Friday, 12 June 2015

Pleasant Surprises

The short session last Sunday on the local lake with my 2 mates had fired something up inside me. As I have described before in this blog, when I was in my early teens I used to spend every spare moment over the lake on the estate where my mother lives, float fishing bread for roach. I used to keep the rod made up in garage to grab at short notice, and always made sure there was enough bread in the house for me to pinch, but leave enough for the breakfast toast. And I've now found myself in a similar situation. It's a bit difficult as I have now moved away from my mothers, but this Tuesday I was back there as I had the dentist in the morning. I arrived back from the dentist at around half 10, and I had 3 hours to kill before I had to get off to work. It wasn't exactly a hard decision.

A corner of the lake on 'Castle View' Estate

As soon as I arrived back from the dentist, I went off into the shed to make up a rod. I grabbed my brothers 12ft Garbolino squad combo rod (as my rods were at the house where I live) and my Diawa exceler reel. I then slid on a 3BB waggler (although I used No4 and No6 shots to shot it down) straight through to a size 12 hook. Now this does sound quite a heavy outfit for roach fishing, I actually gave a little cringe as I typed it, but these fish see very little angling pressure, so as such are not tackle shy. There's also the slight possibility of catching a carp too, so I wanted to make sure I would be able to land it if the opportunity arose. Once the rod was set up, I quickly made a bait box full of bread mash to use as a ground bait (by soaking 6 slices of bread in water, then mashing it with a fork and adding 2 teaspoons of sugar to help it bind) and made my way over to the lake.

There was quite ripple on the water, so I chose to fish an area of the lake that I've only wetted a line in once or twice. To my right was a reed bed that protruded about 6ft into the lake, and as the wind was coming across from this direction, it created a nice area of calm water in front, in which I could present my bread flake in the best possible way.
I kicked the swim off with 2 golf ball sized handfuls of the bread mash. My plan was to start off feeding light, and then increase the amount I fed if the fish were really switched onto it. It only took 5 minutes before the first roach hit the net. Not a big fish, maybe 6oz, but I was happy that the fish were there and willing to feed. So I slipped the roach back, and fed the swim some more.

An example of the roach in the lake from a previous trip


 
2 minutes later, another roach succumbed to the bread flake. I had a feeling this was going to be a good session. I slipped it back, fed a bit more and then recast the float into the swim. I didn't have to wait long for another bite to start developing, and after a bob here and a weave there, it eventually glided across the surface and slid under. I hit it and the rod instantly gave a better bend. The fish didn't power away, infact it didn't take any line, but it kept deep and wallowed around under the rod tip. I felt quite excited to find out what it was and lived in hope that it would be a sizeable roach. Alas, after 30 seconds the figure of a baby common carp broke the surface and was soon lying in my net. This was a pleasant surprise, as it was the first time I had caught a small carp from this lake. I felt chuffed as beans as I slipped the little carp back and was already considering this to be a successful session.

The small common carp


Although I was pleased to have caught the small carp, I did feel that this was a fluke and the numbers of such fish in the lake would be very low. Oh how I was proved wrong, when on the next cast I had another baby carp lying in the net, this time an immaculate little mirror!

Beautiful Little Mirror Carp

All in all, I finished my short session with a total of 9 roach and 3 small carp (I managed to land another small common). I'm always happy to be out fishing, but to catch something is always a bonus. I would of been happy with just catching the roach, but those 3 small carp really made my day. It gave me a satisfying feeling to know that the older carp in the lake were spawning, and that fry were surviving and thriving. As long as the council keep the lake clean and free from litter, the future is looking good for the fish of this lake.

Tight Lines,
A R Howorth







Wednesday, 3 June 2015

The best laid plans...


Irony

Ironically, my last blog post was all about planning my fishing trips and how the lack of planning could be your own downfall when it came to catching fish. Low and behold, the Tench session that I had meticulously planned had to be cancelled because of work commitments and I still haven't gotten round to visiting 'Watersmeet country inn'. With us now into the beginning of June, I think I will delay this trip to next year and focus more on the opening of the river season and the big summer carp that like to lurk in the warm margins.

All is not lost

Although my Tench session had been ruined before it began, a week or so later I did manage to get out onto the banks for an 8 hour session. I had work in the evening so a trip to my local commercial (only 10mins from the house) was in order. Mathern Mill is a simple fishery with 2 lakes, 1 predominant carp lake and another with mixed course species, both around 1 and a 1/4 acres in size. With a day ticket costing £7, it can make quite an enjoyable day out of the house.

My session

When I arrived at 7:30am, I was quite surprised to see a number of rods already on the water, but then remembering it to be half term, I could understand why. I decided to fish on the mixed course lake as I wasn't after catching anything in particular, just fishing for bites. I chose a swim with some nice marginal cover, and an island around 20 yards in front of me. It was a warm, clear sky day and already carp resembling submarines could be seen cruising inches under the surface. Now, with there being a ban on surface fishing on the lake, my first thought was to get out the pellet waggler gear, but unfortunately this had been left in my other tackle box at home. Even though I could see numerous fish up in the water, the lake was only around 4ft deep and I was convinced I could get them to feed on the bottom.
I made up a ledger rod (what I use as a sleeper rod) consisting of a lead clip set up and hair rigged halibut pellets, cast it out to within inches of the island and popped it into the bite alarm. I then proceeded to set up my usual commercial outfit, consisting of my John Wilson 12ft Msterline Avon rod, A Shakespeare Mach3 reel, with 6lb line straight through to a 3AA clear waggler and a size 12 hook.

Waggler fishing in the margins


Now at this point, I would love to be writing about how I had endless sail away bites on the float, describing the fights of the fish, what baits I caught on etc. but the fact is I had one solitary 4lbs common carp all day, caught on the ledgered halibut pellets. I can assure you though, it wasn't for lack of trying! I tried fishing short, I tried fishing long, I tried fishing up in the water, I tried fishing on the bottom, I tried big baits, I tried small baits, I just could not get the fish to feed! I don't think I was alone though, there was no one really bagging up that day. I've come to a few conclusions, the 2 most obvious are that the fish with the increased temperature were simply not interested in feeding and/or were getting ready to spawn.



The fish that saved me from a blank


With all that being said, It was nice just to be wetting a line again, and it was even nicer to avoid a blank. The one thing I did come away with however, is quite a nasty sunburn. By the end of the day I came back looking like a lobster, so if there is one lesson I have learnt, it is that I will now be carrying sun cream with me on all my future fishing trips!!

Side-note

If you have read my last post, you would have read about the local lake I used to visit on a whim to catch mainly roach, and if I was lucky the odd carp. Well, I hadn't fished there for at least 2 years, when this Sunday on the way back from a boozy weekend in Bristol, one of my mates said 'Do you fancy a few hours fishing down the lake when we get back"? Now he isn't really an angler, nor is my other mate who tagged along, but they like to come and watch me fish just to be outdoors relaxing, so that is what we did. It was only a 3 hour session, and even though the stick float I had set up was bobbing from start to finish we only caught 2 roach, it was one of my most pleasurable sessions. It dawned on me, I was sat outside in the fresh air, with 2 of my best mates, sharing funny stories from our weekend away, with a rod in my hand, watching a float dance and weave across the surface and eventually getting a roach in my hands, that this is why I love fishing so much.
 
 
Rutilus rutilus

 

What next?

Well, with the rivers opening again in 13 days, it seems inevitable that over the next month a few tales from the river will appear in my blog. I'm hoping it will be as close to June16th as work allows, but failing that, my father is coming home from Dubai for 2 weeks on the 13th and has booked a few days away in a cottage on the Hampshire Avon. 1.5mile stretch with exclusive use! To say I'm excited is an understatement, so fingers crossed you'll soon be reading about our successes there!
Until then, Tight Lines,

A R Howorth







Monday, 11 May 2015

Failure to prepare... You know the rest.

Sadly this week, due to life commitments (work being the main one as I am sure it is for most) I have been unable to get out on the bank. However, that has not stopped my mind from being preoccupied with the thought of fishing, and what's second best to actually going fishing.. planning to go fishing of course! Almost all of my fishing adventures are planned ones due to my work schedule, and luckily for me, I often find myself with a day off in the week to wet a line. A lot of my fishing when I was younger was done spontaneously. There was a small lake on the estate where I used to live that had a good head of small roach in, and a handful of carp! The carp were hard to catch; due to their small numbers, locating them was a problem, but I did manage the odd one or two off the surface during the summer on floating bread. I think I've gone a bit off subject here, but the point I was trying to make was that when I was younger if I had a burst of spontaneity and fancied a dabble, I could be out the house and catching hand sized roach within five minutes. But now, planning in advance is a must for me. I quite like it actually, it gives me a chance to consider what species I want to target (or if I just fancy fishing for bites), it gives me a chance to locate a venue as I now like to try and fish different venues as much as possible (where would we be without Google), it gives me a chance to rummage through the tackle box and get any supplies that I am short off and it allows me time to get the bait I want if I haven't already got it.

Species Selection

Just this morning, I sat with a cup of coffee and watched John Wilson long trotting the Hampshire test with a wire stem stick float and centre pin reel and with every dip of his float, my left arm jerked as if I was holding the rod myself (don't worry, my coffee was in the other hand!). I watched on in envy as he caught grayling after grayling. But being as it is currently closed season on the rivers I suppose replicating John is out of the question. A quick glance at the weather out the window, and a thought to the time of year pretty much made the decision for me. Tench. Being as we are a third of the way through May already, I'm actually a little late to be going on my first Tench targeting session of the year, but as they say, better late than never. The Tench is actually a favourite in our family. Both my Father and Grandfather claim it to be their favourite species, and I'm pretty sure I've heard my uncle say something similar, although he no longer enjoys the pleasure of angling. Personally, I wouldn't put the Tench as my outright favourite species, but its definitely there somewhere near the top! Anyway, I've found my target species, now to find my target venue.

Tench (Tinca Tinca)
  

 Venue

Having now decided which species I was going to target, a choice of venue was required. I first went through a list of local venues in my head of where I had caught Tench before but I decided there were too many other species in the lakes I'd considered and I would most likely be plagued by Carp (there's a sentence that doesn't get said very often) So I turned to my old friend Google to see what he would suggest. Initially my search results came back with some famous Tench venues, places I was expecting such as Sywell reservoir and Horseshoe lake, but these are large waters that I just don't feel my angling skills are up to yet. So I continued to search and on the next page I was surprised to see a venue which I had  added as a bookmark only 2 weeks previous. I had added 'Watersmeet country inn' with the intention of visiting one day to target their main lake for carp, but completely forgot they had another lake called 'The Tench lake'! The lake holds mainly Tench and Bream to 10lbs along with some smaller carp. I'll hold off describing the lake as I will no doubt cover that in my blog when I return from the trip, but from the pictures I've seen, it looks absolutely mouth-watering! 

Watersmeet Tench Lake

 

Itchy Feet

So there we have it, my next angling adventure is all planned out and I cannot wait to go. I am already running through my head what set up and bait I'll be using, how I am going to fish, what I'll change if my first approach doesn't work etc. My planned day to go is Monday 18th May, however at the moment I am due working for a few hours in the morning and for an hour in the evening, but with the nature of my job, cover is easy to arrange so with a bit of luck my colleagues will understand my need to fish and agree to cover my shift. Hopefully I will return triumphant and my willingness to prepare will not lead me to fail, but you'll just have to wait to find out!

Tight Lines,
A R Howorth














Wednesday, 6 May 2015

Flinging some Fluff

After basking in the glory of my first successful Pike session, my fish itch was starting to twitch. Another day on the bank was needed, and brimming with confidence I decided to try another discipline of our sport that I am not so familiar with, Fly Fishing. I have been fly fishing twice before, both times to a small lake in Hampshire, a private water that requires booking well in advance and has a maximum of 8 rods per day. On the two occasions that I have been with Dan (my brother), my father, his friend and seasoned fly fisher Keith and my granddad, we have had the lake to ourselves. Both sessions were successful, with lots of 3-5lbs rainbow trout being caught. But now it was time for me to have my first try at a commercial trout fishery. A quick search on Google found a decent looking place about 20 minutes up the road. The lakes looked well kept, the fish stocks looked healthy and the catch and release ticket was reasonably priced. So on Friday morning, off I went to Woolaston Court Trout Fishery, Lydney.

Woolaston Court with the main lake in the background


  The Fishery

When I arrived I stood in the car park and looked down over gin clear waters nestled between beautifully mowed grass and my expectations were met.  There are 3 lakes at the fishery. 1 Novice lake around three quarters of an acre stocked with rainbows around the 1-2lb mark, and 2 larger lakes, one at 2.8 acres (main lake) and another at 1.7 acres (bottom lake). Both contain rainbows and blues between 2 and 10lbs, and brown trout between 2 and 5lbs. There is a cabin with great views of the lake from where you purchase your ticket. Here they sell a small selection of tackle, including flies, rods and reels, as well as having tackle for hire. There is also a small snack shop from which you can grab a cup of tea and a bacon sarnie.

The Cabin

A Tough start

After paying for my ticket, (£18.50 catch and release full day) I set my rod up next to my car and wandered down to the lake. As I headed for the far end of the main lake, a guy who had paid for his ticket just before me was already netting a fish! This filled me with confidence and as I arrived at my starting location (as recommended by the guy in the cabin) my confidence grew further with regular sightings of fish. However, 30 minutes of constant casting with my single beaded cats whisker fly saw a nil return. I could see the fish but the fish could see me. I spent the next 3 hours moving from swim to swim between the main and bottom lake, trying different flies on different retrieves but all to no avail. This was tougher than I thought and at 1 o'clock I retreated back to my car for a spot of lunch and to reflect on the morning that had just gone. My confidence was some what diminished, and all I could think to do was to just keep casting that fly in hope that a trout would nail it.



Check your Tackle

My set up for the day consisted of a very basic rod and reel (A TF Gear fly fishing kit, a start up kit if you like), a Hardy's 8 weight forward intermediate line and a 9 foot 7lbs fluorocarbon leader fished with a single fly. As I eluded to previously, I'm not overly familiar with the world of fly fishing and my basic tackle reflects this. A very good, well balanced rod and reel set up can see you into quadruple figures, a quick flick through a fly fishing catalogue will tell you this, and it was my basic tackle that partly let me down during the day. My reel comes with 1 spool (many of the quality reels come with 2 or more to hold lines for different conditions) and as I pointed out, I had it loaded with intermediate line. Having spoke to a few people who were catching around the lake, it was quite evident that they were all catching on floating lines fishing dry flies, something I would be unable to do. I have no doubt that in the future, and with more experience, I will be investing more into a decent fly fishing outfit, but for now, my starter kit will have to do!


Hardy's 8 weight forward intermediate line


Success!

After my lunch, I resumed with the fishing and after another biteless half an hour on the main lake, I decided to move back onto the smaller bottom lake. I could see fish rising frequently into the area I was casting, and a guy just up the bank from me was netting fish on a fairly frequent basis. With this, my confidence picked up again. After ten minutes, the guy up the bank began to pack up (he was on a 4 hour ticket). He stopped on his way past, "there's a big shoal of trout up there mate", he said. "Sitting about 20ft out from the aerator, I've been flicking small dry flies at them and they're going nuts for 'um!". Although I couldn't present them a dry fly, I didn't need inviting twice and I hot footed it up the bank to where the aerator was. By this time in the day, my casting was really improving and I was now landing the fly where I wanted it with ease, but again another 30 minutes went by without a touch and with this, I decided to change my fly. Now, although I started on a cats whisker for the first half hour of the day, I had spent the rest of the day on small black flies, mainly buzzers, based on the recommendations of the guy in the cabin and other regulars. But these were just not working, so I decided to go to the complete other end of the scale, and pick the biggest, greenest, shiniest fly I could find in my granddads fly case (I don't own any flies myself). I cast it out and with one short pull of the line, a trout hit it, hard!  A short but enjoyable fight saw an immaculate 3lb rainbow in the net and I was overcome with Joy. All my persistence had paid off, and the unwelcoming feeling of coming away with a blank that had been on my mind since mid morning had drifted away.

The winning fly



I slipped the trout back straight away, (being on a catch and release ticket I wanted to get the fish back in the water with as little stress as possible, which is why I did not take any photos) and recast my fly. On only the third cast with the new fly, another trout slammed into it seconds after it landed on the water. This one fought harder, and I enjoyed playing it for every second. After struggling so much in the morning, the feeling of a bent rod and a thumping fish on the end of the line was magnificent. A few minutes past before I slipped the net under another rainbow of around 4lbs. I had found the fly that was doing the business, and it certainly was not small, or black!
My very next cast saw another bite, I lifted the rod firmly but felt no resistance on the end of the line. The next cast was like deja-vu, with another missed bite. The trout were definitely there and hungry for my fly, and on the next cast this point was proved when I had my strongest take of the day. I lifted the rod firmly and felt a solid weight on the end. The fish ran straight towards me into the shallow water and I stripped the line through my hands as fast as I could. It was a big rainbow, of at least 6lbs. My heart skipped a beat, this would be my biggest trout by a long way! It kicked away from the shallows and ran to my right, straight under the power lines running from the bank to the aerator! I dropped my rod parallel to the water and gave it as much side strain as I could to try and turn the fish. I thought I had won when the fish turned to face back towards me, but with that, the line went slack and the fish was off. As is always the case with fisherman's tales, the biggest one got away.
And that was it for the day. I spent the last hour casting to the same spot, there was the odd pull here and there but no more fish. It wasn't until I began to pack away when I realised why I'd lost that big trout. Naturally I thought the hook had pulled from the fishes mouth, but when I went to untie the fly, the point of the hook was gone! All that remained was the shank. After a bit of thought I came to the conclusion that as it was one of my granddads old flies, the hook must have been weakened and although it looked perfectly fine when I tied it on, it could not cope with the pressure of a big fish. I was, however, comforted by the fact that it was a barbless hook and had no doubt the fish would be fine. Come to think of it, maybe that's why I missed all the bites after it!

Reflection

There are a few things I am going to take away from my first trip to a commercial trout lake. The first is most definitely check your end tackle after loosing a fish! It is something I have always done when course fishing, but I never considered it whilst fly fishing. I most certainly will now!
The second is the improvement of my casting. It's not such an easy skill as seasoned fly fishers lead you to believe as they cast their line seemingly effortlessly with the fly landing perfectly in the water. It took a good few hours for my casting to reach a standard I was happy with, and by the end of the day my inexperience was unnoticeable as I shot my line with the best of them. There's a certain rhythm to it, but one that is hard to teach, you just sort of feel it and when the time is right you know that this is the one to let go. If you've ever tried fly fishing, you'll know what I mean.
But finally, and most importantly, the thing I will take away most was the friendliness and willingness of the other anglers to come and have a chat with me and share a few tips. It must of been evident to them by my tackle and my first initial casts that I was nowhere near their level of fly fishing expertise, but every single one came and spoke to me to offer their assistance, something that I was truly grateful for. Woolaston court trout fishery, I will most certainly be coming back.

Tight Lines,
A R Howorth