Archive for January, 2010

Peaks and Troughs.

January 25, 2010

Good Evening.

The fishing now has a rather bleak and desperate feel to it. The lake looks uninviting and lifeless. It is asleep. Just like my little Robin searching for scraps of food I carry on each day looking for a possible way to catch a carp. I feel like I am running out of answers, I have tried everything; the session now has reached the sticking point. You could say it has become a pointless exercise, but, this is often the reality of winter carp fishing. No one said it was going to be easy.

He is easy to capture!

Despite the above paragraph I owe it to myself to fight the good fight. Throwing in the towel is not what winners do, and you are only a loser if you don’t try in the first place. I need the change of scenery and I need a new water to gaze at, but there is still more work to be done before I give in and move on. If I look back to last year at Cassien, January was a desperate month, as was the first week of February. January was saved by the capture of a 26.8kg mirror on the first of the month, and then things got tough. I suppose I am now suffering from Déjà-vu and experiencing a similar state of affairs on a different lake in a different country and that just makes it a greater challenge. One more carp would finish off my session perfectly and I am going to give it my all to try and achieve this.

Looking for some answers!

I have redone all the rods today. I tied a couple of new rigs and replaced the hook on my 360 rig. I am always wary of hook sharpness and the back of my hand resembles a pin cushion where I test the hook point for sharpness. At this time of year one take could be the only chance you are offered and a blunt hook is no excuse for a loss if you could have replaced it. My long range rod was retrieved and put back in a position I have tried before. I armed this rod with a supersize offering to see if that might tempt a carp. My shallow rod from the carp spot had a new hook, a new combination of two pop ups adorned the hair and I dropped it back on the sandy lakebed in the area of the riverbed. The reed rod has been moved further out and placed on a hump in 6ft of water. All I can do is try new approaches and new surroundings and see if could make the difference.

A very large mouthful!

A new hook and new combo.

The water temperature remains cold at 4 degrees. Cat ice has greeted me the past three mornings in the margins but last night was a little milder and it kept it at bay today. I have checked the weather forecast as it did start to snow a little today. It was not forecast and the weather looks quite constant for the coming ten days – not much above 3 degrees in the day, not much below minus 3 degrees at night, and limited sunshine with no rain.

A basket of fries to accompany my afternoon movie!

Italy is cold but not as cold as the setting for the film!

Due to the Groundhog Day experience I am going through I gave in yesterday and watched a film in the afternoon and also one this afternoon! I don’t have my dvds but I found some old films on a website where they are streamed onto your screen, meaning you don’t even have to download them. It is completely free but the films are very old and if you want to watch new ones then you have to pay. Both films that I chose to watch, just out of coincidence, bear a strange resemblance to my life if you think long and hard about it for a moment. The first was a film called ‘The boy in the plastic bubble’ starring John Travolta in probably his first role. He has no immune system and has to live in a sterilised bubble for most of his early years. My bivvy now resembles that bubble! The second film starred John Hurt and Hayley Mills ;-) and was called ‘Cry of the Penguins’. It is about a scientist who goes to live on his own for six months in the Antarctic to study a colony of penguins. They both made me chuckle and it passed an hour or so each afternoon.

My wood pile has now pretty much gone. I am now going to go and gather some fallen branches off the ground and build a fire to restore some energy. I have some nice chicken to cook and some alarms to listen out for in case I get a take. The will power is still strong but unfortunately the confidence is quite low. There is the slight sense that I may be flogging a dead horse at the moment but then you never know do you. Tonight or tomorrow morning could bring what I am looking for.

Back tomorrow.

Jake and the dogs.

The Weekend Draws to a Close.

January 24, 2010

Good Evening.

I am sat on my bedchair in the bivvy just finishing off a mug of steaming hot latte (two expresso shots/topped up with hot milk). The temperature and weather today have been very similar to one of those typical winter Sundays when you want to put the heating on, close the curtains and curl up on the settee to watch a film. Yesterday was a little better and a glimpse of sunshine broke through for a few hours in the afternoon, but today has been foggy, cold and rather miserable. I have made the best of it though and that is all one can do.

Saturday morning started off early. I noticed two pike anglers out in their little green boat and knew what was coming. One of my rods knocked as they just missed catching the line, but the middle rod was not so lucky. I hopped in my boat and reeled in the line as I steered towards the boat in distress. When I arrived the older of the two had a big tangled ball of traces, trebles, deadbaits, livebaits and lures in his hand. I could see my braid in amongst it and as I was only yards from my dropped rig, to their amazement, I pulled a pair of scissors from my boat and cut the braid either side of the tangled mess. I pulled my rig off the lakebed by hand, bundled it in the boat, said good morning, and returned to my swim. I was sure they expected me to be angry or annoyed with them and I even surprised myself. I must be getting slightly more mellow in my old age!

Before they had a chance to take out my next rod I went out and retrieved that one too. I now had to find two new positions for them so I decided to put one rod off some reeds to my left at the bottom of the steep shelf in 16ft. The other rod was put back out behind the plateau area in 22ft. I was now sorted again and could relax.

Lunchtime arrived just as the sun broke through the clouds. I got my fire started early as I was expecting some guests to arrive. While I was building up the heat I noticed my friendly Robin kept landing near me. This little character is a regular and quite cheeky. I decided to try and get a really good shot of him so I set up my camera with my remote control, I crumbed some boilies and put them on a perfect spot, and sat back and waited. Now it is always typical when you try to do something like this as the subject usually disappears for the rest of the day and this is exactly what happened. However, I kept the remote in my pocket just in case!

My posse of friends arrived so I got some coffees made and one of them opened a big bottle of red wine. I was actually striking a deal with one of them over four rods I own that I no longer use – my Imperial Legends! Once Ludwig had checked them over, run his fingers through the rings, given them all a quick swish in the air, he was satisfied and we shook hands! It is good news for me as it makes room for my new arrivals – my Soniks. I am currently using a Sonik prototype. This new blank utilises a new kind of carbon which is lighter, stiffer and stronger. I just have to give them some serious stick over the next few months to see how they cope with the work load and to see whether or not they are durable. The prototype I am testing may or may not go into production and it all depends on its performance and reliability.

One of the lads, Emanuele, bought a host of goodies for me which was very kind. An Italian apple cake which I (and the dogs) have been enjoying today. He also produced a very special jar of tomatoes which I can use for a sauce for pasta. They are his grandmothers secret recipe!! (I can just picture the Dolmio adverts now.) I was given strict instructions how to cook them so I explained that I actually used to teach cooking and I thought I would manage okay. It does make me laugh actually as the Italians do love their cooking and food and I do think they imagine the English are appalling at cooking and we eat awful food. Our coffee is a big joke to them and I have to say I agree with them there. I have always enjoyed strong coffee and I don’t think I could ever go back to instant ever again. The Italians drink expressos primarily, and very strong short ones at that which literally pick them up throughout the day. After visiting Italy before in 2008 I now have to admit the Italian food is definitely my favourite so far, with France in second place and Germany comes in last place…sorry Germany!

This brings me onto Spain. I will be going to Spain later this year. After I have worked at the WCC I may fish for a month or two somewhere in France and then I shall make my long way down to the Extremedura region. I am hoping that my third winter’s fishing will be more successful and slightly warmer. Saying all of that though, you have to experience these things or you will never know and I don’t have any regrets at all about fishing Cassien last January and fishing this lake for this January. I have to live somewhere through this cold time of year and it is that simple. I am getting through the weeks and days and it is nearly February already – Spring will soon be here. Time sure does fly and I remember fishing at Gigantica last year in August when I noticed the days were suddenly getting shorter. Compared to now the days were still very long and it was still light at 10pm, but by the end of the week it was getting dark by 9.45pm, a few days later and it was 9.30pm and I knew the dark long nights would soon be here. When I started fishing the Moselle in October that was when Autumn was in full swing and I knew then that I had a long journey ahead of me. I now feel I am coming out of the tunnel though and I can see the glimmer of light beckoning me forwards. Good times lay ahead and some good fishing too.

I made a plan with Emanuele yesterday to go and look at my next water of choice after the Carp Italy show. We will drive the short distance to the lake, taking with me my inflatable and outboard motor. The plan is then to bomb round the lake with my echo sounder and explore the place very quickly looking for a swim for my intended ten week session. If you thought this session was a long one, then think again, this was just the warm up! My friend knows the lake fairly well and it will be a great help to have some knowledge with me for the day. It will also be nice to be set up at the lake as winter turns to spring. I will be there to witness as everything begins to wake up from a long sleep. Aviron in the spring is one of my favourite places in the world. You begin to notice the buds on the trees, the fry in the shallows and the crayfish returning at night, the birds begin to get quite vocal and the carp begin to get more active. Spring is a magnificent season and by far my favourite.

Last night I had a small fish on one rod. The rod I put in 22ft at the back of the plateau. It was desperately cold last night by 9pm and I knew a small fish had hooked itself. The question was do I go out in the boat and free it or leave it to try to free itself? I tightened up the slack line and noticed the rod tip knocking every few seconds. I decided to give the fish the benefit of the doubt and returned to my warm bivvy; either unhook yourself or I may have a catfish run! In the morning at 9am the fish was clearly still on, so I rowed out and freed the greedy culprit. The rod is now back out and that is all the rod work I have done today.

Did I get my Robin picture? I ended up with a few…have a look. The speed of a Robin is lightning quick and he was very aware of the camera. I had to adjust my shutter speed to 1000th of a second and as a result I had to use some flash. As soon as I clicked the remote button he was gone but I got some interesting results.

Look at his eyes...he isn't too sure!

Nice wing action!

Looks like he is about to land!

At least someone is enjoying my boilies!

Hope you all had a great weekend.

Catch you tomorrow

Jake and the dogs.

Big Fish Friday??

January 22, 2010

Good Evening.

The temperature is a little milder tonight so I am sat by the fire whilst I write tonight’s post. The weather forecast for the next ten days is nothing to get excited about and the temperatures are going to be cold and get colder. Snow is a possibility, but I have already had snow; it’s no big deal! Rain is what I want, but the dance I do round my fire every night has not brought any yet, so it looks like I am stuck with the low temperatures for the rest of my session. I am still confident of another carp and winter miracles do happen. I think it now might be a case of having a bait in the right place at the right time.

Last Friday I experimented and it paid off. Tonight I have done a similar thing and tonight’s Friday experiment consists of going long and deep. I have left one rod in the carp spot and the others have all gone out to new homes. I occasionally stuck a rod deep last year at Cassien during a long blank spell and it did not produce. The topography of this lake is very different though and it may just be possible that some of the carp are sitting in deep water in the middle of the lake. I have targeted depths of 7, 10 and 12 metres and have almost gone with single hook baits. Five other boilies, that have been glugged for a couple of weeks in the Red Fish liquid attractor, were dropped near the drop position of each rod. Providing the lines don’t get picked up by any pike anglers during the weekend, they will stay there till Monday morning and then I may try something else.

Today I had a brief visit from the Italian police. They checked my paperwork and told me I wasn’t really allowed to camp in this particular spot. The language barrier was a slight problem but I did get the gist of the conversation and the police officer actually told me that he didn’t have a problem with me being here. When I mentioned the Guardia di Pesca had visited me the other day and said nothing about the camping, he was then more than satisfied and they both left with a Doberman escort by their sides!

My Friday evening is going to consist of the following: In a moment I am going to deep fry some chipped potatoes and have them with some mayonnaise. I have one can of Coca-Cola left which I will savour and drink throughout the evening! My fire is burning brightly and I have a large stash of logs ready to throw on at regular intervals. Finally I will enjoy being here, I will do my usual prayers for a big Italian common before I go to bed, and tomorrow when I wake up it is another day.

My hopes stay high, my motivation remains geared up, I am full of positivity. The only way to catch a winter carp is to fish for one. I have just under two weeks left to try and complete part one of Jake’s Italian job. Will I move on to my next lake with a new personal best common or will I have to fish my next lake for such a prize. Keep reading to find out won’t you! Subscribe to my blog via the RSS feed if you haven’t done already or alternatively follow me on Twitter.

Have a good weekend.

Jake and the dogs.


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