First I have to tell our Spratts members that Trevor and I attended dear old Ted Lloyd's funeral at Surfleet. Old he most certainly was, dying a few days before his 98th birthday. A lovely bloke, and we met his great-nephew, who introduced Ted to big-carp fishing by taking him to France. Apparently Ted loved it so much he went two months later, with his wife, and landed a fish around 50 lb.
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| Ted's spectacular wreath. |
Ted fished with us for several years before the 'getting ready' bit at home proved too much for him, but Trevor used to ring him after every match and tell him the result, often resulting in Ted getting annoyed when told that the match was won from the early end peg we would have given him! Thanks for the memories, Ted.
The same day was the funeral for dear Terry Tribe, also a previous member of Spratts and |JV (and Division Four National Champion), until illness forced him to give up fishing. I didn't know about the funeral, but Trevor found out the previous evening, and went on after Ted's funeral. I had my wife with me, and we'd arranged to meet friends, so I didn't feel able to change the arrangements. I was sorry I didn't see Terry off, but I'm sure he would have understood. A real one-off was Terry, very knowledgeable and known for speaking his mind, no matter who was present. That gave us some laughs, I can tell you. Goodbye, old friend.
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SORRY ABOUT THE SEARCH WIDGET HIGHLIGHTING SOME WORDS. I'M TRYING TO GET RID OF IT!
Good to see a few more people in the Decoy cafe, fishing the Open to practice for the Angling Trust Winter League final on Sat, Feb 28. There will be 50 pegs there, 25 on Float Fish Farm, and 50 at Rookery. I will probably offer to help, again, at the weighing in at Decoy, and hopefully there will be more locals turn up, as any further help will be very much appreciated. The ideal number is three per set of scales - two on the scales and one on the board. Karen would appreciate knowing if you may be available.
Now to the JV match - the first this year. Fished by just 9 stalwarts, as one or two were in the Open of the Kingsland EWintyer League.Yes - peg 11 stuck to my fingers. It has a bunch of irises to the right, and has a good record in Winter. There wasn't much wind, and it was fairly mild, though the light was a bit murky and I settled on a Cralusso 0.2 gm float as these have a thicker tip than my favourite Tuff Eye.
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| Flat calm and low light, but certainly not cold. |
I started on a tiny Method feeder to the small island, which is about 18 metres out, but apart from one huge liner the tip remained still. And soon after the start Chris Saunders to my left on 13 started catching good-sized fish on a long pole, probably F1s. After he'd caught two I changed to a pole as well.
Chris had five in the first hour, and I think I had one, on double pinkie over a small amount of black groundbait (it's allowed here from November to the end of February). Then a second F1 came in and then a disaster when a big fish (possibly foulhooked) surged off, breaking the line at the hook. I'd whipped a strong Drennan size 18 carp hook to my 6 lb line, straight through, so I can't work out how the line broke.
After that there was a lull and I had a quick look near the irises, with not even a liner. Back out on the 11.5 metre line, and I tried double red maggot, which caught a fish. I'd been feeding pinkies and a tiny amount of groundbait, and now tried feeding loose red maggot. This was much better and I had a run of about seven fish in half an hour.
I heard Chris Saunders shout across to Eddie McIlroy on peg 6 that I was catching, but felt honour-bound to tell Chris that three of those fish, including a carp of around 8 lb, had been foulhooked! As soon as I felt that fish had spooked I rested that line, and had a look in the left margin, where I had one missed bite, and nothing more.
Out to the long line and two nice carp- and two or three more F1s came in before I rested it again. One F1 was well over 3 lb. Then there was a bigger lull before another short good spell; and the last half hour saw one F1 and two carp around 5 lb. I had no more foulhooked fish after the three early ones.
Several more short looks in the margins were fruitless except for the tiniest roach I've ever had on a maggot coming from the iris swim. I swear it was no bigger than one-twentieth of an ounce...
By the end I had about 16 F1s and five or six better carp, and I thought I had probably 50 lb. Chris said he had caught only five more fish after that good first hour, and that Eddie on peg 6 had just three fish late on, on a feeder cast to the left of his island. The water at my end of that bit of the lake is definitely deeper than the other end, which probably accounts for why I caught fish.
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| One of my smaller F1s (the biggest one was camera-shy and leapt out of my hands). |
Round to me, Peter Harrison was top from peg 1 with 60 lb 2 oz. That's the peg where you can reach ohe old sunken island with a 14-metre pole, though I suspect that it's not much of a feature any more, and I have no idea whether Peter went out that far.
To my surprise my fish went 70 lb 11 oz and Chris was sure that would win. I asked him to take a photograph of my biggest F1, but it slipped out of my hands and went straight back. However I managed to hold a smaller specimen for the cameras. They are in super condition and fight like fury.
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| Some of these F1s in Decoy are now really big! |
33 lb 13 oz, and was happy enough as he was sure that would give him the section by default. Then I saw a big old F1 in his net and he obliliged me by holding on to it for a photograph. I certainly went well over 4 lb.
There were more weights of 30 lb-plus, but indeed I ended as winner, with Peter second. A good start for 2026, wouldn't you say?
Marks out of ten
I'll bring this section back because I made a special effort to do everything really carefully and correctly. So though I started on a 12 elastic I took the trouble to change to a lighter one (8-10) after losing the first big fish. That felt so much softer, and though I lost two more fish, which pulled off, I was very happy indeed with it. I also put on a size 16, as the bigger maggot covered more of the hook.
One red maggot and one pinkie made a nice change bait; but a single red didn't get a bite. That shows how important it can be to swap around if you're not getting bites.
Even more important was changing depth by a tiny amount - my best spell came when the bait was just off bottom - I got several fish then. If I didn't get a bite I would let it drift onto a tiny rise in the lake bed (to the left where it was fractionally shallower). The float would stop and started to pull down; I would lift it an inch; and a tiny amount more of the float would show as the bait was now just on the bottom. That was when I expected to get a bite, and lifting it another inch often induced one. Really nice fishing.
The one thing I perhaps should have done (but didn't) was to briefly try worm, bread, or a 4mm expander. So I think I was worth just 8/10, despite winning, as I obviously had the best peg.
Next match is Sunday - not sure of the lake as it depends how many turn up for the Open. But wherever it is we expect to catch fish now the first really cold spell is over.
THE RESULT




























