Friday 22 March 2024

4 Stillwaters 4 Targets 1 Week

 Well it's the stillwater season if there is such a thing so rather than wait for things to warm up I've decided to have a crack at a few ponds and the canal, as ever my targets were modest but a little different this time trying to get the following fish.

  • Quality roach 
  • Any tench of any size
  • A chub from the canal
  • A big perch

1. Roach on the club pond 

It was off the club pond first up on Saturday, the weather was fairly warm to start with but I was glad to keep the winter wear on as the day got colder. The fishing was sporadic although I got enough bites to have a good day.  Fishing an antenna float which took a couple of no1's most the bites were on the drop with dead maggots working well.

I wanted roach and I got them and good ones too, only a couple of bream interlopers broke the roach monopoly but I wasn't worried, these roach were full of early season strength and vigour and were pushing a pound, there's naturally one that's bigger and although I didn't weigh it I know it passed the pound mark by a few ounces, target achieved, quality roach ticked off.



2. Early Season Tench

A couple of days later I'm down the little tench pond even if I suspected it's a touch early there's still a chance right?  Wrong, the tench didn't play ball at all. I stuck at it for a few hours but even the huge hordes of rudd and roach were finicky. I managed sporadic bursts of roach with a few rudd and skimmers so it wasn't a disaster,.

I had also fed my favourite perch swim on the carp pool next door, a masterstroke of pre planning and pre baiting. So in the afternoon I'm off round there only to find the one angler in the whole area sat in it. I had to laugh at that as I knew that was a possibility. 

I did manage a carp in another spot off the top on dead maggots which was a laugh, despite being cloudy and fairly chilly by now many of the carp could be seen in the upper layers. Dead maggots are fairly buoyant, a float set very shallow and a boil on the surface was the precursor to a good bend in the rod, a small carp of around 3lb was more than welcome. 

I returned to the tench pool but could barely buy a bite now, it was getting colder and a bit bitter so I called it a day, two other anglers there hadn't caught any either but It was a day out nonetheless and a bit of fun.


3. Chasing Chub Down The Canal



Calling the canal at this time of year a stillwater is pushing it a bit, as you can see it was flowing rather well. I was convinced I would find some chub as being local I have decent knowledge of where they are. Ok I'm being a smarty pants, I knew where they were as I saw them the day before whilst walking down the cut. This time I was walking down with the gear and I soon clocked them again in a slightly different area accompanied by some bream also on the surface.

Setting up along the bank a bit as not to disturb the shoal of chub seemed to take an age, naturally they drifted right in front of me, I fed some maggots discreetly so as not to spook them although some did, others however took a few offerings instantly so confidence grew.

However the towpath got busy and the chub got cagey, some fish passed through every now and then looking spooked and the shoal seemed to split, the bream tempted a few casts but they were not interested in maggots then an early boat came through which wasn't ideal. I knew these chub move and sure enough they were gone from the area completely.

It took a bit of walking back and forth to relocate the shoal and they had moved quite a way down the cut, I repeated the process of feeding and soon get a response as my shallow waggler gets ripped under, I battle it to the middle away from snags yet it somehow finds something solid down the track. All manner of objects get thrown in here and the line is grating horribly on one of them, fish and I part company, it wasn't a good start but I knew it was one of those things.

Consoled by the fact I had done nothing wrong I quickly recast only to have the first 'Little old Lady' encounter of the day, she was being walked by her dog Betty. Pleasant though she was she managed to stand right behind me, blocking cyclists and the like on an ever busying towpath, her dog did whatever it wanted and in the process those chub moved out of sight, for good.

With the old lady still standing there as Betty the dog decided to do a sit down protest I opted to move to another chub spot I know. By now the canal had coloured up with the boats so I cast to a known area after a bit of loose feeding. The float goes under and I was conscious of this swim being even more snaggy, this time I was more fortunate and the chub target was achieved.


I then lost another, the hook bent slightly, a losing ratio of 2 to 1 was not good so with no further bites off I went to do some traditional wag n mag fishing for roach.

By now I was regretting walking from my house in chest waders* and heavy jacket, the sun was out, It was cooking and so was I. Worse still I couldn't get a bite which was weird, all the silt was floating up as it was so warm, at times there was even a weird smell, this gave the canal a spring time appearance, but that floating silt always makes things feel a bit strange. The fish were in a funny spring mood so I went back to the chub swim hoping for one more.

* Chest waders are a good hack when fishing somewhere busy, overlooked with no bushes etc, with the aid of an old bottle with a wide neck you can well you, know go without being seen so to speak. Just don't muddle it up with your drinking bottle.

So I'm back in the chub swim in wall to wall sun and the jacket is off as it's now t-shirt weather, a couple of bleak feed on the drop but still no roach or perch, then another chub obliges to take the tally to a more respectable ratio, a beautiful canal chub lay before me gloriously in the sun.


On another day I would have had 10lb of chub so all in all a pretty decent day out and mission achieved to get a couple. If anything it was too warm down the canal, how weird does that sound? As I walked off a kingfisher zoomed under a graffiti adorned bridge and I made my way home.


4. A Mix Back At The Pond

I wanted some more of that roach action whilst at the same time knowing there was as good a chance of a tench or big perch here as anywhere. Trying a different spot to the weekend I managed to pick an area where three herons were all battling each other in a wonderful display of low flying at close quarters, here one perched on the bridge next to my swim.


The fishing started slow which wasn't surprising given the aeronautics which was at a rod length at times, I had to look up in awe each time one of these prehistoric looking birds glided by so close, so it was only when they calmed down that the fishing got going.

By feeding quite a bit (certainly compared to others) I got the fish feeding both on the drop and on the deck. The roach fishing once again was quality with around 3 fish to a pound on average but none quite the size of the fish I had earlier in the week. There was more variety in this spot though as the first brown goldfish of the year put in an appearance, a lovely fish which was ever so strong.


During a spell where the sun came out two rather large swans came over to make things hard, However a strange drinking routine preceded a bit of jiggy jiggy before they made the heart shape with their necks, I marvelled at this whilst at the same time reaching for the camera, too late of course, but the way their spray lit up in the sun, the sheer white of these birds and the ballet of their courtship will live long in the memory. It was spring and what a show.

A few bream snotted up the line like they do, like most of the roach all caught on the drop, this small hybrid was all covered in tubercles, also getting ready for some action, hybrids are not supposed to breed well but this one will give it a good go I reckon.


A couple of rudd appeared, almost as if to show these bream and roach how on the drop feeding is done, little bars of gold on a spring day.


By now the fish were fizzing on the bottom and my bait was there make no mistake. I suspected they were good roach as they can cause small patches of pin prick bubbles and this was proved as many more followed, although I was also starting to pick up more perch, like little balls they were as so fat. I hoped for a larger one or a tench but they didn't show.

It was a great day though, I watched the other seven anglers most of whom arrived after and left before me, they got just 10 fish between them and most were using the same bait as me, by feeding each cast I was on six times as much by the time I had run out of maggots, getting through the best part of a pint, 46 quality roach, 10 perch, 5 bream plus a couple of rudd and goldfish. The others hardly fed anything, why?

No tench or big perch but it'll do. Over the four trips I had 8 species and well over 100 fish in total, two targets achieved and it was nice to get some chub and such fine roach fishing. What was noticeable was how much they were taking on the drop and how on a variety of waters the larger fish were in the upper layers even on cloudy days. 

The wildlife on show was fantastic and the fishing was pretty decent on the whole, there's no wonder we as anglers can spend endless hours by a bit of water, setting little targets often reveals much larger rewards and they are really the true prizes on offer on days like these.

Sunday 10 March 2024

River Severn March 2024

 So it was time again for another winter day trip up the Severn hoping to replicate the success of February last year, a few chub would do me nicely although I knew It would be much harder. A fairly strong easterly was already in place and heavy showers forecast later meant that it could be 'one of those days' but hey I was willing to find out.

The water was fining down but still pushing through at 1.1m on the local gauge, almost twice what you would call perfect for trotting but fishable as far as I was concerned, plus a decent colour.

Naturally the spot where I did well at last year was taken but also the two little holes below it, plus most of the other good spots for that matter, both banks had plenty of anglers on them making the most of the last weekend of the season. I soldiered on as the steam train whistled along the opposite bank, while sheep and their lambs greeted me with a chorus of bleats as I walked through sodden fields. It was already worth the long drive for there was far worse places to be right then.

The first swim available was one that offered more boil than flow and wasn't working for me after half an hour so I moved between two trees in a tiny spot that was a bit of a suicide swim. Here I had two waterlogged bushes either side and a precarious short trot close in. It looked perfect for chub but whether I'd get one in would be another matter, it was a test however that I was about to take.

So my stick finally goes under with an unmissable bite and it all goes solid, the head shakes and it's game on, It's not bottom after all and clearly a chub. Trying to tire it in the flow without either bush coming into play was more fortune than skill, this chub would have owned me in similar confines on a tiny stream but on larger rivers they are easier to get in, don't ask me why. So after doing the hard bit of coaxing, the bullying came into play as it finally saw snags to head for, it had a go at the upstream one but my nerve held as well as my fine line and a good chub between 4-5lb was netted. 

You don't want to lose that first fish, it may be the only one plus I knew the float would ping off and find one of those bushes causing double the pain, but it didn't and now everything was just perfect, I didn't care if it would be the only fish of the day or one of many like this time of year can offer. The trip was justified, the scenery gorgeous and the bad weather was just about holding off. 

Here's my little swim, one where I've done well in the summer for barbel but it's sure getting smaller each year, the photo doesn't do it justice and I fear it will soon be overgrown completely.

I persisted here for more chub given that a wander would see more anglers than swims but nothing else showed. Plenty of creatures great and small came to see me, from a whole variety of birds to curious playful lambs, this big old bee looked like it had woken up a touch early, sitting all lazy on a twig. I wondered if I would be sitting all lazy in a good spot If I had done similar this morning.

I stopped for lunch and heard the steam train coming back, after a couple of diesels there's no mistaking that chug and whistle although it seems to echo down the valley for miles. I sat there munching on my lunch with the camera ready hoping the engine would be facing the right way, as they never look right the other way round. I wasn't disappointed, I waved back at the people on the train like I sometimes do when having a fun day not realising an angler was walking back on the far bank, In hindsight I probably shouldn't have shouted Choo Choo! 

Getting back to the fishing for another serious bit of trotting saw me bump a really good bite, no excuses and a bit annoying as bites for some reason were once in a blue moon. I had to wait an age before the float dipped again, this time the first dace of the day was swung to hand.

It was super slow so I had to have a wander up and down, stretch the legs and see what's going down, trying a few iffy looking swims along the way. As ever the anglers I did converse with were more than friendly, offering insight to what wasn't being caught today so I was in good company in struggling. I had a good laugh with one local who's spirit was indefatigable despite blanking, jokingly asking him If he'd seen my twin brother go by after walking back past him for the third time.

The farmer came to feed the sheep behind me, the noise a hundred or so sheep make when it's feeding time is quite a rumble, as I walked along I watched all the ewes and lambs running after the tractor drowning out it's engine noise with ease, they are much louder than the diesel but not as loud as the steam train I concluded.

I managed a couple more dace and a few minnow on my wanders but It was a case of one bite in a less than ideal swim then nothing, it was a strange old day for sure, there were a lot of two rod anglers with heavy leads but I doubt if fish like the dace were tackle shy, I still managed a nice one though.

So that was more or less it for the day and perhaps the season, I'd fished it hard and by now had enough to not stay until dark, with the only other spots open to the wind and a long drive ahead it was time to go home. My early chub had saved they day and I was right to play it like a demon and delight in the result at the time.  I think I could have picked around 30 rivers where I would have done better in such conditions, I probably crossed many but often it's that adventure rather than the achievement that keep you coming back for more.