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Stuart Wright

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Posts posted by Stuart Wright

  1. Afternoon all,

     

    The first eel session only produced bream and tench, but the conditions weren't ideal so I'm not too concerned.

     

    Ended up fishing the JS rig on one rod and float fished on a second in the margin with a night light insert. Both fish fell to the float rod!

     

    Will keep you posted on progress.

     

    Stu

  2. Great stuff Budgie, thanks for all the tips and pointers - very much appreciated.

     

    I hear what you're saying about the float fishing, but I spend so much time sat behind alarms when after other species, I thought I might be able to get away with something a bit different here. Maybe not! We'll see.

     

    Had already tied a few rigs using Quicksilver, just in case I fancied putting out a second sleeper rod, so I'm sorted there.

     

    I will be sure to keep you posted on how I get on and will most likely come back with a few more questions after my first session on Saturday night! :)

     

    Cheers,

     

    Stu

  3. I will be fishing an old estate lake, which has a population of some nice narrow head eels, so the plan is to fish with worm and dead maggot. It produced fish of 5lb+ last year during the middle of the day to tench fishermen, so I'm quietly optimistic about catching a couple over the next few months.

     

    If I decide to go down the float fishing route (nobody has deterred me yet) then I will only be fishing one rod, but if someone can convince me that fishing with two rods and alarms will be more effective (for reasons other than just supposedly doubling my chances!) then I will somewhat reluctantly take that approach - I spend enough time behind alarms when fishing for other species! :)

     

    Based on what I've read, the 'no resistance' theme seemed to still be very much current. I must have been looking in the wrong places (just forum threads and online articles I could find)! :rolleyes: Any pointers?

     

    Thanks for your help.

  4. Read up a bit more on the resistance thing Stuart

     

    I have been reading up, Budgie, hence my questions. In fact my questions are the direct result of things I have read up on and can't quite get my head around.

     

    Have you ever float fished for eels? Are there advantages to the traditional eel rigs other than reducing resistance that I have failed to appreciate?

     

    Thanks.

  5. Afternoon all,

     

    I'm planning on doing some serious eel fishing shortly, which will be my first real concerted effort to catch them intentionally, so I'm a complete novice.

     

    I have caught loads of eels over the years unintentionally using all sorts of tactics, ranging from float fished bread to bolt-rigged luncheon meat, so, in my mind at least, there are plenty of options for how I approach fishing for them (well, maybe not bread! :D ).

     

    Anyway, to cut to the chase, I have been doing my reading and appreciate how little eels like to feel resistance. However, my first reaction to resistance-free fishing is either free-lining or float fishing, yet I can find nothing on either of these techniques being used for eel fishing? I'm assuming there must be a good reason? Can anyone enlighten me? Crucians hate resistance but you wouldn't find anyone using a JS rig or a Dyson rig for them would you? Eel rigs just strike me as being unnecessarily complicated. However, I'm not going to presume that I know better than all those eel angers out there who have infinitely more experience than me, so please free free to put me on the straight and narrow! :)

     

    Thanks in advance,

     

    Stu

  6. Interesting to hear a few people confirming the accuracy of this scale.

     

    Personally, I have caught so many chub of so many different shapes and sizes, ranging from short fat fish from the Dorset Stour to long lean fish from the Cherwell, that I would feel uncomfortable using such a scale. Also, length wouldn't take into account the seasonal variation in weight - you could catch the same fish (measuring the same length) in Autumn and then again in Spring and it wouldn't weigh the same.

     

    For the reasons above, I've never measured the length of fish I've caught, so can't provide any facts or figures, but I may well start doing so this season.

     

    Would be interested to hear so more thoughts on this.

     

    Stu

  7. Posted with Eltons permission

     

    1. Do you own a IPhone or a Smartphone?

    2. Do you plane to get an IPhone or a Smartphone in the next 6 months?

    3. Would you find this app useful?

    4. Would you pay for this app?

    5. If so what would be a reasonable price - 59p, 99p, £1.50, £1.99, £2.99.

    6. Preferred fishing - coarse fishing / fly fishing.

    7. other comments?

     

    Thank you Elton for allowing this thread and a great thanks to all the members for your input.

     

    Hi,

     

    First of all, good idea!

     

    HOWEVER, many of the questions you ask sound like the basis for some very early market research, which, if you're launching next week, could well be too late. It sounds like you're trying to establish if there's a market for the product after you've already developed it?

     

    Anyway, for what it's worth here are my answers:

     

    1. Yes

    2. N/A

    3. Maybe, but most people tend to know where they're going fishing before setting off.

    4. No, I'm afraid I probably wouldn't pay for it (sorry). Actually, maybe I would cough up 59p! :)

    5. N/A

    6. Course fishing

    7. See above!

     

    Best of luck,

     

    Stu

     

    Edit: Just noticed on your website that one of the features is also the location of tackle shops. This would be very useful if fishing further afield in an unfamiliar area, so I would definitely now spend 59p! (last of the big spenders).

     

    How about having a diary type feature where you could enter fishing notes, catch reports etc and attribute them to any particular venue you've fished?

  8. With all those Pits scattered around Oxford some must hold some monster still water Chub for something a bit different and after the monsters you had out of the Thames it would be an interesting comparison .

    Whitebait small fish deads in the margins after dark or at dawn would be my guess as long as the Pike don't prove to be a pain ,gotta be some biggys in some of those Pits ,maybe a sleeper rod in the margin anyway at the right pit good luck whatever you go for Steve.

     

    Brilliant - two replies and both suggesting species I hadn't even considered!

     

    Chub is an interesting one. We all know that chub do well once they get into the pits, and if you combine that with the very good stamp of chub in the Thames around Oxford(shire), it makes for a potentially exciting combination!

     

    Has anyone caught any chub from any pits around Oxfordshire?

     

    Now my brain is ticking over faster than it has at any other point during the day... It hasn't been the most productive of days! :D :D

  9. Easy realy. One of those undisclosed pits (if you know where they are) with huge roach in.

     

    Ah roach! I hadn't even considered roach! Have always done all of my roach fishing on the rivers, so have never targeted them on the pits. Maybe now would be a good time to start... :)

     

    I know where some of the undisclosed pits are, although I don't have the money to fish some of them!! :rolleyes:

     

    Although I know of day ticket waters that hold good fish...

  10. Afternoon all.

     

    As is usually the case on a Friday afternoon, I’m sat in the office pondering the weekend’s fishing. However, I’ve been struck by an almighty case of indecisiveness/ lack of inspiration with regards to what to fish for and where! I often find this happens at this time of the year after the rivers have closed but we’re all still waiting for the weather to warm up.

     

    I have the ‘green light’ for a 24hr session starting Sunday morning before flying off on holiday on Monday afternoon (couldn’t believe my luck! :D ), so I don’t want to waste what will be my last session for a couple of weeks.

     

    So, I guess the question is what would you fish for in my position?

     

    Stu

     

    P.S. I live just outside of Oxford, so am virtually surrounded by water/ options, which I think is what’s compounding my indecision! :rolleyes:

  11. This the same water that gets a name-check in rudd chapter of CTI? Called John Barnes' lake in the book?

     

    C.

     

    As you know, I've not read the book, but it certainly sounds like the same place.

     

    Having said that, it's definitely not the same water as that seen in the footage.

  12. A bit hit and miss I know, but a friend had a couple of whopping great rudd from the Thames last winter - the biggest was just under 3lb!

     

    I wish you luck in your rudd quest. It is a worthy challenge. If you're prepared to travel, check out both Frensham ponds on the FAS ticket.

     

    I've only just got to grips with consistently catching good chub from the Thames, so targeting rudd would really be setting myself a challenge! :lol::lol:

     

    I suspect that my willingness to travel down to Frensham will increase as the summer progresses! :rolleyes:

     

    Thanks for the tips.

  13. I know where he had the 9lb tench on the pin - PM me if you want to know. Be warned though, it doesn't normally look that peaceful!

     

    Those huge rudd were something else. I wouldn't be surprised if that place is very private. There are some big rudd in the tench lake though - I've had them accidentally on mini boilies while tench fishing (up to a pound and a quarter) and on summer evenings you can see little shoals of big rudd feeding on the fly life (while 3oz leads rain down :rolleyes: ).

     

    Evening Anderoo.

     

    I'm familar with the 'beautifully tranquil' lake that the tench came from and had heard that it contained some decent Rudd too, but thanks very much for your willingness to share.

     

    Rusty, I've watched the DVDs but not read the book, which is something I hope to put right in the near future.

     

    It was interesting to read in one of the posts above about the three day session of feeding, waiting and watching before the Rudd action arrived, although I'm not surprised. Didn't the whole series take four years to film in total?

     

    I had a walk around Barnes Lake this afternoon, which looked very nice indeed and is another water that has been added to the 'Rudd list'! :)

     

    Stu

  14. Okay, so I've just done the google search on 'Andrew's Lagoon' and haven't been able to find anything. Is anyone familiar with this water or know this water by another name? (Hopefully this isn't just an embarrassing inability to effectively use a search engine!)

  15. I know this is a massive long shot, so I won't be holding my breath, but does anyone know (and are willing to share) the venue where Martin Bowler caught the Rudd in Catching the Impossible?

     

    A specimen Rudd is going to be one of my targets for the summer, and I am trying to build a picture of potential venues.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Stu

  16. Hi Nicholas.

     

    Where about on the Avon through Malmesbury were you having a go for the roach? I was over there the other weekend and had a nice bag topped off by this fish... Not quite the 2lber I was after, but a lovely fish all the same.

     

    DSC07725.jpg

     

    If you're local, you might recognise the stretch I was fishing? Definitely worth having a go down there!

     

    Stu

  17. Just back from an awesome chubbing session on the Kennet. 50lb of fish in 2½hrs on trotted maggot - 6 chub over 4lb - biggest below had the needle settling just the right side of 6lb. Even had a surprise barbel!

     

    6-0Chub536x357.jpg

     

    FrostyBarbel.jpg

     

     

    :D

     

    C.

     

    Great catch Chris, especially with what looks like a fairly heavy frost on the ground! And a bonus barbel too.

  18. Wow! Fantastic result! Got any pics?

     

    I'm still a Thames chub newbie - got any tips on location (not which stretches of the river you fish, more what kind of things to look for)? I would assume flow is more important than cover? Do you catch in the dark?

     

    I'm far from an expert, but I generally look for a nice feature that creates a diversion in the flow, whether it be a set of snags, a protrusion or recess in a reed bed or just the course of the river - nothing special.

     

    As for flow versus cover, I like to be greedy and try to find spots that offer reasonable flow AND cover! I know that sounds unhelpful, but it's the truth! Having said that, I would definitely say that flow is more important than cover.

     

    Both fish have fallen to a nice juicy lob presented alongside chopped work in the feeder, which might set your mind at ease if you'd still like to catch a big perch before the end of the season!!!

     

    As for darkness, I have been finishing work in Oxford at 5.30 and fishing until 7.30 and both of these latest fish have come at dusk. I do catch in the dark, but dusk is definitely prime time in my experience.

     

    Sorry if none of that was particularly helpful!

     

    Good luck,

     

    Stu

  19. I was planning to do a bit of roach fishing on the upper Bristol Avon on Sunday, but have just checked the weather and it has forecast heavy snow all day with 35mph NE winds!!!! Not exactly conducive to the sedate winter roach session I was hoping for! Strangely though, temperatures are still forecast to reach 7 degrees...

     

    So now I don’t know where to go or what to fish for... Any ideas/ inspiration would be most welcome! :)

  20. Not sure if its any help, but something I have done in the past when I have forgotten my spods is to use large, solid PVA bags (as suggested above). However, rather than using them in conjunction with a spod, I attached the bag to a large lead on a 3ft length of mono beneath a marker float. The heavier the lead the better, as this allows the PVA bag to sink to the required depth before melting.

     

    I was using maggots and wanted a 'spread' rather than 'piles' of maggots, and although I couldn't see the lake bed, my results on that occassion seemed to suggest it worked!

     

    I know this would be an expensive approach, but I'm sure you could look into bulk buying PVA, which might help to bring cost down a little??

  21. Yes I have, it would be very interesting to swap notes!

     

    More than happy to swap notes, Rich, although to be honest I don't have a great deal to share at this stage. I only started fishing there last year and although I managed to get amongst the fish, I didn't take anything of a particularly special size. In fact, I was a little concerned by how regularly I was making contact with the smaller bream. I'm sure it doesn't have the same potential as years ago, but I'm always optimistic that it might throw up a surprise. :)

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