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I have always
enjoyed travelling as well as angling, and in recent years have tried to
combine the two. I have fished in Northern Australia three or four times
mainly for Barramundi, Giant Trevally, Mangrove Jack and Queenfish with some
success, also in the Tasmanian High-lands for Trout with less success!. A
couple of year's ago I visited Southern Africa for the first time, fishing &
game viewing in Botswana, Namibia & Zimbabwe. Here I managed to catch
Tiger-fish, several spices of Bream (nothing like ours) and Catfish, but
nothing very large, a 25-30lb Bronze Shark from Australia being my best
effort. But all that was about to change!
I
had been looking at trying my hand at Nile Perch, after a guide at a lodge
in Namibia showed me an article about a place called Merchison Falls in
Uganda. The article told of how an angler fishing at the bottom of the Falls
had hooked something so big that it spooled him of 400 meters of 40lb line!!
So I thought I would give it a try! I managed to get in contact with a tour
operator in Entebbe, and was looking to travel in September/October of this
year, hoping to tie-up with another group of angler's. But about five weeks
ago the agents in Entebbe e-mailed me to say that a travel company in the UK
(Tailor Made Holidays) where looking at The Sesse Island's in Lake Victoria
& Murchison Falls on the White Nile as a new venue, they said they needed a
couple of angler's to make up the party, and that it would be headed by "Go
Fishing's" John Wilson. So I jumped at the chance!
We meet up at
Terminal One at Heathrow on the evening of March 9th for our over night
flight too Entebbe. The anglers were John Wilson (TV presenter & author),
Christine Slater (Head of Tailor Made), Bob Norman, (A well travelled
angler), Dave Huckle (Writer & angler) and Myself. After an 8 hour flight we
were met at the airport by Paul & Jane Goldrin owners of G & C Tours who
were our hosts while we were in Uganda, after a quick get to know you
session and some tea & coffee at a local hotel we set off on the 35 mile
boat trip across the lake to The Sesse Islands.
The
journey took around an hour and a half as the lake was rather rough after an
early morning thunder storm. After a light lunch we set off on our first
session on the lake, John & Christine fished together, I fished with Bob,
and Dave, who had fished the lake before set off in a canoe by himself. The
method used is trolling large lures between 50 to 70 meters behind the boat
at a depth of 5 to 6 meters, we used "up-tide" style rods and multiplier
reels loaded with 30lb reel line to a 100lb trace. My first Perch was around
12lbs, I was very pleased, Paul who was steering the boat said that it was a
minnow, an hour an a half later he was to be proved right! Bob was the next
to hook-up, he got into very large fish, which after around ten minutes
managed to free itself from the three set's of trebles, when he reeled in
Bob's lure only had two sets left, as the rear hooks had been ripped clean
out of the back, and one of the front set had been straightened out! I then
caught a fish of around 4lb, okay that is a minnow! Then it was Bob's turn
again, he struck into another huge Perch, unfortunately with the same
result, after ten minutes or so the hooks gave way. We were fishing with
three rods, Bob and I holding a rod each, and the other rod in a holder,
this rod got the next hit, and it was my turn to strike it. The fish had
taken around 5 to 6 meters of line off the reel when I struck, it just kept
on going 50 meters, 100 meters heading for 150 meters, this is when Paul
decided to manoeuvre the boat closer to the fish, so we slowly closed the
distance between boat and fish to around 80 meters, while I kept as tight a
line to the Perch as I could. Twenty minutes into the fight we got our first
sight of the fish, it got it's head and shoulders out of the water about 70
meters from the boat, it was then that we realised how big this Perch was.
After another 15 minutes of pumping and winding I got the fish to the boat,
but it still had a lot of fight in it, another 10 minutes of the fish
circling the boat, and of me trying to keep the line away from the twin
props, as the Perch constantly tried to dive under the boat. But at last the
fish came up and lay on its side, I gasped when I saw it, the fish was over
five and half feet long! It took both Paul & I to lift it into the boat,
while Bob took some photos. We decided to go to a near by island to weight
it and take some more photos, luckily there were some local fishermen on the
island who gave us a hand with the Perch. We weighed it using a sling, the
gaff poll and three locals to lift it!, the poll bent as the Perch was
lifted clear of the water and the scales settled on 143lb!! I had never seen
a fish that big, let alone thought I would be able to catch one! After an
attempt at some photos (we could not lift the fish clear of the water) we
then revived the Perch and released it.
Over
the next few days I managed I catch another 20 or so Perch, one between
50lb-60lb another just on 50lb,five or six fish between 30lb-40lb another
four or five to 20lb-30lb and the rest from 4lb-20lb, not a bad total for
three days fishing, as you can see from these photos.! John, Christine, Bob
and Dave also caught Perch between 20lb-80lb.
We then left Lake
Victoria to go to Murchison Falls on the White Nile, this had been the part
of the trip I had been most looking forward to, but unfortunately I caught a
stomach bug on the day we arrived, which put me out of action for a couple
of days. I did manage to fish for a day and a half, but only caught some
small fish, which was a shame as the location is truly awesome.
John Wilson is doing
a piece on this trip in his column in The Daily Express on Friday 7th
April, and he should have a centre page feature in The Angling Times
sometime soon.
If you are
interested in doing something similar to this trip, Tailor Made Holidays
have a wide range of Safari/Angling trips available many of which are
escorted by John Wilson. I would highly recommend them as John Wilson was
great fun, both angling and in the evenings with travel and fishing
stories.
Bryan Garnett |