Tuesday 6 December 2011

Operation 'Roach'..phase one complete!

Yesterday all the hard work I have been putting in lately paid off. A session using feeder tactics saw me land a beautiful Roach of 1lb 4oz. Now in a water that seems to contain a gazillion Roach, many of them less than 8oz, that is quite an achievement. Over the last few weeks I have been wading through the hordes of small fish, applying a little prebait in between sessions, and the average size of fish I have been catching has slowly been creeping up. So far I have relied on the Pole, but yesterday the wind was just not conducive to this tactic, so with a little thought I came up with a plan that would hopefully work as well as the Pole has been. Fishing the same swim I have been focusing on, but from the opposite bank, ( the lake is fairly narrow here ), I used a small spod to apply a measured amount of Hemp to the area, and cast small maggot feeders over the top. I utilised a two rod approach and used 'speci' tactics using bite alarms and bobbins for bite indication. The day went well, with a reasonable stamp of fish falling to the tactic, and with one fish nudging the magical mark at 15oz I felt I was getting close. Mid afternoon, I hooked a fish that felt quite good, at first I thought I may have hooked a skimmer bream as the odd one had put in an appearance amongst the Roach, then I thought possibly a Perch as there was the odd jag and it seemed to be fighting quite hard for a bream...funny how I didn't allow myself the possibility that it might be a Roach....when it came up just below the surface, my heart skipped a beat, it was just in a another class compared to the fish I had been catching.  Safely in the net I knew I'd cracked the pound mark, the scales conforming it at 1lb 4oz, a good fish, not a 2lb'er, but a personal milestone in my quest, and a lovely fish. It showed that my persistance was working along with the approach, and that maybe, just maybe I may eventually get close to or actually achieve my goal.

For scale the reel is a '4000' size.

Thursday 1 December 2011

Roach sessions..

The quest continues for big Roach, 'big' being a pound or over as a realistic target. Persistance and adjustments in bait, feed and methods has seen the stamp of fish in the stillwater I am targeting go up recently, also a drop in temperature has probably helped in keeping the smaller fish at bay.
A couple of good sessions recently have boosted my enthusiasm to keep at it, some bonus Perch over a pound really stretched the elastic in my pole the other day and were great fun on such light tackle, and a couple of Roach of 10oz or so convinced me yesterday that I am on the right track and hopefully not too far away from achieving my goal. Today I was even more justified to be so confident as the stamp of fish was even better and I managed to creep close to the mark with a nice 14oz fish, that magical pound barrier is within sight, but once I achieve that, my task becomes even harder. I feel sure the water i'm fishing contains fish in the upper pound bracket and just might hold a two pounder, I know this because I have had them to 1lb 13oz from here before, plus I have caught some big Roach while fishing for Tench and Carp using meat for bait during the warmer weather, but of course the feeling of acievement wasn't there due to using tackle far too strong, and I like to catch particular species on my own terms using appropriate tackle and bait.
Appropriate tackle and bait in this instance is an 8 metre Whip, pole float, 3llb line and 2.5lb hooklink. Bait is hemp, maggot, corn and tares. You really do get the best from this species (Roach), by using a pole or Whip, I'm using a 1-5 elastic which to me seems just right and you get a great fight from even 4oz fish! anything over half a pound really gives a good account of itself, and they can really be appreciated on this tackle, so catching one of a pound or more will be a proper buzz! The Perch have already tested the gear to the max so i know what to expect from a decent Roach.
Looking forward to the next few sessions!


Sunday 13 November 2011

That's not a Roach!

Once again this week I have been focusing on the Roach in my local stillwater, the aim being to try and catch as many fish over a pound as I can and hopefully get somewhere near the two pound barrier....

I have been using tactics that I hoped would produce the goods for me, avoiding maggots I have stuck with larger hookbaits in the form of Corn and Tares, and using hemp as the feed, the idea being to fill up the smaller fish quickly with the seed and draw in the bigger fish. For precise presentation I have favoured the Pole, cupping in the feed accurately. So far although the stamp of fish I have been getting is certainly better than I would get on maggot, it is still falling woefully short of my target. Why this is I am not quite sure, maybe the water temperature is still a bit too warm to put the smaller fish out of the equasion, maybe I am fishing the wrong swims, or perhaps I have got my whole approach wrong...
Admittedly in the past all my bigger Roach have been caught in much colder temperatures and also on maggot although I have had to suffer many small fish as well alongside. We have experienced some very prolonged warm weather here the last few weeks, and only now has the wind switched to the North and temperatures are beginning to barely break double figures, ( we are yet to have a frost ), it will take the water a week or two to follow suit I would imagine, so maybe then things will change and I will start to get the results.

In the meantime I was reminded how you can land big fish on light, balanced tackle at the weekend, something I have been an advocate of for a while now. Although I am tartgeting Roach I am not using what would be termed 'ultra fine' tackle, sticking with 3.4lb line and a hollow elastic rated 5-8. Most matchmen would use hooklinks down to 1lb and elastics in the 1-3 range, but I am hoping for big Roach and I know that I will inevitably hook other species that are much larger such as Bream, Tench, and Carp, so I am erring on the side of caution and hoping I have the balance between enough finesse in the tackle and still retain the strength to deal with larger rogue specimens. This is exactly what happened in the last couple of sessions, one was a Carp of 9lb 12oz, and another one at around 8lb along with a Tench of 3lb plus. The Carp tested my tackle to the limits, but patience and not panicking ( just!), won through and I was able to play and land these fish on the light tackle despite there being snags nearby. I was very pleased actually, and It doesn't mean I am over gunned for the Roach, I still get a decent fight from fish of 1/2lb up, ok it's not the same tackle testing fight as Carp or Tench and you wouldn't expect it to be, unless the fish I was targeting ran to 3 or 4lb...I wish!

Thats not a Roach!


I'll keep plodding on for now as the Saltwater fishing opportunities are becoming fewer and far between now that the weather is closing in, and freshwater fishing is coming more to the fore for myself and my friends, hopefully there will be a river trip or two before christmas in search of Chub and Roach, and maybe as the temperatures drop the bigger Roach in my stillwater will begin to show.

Thats more like it, but still nowhere near the size I'm aiming for..

Sunday 30 October 2011

Roach revival

I fancied a change from the saltwater this weekend and so I made plans to fish for possibly my favourite coarse fish, Roach.

I have promised myself to try hard for a big one this year, by big I mean a pound or over as a realistic target, Hemp was bought and prepared and Tares and Corn would be the hook bait. Now I would normally use maggot as the hookbait but of course they are indiscriminate as to the size of fish they will catch, so rather than sit through the hordes of tiny 'blades' I am prepared to get less bites but hopefully pick up a better stamp of fish overall. Being a bit rusty my first session on the Pole went fairly well, and using the Corn and Tares for hookbaits definitely eliminated the 'eyes and tails', and for the most part all the fish were of a slightly better size. I have a few little tactical things to iron out regarding the use of the bigger hookbaits as I seemed to be bumping a good few fish and with some obviously better ones in amongst them it became a little frustrating, i'll have to experiment with the hooking arrangement and try to get some softer Tares but I am on the right track without doubt. Once again my eldest son accompanied me this weekend and he had a nice day catching silvers alongside me in the next swim.




Does any other fish epitomise Autumn more the the Roach?...

Tuesday 27 September 2011

Kid's stuff

So while the weather has been rubbish for any Saltwater fishing, I took the opportunity to take the rabble fishing..
I gave them the choice of what they wanted to fish for and of course naturally they chose Carp!
I took them alternately to a local water that is well stocked, where they could be guaranteed some action, more or less..these fish are no mugs despite the fact that they will feed readily so a little work was needed in order to ensure some sport.
Anyway in short they caught plenty enough to satisfy their craving and of course they're ruined now, I certainly wasn't catching fish as easily and in the numbers they are, when I was their age! Kid's eh? They don't know how lucky they are!

Short stuff doing their thing...





Tuesday 30 August 2011

Up to my old tricks...!

Well that came around a bit sooner than I thought! I seem to be taking an involuntary break from the Saltwater fishing at the moment, not that I mind though. The children have been nagging me forever to take them fishing, and as I have mentioned on my other blog I had promised to take them during the summer holidays and do some coarse fishing with them as what I do in the Salt really isn't suitable for them at the moment.
So thats what I have been doing and we have had some great fun and they thoroughly enjoyed themselves. In between the tutoring though I have been having a dabble of course, and bagging plenty of fish. I haven't been doing anything revolutionary or technical, just some simple float fishing tactics, with basic baits like pellet meat and corn. Knowing my local waters as I do makes things easy and plenty of Tench, Bream, Roach, Rudd and of course the occasional rogue Carp have all found their way into my net.


A nice mid double on the float

Tuesday 23 August 2011

Different strokes

My summer and winter fishing could not be two more different things. Fishing in the Salt during the summer can be hard work compared to the much tamer nature of Coarse fishing. Saltwater lure fishing is at times physically demanding, often there is a long hike or, a long steady paddle in the Kayak to reach our mark. Once we reach our spot quite frequently from the shore we will be wading which can involve several hours of holding yourself steady against tide, current, swell or all of these. The same can be said when fishing from the Kayak. Lure fishing is also an aspect of our sport where you are constantly casting and retrieving, using all of your concentration in trying to work the lure in the right way and attempting to find out what it is the fish want on any given day or night. My friends and I often joke about us having a 'winter' weight and a 'summer' one, because of all the extra excersise we get whilst pursuing the Bass and other species in the warmer weather!

Winter fishing by comparison gives us a rest, I am not saying Coarse anglers in general are lazy, far from it in fact as some anglers will also walk miles along rivers or around large gravel pits, I know I've done it myself at times, but most of my local coarse fishing is quite easy as far as that goes, being generally very small and intimate venues with only short walks from the car to reach a swim, so during the winter I would say fitness levels drop, ( what little I have! ), and the fishing is generally more relaxed and less intensive, even on the odd excursion to the mainland once the hard work of getting there and setting up is done, apart from day trips on the rivers, it is time to sit back, put the kettle on and relax! Even then when on day trips to the river we will take a break and have some lunch and a cuppa to compare notes on how the day is going, all very laid back and civilised...
So why not make it easy on myself and just Coarse fish all year and leave the hard work of Saltwater fishing to those more inclined towards such things? Well the truth is Summer Coarse fishing, for me, is well....rubbish! Living where I do on an Island, the Coarse fishing is somewhat limited. There are a few small ponds and bits of very small not what you could even call a river,  along with maybe a handful of Carp syndicates, all of which I have done in previous years, and thats the problem here, I find once I have 'done it' I have to move on and find another challenge, otherwise I begin to lose interest..
I love the big open aspect of gravel pits, and the long meandering nature of the big, or even small rivers, in fact I love to have options, but we simply don't have that available here otherwise things might possibly be a bit different, and I may never have needed to bother with the Saltwater if indeed it had been readily accessible. I love the Coarse fishing, but there simply isn't enough to do here, and so we have to limit ourselves to Coarse fishing in the colder months when, sensibly, things are just not doable in the sea...
We may not be very fortunate on the freshwater front, but luckily the sea fishing can be something very special despite heavy netting and commercial fishermen hammering our waters year on year, particularly with the methods we are now using ( see other blog !), and as not fishing is simply not an option for an obsessive like me, it would be stupid not to!
However it seems now My fishing year is becoming naturally cyclic, and this has been developing over the last few years, and that is to fish the Salt when there is an abundance of opportunity in the summer and transpose to Freshwater during Autumn and Winter, when the Coarse species are in their best condition of the year, and also can be something of a challenge compared to post spawning condition and appetite. This suits me fine, variety is the spice of life, ( supposedly), after all, and so I welcome this change of the seasons, it suits me down to the ground, 6 months of full on nose to the grindstone fishing and six months of more relaxed pursuit!

So this will be my Chronicle of the Autumn and Winter Coarse fishing, for those who might be interested in that side of things, and will be kept seperate to my other fishing of the Spring and Summer, though I shall link the two just in case anyone fancies a peek at the other out of curiosity!

I will begin chronicling as soon as I engage in any meaningful angling, which may still be a little while yet, But rest assured as it happens it will appear right here.
I have already begun making plans so I have some direction ready for when the time comes, and I have set myself some targets alongside to give me focus.
On the agenda are Chub for which I shall have to 'escape from Alcatraz' and hopefully venture over to the Throop fishery in Dorset a few times to achieve. I'll be happy with a few other river species on those trips such as Roach and Dace etc. I have found a love of moving water since venturing over to the Itchen fishery in pursuit of Grayling on trotting gear a couple of years running and would love to practise this a little more often. There are a few possibilities locally for Roach and Perch as well, Carp will probably feature as they will be an inevitable by catch, though I am not so size obsessed as I once was with the species. There are a few other possibilities that may arise to throw in the mix so there will be plenty going on, all things being equal...

Hopefully I will be back to report soon.
Thanks for reading.