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peter crabtree

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As I was setting up today I heard a young girl ask " is that a heron mummy?"
I looked across and there was a cormorant swallowing a jack..
14ft rod and stick float with maggot caught me roach, perch and dace but it was patchy.

Had a chat with Neil as he worked his way upstream with his lure stuff...
Nice afternoon....
 

Pete Shears

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Fishing on the Wreake this morning - 4 chub to 3lb 14oz, a beautiful 6oz roach on sweetcorn but lost 2 other fish in thick weed, very low & clear despite all the recent rain, plenty of kingfishers zooming up & down though - must have another go next week
 

S-Kippy

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As I was setting up today I heard a young girl ask " is that a heron mummy?"
I looked across and there was a cormorant swallowing a jack..
14ft rod and stick float with maggot caught me roach, perch and dace but it was patchy.

Had a chat with Neil as he worked his way upstream with his lure stuff...
Nice afternoon....

You tinker ! That's the same photo you posted last time but with the gudgeon photo shopped out !
 

sam vimes

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An afternoon for a trial of braid for trotting, using up old bait and getting on the river while there's still a bit of extra water in. Everything paid off rather handsomely. Forty two dace, sixteen chublets, two grayling and six daft trout. The six daft trout were actually four daft trout, two of which I had twice.
 

rubio

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Back on the river as there has been just enough rain to get it flowing. Barely but it was moving. picked a swim with some good depth(about 8 ft) and started on light waggler and maggot. Half an hour of steady feeding and small dace started making their way to my net. An hour more and perch moved in. Again small at first but had 2 over a pound that put a nice bend in the rod. I was beginning to feel a little confidence in what I was doing after struggling recently. Somebody opened a gate and soon the flow grew strong enough to consider trotting. A trusty and battered crowquill went on and a little dark groundbait went in. Eventually the roach I had hoped for turned up. No record breakers, in fact nothing over a pound but lovely bright fish in good colour thanks to the clear water. For about an hour the breeze veered and blew steadily upstream and helped presentation no end and a bite a chuck was the go. Having been blessed with solitude for hours I was not thrilled to be visited by a chain of canoeists. Do they have a collective noun? Once gone I resumed feeding and began catching again until an otter cut straight thro my swim just as I hooked a small eel. It popped it's head out and looked about to climb out when it saw my size 11's a did a very professional swimmers roll away and downstream. I got covered in eel snot, and had my hook bitten off. Time to go.
 

oyster

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This is more of a general update since season end (I am being lazy) I generally target Roach, with limited success....

oyster-albums-general-picture4094-plum-pudding-rugely.jpg

This was the result of a compromise with the missus on Easter weekend, they were caught outside a pub on the cut in Rugeley.... I weighed the Roach thinking it might tip the pound (was 14oz) couple of nice perch too. Strange how you can walk miles looking for perfect peg, You park at the pub so the missus can have a glass of wine and up having a some really decent fish...

oyster-albums-general-picture4097-rushall-canal-20150621.jpg
A quick 3 hour session on hemp, I still haven't got 100% confidence using it as a hook bait but this was a nice little bag off the Rushall cut


oyster-albums-general-picture4092-bracebridge-200150712.jpg
A few weeks back from bracebridge pool sutton park - targetting Roach... I not a bream fan but a decent bag.

oyster-albums-general-picture4093-cov-canal-20150426x.jpg
Close season off the Coventry near grendon, I think there were six species in the net, part of the charm of fishing the cut is you never know what you are going to catch.
 

tincatim

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Some nice bags of fish there Oyster and a winner finding a peg near the pub!

I've just had a quick session on the Dearne, out the house and back again in two hours. I'm so glad I went though as I managed another PB, that's five now this month all from this river.

I thought I'd hooked a barbel initially but was pleased to see this lovely fat chub roll into the net. Weighed dead on 5lb and beat my previous best by nearly a pound. :D:D:D

1rfedu.jpg


I also had a bream of about 3lb but we won't talk about that.
 
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dorsetandchub

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As I have the flat on the market, yesterday I went to have a look at a c17th cottage separated from the Dorset Stour only by the road in front of it. After viewing said charming property I went to inspect its greatest selling point, the river some twenty yards away.

I can't remember the last time I saw a shoal of roach like that, just rolling in the sunshine and (if such things can be attributed to fish) enjoying themselves in the sun.

Having lots to do, I wasn't going to go today but around 5pm I cracked and put a tin of spam through the MAP 10mm blades, along with the permanent tins of corn and hemp in the car boot.

Ten minutes to Longham on the Stour and the increasingly enjoyable Drennan Dup Super Specialist with an ounce and a half quivertip, Preston PXR with 8lb line (always a chance of barbel here) and an ounce and a half blockend with a 14 to 6lb.

As it's a free stretch, one sees some "interesting" approaches to the piscatorial art here and passing the crowds of out of school and work urchins, I slotted myself into a swim with a nice grouping of sticky up reeds on the far bank.

Ipod on (Best of The Temptations), feeder filled (hemp), hook filled (spam) and cast to within an inch of the stickies. Ace! Rod in the rest, it just screamed bite with a chub accent.

After twenty minutes, a slight flick and again and third time, wallop. Game on. I could feel the fish shake its head vigorously but it didn't make for the reeds and didn't feel big enough for a barbel. What was this then?

The answer, 10 minutes later, was a perch and about and a pound and a half of it. Nice, well pleased. Went back with its dorsal fin up and every inch a proud, strapping fighter.

Just over an hour later and the tip rattled again, I hit and caught it and this time, although it felt small, I felt I knew it was a chub from minute one - and so it proved. It maybe scraped a pound but no worries, always welcome.

That was it. Another hour, nothing. I packed up and returned home, just glad to have got some fresh air and to have made an effort and was rewarded with the awe inspiring electric blue of a Kingfisher at river level for maybe 50 yards. Can one ever tire of that?

Have a great weekend, all. :)
 
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binka

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As I have the flat on the market, yesterday I went to have a look at a c17th cottage separated from the Dorset Stour only by the road in front of it.

Phil...

You do know that if you buy it you will instantly gain around three hundred best mates literally overnight ;)
 

dorsetandchub

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Yep, the spare bedroom could become B & B.....and B

Bed, Breakfast, Bream, Roach, Pike, etc etc.....



Yep, duly noted. All welcome, I guess IF it comes off. :)
 

barbelboi

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Really good reading all your write ups as I'm pretty well grounded (normally be doing at least two mid week sessions on the river) recovering from the shoulder injury and all the hassle of moving house - hoping to be back on the (new) rivers (Great Ouse & Nene) from September ish................
 

dorsetandchub

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Really good reading all your write ups as I'm pretty well grounded (normally be doing at least two mid week sessions on the river) recovering from the shoulder injury and all the hassle of moving house - hoping to be back on the (new) rivers (Great Ouse & Nene) from September ish................


Thank you, Jerry. I'd like to think they're dedicated to anyone who can't get out onto the bank, whatever the reason. I trust you'll enjoy your new surroundings and its waters even more. :)
 

rubio

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Back to same spot yesterday evening. Got there about 7 and put a handful of red maggots on the inside of the 'flow'. It was barely moving in truth. Set up with crowquill rig I used day before but it wasn't quite right this time. Persisted with shuffling the shot around and getting a few small perch. Switched to worm and had a couple of pounders. Lost a pike, unsurprisingly. Retied a hook and caught a pair of eels. Are they really coming back? I used to detest them as a kid but smile to think they are still around.
I'd been feeding a dollop of bread mash from the start. A little further across and down from the perch line. My plan was to seperate the roach and still feed the perch. I felt I was properly targetting roach now with a size 12 fine wire and a scrap of flake wafting thro the swim. Worked a treat for Dace. Eventually fish began topping nearer and a few roach were jagging a gliding back towards me. When I started fish were topping furiously 100 metres downstream, beyond my access. I made the mash with stale bread to the legendary 'wet bread' recipe. Only fresh for the hook but I put my faith in the many years of experience of Keith Speers to get the shoal moving upstream. All that hard won knowledge freely available to me at the push of a button.
With an hour of light still left I caught steadily again, all roach of 6 to 10 ozs. Not a huge bag, no huge specimens, great summers evening.
 

Neil Maidment

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Some very good reading here!

I've been without full internet connection for about 6 weeks and have now moved back to my native Dorset (was Hampshire but the boundaries changed a lot in the last century).

Still a lot to do in the new (old) place but hopefully will be on the rivers I grew up on - Stour and Avon - very soon. Particularly looking forward to a new winter campaign on the Frome which is just a couple of miles away, I'm told there are still a few nice Grayling to be found.

But I'm going to miss the many short sessions on the Loddon that was almost on my old doorstep, she treated me very well particularly with the Barbel and Chub. With a bit of planning I'll still return every now and again to chase those Barbel so hopefully sunrises like this one will again be a feature:

sunrise39.jpg
 

sumtime

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Crackin' pic, Neil.

---------- Post added at 19:14 ---------- Previous post was at 18:14 ----------

Managed a few hours on the canal with my g/daughter yesterday who likes to caddy for me, she loves the hat. :)



I set her up with my four piece travel rod which is 8'10" after I broke the tip one holiday, 4lb mainline and a 3lb hook length with a size 16 hook, bait was just maggots. Lottie was into a perch, big grin on her face as I placed the landing net underneath it and an utterance of "I'm winning" :)
She wouldn't use her bare hands, don't know why as she has handle a few in the past.



After I set up with a 13ft float rod and same line, I began to catch roach , perch and four heavy duty bags :mad: I had what felt like a decent tench on but after 20 seconds...PING! :rolleyes:

Lottie was counting as she was bagging more than me with an eel among her lot. She loves the feel of maggots on her hand, strange child. :(
She really enjoyed her time on the Leeds/Liverpool canal, I must take her to one of the local parks for something bigger, that will get her really excited. After a bad start to the week it ended well. ;)
Sorry for the large pics, I've raced through this before my laptop crashes again.

 
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binka

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I’ve been gagging to get on the river after being unable to get out midweek, I paid the price of impatience with the rain but there was no way I was waiting until the drier forecast for tomorrow.

I was still undecided on which stretch to fish as I loaded the car around half five this morning and on the way there I came up with the brain wave of having the morning on one stretch and the afternoon on another.

The first stretch was steady and deep and things started off ok if not a bit on the finicky side, unusually the first half a dozen runs through failed to produce a bite on the stick and maggot and the difference between no bites and a bite every other chuck was two inches off the depth so that it was just running through slightly off bottom as opposed to tripping it… Not a big difference in the grand scheme of things but a world of difference to the fish it seemed.

I caught steadily with a couple of decent netter perch and the usual smaller ones along with chublets a plenty, a few roach and unusually for me from the river a nice little rudd, I kept alternating between the stick rod and the Avon set up with heavy bulk shotting on the heavier rod but I couldn’t find a barbel.

At around eleven o’clock it seemed that the fella opposite me was having a bad day and for a good half an hour he made Tourette Syndrome look like a minor ailment curable with a quick aspirin tucked in a blob of jam and despite the frequent chuckles that he was causing me I decided it was time to move on for the afternoon.

Just gone midday and I was wading out to mid-river in a completely different type of swim which was a fast gravel run with no more than three feet of depth and it must have been black with chublets below the surface, they soon got cracking once the loose feed started to go in and the next three or four hours turned into a very pleasurable speed fishing exercise where I must have taken well over a hundred and fifty of ‘em and not the pairs of eyes either, probably a half a dozen to the pound with two bonus fish for good measure…



For those that like trotting fast shallow swims I highly recommend Dave Harrell's shallow water version of his wire stems sticks for having a sensible sight tip that can be seen way down the swim and not causing that terrible "shlop" on the strike and spooking everything within ten yards.

Six pints of reds, twelve hours on the feet and a good couple of soakings later and I’m about whacked… Probably a good job I’m not out in the week as I think I will need the extra few days to recover :w
 

sam vimes

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A delayed report of yesterday's outing on a river far, far away from my normal stomping grounds. A phone call on Thursday meant that my day was going to be somewhat curtailed due to a pub meal in the evening. Knowing that, I set my alarm for just after 0500 and was out of the door just after 0600. By about 0800 I was buying my day ticket. Knowing that I had a long walk, after a bumpy drive down a track, I'd taken a risk in just taking a single float rod and centrepin, newly loaded with braid. The walk took me a good half hour and I ended up in a place that I doubt too many venture to, though plenty fish the other side.

After finding a peg that I was happy with, noting a bit of fish activity, I set about setting up. I was fishing by about 0930 and very little happened for the first half hour. Eventually, the bits turned up, with a series of roach, dace, perch, bleak, gudgeon and chublets. Unfortunately, I'd attracted the attention of the resident pike. That meant that the bits seemed to come and go, dropping well down the swim or out into the middle of the river beyonf my reach. Intermittently, it was very quiet down my trotting track. During one of these lulls, at around 1030, I found one of the bigger residents. It set off like a steam train for the middle of the river. After what seemed an eternity, I was making inroads and actually began to think about readying the landing net when a sharp tug saw me lose contact. A returning pigtail of hooklink showed up the danger of tying spade end hooks with reasonably heavy line. I was pretty gutted, thinking that might have been my one and only chance.

For the next few hours, the sun got very high and very bright. I got quite burnt and the bits came and went. Knowing that I had to be away by around 1700, I was getting a little concerned as 1500 came and went with nothing but hard won bits to show for it. The best I'd managed were a few half decent roach and perch, and a chublet approaching a pound. Regardless, and knowing that I couldn't take any maggots back with me, I upped the feed rate. At 1545 I finally hit something that offered decent resistance. However, It didn't feel like a barbel. When, at the end of the fight, it made hell for leather for the marginal weed growth, I knew it must be a chub.
411537379.jpg


The next hour saw a few more bits and a lot more bait go in. The sun dropping a bit had me hopeful of some further action. Not much happened until 1645 when I latched into something that went a bit harder than any chub. Braid through rod rings make a god awful sound, especially when connected to a decent fish. Just to make things a little more interesting, I saw my first wasp of the summer. Unfortunately, it's presence was indicated by a bit of pain in the crook of my left elbow. I'm playing a decent fish on a centrepin with my right hand. The wasp is doing a strange jig on my left arm with its sharp bits stuck in my arm. I managed to contort myself in such a way as to allow me the flick the wasp off my arm and into the water whilst still maintaining control of the fish. With a bit of bleeding and swelling, I managed to land a nice little barbel around the six pound mark. Far too hot a day to muck about weighing as well a photographing.
411537380.jpg


By the time that one went back, I was really pushing my luck for time. However, I had an inkling that I wasn't quite done. Lashing the last of my bait in, so I couldn't push time too far, I was proved right. At about 1715 I latched into another decent fish. This one lead me a right merry dance. It found every last bit of previously unfound weed in front of me. Twice things went solid and several times I could feel line grating. Luckily, braid tends to cut through weed quite nicely. It ended up being another barbel, a smidge bigger than the first and a lot more feisty.
411537381.jpg


Time for a sharp exit, at least as sharp as a half hour hike can be, and a quick shower before hitting the pub. I was very tempted to stay longer, but I'd have got a right telling off If I had. I got the distinct feeling that I might have snaffled a few more barbel if I had. If only this river wasn't quite so far away.
 
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greenie62

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...Managed a few hours on the canal with my g/daughter yesterday who likes to caddy for me, she loves the hat. :)...

I agree with Lottie on the hat - she wears it well - but to drag her out on the L&L in her jim-jams is a bit tight la'! :D

Get her a fleece or jacket to match her 'at and she'll be set-up for chasing Kitty Cats down Newsham Park - you can go along to net them for her - your turn to ghillie, Grandad!;):D:eek:

Tight Lines & Stay Well :thumbs:
 
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