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You may have read
my two previous articles on Nile Perch fishing in Uganda and my Zambezi
Safari earlier this year. This piece is about one of our own waters, London
Colney. It may not hold fish the size of Nile Perch and you wont see herds
of Elephant and Hippo grazing on its banks, or watch 12ft crocs basking on
sand bars, but it has always been one of my favourite waters, along with
the river Loddon at Twyford.
London Colney was
the first water I fished when I joined BADAC along with my father back in
the season of 68/69. I was 13 then and, at the time, there was a long
waiting list to get into the Barnet Club. The late Bill Humphries proposed
my father and I, and we were over the moon when we were accepted into the
club that season. Before joining Barnet I had learnt my fishing at the local
ponds and lakes, such as the Brewery Pond on Hadley Green, Jacks Lake and
Totteridge Long Ponds, along with most of the local boys at that time,
catching small roach, perch and occasionally a nice tench or carp.
But when I first
fished Colney, I was faced with a much bigger challenge. The water was so
much larger, and in most places deeper than the ones I had fished before.
The first few seasons I found it hard going and only had limited success
with the roach and perch. But after a time I got to know the water better
and learnt where the bream would shoal up in the big pit. This I found out
one September, a couple of seasons after joining. I was fishing in the small
pit with my father and only catching the odd roach, so we decided to move
onto the big pit, and ledger the deep water, just using simple maggot &
bread flake as bait and we both got into a large shoal of bream, all around
the 2lb-3lb mark, fish after fish. By the time we finished, we must have
caught around 30lb-40lb each in four hours or so. The next three months I
spent every weekend fishing three or four swims along that stretch usually
with the same results, and occasionally with a couple of good tench as well.
I thought I had worked out where these bream would be most of the time, so
when the next season came round I was back on the deep water stretch, only
to be very disappointed. The shoals of bream had seemed to vanish. I tried
the same three or four swims that had been so productive the season before
through June and early July, but with only some roach and the odd bream to
show for my efforts, so I decided to give those swims a rest until
mid-September and it worked. The bream were back, though my bags of fish
where not quite as large as the previous season.
That example of the
nature of London Colney is nearly 30 years old now, but things haven't
changed all that much,over the years I have had many memorable days on hot
swims, catching 30lb - 50lb bags of tench or bream only to return to the
same spot a few days later and to sit there for five hours without a bite!
Does that sound familiar to anyone? The latest example of this happened last
week. My start to the season had been okay with a couple of reasonable bags
of tench (8lb-9lb) and the odd crucian carp from the big pit, but nothing
special. The weather had been hot and muggy, and there was a chance of some
thundery rain, with this sort of weather I have usually found that the tench
feed well. So I decided to take a day of work, and make an early start, I
arrived at the water at around 4.30am, the main thundery rain had just
missed Colney, but conditions still looked promising. I chose one of my
favourite swims midway along the big pit, I float fished sweet corn on one
rod and bread flake on a ledger rig on the other, over a bed of trout
pellets & corn. The first few hours were a bit slow, only two fish, a 2lb
common carp and a 3lb tench, so I decided to bait up a back-up swim in the
small lake just in case. Another two hours passed by with just a couple of
missed bites, so I went to have a look at my reserve swim to see if any fish
had moved on to the ground bait. Just before I left, I threw out another
handful of pellet & corn. I then reeled in both rods and walk around to the
small pit. The swim I had baited up was showing signs of activity, clusters
of small bubbles were rising from above the pellets & corn, a sure sign that
some tench had found the bait. It was now decision time Should I move now or
stay in my first swim for a little longer? When I got back to my original
swim there was some tench activity as well, more bubbles! I decided to give
this swim three quarters of an hour longer and it worked. I recast both rods
and I was into a 3.5lb tench on my ledger almost immediately. I then lost a
carp of around 6lb on the float rod. It broke me off under a fallen willow.
But, after that set back, the tench just kept coming. At the end of the
session I had twelve tench between 2.5lb & 4.5lb and one carp. At a rough
estimate, a 40lb bag. Two days later I returned to the same spot the
conditions were about the same and I expect you have already guessed the
result…I blanked! Even the back-up swim failed, but that's LC for you. You
never quite know what mood it is going to be in. It is always a challenge.
I had intended to
end my article at this point, but I have fished London Colney twice more
since I started it and have had one good day which included a 6lb tench in a
14lb bag, and the second occasion was even more rewarding.
The weather was
still muggy and hot, with low cloud cover, and a forecast of rain to come
later in the day. I arrived at the water at 7.30, baited the swim, and set
up one ledger rod using a medium braided line. On the other, I used a float
rig fishing straight through on 4lb mono line, attached to a size 12 hook
baited with a single kernel of sweet corn. My first cast of the float rig
brought what looked like a typical roach bite. The float bobbed three or
four times before sliding under. I struck and the water erupted! Three bow
waves headed off in different directions, one with my line attached to it.
No roach then! The fish I had hooked headed out into the middle of the pit,
which was very lucky, as the swim I was fishing has plenty of snags. A
fallen willow on one side, a bank of reeds, and over hanging bushes in
front, and a dead tree on the far bank, all of which this fish ignored!
The clutch on my
reel kept giving line steadily. I had around 110 meters of main line and
then I was on to about 30 meters of backing. I just hoped that would be
enough! The fish took around 70 metres and then stopped and just cruised
about in the middle of the lake. I kept a steady pressure on the fish and,
luckily, it behaved itself. No more long runs, it just seemed happy to
circle around and around. After twenty minutes or so of this, it started to
blow clouds of bubbles. It looked like it was starting to see my side of the
argument and, slowly, I managed to gain line back onto the reel. I still
didn't want to get this fish in too quickly, with all the snags around and
only 4lb line. I knew that if it still had some fight left in it and it got
into one of the snags, it would be game over. Ten minutes later it was close
enough to net. I reached out, got the fish half into the net, but it wasn't
ready. It flipped out and, luckily, the hook hold was true. The fish headed
out to the middle again, but this time it only took about 25 metres of line
and in a few minutes it was ready to land. I slipped the net underneath the
fish and brought it safely onto the bank. It was a fine looking mirror carp
of around 20lb. I knew my set of scales would not be adequate for weighing
this fish, so after unhooking it, I placed it into my keepnet and went in
search of help. I found a carp angler fishing in the small pit, and he
kindly came round to my swim with a weighing sling and a good set of scales.
We placed the fish into the sling and checked the scales. They settled at
22lb 12oz, the sling weighed 2lbs, so 20lbs 12oz was the result.
He took some photos
of the fish for me, and then we released the carp, none the worse for its
little adventure. The rest of the session produced five tench, the best of
which was 3.5lbs, and a crucian of around 2lbs. As I said before, London
Colney can be unpredictable!
Tight Lines,
Bryan Garnett |