Two weeks ago I sat shivering in a match on Willows, dressed in my normal Summer clothes. Blow me, this Sunday, complete with long Johns, thermal vest, thick lined shirt, sweat shirt, hoodie, smart new Decoy Lakes woolly hat, and Imax Winter jacket, when I'd got to my peg I had to take some of them off!
The weather at first looked like being coolish with not much wind (no Raspberry Ripple on my swim) but after about an hour it became almost perfect - overcast (and how!), but warm and windy (later very windy). The sort of day when, 50 years ago, I would have taken a day off my holidays to mog off down to the Relief Channel, behind the tractor factory at Downham Market, where there would be white horses on the surface, and with a bit of luck the bream or big roach would be feeding. The rougher it was the better it always was.
A nice-looking right margin - picture taken after we finished. |
So into the right margin, near the reeds, went about ten dead maggots, followed by my 0.5 gm rig, with 16 hook and two red maggots. I couldn't believe how deep the lake was here - I reckon it was almost eight feet - about ten inches less than the length of my top two. I gazed at the float as it sat there, with a tiny drift against the wind, realising that the rig was probably too light, and the elastic, a No 13, was also probably not heavy enough. Second drop and I could hardly believe my eyes when the float dipped. A strike and a sack of potatoes pulled the elastic out several metres.
Honestly, whatever it was on the end played with me for almost 15 minutes, after which the sack turned miraculously into he most beautiful golden mirror carp you have ever seen - about 10 lb. I found it difficult to net, as I'm not used to having an eight-foot rig to content with. Thank goodness for pullers. Then with it finally in the net, I thought I really ought to up the elastic.
I then got up to shake hands with my best friend, and wandered up to Roy Whitwelll, who had had three carp on a feeder. Mel had another fish or two and was beating both of us.
I soldiered on and eventually that heavier rig paid off, and in the next hour another barbel came in, and a big old F1, before I decided I simply had to follow Mel out to the open water, as he'd had another three carp. It looked as it he wasn't feeding anything. I started on 4mm expander over a little hemp with 4mm feed pellets and micros, at about eight metres, and sure enough the float seemed to disappear, The wind had now picked up and the tow was really pronounced, so I wondered if the 0.75 gm rig had caught on the bottom. No - it was a 10 lb carp.
Then a big fish snagged me in open water a few feet from the bank, and I had to pull for a break. I whipped another hook straight on, so the rig was now a few inches shorter. I also put that rig on a stronger elastic - orange bungee, which was much better in the wind.
Yet another one for Mel, all on cat meat, and I don't think he fed at all. |
I kept feeding and looking in my left margin, but the float never flickered. |
It was a bolo float, with a thick 4mm or 5mm diameter tip, but it sat perfectly still, albeit with a piece of the body showing, so it looked like the sort of buoy you'd tie a boat up to. Hmmm. Probably needs a bit of trimming down, I decided. But before I could bring the rig back the float shot down; the pole tip came up; the elastic stretched out; and a double-figire carp came in. Just like that! I'd cracked it! And I actually sort of had.
On went a No 3 Stotz to trim the float down, and I dropped it back out. Minutes later I landed a big F1, on cat meat. A glance at my watch showed six minutes left, so I dropped it out long again. Nothing. Two minutes later I brought it in and dropped it in the marginal swim. Nothing. A minute to go and I fed hemp and pellets out long, dropped the rig over it, and seconds later the float went down and the pole bent round. Seconds after that the match ended and I shouted "Fish On."
Three carp for 37 lb for Martin. |
Martin Parker next door then started shouting something to me - probably hadn't heard me shout. Now Martin has just aquired some top-line hearing aids - the sort you can adjust on you phone, and I guess he can, like me, answer his mobile without even touching it - the call goes straight throught to his hearing aids. You can adjust them for "In a restuarant", or "In noisy conversation". Wouldn't surprise me if he has a "Listen To The Fish Talking" mode on them. But later he told me he wasn't wearing them anyway - he'd got his old ones in.
The 3gm Spitfire Bolo float that got me out of jail. |
Roy Whitwell - second from peg 21 with 96 lb 4 oz. |
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