Much of June came and went with little or no action from the
carp for me. I had slogged away hard on tench corner for most of my fishing
since May, all I seemed to be catching was more and more tench and big bream on
the pellets, so had decided to fish the Active8 mix with a bit more regularity,
often using the bait on two out the three rods, This was still producing tench
but not so many bream, thankfully, as its no fun getting dragged from my
slumbers in the middle of the night for the greedy, slimy bait stealing
critters. During this quiet spell for me, Rick was still producing the goods,
showing that the application of bait is paramount to producing quality fish on
this venue, with many stock fish coming to his rods, but his target fish were
still proving elusive. Sighting fish was easy at this time due to extremely
low water levels, the lake is usually around three to four foot deep, but was averaging
less than two foot in most swims. Coupled with the weed and algae growth, which
was now breaking surface all over the bottom end of the lake in large rafts,
the fish were very obviously feeding well, being seen cruising in all areas of
the lake and the weights of the fish were on the increase now after spawning
but they would soon drop down again after a second spawn towards the end of
this month.
I felt the
need for a move again, even though I found I could see and target fish in and
around tench corner I was having little or no action from the carp. My next
session saw me make the long walk to the back wall. On arrival
on the Friday morning I pushed myself to ignore some obvious small stockys in
tench corner and cart my kit all the way round to the back wall. After positioning baits in the now rapidly disappearing clay
strip I settled into the alders for some serious lake watching, I could see
fish cruising all over the lake, many were just hanging off the sunken island
in about a foot or two of water. I was not too keen on fishing baits tight to
these snags in such shallow water, as the fish in here fight like animals and usually
strip line from the reels at such a rate that if you were off the rods any more than a yard and the fish
would easily get themselves into these snags.
By mid day
a cooling southerly wind had sprung up and started to push into the reeds and
the bay to my left, in no time at all fish were starting to show tight into the
reeds. They were rolling and crashing right out and not one to miss out on an
opportunity of some surface fishing I quickly set up a rod, grabbed my stalking
kit and walked back the way I had come to the entrance of the reeds. Upon
arrival on the boards I moved along with caution as the fish were just behind a
weed bed in front of the third platform. I crouched
down low and made my way onto the end platform, immediately a fish bowed out from
underneath my feet, how had I not seen it? Thankfully the other fish in front
of me did not seem too bothered by this and continued to roll and rise at
anything drifting across their heads. I let fly
with a few pouches of dog biscuits well beyond the fish to allow the breeze to
carry them back towards me. I cast my controller well beyond them and gradually
drew it back towards the fish. Unbelievably they would not take even a single
biscuit off the top let alone my hook bait. After a frustrating hour of this I came to realise that there was a hatch of flies in progress and thought my chances of
catching were slim if non existent, they were far to preoccupied with the
natural food larder. I tried to create a hook bait from reed mace heads by wrapping the seed fluff up and spinning it onto the hook shank but the fish were oblivious to all my hard work.
As I was
leaving the boards I noticed two fish just hanging off the first platform, and with
little commitment I flicked a bait towards them, it landed on top of one of the
fish which turned and sucked at the bait. I struck, far too early, and missed
the half hearted take, I felt like doing myself in as both fish left the swim
at speed, causing bow waves right across the lake. Annoyed
with myself I felt like I had missed out on a good opportunity and decided to
try the other fish again for one last try. As I crept down towards the third platform I could
hear them slurping and rolling tight in to the reeds and as I turned to enter the
platform I saw the fish were right under my feet. I flicked out some bait
and they attacked it with vigour as if they were starving. Why now and not half
an hour earlier? I was sure these were the same fish as before. A big dark mirror
with large plates rolled, it was for certain one of my target fish, a very heavily scaled mirror carp I badly
wanted to catch, I dropped a bait just in front of it and with a flick of it’s
tail it rose and took it . I struck and was pleased to see my rod arc all the
way round, he was on! The fish thrashed the water to a foam and all the others
shot out from the area. I was obviously going to have to give line, and did so,
but not quick enough. The line parted from the hook length like the crack of a
rifle being fired next to my ear.
Distraught, I left the platforms and the reeds behind me and headed back to my swim. I was
in a mess, my face and arms were burnt to a crisp from the direct sun I was
receiving whilst sitting on the boards, it was only now I noticed how much
pain I was in. I coated myself in sun cream, too late I’m sure, and put my rods
back out onto the clay bar. I felt like I was suffering from sunstroke and
decided on trying to get some sleep. I awoke hours later with the arrival of my mate. Having told him of the days proceedings he decided to dump his kit and
get onto the boards for a go at them off the top, good lad, and it wasn’t long before
he was back round getting his camera kit having just successfully landed
the scaley mirror id lost earlier, how gutted was I! and where was my hook ? gone.
The
following morning brought a cold cloudy miserable day, this was a relief to my
sore, burnt extremities. The fish had disappeared overnight and I believed them
to have moved up to the shallows, too sore to carry my kit back round there, I
stayed put and brewed up, breakfast done, all eyes were on the lake in front of me. In time fish would be showing at range, well out of my casting ability, but nevertheless out went two
single hook baits as far as I could thrash them. Later in the afternoon one of
these bolted off and produced a fish that tore off to the right with tremendous
power, I managed to turn it, only for it to take more line and head
left towards the boards, eventually after a long drawn out fight by a powerful fish Rick netted it for me and as we looked
into the net we found it to be a recapture, but I was happy. He was down
in weight at 18lb 4oz since my first capture of him at a needle width over
20lbs but at least it was a fish. After the previous day anything, even a
bream, might have made me smile.
Out went
the rod again to the same spot, and within minutes away went the other rod, a
short but hectic struggle saw me manage to net a stunning stock fish of 15lb 11
oz with a reverse ‘C’ scale on its left tail wrist. Made up with myself I felt like I had more than made up for
my losses earlier in the session, but losing the scaley mirror still troubled me. Other
than Rick persevering on the boards with the surface baits the remainder of
the session saw little action on the back wall and the following morning saw us
pack up early and leave for the long drive home. Still it was good to be back
amongst the fish again.
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21lb |
The
following week saw me set up, again on the back wall, this was due to the lake
now being virtually un-fishable on most of the meadow side. The rafts of weed
had now joined together to produce a solid mat from peg two all the way into
the reed beds, covering ninety percent of the lake. The Friday afternoon and
night were very quiet with neither of us seeing any action. Over the course of
the Friday I must have introduced about 3kg of 21 mm pellets with a dozen
large pva bags of 3 and 6mm pellets.
Rick and
I were now the only anglers on the lake
who seemed to be working hard at their fishing, we were up before daybreak re-baiting
as the pellets were starting to break down after only six or eight hours in the very warm water. By being awake for first light gave us the advantage of seeing where the
fish were before anybody else thus enabling us to move onto the fish before
the other lads woke. This morning the fish were hanging around in the vicinity
of our baits so we stayed put. From about
six that morning I was up the willow tree on the left of my peg watching one of the big girls come in over my baits every twenty minutes or so. This was exhilarating,
each time feeding for a short while then leaving the swim and cruising around
the sunken island then back again for another bite to eat. She knew where her
breakfast was and couldn’t help herself, well she did have a lot of weight to
put on after her spawning. Last time she was caught she was in the regions of
26lb being down 3lbs or more! Each time she arrived in the swim my heart
started to race with anticipation of catching her. In she would come, down
would go her head, out would come her tail and a good portion of her body. This went on for hours. I was getting baffled
as to why she had not picked up my hook bait. I was getting line bites every
visit but no pick ups. This time as she left my swim, following the same route
as she had all morning, I reeled in to find my hook had pricked the lead core
on the cast earlier that morning and was stuck fast. A quick sort out and a
re-bait saw my rig in position before she returned. Still she didn’t pick it
up.
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27lb 8oz down in weight since spawning but in fine condition |
At around
midday she made her mistake, picking up my pellet and slowly moving off for
what seemed like another mouthful. As the line tightened she froze. Realising
her mistake she powered off up the lake. After an untroubled fight she rolled across the front of my
landing net. I turned to Rick to apologise. He smiled knowingly and shrugged,
saying” I didn’t want to catch her anyway till she gets her weight back up ”.
She was unhooked quickly and put in the sling just to monitor any weight gain
since her last capture. 27 lb 8oz went the dial and after a quick photo-shoot
away she swam, straight out over my baits and into the snags. Brew on. Smiles
all round.
In
hindsight I realise that I might have been putting far too much bait in, seeing
as the fish were not actually in front of us in numbers, but it also shows how much of a
pig this fish can be and how effective these baits are at triggering a response
from this greedy fish.
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