R
Ron Clay
Guest
These days it seems that more and more anglers are out and out specialists and fish only for a single species. Now I've nothing against that. Anglers have every right to do what gives them the most satisfaction.
However for myself, after having a bit of success with one species, I have a strong desire to move onto another. I'm also a bit of an old traditionalist git! You know: opening the season with tench, bream and barbel later, then a few sessions with pike as October dawns, then onto roach and maybe the odd chub. As winter sets in I'll be targeting grayling or even dace. Springtime finds me casting a fly for trout.
Up to now this year - 2002, I have caught Bream, barbel, perch, roach, dace, chub, eels, pike, grayling, rudd, brown and rainbow trout, carp, bleak and gudgeon, most of them deliberately.
How many all rounders are there on FM?
And finally Br Nicholas, the only species I have had no success with are Ruffe Slappers.
However for myself, after having a bit of success with one species, I have a strong desire to move onto another. I'm also a bit of an old traditionalist git! You know: opening the season with tench, bream and barbel later, then a few sessions with pike as October dawns, then onto roach and maybe the odd chub. As winter sets in I'll be targeting grayling or even dace. Springtime finds me casting a fly for trout.
Up to now this year - 2002, I have caught Bream, barbel, perch, roach, dace, chub, eels, pike, grayling, rudd, brown and rainbow trout, carp, bleak and gudgeon, most of them deliberately.
How many all rounders are there on FM?
And finally Br Nicholas, the only species I have had no success with are Ruffe Slappers.