Jump to content

Tigger

Members
  • Posts

    5955
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    181

Posts posted by Tigger

  1. 1 hour ago, The Flying Tench said:

    Your catches demonstrate that float is best, certainly on your river, but my problem is seeing the float even with the hopefully-very-visible ones I bought recently! But I'm interested in what you say about freelining. Does this involve having maybe one swan shot on the line, where you can allow the bait to trundle through the swim, ie a semi-moving bait?

    I haven't met anglers on the Thames who float-fish for chub, but several people have said they don't use a feeder cos they think the chub can feel the resistance.  So they cast the line, with just one or two swan shot, into the flow and wait to see where it settles, I think on the basis that that is where other food will settle also.

    Have I got the right end of the stick about how you freeline?

     

    Yes John, I think you have the right idea, although, I catty feed out as though i'm float fishing if using a hook full of maggots or corn etc.  You can fold a piece of line over your mainline and add or remove shot to it as and when you feel the need.  I use a shot on the line as a stop on my main line, to sort of make a hooklength and fish straight through with 6lb line.  You can lengthen or shorten your hooklength simply by moving the shot up or down the line.  As an alternative to a shot on the mainline you could use float stops/leger stops if you wanted.  You cou,d attatch your link via a couple of leger stops also.  There are several or more ways of setting up the rig, all ultra simple.

    • Like 1
  2. 3 hours ago, The Flying Tench said:

    Ian, I see that even in bad conditions and a deep swim you fished float. Is that always the case, or do conditions sometimes mean you resort to feeder and big baits? I ask of course with reference to my local Thames where my success with the chub is limited to say the least!

     

    If I can I always try to float fish John, I just enjoy it more and it is a much more sensitive way of fishing.  I think you miss a lot more fish if legerring also.  I know most people leger the swim where I fished yesterday, and i'm not lowing my own trumpet, but they seldom catch a chub on a leger, they usually catch dace or barbel.  The chub are a bit clued up as that spot is hammered!

    I usually try to stick to bunches of maggots, 13 or more on a 14's drennan superspade hook.  Often i'll remove several maggs  and squash two pieces of corn on, they seem to like a cocktail.

    I very rarely leger and if I do leger I have found I get better results if freelining a bait.  

     

  3. Narrh, i've got a 14ft sphere waggler rod 😉.

    The spliced tip is nice though, and I think it'll be sound for barbel.  I did get a barbel of around 10lb with it when I first got it and it coped well enough, although that was a small river and they just don't fight anything like as hard in small rivers.

    • Like 1
  4. I had literally an hour on the river today before "rain stopped play" ☹.

    I was aware there may be some light showers, but there was no mention of windswept heavy freakin rain!

    Anyhow, I winkled a couple of chub out of a slow 10ft swim.  I took a pic of the second one which was the smaller of the two.

    I used the browning sphere 13ft 6inch rod again today and it is growing on me a lot!

    IMG-1153

    • Like 2
  5. 12 hours ago, The Flying Tench said:

    I used to tie them using an old hook tier I had, but it wasn't a Matchman. Maybe I should get one and have a go? Do you do it at home or on the bank?

    The Drennan Sweetcorn range provide a reasonably fine barbless eyed hook. I can't understand why it's so hard to get similar barbed ones. Maybe I'll hear from someone that there is something out there.

     

    Just a heads up, tying hooks is much earier in broad daylight than in the house with electric lights.  It makes a huge difference to me.  Might be worth you trying it outside in the garden just to see if that helps you see fiddly things better.

    • Like 1
  6. 34 minutes ago, Martin56 said:

    Don't beat ya' sen up about the big Grayling Ian. They do like Crocodile death rolls with that big Dorsal & once hooked, maybe a blunt hook is irrelevant, since it would be now on the hook bend??

    Maybe too many maggots cushioned the hook + Barbless didn't help?? & they have a soft mouth!!

     

    I was being gung'ho with it Martin, it was hugging the bottom until I got it right up to the bank and I just bent the rod into it to get it to the surface.  The hook was a drennan super spade which is barbed (I never used barbless hooks) but it had lost it's point.  I knew I should have changed it but was just too lazy lol.

    I strike like a panther , so even if a maggot is masking the hook I still rattle the hook home into the fish....if the hook isn't blunted as that one was.

    The grayling looked every bit as big as the biggest chub which was over 3lb, but, who knows, it might have been hollow lol.

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  7. Fished 2pm until 4pm today.  A distinct drop in temp's and atmosphere from last weeks trotting session.  There was a nasty biting wind blowing downstream which wasn't good, but the bright sun cast an awful glare on the waters surface which proved to be far worse than the cold wind!

    Anyhow, I manged to land six chub and one grayling, lost two more fish that I thought were chub to hook pulls through a crappy blunt hook.  Also lost a huge grayling at the net because I thought it was a chub and dragged it up from the bottom as I got it infront of me....darn it, should have changed that poxy hook!

    IMG-1146

     

    IMG-1147

    IMG-1152

     

    • Like 1
  8. 8 hours ago, The Flying Tench said:

    After 25 years my trusty Shimano Exage 2500 RA reel has packed up. Or more strictly I bust it up when taking it apart for cleaning, and couldn't put it together again!

    It's been a good reel, so I'd like to replace it with something similar, but the range seems to be discontinued and I can't work out which of the current Shimano reels is the equivalent. Can anyone advise? I think you'd call it a match reel, but I'm not sure. I use it for general ledgering and float fishing for roach, perch chub etc

    John

    You could sent it to fieldrine and have it put together.

    Failing that, there are a number of nice reels to replace it with.  You could look on ebay for another like your old one...

    https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Shimano-Exage-4000-RA-Spinning-Reel-/313749254486?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&_trksid=p2349624.m46890.l6249&mkrid=710-127635-2958-0

     

    Ok, thats a 4000 size, but would still be geeod to use, prolly better than you 2500 for legering.

    There are some others on ebay, 2500 which looms a bit naff to me, and a 1000 size which is proly to small.

    What to suggest to you depends on how much coin your prepared to spend John?

  9. I had a few hours out on the river today, river was up a couple of feet and so that banjaxed any thoughts ofwading in my thigh waders. I know of places where I can fish off the bank and there I headed, about a mile each way!

    Anyhow, I used a 13ft inch browning sphere spliced tip rod which I haven't used since last november, no point having them if they don't get an airing at least once a year lol.  I used a Chris Lyhte float master SU on the rod, and both worked great together.

    I finnished up with ten or eleven chub, nothing huge but all decent ones, here's some of them...

    IMG-1138

     

    IMG-1144

     

    IMG-1143

    IMG-1141

     

    IMG-1140

     

    IMG-1139

     

    • Like 1
  10.  

    I decided to pop out to the river this afternoon to use up maggots left over from the last couple of trips. Anyhow, the conditions were quite grim, with strong winds, a rising river and heavy rain showers.

    Despite the conditions and walking a couple of miles I finally got lucky and dropped onto a shoal of chub.  I'm not even going to say how many chub I caught because it will soumd like I am telling porkies!

    Anyhow, here's a couple of pics of the stamp of the majority of the chub...

     

    IMG-1130

    IMG-1129

     

    IMG-1137

     

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 1
  11. I've had a few sessions recently, not many barbel but lots of quality chub!

    Fished on sunday just gone and had 26 chub ranging in size (guesses, couldn't be ar$ed to weigh them) from 3lb to over 6lbs.

    So at a guess, over 80lb of em.

    It was great fishing, hitting them at between 60 and 70 yards plus downstream

    I just took video clips and released them in the river where I stood so no pics of them.

    Here's a pic of a barbel I had to make up for no chub pics lol.

     

    DEB5-B0-A1-374-F-444-F-9624-F980453-E6451

     

     

    • Like 3
  12. 6 hours ago, The Flying Tench said:

    The word 'priming' occurs from time to time in articles on roach. It seems to be more or less synonymous with 'topping'. I take it to mean 'rolling', ie breaking the surface in a leisurely manner without jumping right out, though I could be wrong. Anyway, that's what I meant by it in my earlier post.

    So the general view tends to be against assuming too easily that bleak breaking the surface means they're trying to escape from a predator. Would I be right in thinking, though, that several bleak leaping at the same time is a sign? Or one bleak doing a series of little jumps?

    Ok, priming, you've taught me something John 👍.

    Regarding the bleak jumping in groups or singular, yes, maybe they were evading a predator.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We and our partners use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences, repeat visits and to show you personalised advertisements. By clicking “I Agree”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit Cookie Settings to provide a controlled consent.