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Moggy

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Posts posted by Moggy

  1. Although they get caught during mild winter spells the best time is early spring.

    I would say mid April to the end of June is prime Tench time as they wake up and will feed on various baits of all sizes. I belive this is due to there not being enough natural food for them to eat as the water wakes up after its winter slumber.

    After June I have found they like to eat smaller baits ignoring big baits most of the time and put this down to the fact that there is more natural small sized food items for them to feed on.

     

    Strangely I have found tackle does not have to be fined down to much - just bait sizes!

     

    In the UK June used to be prime Tench time but only because of the old closed season preventing anglers fishing April, May and the start of June.

    Right...with you Rudd. Now I've heard it can be beneficial to pre-feed in the desired area for a few days. to get them concentrated a bit. I've caught a single (Very fine specimen) on worm here. my informant tells me that I can pre-feed with maize for example, for a few days and then present a maize/worm cocktail on the day. your thoughts?

  2. My club "Holstebro Omegns Fiskeforening" (Holstebro and District Angling Club) a 100 year+ old club in Jutland Denmark; have been setting out salmon and trout fry in enormous numbers in our river system over the past 8-9 years and it's really beginning to pay off! This year we had two particularly pride-producing results. well last year really, but the info has just come through for last year. The three largest salmon caught in all of Denmark were caught in our "main" river; Storaa...AND anglers were coming from Norway to fish OUR river! The largest was 20.1 kgs...that's the salmon, not the Norwegian! It's usually quite the reverse. So here's a health to the young men of the club that have untiringly tramped the banks of the streams and becks distributing our fry and making this happen. Last year it was 70,000 salmon fingerlings and a quater of a million fry brought up from stripped sea trout. skål!

  3. What a cracking bit of footage mate...thanks for having the presence of mind to get it on film! My fishing club has a hatchery (Seatrout/brownies) way out in the country here in Denmark and I encounter the resisident otters on a regular basis there, but they're nowhere as tame as that...they keep an 8-9 foot seperation zone...but they're just as curios as to what manner of beast just strolled into their territory!

  4. I know that there a few tench specialists on the forum and I am going to make a serious stab this year at cracking a virgin water over here in Denmark. I'm off soon to drag out a swim in the lakewith a view to getting started asap. When do you "tenchies" start your quest? Is it a matter of water temperature? This is a natural lake, quite shallow, well established weed beds, lots of big bream and other coarse species with the odd silver bounty drifting off course on their way up to the redds on the other side of the lake.

     

    Cheers, Jon

  5. Some good response guys (especially vagabond... thanks for that)

    The reason i keep asking nearly the same question is that i always ask it before i go fishing in kent.

    Last time i went i did some fishing on the pier down at neptunes using lug and had no luck, neither did any of the other fisherman next to me. I always go to the pier as it is always busy with fishermen so i presume it is good.............

    i am guessing not by now.

    Any more tips and stuff is great

    Thanks

    I've been a sea angler for many a year, fishing from beach, pier, rocks, boat in more countries than I care to remember and if there's a single thing that I've learned is that the only thing that's predictable about angling is it's totally unpredictability

     

    You can put yourself over the best mark with first class bait on the ideal tide and come home empty handed...or mis-cast on an unknown mark 25 yards into the surf, quickly reel in again and hook a 6lb bass on the retreive. This is the beauty of our sport!

     

    Enjoy being out in nature...doing what you love...in peace!

     

    And by the way...if you look again at the Hene Bay AA site you'll find that they do say that the cod are back in again!

     

    Get out there and do it!

  6. I will be going down to Herne Bay Kent and around that area around the easter period and all i want to do is catch a fish from the sea and eat it. mackerell is probably the easiest to catch so please tell me where to go and what to do to get em. Previously i have failed in catching sea fish so stuck to the river but would like to go again. I have pretty much all basic sea fishig gear and any help is useful.

    I just want to catch something pretty desperate and i want it from the shore.

    What will i catch in April and how will i catch it is the question.

    Any knowlage around Kent is very helpful so get replying.

    Any help is great.

    Thanks

    Chubfrenzy

    hopefully Seafishfrenzy soon :)

    Hiya mate...try this site...it's the Herne Bay Angling Association site, where you can read about what's being caught where and no doubt you'll be able to contact the club for further advice. You could do worse than popping up to their clubhouse and chatting to some of the lads there. Otherwise...tackle/bait shops are often the centre of angling news...give it a try. There should be cod around just now if nothing else just now.

  7. I don't know if this subject has been broached elsewhere on A.N but I thought I'd put a feeler out here. It's now official that stocks off common eels are way down and the downward trend continues. This is not least because of the French hoovering up elvers in the Bay of Biscay as they make their way up to Northern European rivers, for export to China for HUGE sums per kilo.

     

    I'm sure that had this been one of the "sexy" species, anglers and fishery managers would be up in arms. In my river system alone we release half a million or more salmon/brown trout fingerlings every year and have succeeded in getting stocks back to where they were in the 50's.

     

    Whether or not it is one of our favourite quarries is neither here nor there, the issue here is one of keeping the balance of species in our rivers and not allowing crass exploitation of a species for monetary gain.

     

    Is it not time to apply pressure to the European Fisheries Commission (Or whatever it's called) into looking at this problem?

    Jon

  8. I live in Denmark aswell mate, that was caught from Riss Skov strand just north of Århus Havn.

     

    where do you fish?

    Hiya Peter..sorry...just got this...been offline for a while. I live in Holstebro...fish Storå, Vandkræft søen and the tributaries, and the west coast mainly....plus an odd put'n'take if I fancy bending the flyrod out of season

  9. That's great mate...your patience paid off! You'll catch bigger but the odds are you'll not forget that first one. I live in Denmark and we've stacks of sea trout over here, and I've had my fair share both from the sea/fjord and the river but I'll never forget the first one!

     

    A little tip...as soon as the fish jumps, drop your rod tip straight to the water. I regularly lost fish on the jump and an old hand gave me this tip and sure enough, it worked. And as Worms said...you want to try catching 'em on fly...guaranteed to put some jelly into your knees!

  10. Sounds fab. Have heard of double figure fish there, were any that big? :D

    I didn't land anything above 6-7 lb but there were some that would definitely sneak over the 10 mark. Odd thing was that there wasn't much under the 3-4 lb mark...no tiddlers at all.

  11. Now that is interesting. A friend has had large mullet from the South coast of Brittany, did you spot any on that side?

    Yep...Brest had a fair few and our trip took us all the way down to Lorient...there were mullet all the way...not only large shoals...large individuals too! Took my canal tackle and took a fair few on bread flake...what a gas! lost more than I landed but the ones I landed were in fine fettle and "gifted" to locals who took them with pleasure! Many an Armagnac was earned that way.

  12. I've used my Hardy 8-9 when (Unsuccessfully) fishing for mullet here in Denmark. In my local harbour. I've always figured that if I'm to have a chance of having some sort of control over these muscular monsters, a 4-5 might be a disadvantage. But never having connected with one yet, this is but theory!

     

    When I was sailing Brittany a few years ago, I did observe large shoals of fair-sized fish cruising the harbours, notably in St Malo Yacht harbour, depite a group of our beret-wearing cousins casting lies decorated with 9-10 triples, "ripping" for them.

  13. Sorry to contradict Ken...Denmark's record salmon was a little bigger weighing in at 26.5 kgs caught by D C Dinesen, Easter 1954. It fell to a devon spinner on Skjernaa (River Skjern) Here's a picture of it...

     

    http://www.7days.dk/fishing/droemmefisk/fisk/dinesen.htm

     

    But this is certainly the largest one caught for a heck of a long time and quite by chance it was caught on my local river...Storaaen. It was caught about 10 kilometres upstream from where I have a shack by the river so who knows how close to catching it I've been!

     

    Since the 20.1 kg one another one, a shade lighter has been caught! Again not far away from me. My club has spent thousands of pounds and volunteered uncountable hours in getting the fish stocks back to where they where in the 50's, with massive restocking programs among other things Coincidentally, I sent in an article some time ago which Elton kindly published. Anyone interested can find it in "Miscellaneous Articles" title: "Viking Trials and Tribulations"

    Cheers...Jon

  14. Hi moggy ,,,,,,theres a scotties in newport (capital,, ;) & the other one is in the sandown backroads ,,,,,,,,,dead easy to find though with the free book ,,,,,,,,

    Good luck ......rich

    Thanks Rich...that's good inside info! Been researching the species available...WOW! Also...found out that a member of the family that I'm visiting owns Totland pier just up from the Needles...interesting!

  15. Hiya OT...On my own river (NW Denmark) there's often hatches of yellow (Not sure if this is a mayfly at all but it has the general characteristics) I tie vey simply with a yellow wool body, thickish yellow front hackle and hackletip wings and a few fibres of same for the tail from dyed feathers. Works a treat sometimes...one notable morning I took no less than four species on it...Rainbow, brownie, grayling and dace!

  16. They're not difficult to make Elton. Make the frame from hardwood...if there's any curve in the deck then make a cardboard template and apply that to the frame...cut and sand to fit. For the top you can use either plexiglass if you need the light or marine ply if not. There are all sorts of fixtures you can use to hold it down, but these can often be found second-hand at the local boatyard. Do use brass or stainless...anything less will inevitably rust.

  17. Hi all!

    A young friend of mine is moving onto the island (Near Freshwater Bay) in a few weeks and though he's never wielded a a rod before, he's interested in giving it a go. I understand that there are tons of good marks on the coast, and I've promised to research it for him. Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks

    Moggy

  18. That's something else we have in common then OT...well...I actually own two...but they're both at my ex's flat and both for sale. Listen to a lot of radio when I'm indoors though...4 for the serious stuff and 7 for the humour and drama. Just as entertaining as the idiot box if not more so, and you can get on with other stuff while being entertained. I'm actually just in the throes of routing a couple of speakers into the hobby room which is adjacent to the kitchen so that I can listen more otr less wherever I am in the flat!

     

    I've just found one on the net...I can see how that'd work! I know a chap that's into his carp-fishing now that I think about it...I throw him a mail and see if he's got a spare. Thanks again for the help.

  19. I've never fished with them, though I have tied them. Quite honestly the best thing to do with a quill is cut the end off and bake it in hot sand for about 15 seconds. Then it is ready to make a pen from! Sealing the cut end is always a problem.

     

    As for daddy legs two things. First find a tame carp fisherman, sneak up on him, (not difficult they are a rather sedentary bunch) and steal his latched boilie needle. They are great for knotting pheasant tail fibres. The other simpler method is to but a full feather ready knotted. The last one I bought only cost about a fiver and lasted me a couple of years. (I was tying commercially then).

     

    It is quite amazing how they train the pheasants to do this. Such a waste though, as, for the feather to be of any use, it must be "harvested" before the bird drops it. Discarded feathers are of little use in fly tying. Once the bird has knotted all the fibres its curtains for it, or should I say the pot.

     

    Cheers

    OT

    Right...knowing nought about carp fisherman or boilies, I don't know what that bit of kit looks like! But I'll find out. This is yet another arguement fror getting myself a nimble fingered oriental wife!

     

    That pheasant deserves a place in the book "Restaurant at the End of the Universe, by the way!

     

    Cheers...Moggy

  20. Have you tried using the quill body, OT? Am I wasting my time as Alan suggests? It's just that; if there's one thing I've plenty of, it's quill-ends! One successful "fly" I have made using a sturdy goose pen quill was a Quill Popper from Hugh Falkus' book on seatrout. But I'm getting the feeling that if it was an ideal solution, there'd be a lot more patterns with quill bodies!

     

    The chenille body looks excellent by the way...I'll give that a shot. I always have problems knotting the legs though...any advice there?

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