Ironically many people find themselves in the autumn and
winter months with some additional spare time, in these months however but we
seem to be at our busiest. With work and various life matters being flat out
there seems to be no end in sight of places to go, thing to buy and people to
see. Still, being the opportunist angler that I am, meant despite travelling
home I was able to arrange a few hours on the fly with my Dad and Grandfather.
We would be heading down to Riverside for a few hours to try and tempt some last gasp puddle pigs that resided there before the seasons really took a turn for the worst.
Instead of using a conventional floating deer hair fly I
would be using a 8mm fake dog biscuit on a 5 ft Guru N-Gauge leader. Any bigger
than 8mm and the weight of the biscuits ruins your cast. I only had around 2
hours to fish so was keen to get the fish feeding as soon as possible and being
late on in the year despite the mild temperatures I knew we may be faced with
an uphill struggle. I suppose this is a real advantage of fly fishing, you can
be set up and fishing in a matter of minutes. A few pouchfuls of biscuits
however did not stir the surface into life as I had hoped for and with some
roaming anglers to our right casting into the dog biscuits we had just fired
out, it meant casting our lines was going to get a bit awkward. It also made me
wonder who teach angling etiquette these days! "Thinking Tackle" has
a lot to answer for!
|
Very greedy or very ambitious! |
I was in to the first fish, but on striking I knew it wasn't
anything sizable, and sure enough on bringing it to the bank I found myself
attached to a very ambitious Roach. I quickly unhooked it and plopped it back
in.
10 minutes later and the fish started to arrive, although
they seemed more curious than keen, and the ensuing feeding frenzy i expected
didn't materialise. Infact any biscuits taken off the surface were being taken
very tentatively. Maybe this method had been found out? Surely not with the
vast majority of teenage anglers using bubble floats and rope as the main
constituents of their rigs. Maybe it was too late in the year?
The first person to strike into a fish was Gramp! This
wasn't in the script! Still I was pleased to see him hook into something,
especially as the fish were being particularly quiet on the feeding front. He
played the fish for a few seconds before it turned and shook the hook!
|
I don't know who looks more chuffed! |
Damn!
The wind was stared to turn and whip around the lake making
my casting a complete nuisance, so much so that I almost caught the hat from on
top of my head! I moved position and walked towards the corner of the far end of
the lake. It was a lot easier to cast and I could see some bigger fish moving
around the open water. Grabbing the catapult I fired out several pouchfuls of
biscuits then cast my fake offering just beyond them. A mouth appeared behind
my hook bait and slurped it down.
|
Gramp was on hand with the landing net |
I was in, and this time it wasn't a roach!
The fish streamed off and before long it was pulling line of the reel. I was
only using relatively light fly fishing gear so when I couldn't turn the fish I
started to wonder how big the fish was. My Gramp appeared with the landing net
and on the third attempt of turning the fish he got it in the net. It was
bigger than I anticipated, taking the scales just shy of 11lb.
|
Quite pleased with what was 2 hours fishing in cool and windy conditions. |
It had taken me 10 minutes to land that fish, and with that
my time on the venue was up, I had other relatives I needed to see before
returning home to Somerset, still it was great to get out and spend some time
fishing my both my Gramp and Dad. The venue itself was producing the occasional
Carp, but not prolific in comparison to what I'd normally expect despite how late on in the year it was.
While the year winds down I will be doing some last minute
Bass fishing along the south coast to see if I can actually catch one of those
elusive bars of silver!
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