Archive for March, 2010

Moody Weather…Happy Angler!

March 31, 2010

Good Evening.

As I write tonight’s post the rain is just beginning to fall – once again! I am being treated to an evening thunder and lightning display and I have the best seat’s in the house. The wood I am set up in is very mature and many of the trees have fallen or lay resting against other unstable looking trees. It is probably not the best place to be during a strong gale or whilst lightning is striking, but life is all about beating the odds, and the odds of a tree falling on my bivvy are probably a million to one. I shouldn’t tempt fate though.

Black clouds approaching. Take Cover!

Thank you for all your kind messages throughout the day. I have been very busy today and have not had a chance to answer any, so this is my answer to you all. Thank you! They are appreciated as always and as ever it is nice to catch the first carp of the session for my loyal readers. I can often feel the tension building up in some of your messages, and just as I was confident of a carp, I am sure there were many of you who probably knew a capture was imminent! I am sure there are some people who think that because I fish all the time, the alarms must be going off constantly, and I must be catching, left, right, and centre. That would be nice although it would probably get rather boring. The real challenge for me when tackling a new water is learning as quickly as possible how to catch the carp, and overcoming problems as they arise.  The rain is now pelting down outside and I am sure there will be more water arriving through the forest shortly. Unfortunately in this swim I am actually set up in the best area of terrain, as every other square foot of ground is very soft and water-logged. You have to take what comes and deal with it when it does. If you don’t like it then the only choice is to move swims.

Boat in place ready for a quick launch if needed.

Today was spent moving my rods. I have now turned my pod ninety degrees and the rods are now pointing towards the reeds. I have three rods placed down the reedy margin in various depths from 1-2m. I have kept the fourth rod by the tree stump spot. I have placed the rods in such a way that the angle of each is not interfering with the neighbouring rod. I am using back leads to keep the braid pinned down and they are being fished at a variety of distances from 60 – 300 yards. This is to try to minimise disturbance in my other spots should I get a fish. I am expecting the hooked fish to kite left into the reeds, so I have my waders ready and I will try to apply sidestrain to keep them out. If I succeed and the fish moves into open water then I shall take to the boat to finish the fight. If the carp does manage to get into the reeds and becomes ‘hidden’, then the boat will have to be deployed to find and extract it. Whenever you fish in this manner it is very important to have all your strategies in place before they are suddenly needed at 3am, and when it is dark. I always go through each rod in turn in my head, working out what I will do in certain situations. Prepare and be ready for action!

The rain has now eased which is comforting. Apart from the occasional drip on my shelter from the trees, I can now just hear the distant traffic from the main road about 200 yards away and the chime of a church bell. This swim offers peace and quiet and in the morning you are treated to a full chorus of varied bird song. There are many birds of prey that soar the skies, along with the many day-time gliders that are wrenched into the skies from the base to the right of my swim. Have you built up a mental picture of where I am?!

"I love the rain..don't you?"

To finish tonight I just want to take the opportunity to answer two questions included in a comment from a guy called Ben (possibly from Australia?).

G’day Jake,

Oh to be you mate! Fishing hard in foul weather really is the epitome of an avid angler.  Fair play mate!  Look forward to your rewards flowing in, in the coming weeks.
Couple Q’s….Do you fish with a receiver but leave it on the bank or too greater range?
And those 20mm’ers are they cork/airball? Must take some weight to keep them on the deck?

Cheers,
Ben

I use two ATT V2 receivers and for the following reasons. I like to keep one in my bivvy on a bivvy table next to my bed, and that’s where it stays. The other one is my mobile speaker and I either clip it to my belt or I hang it up outside. At the moment my rods are a long way from my bivvy and I would probably not hear the one in my bivvy if I was stood by my rods. Two just serve as a safeguard and together at night they make one hell of a racket!

Dynamite Baits pop-ups use cork dust these days and I love them because they stay popped up for several days. The choccy malt pop-ups seem to be very buoyant indeed, more so than any other in the range. I use a large 2BB piece of shot on the tag end of my hooklink coming off my ring swivel (360 rig) and with the choccy malts I also put a small piece of shot on the hair beneath the second pop-up (this is pinched on between the rig ring and the pop-up so it does not interfere with any movement of the hair sliding on the hook). I will put a picture on tomorrow’s post.

That’s all tonight folks. I want a good night’s sleep, but I also don’t, if you know what I mean!!

Cheers

Jake and the dogs!!

The Smell of Carp is Real!

March 30, 2010

Good Evening.

The rain today has been absolutely terrible and did not stop until an hour ago. The forest has flooded again and things have got wet once more, but I can cope with that. The forecast for tomorrow is supposedly sunshine so everything can be dried and then I will wait for the next downpour!

I spent most of the day sheltering in my bivvy as it was not the right weather for boat work. The day passed by fairly slowly, and then as I lay down on my bed, a few beeps from my right, and middle rod, had me quickly into my waders. The debris coming in from the stream was responsible for the right hand rod’s excitement, and a plump silver fish was the culprit on the middle rod. I put the rods against a tree and got the kettle on. What do you do in a situation like this? Get the rods back out in the rain or go and shelter from the awful weather and wait for it to stop. I decided to do the best thing and got my waterproofs on and went and got the rods ready. The middle rod was dealt with first; the rain was now literally pelting it down. I have now properly tested my BlackHawk Warrior Wear Shell Jacket – put it that way!

As I returned to shore and put the rod on the rests, I noticed to my surprise that the bobbin on my left hand rod was hanging low. I had had a take when out in the boat, so I wound down and a fish was clearly on, albeit in the reeds! I grabbed the landing net and took to the boat and made my way to the reeds about 70 yards away. As I neared the reeds, a fish suddenly shot out from them and pulled the boat round in a semi circle – the excitement levels suddenly grew tenfold! Unfortunately for the carp, my leader had somehow twisted around its body and this prevented it from scrapping properly, fortunately for me, it meant the battle was very one sided and I soon had the carp in the net. It was a very nice looking common carp, but it sadly had a slightly damaged dorsal fin, probably from my leader twisting round the carp during the fight. If you look at things realistically, carp anglers at least release the carp to fight another day, rather than knocking the fish on the head for the table. The dorsal damage will heal and the fish happily lives on.

I returned to shore and retained the carp safely whilst I got some equipment ready. It was still raining very heavily so I decided to have a celebratory cuppa and got the rods sorted to go back out. Taking a self-take is easy but not advisable in the rain, as you will damage your camera; so I had to wait for the watery downfall to ease off a little. I now had two rods to re drop and they were put down the reedy margin to my left. The carp incidentally was caught from yesterday’s drop in 1m just off the reeds after I noticed the deposits from the boat. The bait – two 20mm Chocolate Malt and Tiger Nut pop-ups with the 360 rig.

Hopefully the first of many to come!

By the time I had done the rod drops, the rain had kindly eased off, and I was able to take some quick shots and return the carp. Twelve and a half kilos was the weight and a very grateful capture indeed; and, as I said yesterday, I thought I was getting closer to a carp, and I wasn’t far wrong!

My Shell Jacket incidentally is absolutely amazing. I have just taken it off after three hours in pouring rain, and do you want to know what I found inside? Nothing but a completely dry lining, and my clothes underneath are also bone dry. This is the first jacket I have ever worn in a downpour which has kept me 100% dry. There is no point in me lying about such a statement, and all I can suggest is buy one when they are in the shops as you won’t be disappointed. If you think it’s a bad product, come back and complain to me!

I am now going to eat some food, drink some coffee and take in what has happened in the last few hours. There may be more to come tonight?

Cheers

Jake and the dogs.

Tick Tock!!

March 29, 2010

Good Evening.

A short post tonight because I am absolutely shattered. After finishing the second part of my series for Spiegel magazine by late morning, I ambled out in the boat for a look along the margins to my left. The light wasn’t great due to the cloudy day and lack of sun, but my polaroids enabled me to see the lakebed and I found some interesting patches on the bottom. Small fish scales were clearly evident from predator attacks, and kills no doubt. I also found traces of what looked like excreted mussel shells. I am going to have a closer look tomorrow to be certain. There is no guarantee that this is a fresh deposit but it is a clear indication that the carp love coming right into the reedy edge in no more than 1m of water. I have stuck a rod there for tonight and tomorrow the work will continue. The wind actually picked up around 5pm when I was off to drop the rods, so the visibilty had become poor and the conditions for the boat weren’t ideal. I managed though!

Last night I had a few beeps at 9pm on the tree stump rod. This was more than likely from a small fish; a roach or a bream. I went and redropped the rod in the dark and as I came back towards my red flashing light on my pod, I couldn’t help but notice lots of fish just below the surface in the beam of my Surefire head torch. It was alive with fish. I had earlier sprinkled some pellet around the tree stump area and I am sure this attracted plenty of evening diners.

Funnily enough I have just had a couple of beeps on the same rod at the same time this evening. Things are starting to happen. At Cassien the bream always seem to switch on first after the colder weather, and I am sure it is the same on most lakes. Carp can certainly go longer without eating as their metabolism slows down in cold water temperatures, but the smaller stuff must begin eating sooner to stay strong to help against predator attacks I guess, of which there has been plenty along the edges.

I can almost smell the carp and I think I am getting closer to a capture.

Back tomorrow.

Jake and the dogs.


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