The forecast obviously turned some people off - high winds and rain - and just eight turned out for this JV match on Elm and Cedar. Well, yes, there were high winds, though not gale-force, and there was rain - but I had my umbrella up, so I was dry (ish). Here Hee. Not that any of that helped, 'cos I ended up with not a fish after five hours. And it did feel like mid-Winter.
Peg 13 is in the corner of Elm - there were four of us on this bank, and four on the same bank facing the opposite way - into Cedar lake. And yes, it was cold. I fished a banjo feeder with a wafter for the first two hours with just three small liners, but to my left the Kendall Killer, Eddie McIlroy, was casting to a bed of reeds opppoite, where I had the majority of my fish two weeks ago when I won with 137 lb. And he was catching occasional fish...
The wind was Northerly, from my right, but while the ripple was going in that direction in the early pegs, it was going from left to right at our end. The end bank must have set it rolling over and set it churning back in a Southerly direction. Very strange.
My left margin, with a ripple from left to right. But you can see, in the distance the ripple at the other end, which was right to left. |
My right margin looked lovely, but produced nowt. |
Shaun in action - I peaked out from my umbrella to catch this one. |
Behind me, Shaun Coaten started on a feeder then changed to pole and I know he had three fish - probably F1s, with the first one foulhooked, I guess he was using corn. I spent the lst hour or so on a Method feeder, but never had another knock. And I was glad when I'd had enough!
I didn't see it. I was too concerned with getting everything together and trundling back to the van. We'd had rain on and off all day, everything was wet, and everybody was cold,. But there were fish caught - and Eddie won with ten for 66 lb, taken I think mainly on wafter. On Cedar Roy Whitwell had three on maggot on a feeder, and three on wafter for 46 lb 8 oz to win that lake.
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