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far bank stalker

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Posts posted by far bank stalker

  1. hey. recently bought an 11ft 4-piece travel barbel rod from CFR. i got it second hand but in very good condition from ian at CFR. my intention was to use it for prawning and the occasional trip to shrewbury for barbel/chub fishing but i don't have the time to go fishing in shrews' or the patience for migrant game fishing so it burns me that my occasional rod is several degrees better than my everyday float rod. the rod is fitted with fuji reel seat and guides and was originally specc'd at just over £200. it would make a reallt nice rod in the right hands. if anyone has a harrison gti or a float rod of similar quality and interested please let me know, thanks

  2. i went to the Dee and targeted grayling. got two brownies first, one wild and one stocked, which got a tap on the head and smoked. taken to returning the wild ones regardless of size. one small grayling which i got to the net then it got off. grrr! still i saw it!. going after roach this eve down the canal. yay!

  3. personally i would either fish to an undercut bank or an underwater feature. all the stuff i learnt about course fishing seems to work across the board and fish holding spots invariably hold fish regardless. i don't think game fish are aware of their status and so don't seem to mind hanging out in the same spots as course fish.....erm maybe though they just like slumming it every now and then

  4. In the spirit of exam season:

     

    The largest fish are the most difficult to catch.

     

    Discuss.

     

    Rich

    just for the sake of it if the swim has been prepared properly and your fishing for fish that shoal then catching the biggest one in the shoal should be quite easy as they will be competing and the biggest usually win, it's the big solitary fish that are hard to catch.

     

    i would add that what i know about carp fishing could be written on a pin head and the same for commercials too, so what i think may have zero application

  5. if the fish is as large as the line spool suggests then it's a weird shape for a roach, our local ones, like perch tend to have arching spines behind the head once they get over a pound or so, if that makes sense, like....the line between the head and tail is kind of smooth and un-interupted on yours

     

    without reading all the other threads it's also kind of silver orange, rather than silver blue. i'm certain i've had two roach/bream hybrids in the past few months

  6. Thanks guys, some interesting suggestions.

    The obvious one to try would be deadbaiting, and no lack of small roach to supply the bait. Will definitely give that a try.

    Also baitfishing with prawn appeals although I would be surprised not to get carped. less likely than with a worm though.

    Lastly drop shotting. Sounds intriguing. The lake as far as I know is pretty shallow, I don't know if that would make a difference. There is also very little structure to fish to, apart from lakeside trees.

    I have always thought of dropshotting as a vertical style of fishing under the rod tip which would be pretty limiting, but how about using a drop shot technique and plastic bait with a pole?

    I am going to the lake this evening and will start off with the deadbait idea. :)

    just out of interest do carp respond in the same way as perch to the release of worm amino, caused by chopping? carp are a totally foreign experience to me

  7. In a word slugs very few anglers I have met want to handle or chop up slugs or snails and even fewer can do it without feeling sick - woosies - they are just slimy worms...hehehe and I will add I never said all anglers...I have never had a Carp take on slugs and small Roach are not keen on them - chopped up for loose feed work very well, and far more natural for river fish than prawns or shrimps although chopped up crayfish is also a good perch bait.

     

    EDIT:

    Easier to use scissors than a knife for slugs. What do you expect people act strangely delicate when I suggest liquidising worms or maggots or mice.

    END EDIT:

    hmmmm i used a slug once for chub, it was indeed vile and spewed like flouro green gunk all over me.

  8. If you're fishing this weekend, it's worth noting that just about every region of the EA appears to to saying that they're having a rod licence blitz.

    hmmm, would that be the glorious collection of human leeches and parasites we call our government trying to claw in every last penny from the working man as they slowly drag the country down into it's world of selfish greed?

     

    the question was rhetorical. bet they won't be in any 'put & take' fisheries, just canal and lake banks. not that you could accused the swine and effluent that make up the current government of being biased in any way

  9. I have been invited to fish a 5 acre lake which, I am reliably informed, contains some very decent perch, It also contains lots of carp in the 5-10lb range (with a few quite a bit bigger) and a myriad smallish roach, I would like to fish for the perch so need advice on tactics, baits and carp avoidance :)

    I am not allowed to livebait and I don't really lure fish these days as the sciatica prevents me from doing it comfortably.

    Float fishing or feeder fishing are the options. baitwise, maggots are available, but expensive and poor quality and worms such as dendros and lobs ditto.

    The lake is short on features with little or no weed and no reeds. There is a small island and in some areas trees overhanging and drooping into the water.

    OK, over to the experts ;)

    erm, havent read the other posts, but i would use either chopped worm, worms that are chopped, or little bits of worm that have been cut into pieces, for perch or chub. but thats just me

     

    have just got some 'Predator plus' but i haven't really tried it yet. have had some luck with 'bloodworm dna, amino complex'

     

    also, i'm sure you know this but catching bigger perch is often more about the spot chosen than bait used (thanks to other members for that pearl of wisdom!)

  10. i dont know how it works these days, angling has become some horrendous marketing opportunity, but back in the 'good old days' (thats the 80's for me!) i would have taken a guess that if it's under a bridge carrying a public road then there's a good chance it's E.A. owned and therefore fishable with a standard rod licence. certainly there are a few rivers i see on the train to work in exactly the same circumstances and i intend to fish them. as long as you have your rod licence with you just give it a go. the worst that can happen is that you could be told off and frankly so what

    erm, i would add that if you do get told off best to never fish it again without permission. thats a good way to explore though

  11. Every time I drive along the a60 over the Soar it makes me want to fish it, the narrow river looking really enticing. Here is a link to multimap - the bit I am on about is just south of this location, where the main road crosses the river.

     

    map

     

    Anyone know who owns the rights?

    i dont know how it works these days, angling has become some horrendous marketing opportunity, but back in the 'good old days' (thats the 80's for me!) i would have taken a guess that if it's under a bridge carrying a public road then there's a good chance it's E.A. owned and therefore fishable with a standard rod licence. certainly there are a few rivers i see on the train to work in exactly the same circumstances and i intend to fish them. as long as you have your rod licence with you just give it a go. the worst that can happen is that you could be told off and frankly so what

  12. last autumn i decided i'd try cake crumb as ground bait and asked here if it was any good. gave it a try yesterday and this is what i think. it's too dense and greasy to be used on its own so i mixed it with bread crumb and a touch of caramel brasem which seemed to fit the theme. when i put the first balls in i noticed that the breadcrumb clouds and the cake crumb sinks, which to my mind makes a good combination and i would guess that the cake crumb acts as a holding bait like hemp seed. obviously now the water is warmer i reckon that the oilyness is good and carries a sugary, buttery flavour

     

    the best thing for me though was that unless i'm mistaken it pulled in the roach, which when i'm fishing the canal is what i'm trying to do, and getting through the dace is not easy.

     

    anyway, if your lucky enough to have a girlfriend or friend that makes a lot of cakes then i would definitely give it a run as an additive to your usual ground bait

     

    p.s. the cake need to be broken into small pieces then dried for about a week till it's crispy then blended down to crumb

  13. Hi

     

    I hope somebody will be able to help....

     

    I live in Boxmoor and just wondered if there were any places near Hemel Hempstead where I would be able to fish for a day or so and rent the equipment to do so? The reason being, my father, who moved to El Salvador 25 years ago, is visiting the UK in June/July this year. He used to be an enthusiastic fisherman and we both used to be members at Westbrook Mere, but when he left the UK I lost my fishing buddy and gave up the sport. It would really make his visit if we could get a days fishing in. Catching anything would just be a bonus!

     

    Please let me know if anyone can help. Much appreciated!

    i don't know about hiring equipment but to be honest it's so cheap these days you could probably buy a rig or even two for very little, who knows you may enjoy yourself and want to do it again! as for venues, you have the gade running through the park in boxmoor, opposite the fishery inn and down a bit, the stretch on the other side, toward apsley has had me wondering for awhile now, i reckon maybe it holds some good fish.

     

    if you don't fancy the undergrowth and cow poo you should try the same river in casio' park in watford. tend to get quite a few other anglers there and if i remember it's on a day ticket. if you know watford at all you can access the gade for free in quite a few places and it holds good fish (or at least did!). the canal in hemel, especially around the lakes in kings langley used to hold massive carp, and there used to be a famously large pike by the fishery inn that outfoxed everyone for years, but i don't know how it is these days.

     

    the other venue that spring to mind is tring resi's. i watched a heron there eat about a 5lb tench. not a pretty sight!

     

    anyway the river season will be open when you want to go so good luck

  14. anyone watch NatureWatch on BBC2? really good program featuring Goshawks, accompanied by some interesting research and data.

     

    the story goes that Goshawks where first off revered by the nobility, for their grace and hunting prowess and like all of our native hunters they flourished. then along bumbled the industrial revolution, the land enclosures act (thats the one where the business/political elite stole your inheritance, your birthrights to the land) and with them industrialised farming. farmers, in a quite uncharacteristic move, decide to just kill all the Goshawks because they felt they're a pest. by the turn of the twentieth century they're virtually extinct. then the first world war does for a massive percentage of the male population of Britain, the land is not used as intensively and the Goshawks start to make a recovery.

     

    cut to today. goshawks exist in Britain only in a few remote mountainous regions. this confused naturalists, because in every single other european country where a similar thing happened Goshawks have made an amazing recovery. they inhabit cities and parks as well as their natural habitats. in Holland they can regularly be seen in the big cities (my dad once saw one take a kitten!) so what was different here? why such a pathetic recovery limited to so few places, all remote and mountainous? there is only one answer, no conjecture just one solid reason. in this country as soon as newly mature juveniles move down from the highlands to the lowland, as they do elsewhere they are killed by a hardcore of gamekeepers who are involved specifically with the rearing of pheasant. this is the reason that whilst Goshawks have flourished in europe here they're still pretty much endangered.

     

    i don't expect this to be popular. but it is an illustration. my last two rants where based around water abstraction to feed 'put & take' trout fisheries, and how that is is in effect poaching an entire river system from those who have a right to enjoy it for commercial gain. this is just another example of those who tell us so boldly that they are the rightful 'Husbands' of our land are in fact little but low-end rapists, who steal it from us for forever for short term gain

     

    i would reiterate that i have no dreadlocks, don't smell (too much) have a dog, but never on a string, have never tried to re-align my karmic balance by chanting a mantra about beans in a retreat in totnes or anything else of that nature. i am a passionate angler, and have no qualms about hunting for food. i just hate the way our country has been turned into a big pound note machine by fat greedy whores

  15. It's been years since I have caught one they used to be very numerous on a number of waters around me and would often turn up with mixed catches with Gudgeon. They seem to like a gravel or hard bottom.

    actually after it had recovered the first thing it did was swim off to and hug a rock

  16. Plenty of the little perishers in the Macclesfield Canal! I find it's pointless using worm on the hook unless it's at least twice as long as the biggest ruffe in there. But then the signal crays will eventually tear it to bits anyway. :rolleyes:

     

    Love the reel, btw - Rapidex/Flick 'em Perfection? :)

    yes indeed. the exterior, was ratty when i got it but the actual movement was mint, with no wobble at all! i ran i in. very lucky ebay purchase

  17. the picture i've linked here is of the hardest to catch fish i've ever caught. I ignored the staying in a swim for twenty minutes and kept running through a spot where i couldn't tell if i was getting a bite or catching bottom. after about an hour i was convinced i'd got it wrong and was about to give up when i caught this.

     

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/brigand_doom/.../in/photostream

     

    My favorite catch of the year so far. If i had to guess i would say it was a Bullshead, but i thought they disappeared around the same time as the Gudgeon. Funnily enough i had a wild brown trout from the same stretch of the shrops union a couple of weeks earlier

  18. two possibles here ,shot spacing or not stopping the cast (niffty thumb work)

     

     

     

     

    two possibles here ,shot spacing or not stopping the cast (niffty thumb work) *

     

     

     

     

     

    ???????? don't get this last bit about the bottom weight (dropper / tele tale ?) out at this time of year ?????

     

     

    * shot spacing will effect how the lighter hooklink will behave .if your dropper shot is just below half distance from a bulk shotting patten too the hook under little resistance the hook shouldn't swing up and catch on the bulk shots ,if the cast is braked correctly ,you should be appling thumb pressure too the spools rim too brake it just as the tackle nears the water ,(same as feathering the line when waggler fishing) the bulk will shoot forwards then the dropper shot then the hook all straitning out as it lands on the water .this will happen to more or lesser degree according too how you time the braking action.(does'nt matter how you cast ,the princable is the same)

    fish won't bite if i don't use a hooklength. the few times ive broken off on the bottom, forgotten my chameleon line and had to fish straight through it's killed the session there and then. also, though i guess it's just from my fumblings later in the year i sometimes fish a touch more over depth with no sinker so that the bait can move up and down a bit in the flow. to be honest i'm a total novice. i only started fishing again last year and when i did fish before i only ever used a centrepin once. i think i need to practice slowing the line down. i have been doing it via the line in my left hand

  19. Wondering if anybody has ever had the same problem i'm having. Started out doing a modified Wallis cast and i can cast a fair distance but i just get the same tangle, which is the bottom weight whips up and tangles my hooklength with either the float or the bulk shot (stopped using buttons for anything but rod tip stuff)

     

    now i've settled with a standard Wallis cast, i think, where i bring my left arm in as the rod loads and the float goes out and although i can't cast quite as far it works out about 90% of the time, still usually at a critical moment the same thing happens. pretty sure its because the hooklength is so much more flexible than the mainline but they're evenly matched i think ( 3.2lb/2lb)?

     

    the only way i can think of to stop it are either to stop using a hooklength (never!) or stop using the bottom weight, which is out at this time of year and if i remember from last year not guaranteed to work either. anyway any help gratefully received....

  20. not much to say here but that red worms are really good! if you haven't used them before they're quite hard to find, i had two choices after being told to use them last year, dig in big manure piles where they can be found at the bottom which is the traditional method or source them on the nintonet. they're not so easy to find and i'm not trying to advertise but they are there and despite being smaller than all the other worms generally on offer they seem to pick out the big fish

  21. What do you consider to be a brace of fish?

     

    I know it is two fish but how about when thay are caught.

     

    When talking of a big brace if you are doing a weeks session and catch one fish on Sunday and one on friday is this a brace.

     

    I would venture to say that a brace should be caught in the same session within 24 hours of each other.

     

    What do you think?

    unless i've missed my mark Brace is a shooting term which generally gets used by a certain type who probably think of themselves as 'Game hunters'. the perfect Brace being a male and female. I fish for game around now and am guilty of calling my favorite swims my beats but the people who catch braces of stuff look at me in horror, stumbling along with a float rod, smelly jeans, trainers and polarised glasses, i must look some kind of low end celebrity fallen on really hard times, maybe living in the woods and fishing for food?

     

    loving the 'brace of Cod' remark....i may get an airgun, just so i can bag a brace of rats

  22. A 'rolling' leger with worm, is another choice you have.

     

    John.

    ah thanks, i'll look into that. i think my cane rod will be ok for bottom fishing. erm...is that what matt hayes is always doing? rolling a bait into the creases for chub?

  23. Check your local byelaws carefully !

    This from the Wales section of the above sticky:

    ummm....i think i may have illegally caught a trout! i put it back though! i only used maggot once because i had some knocking around and no worms the day i purchased my ticket. i'm allowed to trott on my section though for definite, a fair few club members that i've seen on the bank carry both a fly rig and a trotting rig. its the only stretch of the Dee as far as i know within wales. pretty sure it belonged to a working mans club once, or sumsuch.

     

    even if a float is not allowed though, free-lining a worm ( or 'garden fly' ) is good. a lot of fly waters allow the use of worms.

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