Date fished 28/1/2018
I will start with the result and then describe the day, 2-1
to Ellis.
Ellis and I went to Cundal on the Swale again, to see if we
could avenge the New Year’s Day blank. The river had been high but was dropping
down and was still heavily coloured. We had planned a different trip, but the
conditions were not right so Mother Nature had us changing our plans and
visiting Cundal.
I would be fishing for Pike and Chub (Barbel, secretly) and
Ellis was going to have a couple of rods for Chub (Barbel, hopefully!) He was
also going to be trying his new Burts on the Oxbow lake, that he had recently
bought.
In preparation for the day, I had reviewed the deadbaits in the
freezer, ensured the worms in the boot of my car were happy and then made
cheese paste!
It was a first for me. I had never used or made cheese paste
before, but read many a good article regarding its potency on cold coloured
rivers for greedy chub. The paste looked
good and really did tick all the boxes in the “stinky” division.
We arrived at 8am and parked in the first field again, the
track was very wet and we did not want to get stuck. Immediately it was
different to our last trip, there was 3 other cars! We counted about 10 of us
fishing over the day, the most I have ever seen on any river trip!
We started on the Oxbow, Ellis chucking burts whilst I sat
behind Lamprey on one rod and worm on the other. No fish in the Oxbow wanted to
have their picture taken so we moved to the main river.
Fishing above the weir in a very likely looking area we both
went after Chub and Barbel. Ellis was first off the mark with a great slip in
his first swim. 1-0 to him. In terms of fishing, he had a couple cracking bites
but was unable to connect to the fish, chub assumed.
We continued up the river, chatting to the anglers and
trying likely looking swims. The current was strong, 5.5 ounces needed to hold
bottom. Here Ellis extended his lead slipping again in a new swim. 2-0 to him.
We settled in a section that had no cover on our bank, but
was thick with willows on the far bank. I was looking to present a cheese bait
close to the overhanging trees, unfortunately I slipped, falling straight on my
bum for 2-1, was this the come back?
As we fished here, a lot of debris came down the river,
noticeably a dead sheep. What caught my eye was how close to the overhanging
trees the sheep kept. I had thought the main flow would be in the centre of the
river, but the sheep stayed in a near straight line directly under the trees.
Is this watercraft I thought? Is this me learning where on a river the flow
goes, and where the fish may be waiting for food? Or did I just bang my head?
Further up the river we met an angler who was wearing a life
jacket and had a boat strap securing him to a peg in the ground. Discussing
this with him, his friend had fallen in last season and been fortunate enough
to be grabbed before he drifted too far or became too waterlogged. There have
been several articles regarding this in Angler’s Mail recently and it certainly
got us thinking about safety on these slippery banks at this time of year.
We walked most of the stretch and found some nice looking
swims. Due to scaling down of the tackle, I had to make do with equipment I found or made. I found a whole packet of shot and then had to make my own rod rest, or should this be a bank stick?!
Finally settling in a couple towards the end of the day that appeared
perfect. Sat on my hands, watching the river flow past, it was a great end to
the day. I sat watching as my rod hooped over, the fish obviously liking my
cheese paste. Unfortunately my hands did not move, my brain did not register
and I watched the rod spring back to its position.
Approaching 1630 it was time to trudge back to the cars.
Both delighted to be going back to work the next day! (not)
Another great day on the bank, and as I said, it was 2-1 to
Ellis, now we need to decide if was I talking about bites or slips, or both?
Great write up Adam as usual. Very entertaining.
ReplyDeleteA self-inflating life jacket when on your own is another good option, I managed to flip a boat a few winters back and the jacket inflated before my head went under, a good investment!
ReplyDelete