Well, the ice was gone last week too! I have to admit though that after spending another bite less session on the bank I didn't really want to write about it!
I was a little optimistic this week, as the weather had been mild for five days before this match meaning that although without doubt the water would still be very cold, it would have at least been rising in temperature. Arriving on the Sunday most of the lake was wind free, although you could hear the very strong wind whistling through the trees. There were two pegs in that I really wanted to draw; peg 72 in the reeds (it won last week, albeit with just 6lb, but the reeds were heaving on the day, as there were again) and peg 62 in the corner, with the (warm) wind blowing down in to it and with signs of fish moving. When I went into the draw bag there were only a couple of pegs left, including 62 and 69- both I'd have been happy with. What I wasn't happy with was peg 48, which has bad cold water form, and I'd already blanked off it not long ago!
Putting my box down I wasn't the most optimistic- it's a shallow peg and the lack of colour meant I could see the bottom in a good 2ft of water. With this in mind my rigs were kept away from the island a touch. A 10m rig fished at an angle to my left found the deepest water I could on the pole at about four and a half feet. I aimed to fish corn here and the rig was a .2gr NG Decker on .14 line to a .12 hook-link with a size 16 B611. I had two rigs up for the island (well, to the left of it rather than the front) at 13m. One to fish in not quite 4ft of water and the other for a bit further up the slope set at 3ft, which could also double up to try shallow over the deeper lines. Lines and hook-links were the same but with smaller size 18 hooks to fish maggot (a 4x12 chianti and a 4x10 PB2 were the floats). Lastly, I had a bomb rod up, both to cast a bit to left towards the open water and also to use over the island lines if the wind got too bad (it did at times during the day before dieing, I took the pic after the match) and also if fish were present on the shallower areas but wouldn't tolerate the pole over them.
Shortly before the start of the match I was buoyed by two things; firstly a group of fish cruised through my swim, following the island, and secondly the sun came out and was not only nice on my back but it also was on the water near the island, leading me to hope that any fish moving in the shallower water here may actually be able to be tempted to feed. Having seen movement I fed the 10m corn line with three grains of corn and four casters before dropping the bomb just past where I intended to fish the pole, hoping to nick a fish there without feeding and perhaps spooking them. I had a proper liner after ten minutes but it didn't develop so after near twenty minutes I changed hook-links and tried a couple of bits of punch. Again the swim showed signs of life in the sun so after twenty minutes without a proper bite I wondered if feeding something may encourage them to get their heads down. By this time peg 69 had two early carp from the deep water, and 72 in the reeds had one, as did 62!
After feeding just three maggots and the same of casters on the long line I had one more chuck on the bomb with corn, a bit further away from the island. Again I had liners but nothing that developed so after twenty more minutes the tip rod went up the bank and a single red maggot went on the long rig. With the pole going out it seemed to stop any signs of life, with no liners and no visible fish moving, even with a fairly long line above the float. I trickled odd maggots in hoping for some sign but it never happened so after half an hour I had a quick drop on the corn line, but this gave nothing. Buy now the sun had gone in and despite my best attempts at making something happen I never had so much as another liner for the rest of the day! Even searching the swim with punch on a long line rig and casting the bomb about failed to produce signs of anything. I still stuck it out to the whistle mind! With no sun on the peg the fish just went away...
For the last hour and a half I watched peg 72 steadily catch to comfortably win the match with 30lb 14oz. Peg 69 was second with three fish for 12lb and 62 was third with one fish of 6lb odd. In the last twenty minutes or so the two end pegs on my bank both had a carp each but the block of pegs in the middle of the lake (where I was) were just blanks. I have to say that the last few sessions now have really knocked by confidence and with a fortnight until the winter league I'm now really questioning myself and the way I've fished. I'm not sure I've done a lot wrong, just wrong place at the wrong time but I'm now toying with either trying something different or not fishing until the winter league starts.
The hunt for a fish continues........
2 comments:
hey Gavin, I was exactly the same as you until yesterday! Last 3 outings have been biteless when others have causght and i was beginning to doubt myself and ability etc. In the end decided to go again yesterday to a new water for me and got 2nd with 5lb 10oz so don't worry - it will come! Get back out next week!
I'll be back out Sunday! Got one or two little things I want to try out, and hopefully I've used up all my quota of blanks for the year!
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