I'm late with this blog - had so much to do. The cold weather stayed with us after the particularly horrible match on Cedar, and though the next weekend, on Sunday Feb 22nd, saw better weather, the wind was still cold, and the water so cold it took ages to thaw out my frozen maggots.
Peg 15 on Horseshoe in the JV club match was one I did not fancy - that side of the lake tends to fish worse than the lower numbers. Lee Kendall was on end peg 20 and said before the match that he didn't expect to catch much; he was correct in that! I didn't fancy my peg much, and spent the first 30 minutes on a maggot feeder with just a tiny liner or two.
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| The West wind increased during the day, which made presention on a pole very difficult. It died down a little for 20 minutes during the afternoon. |
Eventually a cast of three-quarters of the way across brought a 2 lb F1. Then a change to a pole, fished at about five nmetres, which was the longest I could fish with perfect presentation, because of the strong Westerly from my right, brought an instant response.
First drop on the pole with maggot bait saw my elastic stecth for a few seconds and then go slack. Possibhly foulhooked. Next drop and exactly the same thing happened - a fish came off within seconds. It took me almost an hour to get two more bites, which resulted in two more F1s.
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| Round to my right David Bates weighs in 41 lb 7 oz for second place. |
On peg 20 Lee Kendall had a few roach and then, towards the end of the match the wind died down a little for about 30 minutes. He went out to the far bank on a 16-metre pole, hooked two carp, and lost one. He weighed in 6 lb 7 oz; my fish went 19 lb 5 oz, and that was sufficient to win the three-peg section. That meant I've fished five matches this year and picked up money in four of them. Improving!
Ernie Lowbridge - winner with 77 lb 6 oz.
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| Carl White, who does so much for the club, won his section from peg 3 with 31 lb 7 oz. |
Ernie Lowbridge won with 70 lb from peg 1, with some fish from the marginal reeds to his right. As I expected, the pegs on that bank, which had a nicer wind, caught better than our side.
Part of the match was also on Lou's lake, and the weights here were better. Also, some fish were caught on cat meat - a sure sign that things are getting better! Next match on Sunday, March 1 on Willows and Lou's.
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Peg 29, Willows, Sunday, March 1
Just 13 anglers turned out for the JV match, and we were all pegged on Willows. My peg 29 is known as a good-un, with an island in front, just to the left, and a big gap in front, where the channel runs down to famous peg 25. I know from previous experience that fishing close to the island is fraught with danger as it's so snaggy there. But I was happy enough, with Eddie McIlroy volunteering to help guide my trolley round one difficult sloping corner on the way to my peg (help is always on hand) .
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| That island looks so inviting, reachable on 13 metres. |
The wind was nasty, from the East to my left, and the sun was really annoying, low and in my eyes if I fished to the island. So I started on a hybrid feeder with maggot, and had just two tiny liners. Forty minutes after the start I changed to a pole, fished at about eight metres, but although I fished hard for an hour I never had a touch.
Next it was out to the island, and almost an hour there, fishing close to the island, and up to a few metres farther away, and fishing on the bottom and right up to two feet deep, I never had a touch. There were reeds and brambles waving under the surfacer which kept snagging the rig, but thank fully I always pulled free.
Next it was into the margins, which were well over three feet deep. The platform to my right looked nice, but the bottom shallowed right up there, so I stuck to the deeper water closer to me, on a top two, particularly to my right, where there has always been a deepish area - there used to be a bush overhanging, but that's been cut right back. I also put some dead maggots into the left margin.
Eventually an F1 came from the right deep hole on two red maggots, and then a much bigger fish which took me ages to land. Hardly surprising when I found it was hooked on the outside of the mouth! And I reckon it was getting on for 15 lb.Then came a lull and I took a chance and put a rig baited with mussel into the lefthand margin. This was difficult fishing because the wind was hacking in there; but I had a definite bite which I missed. So I tried a mussel in the deep hole to the right.
That move brought another big carp to mussel, and I changed to my special method with maggot, which brought a bite first drop but the fish came off. However one more big carp came to maggot, and with 90 minutes to go an F1 decided to visit my keepnet. I now had five fish...and I had no bites until seconds before the whistle, when I hooked a big fish which came off after 15 seconds, just as the whistle went.
Over to my right on 33 Kevin Bell had been fishing long to the aerator on his left and hooked about three big fish in that last hour or two. I assumed he would beat me. To my left on 27 Dave Parson fished a feeder in the gap between the islands and lost five fish which broke him, bewcause you have to hold then so hard to stop them galloping into the brambles (it might have been seven that he lost - can't remember exactly).
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| Kevin Bell plays a carp on peg 33. The other angler is Eddie McIlroy. |
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| Me with one of my big carp. I had three in total. |
Dave Parson weighed about 15 lb and my five fish went 41 lb 7 oz, with Chris Saunders taking a picture of me with one of my carp. Kevin Bell was next to weigh - he told me he had lost seven, possibly foulhooked, and he totalled 38 lb 14 oz, to leave me second, behind Roy Whitwell who fished feeder on peg 25 for a wining 75 lb 1 oz. And Kev Bell came up and offered to take my weighty pole holdall back to my van; thanks, Kev. The exercise does me good, but that help after a match is so welcome.








































