the far bank, half a section further to my left, and using just a tiny amount of crumb and a few grains of corn via the toss-pot. I'm not sure if it was this or the end of the rain and a lift in the temperature but after a two drops I had signs of life and the third drop gave me a bite. After a rather crazy fight a stunning looking silver/gold koi of about 6lb was netted, and almost immediately next drop it was followed by a mirror of about 4lb. The next few drops saw odd indications and just as I was about to give it a rest a bite produced a beautiful almost pure white ghostie which weighed about 2lb and fought like it was 22lb.

A lack of indications on the next drop led me to rest the swim and come in, and a try on the 5m line was useless so I found myself back in the edge. I missed the first bite, again on corn, and the second was a while in coming although again a decent fish of about 5lb. With nothing on the next drop I went across again, but bumping a fish saw the end of any action there and I spent the last spell of the match alternating across and the margins looking for bites. Just ten minutes before the end I had a decent common of around 7lb down the edge, and sticking it out there saw me miss a bite just before the end that I probably hit a touch too quick!

When the scales got to me there were weights of 36lb and 33lb. I had a level 1lb of bits and my nine carp went exactly 42lb for a nice and easy piece of adding up. I knew however that it would only be enough for second as peg 37 had spent the second half of the match bagging, putting not quite 63lb on the scales. In hindsight that was probably an achievable weight off my peg on the day (only three or four more fish at the stamp I had) and catching early probably led to me going at it a touch to much. What I didn't know also was that my peg was fished the day before in a match, something that would have led me to hang back a bit. I also think a more delicate rig, both across and in the edge would have given more hit-able bites. Time to put the summer gear away!