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gareths

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I caught my first Grayling on the Dove this morning - had 7 in all to about a pound and a half in the first hour of fishing :D

 

I was using legered maggot and quiver tipping but did find a few were quite deep hooked - any tips on avoiding deep hooking? I was hitting the first sign of any bites but it didnt seem to help - they were gorging on the maggots as nearly every fish had a few from loose feed in their throats.

 

Cheers

Steve

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I was using legered maggot and quiver tipping but did find a few were quite deep hooked

 

Big problem with feeder fishing for Grayling, large proportion of those that I catch on this method are deep hooked. Must be something to do with the way Grayling feed. I've not found any change in setup that helps to stop this, anyone got any suggestions.....apart from changing to a float :)

 

Only thing I do is to use barbless hooks to make unhooking easier, and make sure the fish is fully recovered before releasing it. In the past I've spent up to 20 minutes nursing Grayling before letting them go.

 

Paul

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Hi Paul, I was using barbless hooks too which helped a bit, I also tried shortening my hooklink down to about 7-8 inches but it didn't seem make any difference.

 

Oh well - looks like I'll have to dig out a few floats then :)

 

Cheers

Steve

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  • 4 years later...
And they can be of a 'fair size' too on the Itchen. My best ever haul on this lovely river was 17, 2lb+ fish in a day. Included in this was NINE 2lb fish caught right at the end of the day in CONSECUTIVE casts. In the end it was a bit like the Mr Castwell story - not quite sure if it was heaven or hell!!! - we certainly 'found the fish' that day. Still searching for that elusive 3lber however, my PB has been 'stuck' on 2lb 15oz for 4 seasons now!!! :D

 

Roll on the first frosts....

 

 

C.

hi,have you had your 3lber yet?
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Excellent stuff. I love it!!

 

"Winter Grayling" by Andy Macfarlane

 

"When I was a dedicated Trout angler I used to long for the season to commence once more. When the tension became all consuming I would head out to a water near Kilmacolm, somewhere between Glasgow and Greenock.

There is a fine little stream called the Gryffe in Kilmacolm and the winter Grayling fishing is second to none. The scenery is fairly hard to beat for a town not 15 minutes from Paisley.

This stream is quiet during the season for the most part so fishing during the Winter could be a lonely affair. Fair do's...I like things that way.

Armed with a fly-rod set up for light trotting and a 12 foot match rod rigged with the lightest of stick float set ups, I would head out over the frost bitten fields in search of some suitable runs.

The Gryffe is a fairly fast little stream that dips into dark, mysterious plunge pools and swings round corners and under bushes at a decent clip. As long as you fish the fastest bank or the middle of a run, you would always produce at least one of these fine looking ladies.

Maggots would be introduced to a run 2 or 3 at a time over 20 minutes or so whilst keeping well out of sight. Not one single cast would be had until I was satisfied the fish had the general feeding pattern worked out.

Fingerless gloves would help with casting and the dexterous touch required for lifting and lying the bait every couple of inches along the gravelly bottom.

Bites would be infuriatingly shy at first but as the continuous pattern of freebies ensued the bite rate would pick up. I have watched through sunglasses, the Grayling gathering from seemingly nowhere, to the top of the run, jostling for position in a competition to grab the best offerings.

Usually I would try to take as many fish from the bottom as possible using the trotting set up. A flick with a fast sinking fly line and 5 foot of 2 Lb break and 3 BB's was the order of the day. I would get the bait down quick and set the shot so as the lightest of lifts would set the bait on its downward journey again. Lowering the tip would see the maggots wiggling on the spot once more.

Grayling can be notoriously shy at times but once induced on a feeding frenzy, it is hard to see where this reputation comes from when their ability to jump on the hook one after the other in some sort of strange suicidal pact comes into play.

Don't get me wrong. All it takes is for one fish to see you or one noisily landed fish crashing around or for a boot to scrape the gravel at the side of the stream and they would retire to their hiding hole. Once there, it is very hard to tempt them back out and a journey home may seem like the best option.

It was quite possible on a good day to take 12 or so fish from the same pool over a couple of hours, that is, if you sat still long enough with your assets freezing.

When the fish were not willing to show themselves, the match rod would come out to play. Sometimes when the fishing was slow I would use the little clear Carp wagglers used for stillwater fishing as these offered very little resistance and coloured floats can spook fish all day long.

I would again feed the pool lightly, then drop the float straight down into the head of the run with a single maggot on a size 20 hook. More often than not the float would travel all the way to the bottom of the run before dipping confidently under the surface. This action could be performed again and again leading me to believe the Grayling were following the bait from somewhere further up the run. Maybe they wanted to inspect these freebies but gobbled them down once they realised they would disappear into the next patch of fast flowing water. I'm not sure but I couldn't see a dozen or so fish couped up at the tail end of the pool.

I always thought they fought rather elegantly. Hard and determined but without the erratic leaps and misdirected crashes that a hooked Brownie often displays. I think it is when the huge multicoloured dorsal fin stands up proudly in defiance and turns the fish side on into the current that shows the Grayling to be a wise and worthy contender. Even in the Winter they are quite able to string a fight out for what seems like an eternity.

I usually returned all the Grayling I captured but if the numbers reached the teens, a fish would definitely find its way to the dinner table. A fine eating fish I always thought but too rare in numbers to make a habit of.

I have not fished for Grayling in quite a while but all this talk of Winter has me buzzing again. Although I am now a Piker at heart, I find all that tea making a little demanding so the Grayling may see me creeping around again once more when the frost sets in.

Ahhhh....almost makes you look forward to less favourable weather........

 

.....THE END....."

 

 

 

Here's another trick for this time of year. Grayling love eating Trout eggs and they'll eat anything sweet, round and yellowish.

Get a couple of bags of frozen sweetcorn. These bags are pretty cheap so it won't break the bank.

Allow them to defrost and then blend most of the corn down to a loose mash, not too fine. Add a few squirts of Van Den Eynde Liquid Corn and use this too feed the swim you intend on casting at. Keep some of the frozen corn aside for loosefeed.

Fling a couple of handfuls in and sit back for 20 minutes before putting your bait at them. You could also offer a few freebies at this time.

Use the stuff from the tin for hookbait as it holds the hook a little better and tends to look shinier and more attractive

¤«Thʤ«PÔâ©H¤MëíTë®»¤

 

Click HERE for in-fighting, scrapping, name-calling, objectional and often explicit behaviour and cakes. Mind your tin-hat

 

Click HERE for Tench Fishing World forums

 

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"I envy not him that eats better meat than I do, nor him that is richer, or that wears better clothes than I do. I envy nobody but him, and him only, that catches more fish than I do"

...Izaac Walton...

 

"It looked a really nice swim betwixt weedbed and bank"

...Vagabond...

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Although i have caught Grayling from most of the well known grayling rivers in southern england it is the less known streams where grayling occasionally put in a appearance that mean the most to me.

 

Going back a couple of years i had six grayling in consecutive casts from the Windrush, but despite visiting the venue a few more times that winter no more turned up.More locally i have had the odd one from the Enbourne over the years and going back over 20 years a brace of pounders from the Pang.

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Although i have caught Grayling from most of the well known grayling rivers in southern england it is the less known streams where grayling occasionally put in a appearance that mean the most to me.

 

Going back a couple of years i had six grayling in consecutive casts from the Windrush, but despite visiting the venue a few more times that winter no more turned up.More locally i have had the odd one from the Enbourne over the years and going back over 20 years a brace of pounders from the Pang.

 

Wow, I didn't know there were grayling in the Windrush. What a nice surprise!

And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music

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