Saturday 30 September 2023

Undeserved success on Oak

 Peg 9, Friday, Sept 29
I must be deteriorating. I wrote last year about remembering Alan Scotthorne's advice to: "Don't just think it - do it!" Well, in this match not only did I not do it - I didn't even think it. But in the end I probably got what I didn't deserve...

Illness and the Call of the Wild (in the form of the Old Codgers Open on Beastie Lake) reduced this Spratts entry to eight. I wasn't unhappy with peg 9 on Oak, as it was close to the 10 or 11 I had fancied. Dave Hobbs was on my other favoured peg 1, with Steve Engledow on 11 (we fished odd-numbered swims from 1 to 15). Bob Allen was first out of the hat, with 15, which would have been my next peg to fancy. And Neil Paas was drawn out as Golden Peg.

My left margin - four feet in front of the reeds, but
only inches next to the bank.
Sun and more sun
The sun was out most of the day, which didn't help the fishing, and we had back wind. Trevor Cousins on 5 said there were hundreds of fish in front of him just under the surface, and he tried to mug some. He's very good at that, but not a single one obliged. I saw a few fish, and tried for about five minutes to mug them, later in the match, also unsuccessfully.

I had read a lot of my reports around this time of year on Oak, and decided to start on the feeder, as this has brought occasional fish. I used a full Method, with a red wafter. It's a long time since I used a proper Method feeder - recently my first choice has been a banjo, but within a few minutes, with the bait cast about three-quarters of the way across, the rod whipped round and I had my first fish on.

The right margin - unfishable for half the match
because of the sun shining on the water.



My lovely new feeder rod
I was using my new Guru N-Guage ten-footer rod. It's unbelievably light, and I loved handling it. I kept the rod down level with the water, and the fish came in nice and easily until it was within netting distance, then I lifted the rod to bring it up and into the net. Nothing happened! The reason was that my Matrix Method rods are much stiffer than this one, and they would have lifted that fish up a foot, to the surface. But the N-Guage just hooped round, and the fish stayed where it was!

That was disconcerting, of course, but I realised what had happened. Adjustments were needed, and I soon cottoned on to the fact that the fish had come in more quickly than on my other rods, and had more fight in it. So I had to be a little patient before the fish was netted. It was a common about 7 lb.

Operator error!
A cast nearer to the middle brought nothing, and the next cast flew uneeringly into a reed bed on the opposite bank. Rather than pull for a break I took my long hook round to the opposite bank, and managed to extricate the whole rig. So ten minutes wasted, but the next cast a few metres from the far bank saw another fish about the same size. 

When I had a slow spell I tried the pole in three swims - hard pellet at 13 metres, where I foulhooked a fish which came off. Then corn in the deep water to my left where I foulhooked another with the same result. And finally in the shallow cut-back to my left, where I never had a touch. So it was back out on the feeder.

Others were casting right across, but when I did that the feeder hit bottom in a split second, and although I gave it 15 minutes, I never had even a liner. So other casts were several metres from the bank, in the deeper water. By half time I had five fish, best around 10 lb. 

Pellet band with a 'pimple'
The first fish saw the hair-rigged band come off the hook, so I took a leaf out of Andy Finlay's book and hooked a band directly on to the hook. I still have some old ones that have a little pimple on the band specifically for putting the hook through, anbd that acounted for the final four fish, with an 8mm Robin Red pellet. The band stayed on and is still on the hook.

Behind me on Cedar lake Peter Maskell, who introduced me to mussels as a bait, was catching well, and he shouted out that he had ten carp. I was already thinking about  going on to the pole, and  when I saw others catching the occasional fish on the pole I felt I had to have a look. First drop with corn next to the reeds to my left, in about four feet of water, saw another double-figure fish come out. 

To my left on 11 Steve Engledow had an occasional fish early on, but more towards the last hour.

 Good old mussel...
A change to mussel was next, but it took ages to get a bite and I should probably have gone back onto the feeder. But I persevered and slowly I found fish - good ones, with the best probably 13 lb. Just one came from a two-foot swim near the keepnet on my left, where I had put just a few grains of corn, then suddenly all hell broke loose.

Steve made hay in the sun for the last hour.
Huge fish, over 15 lb, came charging into the shallows, stirring up the mud, heaving themselves around, and waving their tails at me. I hadn't put any feed in that shallow water, but they stayed there for ages, then left, and then came back. It seemed impossible that they wouldn't take a mussel laid on, but no. Nothing. I wasted no more than five minutes, and went back into the deeper water, but you can imagine how frustrating it was.

Yet on 11 I could plainly see Steve Engledow now netting fish obviously hooked right in the side, and I could see his rig was only about 18 inches deep. I must have been doing something wrong, but I plodded on using mussel and VERY occasionally would catch another nice carp. Steve was definitely catching better than me, though, and I thought he had probably overhauled me..


Last fish lost
With five minutes to go I had 12 fish, from 5 lb upwards, and then hooked another. It came quickly towards the net, but I couldn't quite get it in first time, and it went walkabout. The match ended and I shouted "Fish On." Two minutes later I shouted: "Fish Off" as the hook pulled out. By then I had realised it was foulhooked. Neil Paas on my right had also started catching better than me in the last 90 minutes, so I feared I had been overtaken after what had been a reasonable start on the feeder.

Dave Hobbs on peg 1 carefully empties his fish into the bag.
The weigh in
On 1 Dave Hobbs weighed in 104 lb 3 oz, which I now thought might win, as I hadb't seen anyone else with three nets in, except me. I esatimated I had nets of 30 lb, 36 lb and 12 lb - total around 80 lb, though I know I always underestimate. I think Dave had fish on a feeder casting to the aerator, and then had a good last hour rin the margins.

Trevor weighed in 49 lb 9 oz, so it must have been hard in that area, as he is so consistent. Next to me  Neil Paas, using hard pellet, had 75 lb 3 oz. I thought he had more fish than me, so they must have been snaller. 

My two fish weighed 15 lb; four in one net went 42 lb; and six smaller fish in the third net went 48 lb - total 105 lb 3 oz, so I had done Dave by exactly 1 lb, and that last lost fish hadn't cost me anything. On my left Steve Engledow must have wished for another half-hour catching in the shallows, as he ended with 92 lb 11 oz for third spot, and I ended the winner.

Dave was the early leader (obviously) with 104 lb 3 oz.

Marks out of 10
Honestly, I am worth only 4. The sun was shining bright, and low, from the right, so I couldn't fish to my right for the first half of the match. But afterwards I realised I had virtually ignored the right margin. I had had a couple of drops in there, but I hadn't plumbed up properly, and under the surface it must have been like the Himalayas - peaks and troughs everwhere , where the bank has fallen in. I should have looked for a flat piece to fish towards the end, or just fished the deep water next to the reeds properly.

Also I never tried maggot, even though I had taken the trouble to put a handfull in a small container on my try, so I only had to dip into it. Worms stayed in the maggot box, and I put on just one piece of cat meat all day. I stayed mainly in that one swim for the last three hours, but everybody knows that on some days just hooking a fish causes others nearby to scatter, and you have to look elsewhere. But I didn't.

Neil Paas, who was Golden Peg - 75 lb 3 oz.

Also I ignored that famous 2+1 line where almost everyone else catches fish, and I never thought about putting in the dead reds I had, which might have snared at least one of those shallow-feeding giants. So I was lucky. As I said at the start, an undeserved win, but they all count...

Next match Sunday on Six-Island where the forecast is for SW wind during the day, blowing into peg 9. So I'd like from 6 to 9, or 11 on the opposite bank, which has a lovely bed of irises.

Bob Barrett - 56 lb 3 oz on a feeder.
Bob Allen didn't want his phote taken, so Trevor showed us Bob's best fish!

How cruel! Bob Allen wrote that comment on the board before we even started!!                                    
THE RESULT
1 Dave Hobbs        104 lb 3 oz             2nd
3 John Smith            44 lb 2 oz
5 Trevor Cousins      49 lb 9 oz
7 Neil Paas               75 lb 3 oz
9 Mac Campbell     105 lb 3 oz            1st
11 Steve Engledow   92 lb 11 oz          3rd
13 Bob Barrett          56 lb 3 oz
15 Bob Allen             50 lb




Tuesday 26 September 2023

Corner pegs dominate on Cedar

Peg 21, Cedar, Sunday, Sept 24
I am ashamed to admit that at the draw for this Fenland Rods match, when Peter Spriggs' name was drawn from the old condensed milk tin, prior to his number being taken from the bag, with only a few pegs left, I actually said, aloud: "Oh, please. Not 26". Because Cedar 26 is, after temperatures drop, probably the second-best flier on the whole complex, behind the famous Lou's 6 (which often requires precision casting with a feeder for 50 yards).

Peg 26 is a corner peg, with a lovely bed of reds stretching out from the corner, and the end bank easily reachable on a pole, and it has won match after match in the Autumn and Winter. And Peter is a VERY good angler. So forgive me for my jealous, plaintive, outburst. However, I got my just rewards when Mel Lutkin drew out one of his balls, turned it over, and announced, almost apologetically: "Twenty-six." 

My lefthand margin was fishable on just a short top two.
Trying to be positive
So I realised we were probably fishing for second place, even though Decoy is so fair, and any match CAN be won from any peg. I was given 21, which at least avoided 24, which I had failed on so recently. There's no reed cover on that swim, and I pitied Dave Hobbs, who was sat on it. In contrast, my swim looked good - the corner of a reeds bed to my left, and to the right and nice stretch with reeds alongside the bank, ending in the corner of another protruding reed bed about ten metres away. But the howling wind from left to right was going to make presentation difficult wherever we all fished, though the higher-numbered swims had less than those at the other end.

As a general rule Cedar tends to fish better towards the car park end ie: 1-5 and 25 back to 22 approximately. But Allan Golightly was in corner peg 14, with the Southerly wind blowing down that way, so I thought that he stood a good chance of catching fish, even though it was very rough down there.

The right margin. There's a cut-back there which is
not obvious in this picture. The wind soon picked up.
Bre-e-e-am. Bream, Bream, Bream (apologies to the Everly Brothers)
I put in some micros and hemp on a top two in front of me, and some corn to the left corner. There was a small area cut back into the bank which gave me about three feet of water and I earmarked that for a bit later. A few casts on the bomb brought not even a liner, so I had a look with corn on the top two line, on corn over hemp and micros, with a 1gm Cralusso float (don't know if you can still get them - they have interchangeable different-coloured tips). My immediate reward was a leaping 2 lb bream.

A couple more bream came, plus a small F1, and I tried a worm, which brought just a small perch. How do they get those big worms in their mouths? Then I was tempted to look in the shallow swim. There was nothing there, so I put in some bait and had a look in the left corner swim, which produced another bream, around 3 lb, first cast. Then a 4 lb carp from the front swim, and finally a nice carp from the shallow swim, on corn. But although I was getting liners there, it took a long time for the next two or three carp, best 10 lb, on mussel and halfway through the match Callum, to my left, said he had about 40 lb, with Kevin Lee on his left on a little less.

Mike in action. We were often struggling in the wind at this end.
Problems with wind
At that time I reckon I had about 45 lb, and went back into the shallow swim to try again, although the increasing wind made it quite difficult. At that point I should have taken note that both Callum and Kevin were fishing about four sections out, but as I knew that there were fish in the shallow swim, I kept on there, trying to get my special method to work, but conditions were against it, and eventually after it brough a fish or two I gave it up.

The problem was that it took me about 20 minutes to get each fish, on mussel, altough they were good 'uns, approaching 8 lb. Meanwhile there was a lot of splashing from Callum's swim, and I realised I was falling behind, and I got the impression that he had come in a little closer. To my right Mike Rawson was struggling, and had only the odd fish. 

Liners
I kept getting liners, and briefly foulhooked three or four. But a lot of the time I am convinced that the carp were actually dragging the mussel off the hook, but not taking it completely into their mouths. Perhaps they were finicky because the water was shallow, though it had a big ripple.

I sneaked up on Callum, to find him unhooking a big one.
With 90 minutes left I put dead maggots into the shallow swim, and baited with a bunch of deads, which did produce two or three quick carp. But then a roach and a tiny carp forced me to look elsewhere with 30 minutes left on the clock. 

Excitement!
At around that time Bob Allen came charging down the bank, landing net in hand, trying to keep up with his top two, which was making good progress though my swim. I tried flicking my rig over the line, but missed, and by the time I turned round, to grab hold of my long-handled hook, the fish had taken a smart right turn and was out almost in the centre of the lake, where it nose-dived down, taking the pole with it. By the end of the match Dave Hobbs had somehow retrieved it, minus the fish, and was able to hand it back to Bob.

That was the most excitement I had had all day.

I should have fished the reeds
Later Kevin told me that he had had a really good last hour fishing the deep margins next to reeds, but I went out to the top-two swim with 30 minutes left, and caught only another bream and a 4 lb carp. That was stupid, because I hadn't been back to the margin swim where I had had a bream first drop and never tried it again! It wasn't difficult to fish - I could have done it on a short top two!! And I suspect I could have had four or five quick big carp there, for a grandstand finish...

I thought by the end I had 40 lb in each of my two nets.

Callum fished mussel all day for 129 lb 6 oz and fourth place.
The weigh in
By the time I had got round to loading my trolley the scales were up to me, with Allan Golightly leading with 162 lb 11 oz, taken mainly on a hard 8mm white Fujika pellet. That was more than I had envisaged, and I thought it a very good performance in difficult conditions - even playing fish was not easy in that wind.

I couldn't lift my first net out in the wind, so John Garner did the honours - 50 lb 3 oz. The rule with Fenland Rods is that we aim for 50 lb maximm, but there are so many double-figure fish in Decoy, it is difficult if you have, say, an estimated 36 lb in a net, to judge whether a big one will take it a little over. So we now aim for 50 lb, but will accept 60 lb, provided the ruling is not constantly abused (which it has not been).

So my extra 3 oz counted, and the second net was 48 lb 13, total exactly 99 lb - second in the first five pegs. But both Callum (who took all his fish on mussel) and Kevin (on cat meat) beat me, and inevitably when we got to Peter Spriggs, he had five nets in, and 197 lb 1 oz in them - a well deserved win. So I ended fifth out of ten.


Our current club champion Kev Lee - 159 lb 7 oz for third spot, taken mainly on
cat meat,  with a final flourish inside, in the deep margin against the reeds. 

Marks out of 10
I give my self a generous 6/10, mainly because I ignored the two obvious areas where fish can be always caught - out on four sections, and right against the reeds in the deep water. On the other hand I took at least some advantage of the shallower swim, but I didn't take into maccount that fish are more easily disturbed when you hook one than in deeper water. Sure I was putting some bait in there every time I landed a fish, but I should then have moved to another swim.

Peter Spriggs - winner with 197 lb 1 oz, 30 lb ahead of runner-up Allan Golightly.
Peter fished in his left margin, and lost several fish trying to stop them getting in the reeds.

My next match is Friday on Six-Island, where we have pegs 13 to 25, but Karen may allow us to fish the whole lake, if she has plenty of pleasure-fishing swims available. In any case not many pleasure anglers would willingly fish next to a match. 

The wind always dominates on this lake and the current forecast is for a Westerly, so if we have the whole lake I fancy 8 round to 12, which will be in the wind. Otherwise 13 or 14 if they have ripple, or 15, 17 or 25. But what do I know?

OOOps
No it's not - Friday is Oak with Spratts when I'd like 1 or around 10/11 or opposite around 20/21. Then Sunday is Six-Island with Fenland Rods. Get a grip of yourself, Campbell!!


The News - angling is good for you (who knew?)
I see articles appearing following the revelation that angling is good for "wellness" (a bloody stupid word) and that few anglers seem to suffer from mental problems. My wife (and many others) would probably argue that fishing like we do is a mental problem in itself, but I understand the concept. 

One of the articles was Craig Brown in the Daily Mail, who writes that fishing is "Holding a rod all day and doing nothing". REALLY?

On a serious note, he has it all wrong - fishing (no matter what your capabilities) involves decision-making all day, from making the decision to go fishing, getting ready, making decisions every few seconds while fishing, then physically packing up and going home. The result is that whether you catch fish or not, you have actually achieved something, as opposed to someone sitting all day and watching  TV. 

Achieving something is what keeps us being positive. Ask any psychoanalyst and they are likely to say that DOING something is the difference between feeling that life is worth living, and giving up.

THE RESULT 




Saturday 23 September 2023

I flex my mussels, on Willows, Decoy

Peg 18, Thursday, Sep 21
I'm pleased to report that my shed is now free of bluebottles and the maggot fridge is switched on and working perfectly. In addition, my Dearly Beloved is none the wiser about that unfortunate episode when a cloud of flying insects gave a spectacular imitation of starlings murmurating in the skies above our surprised village a week or so ago, of which no more will be said!

Twelve of us hopefulls turned out for this Spratts match - no doubt all hoping to draw peg 1 or 15; I know I was. But early in the draw 15 went to Peter Spriggs. He's won off that recently and is running hot at the moment (well, he has been for several years). The a minute or two later: "Peter Harrison, peg 1!" Peter has won off that peg as well (so have I, so it must be a good 'un). To cap it all, if my memory is correct, Peter Spriggs was drawn Golden Peg...

Fishing for third place
Now I am a realist, so I decided that on peg 18 I would be fishing for third place at best, and that actually relaxed me, and I determined just to enjoy the day. Not that I was unhappy with my draw, because I came second off 20 earlier this year, beaten by the flier 25, which was not in today. In addition I remember that John Smith won off end peg 19 last season in a Spratts match. Yet a few years ago that bay, from the point at 15, round to 23, used to be known as Dead Man's Bay, because no much was ever caught there!

My home for the day - peg 18 in Dead Man's Bay!

When I got to the peg the light South-West wind was blowing from about peg 6 straight down the lake, giving calm water for the early numbers, but a nice ripple from about 11 to 15. On our swims in the bay there was a ripple, but it was a long way out, so I opted to start on 11.5 metres, just on the edge of it. The forecast was for possible rain later, but we had sun for much of the day, and all-round it was very pleasant.

Only two nets in
After the huge amount of rain we'd had overnight I didn't fancy my chances of catching a lot and put in only two nets, instead of my normal three. Next, Karen came down to the lake with the live maggots I had ordered. She had said the delivery to Decoy would be around 9.30 am. and she had some to take to Six-Island as well. That's service for you! Karen's doing a great job managing Decoy, has been very helpful to the Fenland Rods club, and I've heard no grumbles at all.

It was a slow start - the first hour saw a tiny carp or two on an expander, then a couple of F1s on corn. But there were fish there, as I was getting indications just as the bait was almost on bottom. Then I foulhooked an F1 on the top of the head, which meant it must have been rooting around on the bottom. So why wouldn't they take my bait properly?

Joe Bedford in action to my left on peg 16. Peter Sprggs, is to his left.

Fishing to the platforms
I had intended to fish hard pellet on that line  but instead decided to have a look towards the platforms either side, in the deeper water about five feet from the reeds. I chose to fish the deep water because the sun was out and the surface was flat calm. That brought a couple of bream and roach, and a small carp from the left. First drop towards the right platform, and I pricked a fish first drop - the elastic came out momentarily but the fish came off. That happened quite a lot in this match, and I must assumed that the fish were all foulhooked.

Back out to the long line and the occasional carp to 2 lb came in, and after two hours I had about 12 lb. I had seen Peter Spriggs, to my left, playing a fish or two, and about this time I saw Joe Bedford land a much bigger carp, fishing near the margins. That was obviously my next move, so after a quick look near the platforms I set my stall out to fish on a top two either side.

Joe didn't have many fish, but they were nice ones.

From the left I had a couple of bream on corn, best 2 lb, and tried worm, which bream love. But the result was a tiny perch, so it was back to corn  for a roach and another small F1. Bites were not easy to hit - something would tug at the bait (at least that's what it looked like) and then leave it, and perhaps sink slowly down, but there would be nothing there. Probably liners. Occasionally it would disappear under the surface and if I left it for two or three seconds and it didn't re-appear it would be a proper bite, and a fish would result.

My Get Out Of Jail card
But I felt that I should be getting more fish, so I changed to my special method, which I haven't used much this year because conditions haven't been right for it. They weren't ideal today, but I thought it worth a try, as it has got me out of jail many times. Basically if I can't catch on that in the margins I won't catch anything.

I had a spare short top with 8/10 elastic in, put a new rig on that,  and it worked a treat - a couple of quick F1s and then a 2 lb carp. That made me worry a bit - I didn't fancy playing big carp on an 8/10 elastic through a short top, so I put another similar rig on a short top with 16/18 elastic.

The result was instant - next fish was a mirror around 8 lb, and I was VERY glad I had changed the elastic. I immediately changed to mussel and soon after, I was attached to another good carp. It came in quite quickly, as I kept the top low and let the elastic pull the fish slowly in to the net, rather than constantly  trying to bully them in. It doesn't happen every time, but when it does, the result is very satisfying (though often the fish come alive in the net and are difficult to unhook).

Mike Rawson was on 20, to my right. There was a platform between us, hidden by the reeds.

Advice from a good 'un
Now during the Scunthorpe visit a fortnight ago Lee Kendall had given me some advice about feeding for carp, and today I put it into effect. Basically it was to keep feeding if the carp were there - don't let them drift away beause there's no feed in the swim, or no feed going in. We all know that even if they are not hungry, carp will often take an interest in feed falling through the water. And if they are hungry, then they are "Feeding Machines" (Lee's description).

Today I put that into effect, and scooped up a handfull of micros while  was playing the next fish, squeezed it, and plonked it in the swim. Then before the next cast I would out in a biggish pot of micros, hemp and corn or 6 mm pellets. It seemed to work, and slowly I started getting  carp mainly 5 lb-plus. I also kept hitting fish as I lifted the rig out. None stuck - they all came off immediately.

Best carp of the day
When I had 34 lb on my clicker for the first net I had decided to look in the right margin, where I hadn't put any bait. Within 30 seconds I hit the best carp of the day - over 10 lb, and put it into the second net, just in case it took my first net over the 50 lb mark (I tend to underestimate my weights and go over the limit, to my mates' constant delight at the weigh-in).

Next fish was 6 lb and that went into the first net, to bring it up to 40 lb, giving me a safe margin. I was really enjoying it - the short top combined with a short Number three means you can use the puller if necessary with the extra section attached, and I did so to land the better fish. But the shorter length of elastic means you have to be prepared to add a section or two at times early in the fight.

Even using my special method it wasn't all perfect, but at least it told me whether fish were still in the swim, even if I wasn't getting good bites. To my right Mike Rawson started getting fish farther out, but they were smaller, although he had one fish at least into double-figures. I couldn't see Peter Spriggs landing much, but I was sure he would have been bagging; and of course I had no idea what Peter Harrison had on 1.

Several bream were caught - they have shown well
at Decoy in the past couple of years. This one
is in Trevor Cousins' net.
Right margin best
The righthand swim gave me fish more quickly than from the left, all on half a mussel, and they were mainly 6 lb-plus.The only one I lost was down to me - I thought it was an F1, and that I didn't need to add a third section. Then the fish surfaced and I could see it was in double figures, but before I could add a section the fish obviously remembered it has an urgent appointment and shot off, breaking the hooklength.

Soon after that I put in a third net, but stupidly, because it was in the last hour, I didn't click properly.  

In the last half hour the fish seemed to have vanished in the righthand swim where I had been fishing, and I had been coming slowly closer to the bank to get bites. I would have liked to drop in right next to the reeds, but there were several reed stems laying out a couple of feet from the bank, parallel with it, and I daren't risk moving them because it was the only cover there. 

Wendy Bedford, fresh from her Spratts win last week
had 30 lb 5 oz from peg 11.
So I switched back to the left margin, which I hadn't touched for an hour. But I had been religiously feeding it constantly, and that paid dividends when I found fish there straight away. They were mainly big F1s, but a couple were better carp around 8 lb. Then the match finished, and I had clicked 40 lb in two nets and probably had 20 lb in the last one - total around 100 lb.

The weigh-in
I missed the first few weighs, but Peter Harrison was way out in front with 99 lb 3 oz, on cat meat and hard pellet mainly from the right hand side of the swim. I was surprised at how low the other weights were - below 50 lb, up to Dave Hobbs on 13, who had 54 lb 13 oz. Next was Peter Spriggs on the pont on 15, who had not emptied it after all. He totalled 59 lb 3 oz, and said he must have lost at least ten fish. From his description of how the fish took off I am sure they were all foulhooked.

Dave Hobbs waits patiently while his first net is weighed.

Joe Bedford had fished well on 16 to land 40 lb 9 oz (he's 93), and I was next to weigh. 

My first net I struggled to lift out - sometimes a rig gets caught under the platform - so John Garner came to my rescue. He lurched up the bank with the net and immediatelynearly everybody suspected that my 40 lb net was overweight. Indeed it was - that was obvious. If it went over 60 lb it would be disqualified.

My heart was in my mouth as I saw the digits shoot upwards to...56 lb something. So I would get 50 lb for that net. The next one (40 lb in my estimation) had 48 lb-plus (phew) and the last one which I hadn't been clicking because I thought there would be no need, went 46 lb; I was lucky there! Total 144 lb 5 oz for the win. 

Then the rain, which had been just spots, came down a little harder and, ironically, gave us a bit of ripple where it had been calm all match! To my right Mike had slowed up after a good spell fishing long, and had 48 lb 13, but on end peg 22 Bob Barrett had worked his magic with his feeder rod, down the margins, and ended with 57 lb 1 oz. He really can fish that feeder.

Peter Spriggs' fish were a lot smaller than mine.
The better ones seemed to be in our bay.
But he always enjoys himself, win (which
he does a lot), or lose. And he did come third.


The rain had started before Mike Rawson
 was asked to pose with his fish.






















Last to weigh was Bob Barrett,
 fourth from peg 22.


Mike shows fishes his best, double-figure,
fish out of the weighing bag.





















Marks out of 10
I give myself only 7, because I never even tried maggot on the hook, and I had both live and dead with me. Nor did I try hard pellet or paste for those big carp, nor worm once I knew they were in the swim. So often a change of bait will tempt a fish when they seem to have wised up to the bait you are using. Mussel was fine, but I wasn't getting fish that quickly - I really should have tried something else.

However I did play the fish well, apart from that one blip. And I was chuffed that I took Lee Kendall's advice to keep feeding. Previously I have tended to take the advice in so many magazines, and fish for 'one fish at a time.' I got through two tins of hemp, two tins of corn, a pint of 6mm and nearly three pints of micros.  Plus some mussels, usually putting five half mussels in each time, with a half on the hook. Happy days.

PLUS it seemed the fish our side of peg 15 were bigger, so Dead Man's Bay was the hot area to be in, even though there wasn't much of a ripple. But you've gotta take advantage of that sort of luck when it comes along.

Next match on Cedar on Sunday, when it would be nice if corner pegs 1 or 26 stuck to Mel Lutkin's fingers when my name is pulled out!

Bad News
Trevor told us that Mick Ramm won't be fishing with us for the forseeable future. He missed fishing all last year because of one hip being so bad he could hardly walk. He had an operation on that in January, and fished with us early in the season, when he was absolutely fine. But when he fished recently he was hobbling, and now apparently he can hardly walk again, because the other hip has gone, and at the time of writing no date had been set for an operation. And with millions of appointments and operations in the NHS pipeline who knows when we shall see his smiling face again? I know Mick is the same age as me, because we went to Junior school together when we were aged about 7-10.

THE RESULT
1 Peter Harrison        99 lb 3 oz        2nd
3 Neil Paas                32 lb 8 oz
5 Martin Parker         22 lb 3 oz
7 John Garner            24 lb 8 oz
9 Trevor Cousins      48 lb 11 oz
11 Wendy Bedford    30 lb 5 oz
13 Dave Hobbs         54 lb 13 oz
15 Peter Spriggs       59 lb 3 oz        3rd
16 Joe Bedford         40 lb 9 oz
18 Mac Campbell   144 lb 5 oz        1st
20 Mike Rawson      48 lb 13 oz
22 Bob Barrett          57 lb 1 oz        4th



Tuesday 19 September 2023

Elm Result, Fenland Rods

 Sunday, Sept 17, Elm, Decoy

I didn't fish this Fenland Rods match, but have the result, and I was glad to see James Garner there. James doesn't often fish, but he always does well, asn is always welcome. Yet again the area around peg 8 produced fish, as it has done so many times. Put a good angler in a good area, as happened here...and yet again Peter Spriggs did the business. Well done indeed, Peter (yet again). The top weights all came from that Northern end.




Friday 15 September 2023

Wendy hands out a walloping on Yew

Firstly, I have to report that my expected contribution to the enhanced pollination of British plants has taken place. I was able to release hundred of bluebottles into the countryside merely by opening my shed door, and how delightful it was to see them immediately settling on my petunias and geraniums before buzzing off into the surrounding fields to do their part in producing food for the masses. I hope the electrician who switched off my maggot fridge last week appreciates the honour which has befallen him.

And now to the mundane subject of my matchfishing...and mundane is am appropriate term to apply to my most recent performance(s).

Peg 3, Yew, Wednesday, Sept 13
Happy with peg 3 as the wind was blowing down to that end of Yew in this 16-entry Spratts match. Trouble was it was a North-easterly, and after the unsettled weather of the previous couple of days the odds were against big catches all-round, as experience has shown that the little rhyme which begins: "When the wind is in the East then it is the fish bite least" tend to be correct.  But poems have been known to be wrong, and hope beat eternal in Mac Campbell's breast as I settled into my office for the day.

 Bright, but the North-East wind was cool - not ideal conditions.

A good start for Peter
It was a good blow, with bright sunlight, but to be honest it was quite cold as it was slightly into our faces on the West bank. To my right Peter Harrison on peg 1, pole fishing against the reeds to his right at about 11.5 metres, had a big fish early on, and minutes later I saw him lose another. Then on my left there came splashing from Peter Spriggs' peg, and he was obviously underway. I was fishing the pole at 2+2 because there was a small slope onto which my rig would drift, using expander and then banded pellet, then it was back to expander, and after about two hours I had a carassio of about 6 oz.

This was all I could see of Peter Harrison, fishing long to the end bank.

Believe it or not, but that gave me  a bit of heart, as it was already obvious that everyone I could see was struggling. So I put on maggots and had a 1 oz perch. That was followed by six more, and I changed to a worm (I had brought them, as promised) hoping that if there were carp there it might sort one out. That only brought a slightly bigger perch, and cut my losses and felt I had to have a look closer in.

I had trickled corn into a spot right on the corner of the reeds, where the water was about three feet deep, and fully expected some sort of touch there, but it never happened. Around this time I saw Peter Harrison also fishing in the side and opposite, both Dick Warrener and Trevor Cousins changed about the same time. On peg 30, on the opposite bank in the corner, Mike Rawson had three fish on a feeder quite quickly and I thought I really ought to put one out...but I didn't!

Peter didn't have many fish - but they were good 'uns.
At last a 'proper' carp
Back out on corn, and at last a proper carp came in, about 3 lb, and I also lost a big fish obviously foulhooked. But the next two hours were fishless both on that line and near the reeds to my right,. where I tried corn, expander, cat meat and musell with just a couple of tiny liners.. Meanwhile I heard Peter Spiggs landing two or three more fish.

Ninety minutes to go and I started a new line on 2+1, in the deepest water, trickling in expanders, and although I had had liners on the other lines, I got none on this line. Then I started to see fish swimming into the side, which is often a sign that they are starting to think about feeding. Sure enough after I had got the bait just touching bottom I lifted it an inch, dropped it back, and the float zoomed under straight away. That was a carp about 7 lb.

More foulhookers
A few minutes later I had another about 8 lb, before playing another for a long time before losing it - also foulhooked as a scale came winging its way back to me.

Half an hour to go and I hit another fish on the deepwater line which came slowly in, just flapping its tail occasionally - I could see it was over 10 lb. But I couldn't get it over the net as it wouldn't face the right way! Frustratingly that happened twice more - almost in the net but it kept slipping sideways.

That corner on the reeds looked good, but produced nothing.
Then, about two minutes before the end, I saw a fish move
in the shallow margin only a foot from the bank. I dropped in for a
 few seconds (of course) but nothing happened. 😔

Then that fish came alive and started off along the margin, and I realised it was foulhooked. It made several runs up to the next platform and I had to put on extra sections to pull it away from the side. Eight minutes later the inevitable happened, and the hook pulled. I know it was eight minutes because I looked at my watch.

Final fish
Two minutes later I hooked, and landed, my third nice carp, around 8 lb, on a 6mm expander.

Back in and almost immediatelyI hit another, which was also obviously foulhooked. This fish shot off immediately, lit the after-burners, and 'snap' it broke the hooklength. I dropped the top down, picked up another which was set at the same depth, and dropped it in. But there was no miracle finish - just a whistle to end the match. Didn't know we had a whistle! 

Dave Hobbs, with 60 lb 1 oz was only ounces short
of being top weight on our Western bank.
The weigh in
Peter Harrison had seven fish for 53 lb while my five (plus the itchy perch) went 26 lb. Then Peter Spriggs weighed in his seven for 52 lb 5 oz, taken on cat meat. Those catches were fairly typical as we went along, with Shaun Buddle on 60 lb 11 oz being top weight on our bank. Everybody said that they had their best spells in the last couple of hours.

Over to the East bank the highlight was Wendy Bedford on 20, who had some very big fish. I think she had seven fish for 81 lb 8 oz, all on feeder and mussel, and that catch won the match. It was certainly the most popular result this season. Wendy has a bad shoulder and always fishes feeder. Congratulations came fromn all sides. As an aside her 93-year-old brother-in-law Joe, opposite on 11, had 47 lb 13 oz.

A beautiful golden common for Joe Bedford.


On the next peg to Wendy John Garner fished pole for 72 lb 4 oz and second place, but the rest was a bit of an anti-climax, especially for Bob Allen on 24, who never had a bite all day! It really was that hard.

Marks out of ten
I can't beat myself up about not catching three or four more fish, which would have put me in the frame, because the fishing was definitely difficult. But I should have tried the left margin more aggressively, and I had a bomb rod  ready - why did I not give it 15 minutes on mussel during the hours I couldn't get a fish? I should also have come into that near corn line on the right in the last half hour, giving it just five minutes, because if the fish are near the margins you'll usually get an indication in that time. 

But when the fish are nearly all between 8 lb and 14 lb just three will make the difference between framing and coming nowhere. So taking into account the fact that I never stopped concentrating at any time I give myself 5/10. I'm having a poor spell at the moment; next match next week on Willows, which can be peggy, so I'm half expecting another grueller. On the other hand I like Willows - perhaps it will like me!

All hands to the deck as Trevor Cousins lifts out his catch.

John Garner, next to the winner, had some double-figure fish in his 72 lb 4 oz second place catch.

Wendy Bedford's first four fish went nearly 50 lb...


...and this might not even have been the biggest one!

To the winner the spoils. Well done from all of us, Wendy.
                    THE RESULT
1 Peter Harrison        53 lb
3 Mac Campbell        26 lb
5 Peter Spriggs          52 lb 5 oz
7 Shaun Buddle         60 lb 11 oz    3rd
9 Steve Engledow      17 lb 9 oz
11 Joe Bedford           47 lb 13 oz
13 Dave Hobbs          60 lb 1 oz      4th
15 Bob Barrett           54 lb 4 oz
16 John Smith            54 lb 9 oz
18 Mick Ramm          29 lb
20 Wendy Bedford     81 lb 8 oz      1st
22 John Garner          72 lb 4 oz      2nd
24 Bob Allen            DNW
26 Trevor Cousins     55 lb 11 oz     5th
28 Dick Warrener      34 lb 12 oz
30 Mike Rawson       26 lb 9 oz

Monday 11 September 2023

Day two at Grange Park

 Peg 22, Sun, Sept 10
This won't take long. Second day of the JV away-weekend was on Curlew. I've never seen a water quite like it - two inches deep against the bank; six inches deep over a metre out; and about nine inches of water at two metres. But the platforms on this lake and on the previous day's lake were excellent - five feet from front to back, four feet wide and solid as a rock.

Hot again, and the sun was in our faces on this bank, so no point in putting up an umbrella. But there were fish there - lots - and Lee Kendall had a bit of a preview, managing to catch one before the match, when it took his band! The fish showed in the margins seconds after the match started - fish to 8 lb cruised along, showing everyone their tails and stirring up the mud. But we couldn't catch them.

Ripple? I don't remember seeing much of that on Curlew lake.

A fish!
I had one fairly early which took a banded pellet on the bottom in about  a foot of water, level with the front of the platform, to my right, but the next two or three hours passed without incident. To my right Richard Linnell had the  (doubtful) pleasure of my company again, and he had a couple early and then one on a feeder. On the far bank Lee had started on a feeder to the island and I saw him land several fish in that first two hours.Otherwise everybody was struggling.

On my left Justin Hayes had, I think, a couple in the first half of the match and spent the rest of the time fishless. I had a look out in front of me in about four feet of water and somehow managed four fish in the next four hours on small cubes of luncheon meat - carp all around 3 lb. I had several more tugs that looked like bites, and am convinced that, as on the previous day, the better fish were just hitting the bait.

I got the impression that putting bait in did more harm than good - after the fifth fish, having had three in about an hour, I put in some luncheon meat and micros, and never had another touch of any kind in that swim.

Worm did the business
Richard then went out towards the vacant platform between us, with worm, and snared about four or five, also losing one. That convinced me that worm is a bait I should have with me at all times - so many of the anglers took fish on it when they couldn't catch on anything else.

Should I have a drink or play the fish? In the heat it was a no-brainer for |Richard Linnell - down the hatch...


...but it had a happy ending. Richard got his drink and the fish.

Everybody had the same experience in the shallow water on this lake - fish would be there but when they drifted up to out floats they took fright and swirled away. I tried laying on about 20 inches and briefly hooked one fish which might have been foulhooked. And right at the end I set the rig to six feet, laying it in the margins so the line was on the bottom. The float slid away once, and again I pricked something, with no way of knowing whether it was a proper bite.

Then half an hour before the match finished it started to rain, and I couldn't resist t6he opportunity to start packing away. Justin, next to me, had exactly the same thought at exactly the same moment. It's very rare for me to pack up early, but circumstances were unusual - the heat was really oppressive and the atmosphere very muggy and close. I forgive myself, and all the others who did the same! 😉

Dave Parsons tips his fish in - third place to him.
The weigh in
The top weights came from the far bank, where Andy Kelk in the corner fished worm for 72 lb 15, caught a little way from the bank in water  between nine and  18 inches deep, followed by Andy Bull in the corner at the other end of the far bank.  He fished worm tipped with maggot for 66 lb 14 oz. Dave Parsons was third, fishing just maggot (more food for thought). I wonder whether the movement in worms and maggots was attractive to the fish? 

I was told that the water was a foot down on normal level, and that the fish normally feed in the margins, but of course must feel more secure with more water over their heads. A pity to travel that far for not much - but spare a thought for Brian White and John Taylor, friends of Carl White, who had a nine-hour journey back to St Ives in Cornwall to make the next day.


Andy Bull - second with 66 lb 14 oz taken on worm and maggot.
My journey home
Carl White and Lee, who organised the event, announced the results and made the payouts quickly, which enabled us to get away in good time. I wanted to go via Lincoln and Newark onto the A1, but my sat nav took me via Gainsborough, which was OK with me as I knew it wasn't much farther.

But then she wanted to take me over the Trent at Dunham bridge. That was also OK with me...until I drove up to the bridge and saw it was a toll. Fifty pence to cross! Bugga that - I turned round and went on my original road to Newark, which gave me no problems and I was home in about two hours and 20 minutes, which is not bad for a van limited to 50 mph on all roads except dual carriageways and Motorways.

Marks out of ten
I give myself, and everyone else, ten for sticking it out. So another little adventure ended with my congratulations to everyone who took part, and especially to Lee and Andy for ending up on top of the heap, as it were.Next match with Spratts Wednesday on Yew, when I will have home-grown worms with me!


Busiest man over the weekend was Carl White, who had 32 lb 2 oz on the last day. Many thanks for all your work, Carl. It was a good weekend, despite the heat.

THE RESULT