Another week passed by, it’s properly spring now, the first
leaves on the beech hedge broke out earlier than ever before out and a few warm
days followed, one of which saw me heading to the coast hoping for Rays
again. High tide was due in mid
afternoon and I made my plans to fish a popular beach that can fish well at all
states of the tide. I arrived around
1400 to find a lot of people had the same idea as me, I should have known
better. My antisocial self-took over, I
returned to the car and made my way to another spot I knew would be quiet but
if I’d stopped and thought about it for a minute, I’d have realised the state
of the tide wasn’t so good here. Also,
although I’ve done spectacularly well at this beach on a few occasions it’s
always been later in the year, never this early.
None of this had entered my head as I stood looking down at
a fairly flat and inviting sea, there was barely a breath of wind and it did look
good for a Ray.I fished one rod long
and the other mostly close with baits out of freezer and started off fishing
with confidence.I had a couple of
rattles on the tips around high tide but these didn’t develop, still I was sure
something would happen eventually.As
time passed this began to feel unlikely.I stayed on hoping that the onset of darkness would change my luck but
not even that worked for me this evening and I gave it up soon after.Having started off feeling confident of a Ray,
I tramped back to the car knowing I’d got it totally wrong tonight.
A few days passed and forty eight hours before my next planned
visit to the beach things had looked spot on, high tide due at about 2230 and
there should be little or no wind.A day
later the forecast had been revised and I could expect a ten to fifteen mile
wind blowing into my face which is never ideal.I could go fishing or I could stay at home, no decision really but I felt
just the one beach would be suitable with the time I had available. I left home in mid afternoon knowing full well
what to expect when I got to the beach but hoping for something different, they
don’t always get it right do they?When
I broke through the scrub and onto the shingle I stood for a couple of minutes
watching the waves roll in, knowing my chances of catching a Ray weren’t great.I tried to be positive; the wind often drops
away with at dusk, maybe things would settle down.
I set up with two pulley rigs and blasted a couple of big
baits out then got the shelter up as quickly as I could.The wind was a chiller and it’s always five
degrees cooler on the beach.One of my
rods was rattling within minutes and I wound in to find a little Turbot had
managed to get a whole squid in its gob.I don’t catch many flatties of any kind so I always enjoy the
novelty.For the rest of the evening I
had bites on almost every cast, it didn’t matter what I used as bait or how far
I chucked it, the bite was just a matter of time.I dragged six decent size Dogfish and two
Whiting up the beach which is all good fun but these aren’t the fish that
motivate me any time of year and I could have predicted this before I left home.
Everything came to an abrupt end an hour before high tide as
there were loads of big lumps of weed being carried in on the flood tide.I’m
not sure what it was but after a little look on Google I think it might have
been bladderwrack.First one rod was
wiped out by a drifting raft of weed which took an age to clear and before I’d
even managed it the second rod was taken out too.I didn’t bother to recast after that just
packed away the rest of the gear and hiked back to the car park.
I wasn’t planning to fish again quite so soon but a few days
later I had some time off again, this coincided with an even later tide and crucially
there was a light off shore breeze. In
theory everything should be perfect for a Ray, I simply couldn’t resist testing
this.High tide was due around 0130 so I
finished work and had a leisurely couple of hours before loading up and heading
across the green heart of the county.I
parked up and when I got out of the car I felt the breeze which gave me a few seconds
pause but I expected to be sheltered from this by the time I’d hiked to my
destination.When I reached the top of
the beach I could see that the sea was flat and the waves were small, it looked
perfect.
I was set up with two rods on the tripod by 1915, I used two
identical pulley rigs baited with squid or large strips of mackerel.One of these rods I whacked as far as I could
every cast but the other was fished at all distances.To begin with I fished both baits at long
range, my thinking was any fish would be way out because I was fishing a
shallow beach, just half an hour into the flood.Even so I didn’t expect anything much to happen
this early but on the first cast one of the rods started banging and I found
myself trying to haul something heavy towards me.It was a Ray of a couple of pounds or so, not
a monster but the species I set out to catch which gave me a sense of
satisfaction.Every time we fish, we learn
a little more; having started sea fishing with no idea at all, in time I
learned which areas fished best for which species and now I’m learning when to
fish and just as important, when not to bother. This last lesson had been reinforced on my
previous visit!
The hour or so of daylight passed without any more fish but
constant attention to the baits, easily seen on the rod tips which were
unaffected by wind or tide.I somehow missed
a decent bite at dusk but it was 2115 before I hooked another fish and this was
another good ‘un hooked on a shorter cast.This was another Ray, twice the size of the first and like the big one I
caught earlier in the spring it tried to bury itself in the sand.Unlike that fish I managed to move this one
and soon had it in.On the beach it
arched it’s back and extended its tail which made it seem really angry.I’ve seen a few Rays do this, I expect it’s
some kind of defensive posture but it actually looks really aggressive, perhaps
that’s the point.
For the next three hours I had constant action on both
rods.It didn’t matter how far I cast or
what bait I used, a bite would come.I
caught a couple of Whiting but most of the fish were Dogfish, some of which
were as small a Doggy as I’d ever seen.I
also caught two more small Rays, one of these gave me a spectacular bite,
banging the tip over then slackening off.In my mind I always think these bites will lead to a big fish but unfortunately
that was not the case.There’s a lot to
be said for this kind of all action fishing but to be honest it’s all a bit
much for me.I like to just sit on my
backside and do nothing for a while but there wasn’t a chance tonight.Also when there are loads of Dogs about there’s
less chance my bait will be unmolested for long enough for a Ray to find it.
I packed up just after midnight, high tide was still an hour
or so away but by this time I was knackered and virtually out of bait.I still had a little bit of mackerel left
which I could have eked out but I’d had enough and my bed was still an hour
away. I had a tired drive home with the stereo turned up but i'd got it right tonight.
When the Pike season ends my fishing becomes much more
leisurely, mostly. I rarely need an alarm
clock and I’m no longer behind the wheel racing the dawn. I look at the tide times and weather forecast
then pick a beach that I think should be suitable in the conditions and off I
go. I mostly avoid the A roads too and
almost enjoy the cross country drive. At
this time of year my eyes are drawn to the new yellow and white blossom and the
fresh sprays of green in the hedgerows. But
on this occasion my eyes couldn’t avoid the massive houses that are sprinkled
through the green parts of Suffolk and my cynical mind wants to know who owns
these places? How long have they lived
there? Is it home or just the weekend
retreat? Many people are paranoid about
foreign migrants, I’m more concerned about the parasitic ones escaping the
capital and they’re not from abroad. My
mood wasn’t improved by closed roads and lengthy diversions through less
familiar countryside. I suppose it’s
normal for spring; after the winter wear and tear the rural roads need a patch
up, in twelve months time they’ll probably be filling the same holes again.
I arrived eventually and found myself emerging into a grey
blustery morning, the thick clouds were being propelled out to sea on the fresh
south westerly.I picked this beach
because I knew this wind should be mostly on my back, it was strong enough that
I broke normal procedure and erected the shelter before anything else.By 1030 I had two rods nodding on the tripod,
I fished the same way I always do with a whole squid punched out on the heavy
rod and smaller baits on a leger rig with a long hooklength.Now all I had to do is relax and let all that
grumpy shit go.The rod tips were
wobbling a bit in the wind but high tide was still a few hours away so the
waves were small and spotting a bite shouldn’t be the lottery that it can
sometimes be.Today I was hoping to
catch a Ray but as it was my first go off the beach for six months I’d settle
for anything.
An hour passed quickly before I had my first fishy rod
wobble of the season, this didn’t develop but when I checked it a few minutes
later there was something attached and I wound in a tiny Dab which had
attempted to eat a whole squid.How does
such a small fish, so far off the beach, register a proper bite on a stiff,
glass fibre rod tip?It makes me think,
not for the first time, about how over-engineered freshwater bite indication
has become.Yes, buzzers and bobbins do
have their place but these set ups are only really necessary when the angler
cannot see his rods, for whatever reason be it darkness or distraction.The more fishing I do with tips pointed in
the air, the more I think it really is the way to go for most species in most
conditions.Anglers have become
conditioned to use electronic audible indicators and are now being steered
towards the “precision” offered by bait boats.There’s only one winner from these modern trends and it isn’t the
angler.Also, if you are using a
baitboat to fish within comfortable casting range you are not an angler.There I said it.
Nowadays I go beach fishing to avoid all that bullshit and
back at the beach after an hour of inactivity the wind was picking up and
rattling the shelter while the waves were getting bigger and louder.I was reminded that although sea fishing is
peaceful it is very rarely quiet, also the environment itself is harsh.Even on a relatively mild day, if it wasn’t
for the shelter I’d be uncomfortable and I probably wouldn’t stay too
long.Another familiar feeling returned;
like most forms of fishing there are long periods where nothing at all happens
and when I’m on the beach, staring out at the endless grey mass I end up
getting the feeling that I’m never, ever going to get another bite.I soon reminded myself that I almost always
get this feeling but it only takes one indication on a rod tip to blow it away.
As is often the case at this location, things started to
happen around ninety minutes before high tide.The first action was a proper thump then slack line on the heavy rod, I
was on my feet at geriatric speed and wound down into a solid weight that was
an effort to pump back towards me.The
fish pulled back a bit too which was promising but as it neared the surf the
resistance disappeared, whatever had been on the end had slipped the
hooks.As high tide got closer so the
waves got bigger and louder, with the wind also picking up the rod tips were
wobbling permanently.Another reminder,
when it’s like this I might not see ‘normal bites’, as much as anything I’m
looking for a movement that is just different, a break in the rhythm of the
rods.I was seeing this kind of thing on
just about every cast now and at 1445, bang on high tide, I hooked another fish
which was my first Doggy of the year.These are always a bit of an anti climax as they are usually bigger than
the Whiting that are still around in spring and they pull back a bit, often making
me wonder if I’ve hooked a small Ray.Dogfish are cool creatures in their own right though but because they
are so numerous they don’t raise the interest levels too much.
Half an hour later the lighter rod tip done something
different and I winched in my first Whiting of the year which I might have used
for livebait on another day.The tide
was ebbing now and although I felt there were fish about still, in truth I was
knackered.Another sea fishing reminder;
there always comes a point when I’ve had enough and unlike freshwater fishing,
when that moment comes I don’t hesitate I pack up.A large Seal popped its head out and looked
mournfully towards shore which seemed to endorse my decision.By 1545 I had the rucksack mostly packed, the
shelter and tripod were down and I had one rod leaning against the back of my
chair.When I came to wind it in there
was a bit of weight on the end which turned out to be a bigger than average
Whiting which at 36cm was actually the biggest I’ve caught.I can’t get too excited about a PB Whiting
but if I’m going to catch them then they might as well be big ones!
I was back in the car by 1600, out of the wind and away from
the crash of the waves, hoping to get home before the evening wacky races
started.If my outward journey was
frustrating then the drive home was just farce, two closed roads and three sets
of roadworks.The last of these involved
three way traffic lights and a thirty minute queue before I came to two
sheepish looking blokes in high viz cutting a fucking hedge!Only in East Anglia.A journey that normally takes forty minutes
stretched into almost two hours, at least I’d renewed the selection of CD’s in
the car but with one ironic choice.
A few days later…An
early finish at work and a quick turnaround gave me plenty of time to get to
the beach before darkness.With high
tide due just before 2000 I would be able to fish a couple of hours either
side.There was no travel frustration
today and I made it to the coast without a hitch.I fished the same area as last time and
crunched across shingle to find a row of anglers spread along the bay and
remembered why I rarely fish here on a Saturday.Still there was plenty of space and I was set
up by about 1720, this time fishing two heavy rods rigged up with pulleys.I was hoping for a Ray so had decided to go
big or go home; baits would be squid, large strips of Mackerel or frozen black
lug wrapped in squid.I knew these baits
wouldn’t be exactly selective but may stay in place long enough for a ray to
find them.
The evening was clear and dry but cool with a moderate westerly
wind.This area is sheltered so it was
comfortable enough and they waves remained small all evening.I had my first bite after half an hour, it
was a Whiting but a good sized one that had managed to get a big lump of
mackerel into its gob.It seemed to get
dark quickly and I realised I’d left a light at home, fishing after dark was
bringing a load more reminders.I had a
quiet hour with baits coming back from a long soak looking barely touched but
as high tide grew closer so things started to happen.My baits were getting fishy attention on
almost every cast but I had few proper bites.I guessed this indicated there were plenty of Whiting about; many
wouldn’t be able to get my baits in their mouths but a few were bound to hook
themselves.
I’ve caught a few Rays around high tide from this beach and
the relatively flat sea looked ideal but nothing flat, brown and thorny turned
up tonight.As the sea started to
retreat so the Whiting activity increased, frustrating rattles that stopped
before I could get to the rod.But by
the time I’d had enough, just before 2200 I’d managed to catch five Whiting,
most of which would have been keepers, as well as one angry dogfish.Two trips into the spring and I can just
about remember what I’m supposed to be doing and hopefully in the weeks to come
I’ll find the fish I’m after.
My next day off fell just right, high tide was due a few
minutes after midnight following a mild day, the wind was forecast to drop away
to the barest breeze.These things
combined amounted to perfect conditions for catching Rays at my favourite beach
and too good an opportunity to miss.Like all anglers I’ve failed spectacularly in “perfect conditions” many
times but I left home in the late afternoon full of confidence.The journey was surprisingly smooth, despite
plunging into rush hour which barely affected the roads I travelled on, in the
direction I was heading at least.I made
it to a quiet car park in good time, loaded up and went for a hike and arrived
to find an empty beach. The conditions were as forecast, the sea was flat but a
long way away at the bottom of the gentle sloping beach, small waves rolled
over, everything looked spot on, almost too perfect?
It had been six months since my last visit to this beach and
it had changed considerably since last year.Normally I expected to be fishing over a mix of sand and shingle but
today it was pretty much all sand.Based
on previous years this will have changed again by the end of the summer.I try to avoid setting up on sand if I can so
positioned myself on a narrow, flat strip of shingle at the very top of the
beach.A big tide will reach all the way
up here and with no recent memory I wasn’t sure how far tonight’s biggish tide
would reach so opted for caution.This
meant a walk of about two cricket pitches to reach the water to begin with but
I’d avoid getting everything full of/covered in sand.
Tonight it was all about Rays, I wasn’t interested in
Whiting or Dogs although I knew I wouldn’t be able to avoid them.Even so I used two heavy set ups with pulley
rigs and big baits, mostly squid but also large mackerel strips, frozen black
lug and combinations of all three.I
made my first casts just after 1800 then as I always do, I sat back with a
cuppa and enjoyed the sights and sounds of the wild environment.I didn’t sit back for long, my left hand rod
baited with whole squid on a pennell was banging already, taps and rattles that
stopped then started then stopped until I struck out of frustration and wound
in a small Whiting.A few minutes later
the other rod banged over nicely and I found myself attached to something heavy
at long range.I slowly gained line and
pumped it back close to the shore before there was a thump and whatever was on
the end was attached no longer.I’ll
never know what it was but it had all the characteristics of a Ray.This didn’t disappoint me too much as I was
confident there would be more as the flood gathered pace.
This was the pattern for the rest of the evening, just about
every cast brought activity of some kind and with small waves and no wind the
taps and quivers were easy to see.I was
on the go all the time; baiting up, casting and winding in, walking up and down
the sandy slope which shrunk as the night went on.Time passed, I barely noticed the onset of
darkness, I was just aware I needed the tip lights then I was busy getting two
more rigs loaded whilst glancing up at the rod tips every other second.By 2130 I’d caught four Whiting and five
Dogfish, two of which came in together, one on each hook of a pennell rig.Despite the busy fishing I was becoming
frustrated, I really expected to have caught a Ray by this stage of the
tide.It dawned on me that by fishing identical
methods on both rods I was effectively fishing both baits at the same sort of
distance.I probably catch most rays at
this beach by whacking a bait out as far as I can, most by not all, so my next
cast on the right hand rod was dropped in quite close.
Then the distance rod heaved over, a bite that just meant
‘Ray’ here we go… no another Whiting!That rod was barely recast when the over rod dropped in close was
banging away nicely but somehow I missed it!Another recollection from previous seasons, I somehow miss a lot of
these bites when it looks like the fish has already hooked itself.By now it was 2200, high tide was still a
couple of hours away but the prime time for a Ray was running out fast.But it only takes a second and a few minutes
later the close range rod signalled a solid thump on the tip and I wound into
something substantial which thumped and throbbed but couldn’t prevent itself
being hauled back up the beach.There it
was, my first Ray of the season, not a particularly big one but any Ray is a
good fish and I was well chuffed, mission accomplished.
With the fish back in the drink I got a fresh bait back out
after it, dropped in close again then sat back with a grin and a small sense
achievement.Then bugger me the same rod
banged hard once and the line fell slack.I scrambled to my feet and quickly wound down to find myself attached to
a solid weight that didn’t want to move.I wondered if I was snagged but no that couldn’t be.Steady pressure got things moving very
slowly, inch by inch I kept the thing moving.Through the rod I could feel a weird throbbing sensation and the tip would
thump again, then back to the tug of war.It was obviously a good sized Ray and was close in so I expect to catch
a glimpse any second, then it all went solid again and wouldn’t move.I wound down and heaved but nothing gave, so
I wound and allowed myself to be pulled towards the fish/snag. Then with a retreating wave my head torch
revealed the Ray had buried itself into the sand, high and dry until it was
covered by the next wave.I put the rod
down and followed the line for a few feet, when the sea sloshed back again I
picked it up, fish sand and all.I very quickly
remembered they’re called Thornbacks for a reason so this wasn’t a particularly
sensible thing to do. It cost me a little blood but I wasn’t going to let that
fish get away.A bloody big Ray it was
too!
Somehow I got fish and tackle all the way back up onto the
shingle, the hook came out easily and the fish looked huge to me.I bundled it into a weigh sling, the thorny
back helped keep it there, this must be close to a PB?The little digital scales were still in
another bag but the emergency spring balance pulled down to just over eight
pounds, my second best Thornback!It
would have been nice to get a trophy shot but in the circumstances a self take
photo seemed a lot of hassle so after a couple of quick shots I bundled it back
into the sling and carried it back to the water.It flapped its wings and slid off into the
dark, as did I, albeit in the other direction.
Nothing was going to better that fish but I carried on later
than I’d intended, right up until high tide, I may have stayed even later but
by midnight I’d actually run out of squid.I lost a fish at range which might have been another Ray and managed to
catch a couple more Dogfish plus another Whiting.I think I landed fifteen fish in total, for
once things went as I’d hoped, the fish had read the script.Driving home my tired eyes were kept on
alert, animals of all kinds were active along the country roads; several Deer,
hundreds of Rabbits, a rat and others too quick to identify.Then there were patches of fog which slowed
me to a crawl at times but these grew fewer further inland.I arrived home knackered and it was good to
crawl into bed after all of that, another feeling that will become familiar over the next few weeks.
Through the ‘back end’ most of my Pikey energy had been
directed north and I managed to spend a few days on the Broads.I mostly fished in comfortable conditions,
caught a few nice fish and had a thoroughly enjoyable time but it is hard work!
With the rivers now closed my season is all
but over but as usual I had one last trip out in the Suffolk boat with Mr
T.Like the preceding days it was dry,
bright and mild and if they hadn’t already spawned it had to be on the cards?We found fish straight away but suffered a
series of dropped takes and bumped fish which is not unusual at this time of
year.I managed to get one almost to the
boat before it rolled and threw the herring back at me.After that it went quiet and it threatened to
be ‘one of those days’.
We kept trying and repositioned the boat regularly but this
did nothing to improve our luck, I began to wonder if the Pike were sex
obsessed?Things improved later in the
day with a series of more confident takes which saw Mr T manage to bring four
fish to the boat, the biggest around thirteen pounds and all would have weighed
a bit more this time last week.With
time running out my herring was picked up again at last and I managed to keep
this one on the hooks, a nice fish of not quite twelve was my last of the
season.
And what a twelve months it has been!Hundreds of fish of eighteen different
species; Pike to 25+ and PB’s for three other species; Smoothound, Barbel and Chub,
probably my favourites after Pike. I’ll do well to repeat that any time soon
but I’ll certainly try and as long as I keep enjoying myself it matters not.Now it’s time to have a little break (or will
I?), reorganise the tackle shed and get geared up for a few months of saltwater
fishing.
With the evenings starting to draw out and an early finish
at work there was time for me to get to the river for a short evening session
after Chub. It’s actually the first time
I’ve been on the river for over a month in which time it has mostly been above
the banks on which all but the stoutest vegetation had been flattened. The evening was mild and dull with barely a
breath of wind, I was set up by 1710, in a swim I’ve had fish from in the past,
time was short, no time for exploring. I
used the usual feeder rig baited with a bit of an animal and swung it along the
near bank towards a fallen tree. Half an
hour here brought a couple of fishy tremors on the tip but no proper
bites.
The next swim was also a familiar one and second cast here
brought a solid bite at just after 1800.I swept the rod back and something hefty lunged around in a downstream
direction for a few seconds before the hook pulled.Obviously this is frustrating but these
events no longer crush me like they once did.At that moment the most pressing thing on my mind was “what do I do
next?” the light was fading fast, should I stay in this swim as I’d had action
or should I move?The Chub I’d lost was
a serious fish, would it have spooked the swim?
I had one more uneventful cast then moved downstream, a
decision I regretted almost immediately as my new swim was not one I was
particularly familiar with.Shortly
after settling in, I heard a swirl and a hiss in the dark, I guessed what it
was and hissed back.Cue bedlam as what
was obviously Otters churned the water in a huge boil and hissed again in
unison.I flicked the headtorch on to
make sure they got the message and picked out the eyes of a mother and two cubs
as they moved downstream along the far bank. I spent half an hour here in which
time nothing fishy happened and my heart was no longer in it so off home I
head.It had been an enjoyable couple of
hours and I hope to squeeze another trip in before time runs out.
My Broadland obsession really kicks in when the season
starts to run out and nowadays a long session spending dawn till dusk in the
boat and all that goes with it, leaves me knackered the following day. Not too knackered however, I had enough
energy to cook dinner for lunch time and get to the river for mid
afternoon. The day was dry and mostly
bright with a fresh westerly threatening to make life uncomfortable at
times. I walked a way upstream and
settled into a swim that produced the goods back in December and was fishing by
1510. Things have certainly changed
since then; from late January we’d had almost a month of flood conditions which
had shifted a big raft from this spot and removed snags from others. It’s pretty certain that those snags now sit
elsewhere, time will tell. This spot
didn’t look as fishy as it had before but I swung the feeder rig out anyway and
made a brew.
Forty five minutes later I was in a second swim, one that
the floods had actually made look more fishy.I didn’t expect to catch to be honest but you never know and on my
second cast the tip bounced and I was attached to a fish.It didn’t feel as heavy as the one I’d lost
last time but it was big enough and tried hard to get into near side snags on
both sides of the swim.My tackle takes
no prisoners and the hook stayed in, soon I had a good Chub in the net.I thought maybe four pounds but my guess was
optimistic by four ounces.I gave it a
while longer here and a couple of casts in the next swim downstream but without
any more signs.
By 1700 I was fishing in another familiar spot but spent a
fidgety half an hour here without a bite.In truth I was killing time because I wanted to be a little further
downstream, in the swim I’d lost a biggun last time and at 1730 that’s where I
was.I was confident I’d get a bite in
this relatively shallow run between reeds but after fifty minutes I realised I
was being proved wrong again.A few
minutes later I was fishing a bit further downstream casting across to a slack
on the far side.I’ve caught a few Pike
here and feel it should suit Chub but tonight I couldn’t settle and barely
fifteen minutes passed before I pulled up the rod rest again.
Just downstream was another swim above a reed lined bend
which I’d not yet fished and for some reason I settled here and cast just short
of the far bank.At least that’s where I
think it landed as by now it was just before 1900 and proper dark, so I sat
with the rod in my hand, oblivious to everything around me.After a few minutes I felt a slight pull, it
wasn’t anything like a bite but felt fishy and gave my flagging confidence a
boost.The sense of anticipation
dwindled, was it a branch or something bumping the line?Had I imagined it?Then a strange series of twitches and pulls,
I swept the rod back and felt weight, a good fish plodded around downstream of
me but I was gaining line and slowly brought it back up in front of me.I’d switched the head torch on by now and saw
a big ghostly shape in a boil of water.It didn’t like the look of the net and probably wasn’t too keen on the
light either now I think of it but all I needed was patience. Once I’d got it in the net I looked down and
ran the torch along what was obviously a big Chub.
I left it in the net to rest while I sorted out the
essentials, wetted the sling and zeroed the scales. I laid net and fish on the
mat and realised this fish was a different beast to the one I’d had
earlier.I’m rubbish at guestimating these
fish but was pretty certain this was the biggest Chub I’d ever seen. The scales
agreed, my first five pounder with two ounces to spare.Fucking hell!A five pound Chub!I put the fish
back in the net and left it to rest in the water again, I couldn’t return it
without attempting a self take, which by my standards came out quite well.
With the fish returned I thought I might as well cast out
again and sat in the dark smiling to myself.When I was a kid a five pound Chub was a big deal nationally and in my
fishy world it still is, I was chuffed to bits.I sat there for another forty five minutes or so and despite all the
commotion there were still fish in the area.I felt a couple of raps and a couple of short pulls, one of which I
struck at but felt nothing.I’m not sure
my concentration was what it should have been, I was away with the fairies and
called it a day around 2000.I drove
home knowing I’d find a way to get back on the river again before the season
ended.
March 14th already, a mad dash after work then I
find myself sitting by the river staring at a rod tip one last time. The day had been mostly bright with a
moderate north westerly but there was a bit more cloud towards the end of the
day and some of these spat showers that were short, sharp and unforecast. I
spent half an hour in the first swim then forty minutes in the next and didn’t
get a bite in either. I knew where I
wanted to be, the swim where I’d had the biggun last time and I was settled in
by 1820, with the light fading fast.
By the time I’d made my second cast it was dark enough for
me to need to hold the rod which is nice but not always practical, I’ll do
things differently next season.But when
I am holding the rod and I get a bite it’s brilliant and this happened again
after a couple of minutes.The fish was
noticeably less substantial than the last Chub I’d hooked and was actually
about half the size but had a bit of spirit.Still a fish and that was all I wanted when I set off this evening.I sat contentedly and comfortably in the
darkness despite the fast falling temperature which I could feel on my exposed
hands.The wildlife was active tonight
both in the reeds below me and the undergrowth behind but things seemed to be
quiet now in the river.
With the next couple of casts I went a bit further
downstream but without success.By 1930
I’d had enough so I loaded the feeder banged it downstream and put the rod on
the rest, with the bait runner on while I set about tidying up.The unhooking mat was turning frosty which
told me it was probably a good idea.All
this time the headtorch was on and I made no attempt to be careful.I was running out of things to pack away when
I sensed movement, the torch beam picked out a bending rod and my ears detected
a ticking reel.The fish was already
hooked and felt decent but was a long way downstream and was banging around a
bit.I needed to get it upstream
sharpish before it decided to dive into the reed beds and this I did with
surprising ease.After it’s initial
burst of energy the fish just gave up and allowed me to pull it straight up and
into the net.Out came the mat again
along with the scales and sling.I
thought it was clearly over four pounds but it was actually three ounces under,
a nice fish all the same.
Ah this could be difficult…Through the 1980’s John Watson was something of a hero to this (at the
time!) teenage Piker. This was due to his frequent appearances in the angling
press and his excellent work as PAC secretary.I know his tenure was curtailed amidst a cloud but whatever the truth,
seldom has PAC been as visible or effective.I first read JW’s “A Piker’s Progress” in the early nineties when I
found it in a local library, later I often wished I’d kept it and paid the
fine.I remember really enjoyable
anecdotal writing which at times came close to making me feel like I was in the
boat with ‘Watto’.An excellent read
that culminated on a real high with the authors capture of a huge Broadland
Pike.I later heard that the book was
ghost written by another renowned piker, I don’t know if this is true but
either way it doesn’t alter the fact that it was a seriously good fishing book.So when in 2009 the book was revamped as “A
Piker’s Progression” I made sure I grabbed a copy so I could revisit Watto’s
boat whenever I felt like it.
My first impressions of the new version were positive; I
found the story telling in the older section was as good as I remembered it but
I wasn’t so enamoured with the new section which was barely much more than a
list of the people JW fished with and what they caught.Another sixteen years have flashed by, Watto
has enjoyed another well deserved Broadland monster but he’s also been involved
in other more unsavoury events whilst on the water, one of which I described on
this page at the time as staggering hypocrisy.I think it’s fair to say that when I recently re-read ‘Progression’ I
did so with a more critical mind.
I only intended to read the first, older part of the book as
I knew this to be full of great fishing tales featuring my own favourite
species, often set in places I know and love.All of this is still there and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it once
more, no doubt I will again.It’s
impossible not to notice the text of this new version has been tweaked in
places which is fair enough but it did get me wondering whether all that
pompous self-aggrandising was present in the original text?JW is undoubtedly a very good Piker and in
the 1980’s was consistently ahead of the game but he does like to big himself up
and we could come away with the impression that he singlehandedly
revolutionised Norfolk Piking.It was
also difficult for me to ignore Watto’s highly flexible moral code; now I’m no
saint and I’ve done similar things to JW in the past but I won’t try to justify
my actions.The trick is to keep quiet
and don’t get caught, at the time JW couldn’t do either consistently.If other people’s moral codes flex in a
different direction we have no right to criticise but that doesn’t stop JW.The squabbling between the 1980’s Norfolk Pikers
was well known at the time too, there were a lot of big egos bouncing around,
happily in my experience this is a thing of the past, mostly.It’s easy to be critical but what I
absolutely won’t question is Watto’s honesty as an angler, his catches and the
published weights are what he says they are, which as far as an angler’s ethics
goes, is most important in my opinion. Despite my niggles, the first section of
‘Progression’ is a really good read and no Piker could fail to pick up inspiration
as well as some sound advice along the way.
I hadn’t planned to carry on reading but ended up going
through the new part of the book in no time at all because there isn’t much to
it really.This part was pretty much as
I remembered it, apart from a few passages the writing doesn’t come close to
capturing the attention and imagination in the same way as part one.On at least three occasions in this newer
text Watto criticises Piking practices that he himself previously revelled in,
as described by stories in part one.Maybe he has reasons for these contradictions but if so, these are not
shared.I know my own days of night
fishing from a boat won’t go on forever but when I no longer have the
motivation, I won’t criticise those who do.Incidentally this specialised form of Pike fishing has come on a long
way since Watto’s days of kipping in the bottom of a boat, trusting the clicker
on a multiplier to rouse him. There are
further inconsistencies in attitude around the subject of fishing the ‘out of
bounds’ areas which JW continued to do.I sympathise with his opinion on the rights to fish tidal water but
whatever the legality the author still seems to want a rule for himself and
another for the rest of us.For him to
fish in these areas, discretely and quietly would as he says cause no harm to
man or beast but Watto doesn’t want anyone else benefitting from this
interpretation of Magna Carta.Inevitably
JW was caught in the act and implies this could only have been possible if
someone had grassed him up.When a
decade after this publication JW was on the receiving end of a ‘guesting
situation’ he really should have encouraged his boat partner to keep quiet if
he wanted to avoid being labelled a hypocrite.
What is highly ironic is the popularity of Broadland in
current times is very much down to the writing of John Watson and others of his
generation who decry the ‘state’ of modern Broadland Piking.We were inspired by the likes of Watson,
Harper, Belsten and Fickling just as they were inspired by Pye, Wright, Vincent
and Hancock.It’s the way of the Piking
world nowadays that a book like the original ‘Progress’ could not be written,
which is sad in a way.
But what do I know and who cares anyway?John Watson has passed the age of eighty now
and his legacy in this daft pastime of ours is secure.Few if any honest anglers can match his
record of big Broadland Pike and most of us will certainly have learned plenty
from his writing over the years.A great
deal of “Piker’s Progression” is as good as Piking writing gets but when Watto
gets on his high horse it waters things down and I never did like shandy.However, I know I’ll continue to read and
enjoy the good bits over and over.I
also know that in Norfolk nobody gives a fuck what you do until you catch a
couple.
Fifty Years a Fisherman by John Wilson
Another fishing autobiography from another John who
parachuted himself into the Norfolk fishing scene and went on to become
possibly the most famous British angler of all time?I enjoyed the early parts of this book; John
Wilson’s childhood fishing on local streams and on into early adulthood
travelling to East Anglia to fish for Roach.With his career as a London hairdresser in the sixties and work aboard
in exotic climes JW would have us believe he was a bit of a shagger though
interestingly, in these tales he constantly refers to himself in the third
person as ‘Wilson’, almost as if he’s trying to disassociate himself from such
goings on.Wilson settled in Barbados for
a couple of years and the fishy description of this is excellent.
I also enjoyed reading about the author’s eventual settling
in Norfolk in the early seventies and the excellent river fishing that was
available at the time.There’s a little
bit of Broadland Pike fishing described too but disappointingly no mention of
Wilson’s Thurne thirty pounder, come on John FFS!After that, things tailed off a bit for me, a
lot of the fishing is brushed over quickly, without much description and the
thrill of the chase is not present.As a
prolific writer maybe he’s told these stories before elsewhere?The parts talking of Mahseer fishing in India
are pretty good though and JW’s love of the place and the fishing shines
through.When Wilson gets political I’m
in broad agreement too and I noticed him bemoaning the privatisation of the
water industry and the decline of our lowland rivers two decades before it
became fashionable.His description of
watching frolicking Otters at some foreign destination was highly ironic with
the benefit of hindsight.
As someone who for whom work is just a necessary evil I
wasn’t really interested in Wilson’s TV career and the behind the scenes stuff.I’m only interested in the fishy part and the
end result that appeared on our screens was very good although to be honest
JW’s giggling used to get on me tits.But fair play to John Wilson, he was very good at what he done and was
driven enough to make a damn good living for himself.This allowed him fish himself around the
world and reside in a nice big house with a lake.The description of this lake build bored the
bollocks off me and the end result the type of fishery I avoid at all costs,
ghosties FFS!Most of the final chapter
(I think this bit was added ten years after the original text was published as
‘Forty years…’) deals with Wilson’s globe trotting fishing exploits.This is interesting enough but I couldn’t
help thinking it read like a travel brochure, the writing had something missing.There’s no attempt to disguise that JW liked
a drink but that was never a secret and apparently there are many tales
connected to this that didn’t make the book.
I’m always sceptical about autobiographical writing as I
think it is rare that any person can look at their own lives objectively,
although there are exceptions.What we
usually end up with is an interpretation of events from a single perspective
and the end result can often be inaccurate if not dishonest.That’s not to say I think either of these JW’s
are dishonest but I think one of them has edited out the bad bits and the other
should come with caveats.Both books are
similar in as much as when they are good, they are very good but both run out
of steam before the end.
Still the rain falls, the river has barely been within it’s
banks over the last week so hasn’t been on my mind.This week I was due to fish with Mr P, it’s
about this time every year that I remind him there’s more to fishing than
Carp.We usually go out in the Suffolk
boat but with another miserable sodden day forecast we opted to do the sensible
thing and sit under a brolly on the bank somewhere.There wasn’t much choice for ‘where’ either,
it would have to be the Olde Lake.
We set off in the dark and started laughing almost as soon
as we were on the road and so the journey passed quickly.By 0730 we were set up fishing deadbaits with
two rods each, squeezed into a gap between reeds, this would mean we’d have to
have our wits about us should we need to bring a fish to the net.The water in front of us sloped from right to
left, somewhere that’s always worth a go, indeed I’d caught a few fish here on
my last visit.The water was still high
and coloured which is unusual for the lake but I’d done okay in these types of
conditions the last time out.We sat
under a low set oval brolly peering out into the gloom, supping tea and having
a good yarn.An hour zipped past in no
time at all but I was starting to get a bit twitchy, where were the pike?
At 0850 conversation was interrupted by stabbing float and a
fizzing baitrunner, my rod baited with sardine was on the move.I soon had a fish of seven or eight pounds in
the net and we were off the mark.A take
here is often followed by one or two more in quick succession but that was not
the case today and we spent the rest of the morning on our backsides putting
the world to rights.By midday we’d had
no more action and with a brief spell of brighter weather it was a good time to
have a move.The area I fancied most was
just too flooded, we couldn’t get in between the trees so we opted for the next
available space.We managed to squeeze our
rods into another tight gap then set up camp on an island of slightly higher
ground surrounded by flood puddles in the meadow that is fast becoming a
marsh.The waiting game began again.
An hour passed and as usual I was at the stage when I was
beginning to have doubts then at last Mr P had a take on smelt.We soon had a fish of eight or nine pounds in
the net, Mr P was pleased and I was relieved, my Pike finding ability would not
be called into question today.Half an
hour later the same rod was away again, a repeat performance with a similar
sized fish and Mr P had a second.At
1415 it was my turn with a take on a smelt I’d hurled out on a leger rig.This fish swirled on contact then a decent
weight kited round to the left, Mr P quickly wound in my other rod and got it
out of the way in the nick of time.I
gradually brought the fish back towards me and it felt heavier than a Pike from
this lake had any right to.The fish
didn’t want to come in and even took line off the clutch at one point but I soon
had it on the top and Mr P scooped it up.A most pleasant surprise, at 15.04 the biggest Pike I’d had from the Olde Lake
for several years and an absolute cracker, fat with fantastic colours.
After that we had a quiet hour but with a couple of fish
each we were content, it was a happy
afternoon in which we even saw the sun for a few minutes.The time passed quickly with conversation and
in the gaps the sound of Skylarks came down from up high.At some point I manged to fall flat on my
arse in the puddle but my partner rescued me with a hand before the water
seeped through the layers.Mr P had
another take on smelt and added a third Pike which like the others was eight or
nine pounds or so.With the light
beginning to fade and more dark clouds coming towards us on the south east wind
we decided to wind in and make a break for it.We got away and onto the roads just before the evening whacky races
commenced.
Last time I fished with Mr W we took the Suffolk boat out
and didn’t get a touch but for some reason we decided to try again, mostly
because it’s a bloody nice place to spend your time, even if the fish don’t
show up. We were in position and fishing
by 0730 on a gloomy morning that didn’t get a whole lot brighter through the
day. At least being mild with a light breeze
we’d be comfortable whatever else happened.
Tactics today were the same as always, to fish deadbaits and keep moving
till we found some fish. I’d brought a
lure rod too but it has barely stopped raining in the east and the water was up
and as coloured as I’ve ever seen it here.
Not really what I expected or wanted to see.
Despite this, today things went a little more to plan; I had
two takes in the first half hour boating two Pike of six pounds or so, one each
on smelt and sardine.After that things
went quiet and we commenced an anti clockwise circle of moves that took us
through a series of spots that sometimes hold a Pike or two.At our third stop a smelt cast towards the
edge was picked up and this fish had a little more weight to it.I didn’t weigh it but we agreed between ten
and eleven pounds wouldn’t be far off and like most of the Pike in this water it
was beautifully coloured.By the early
afternoon our moves were taking us back in the direction of the boatyard and Mr
W still hadn’t troubled the scorers.I
had to be off the water by 1600 and time was running out so it was a relief when
Mr W’s float wobbled then buried at last.This fish wanted to have a scrap and we got our hopes up but as is often
the case, it shrank near the net but was a little cracker all the same.It’s always best when both anglers catch and
this capped an enjoyable day of chat and laughter.
A final move didn’t bring anything further and soon it was
time to head back to base.The Pike here
often appear to show a preference and today three of the four takes came to smelt.This is slightly skewed as both of us used
smelt on one rod but the bait used on 50% of the rods accounted for 75% of the
fish.A couple of years ago, fishing
this water in similar conditions lamprey fished on one rod accounted for 80% of
the action, today it remained untouched.These things interest me but I’m still not sure about these apparent
bait preferences; do we anglers contribute to a self-fulfilling prophecy?I can’t believe a Pike will ignore one type
of deadbait and take another through preference or taste.A couple of years ago I wrote in ‘Pikelines’
that I think that one bait will be detected quicker than others due to the
conditions on the day.For this to be
correct then preferences should change over the days and weeks and this is
certainly the case, the example mentioned above being one of many.Over the years fishing the Broads I
consistently caught Pike on Lamprey, in October 2022 I netted a particularly
memorable one on this bait.Since that
day I’ve not caught a Norfolk Pike on Lamprey, not one.In recent visits I’ve not bothered to use
them, lack of confidence leading to a self-fulfilling prophecy?If there is a lesson from this surprising
ramble of thought it is this; always use a variety of deadbaits, every day is
different.
With little respite from the rain the rivers were properly
flooding, for the first time this winter the fields and meadows were swamped
making the river largely unapproachable.This came at the worst possible time as I had a couple of days off which
I’d intended to spend wandering the banks.I was determined to fish but it would have to be a stillwater and with
nothing to lose I found myself paying my first visit to a place that had been
on my radar for a while.The day was wet
and windy as usual so for once I set up the oval brolly and sat behind a couple
of buzzers.Between the showers I’d
emerge every now and then to twitch a deadbait or recast into another likely
looking area.I’d also brought a lure
rod onto which I clipped a sinking lure which I’d cast out and count down to
get an idea of depths.On one occasion
my curly tailed jig was followed by a Pike which slowly swum away never to
reappear.I did get a good look at it
though and although not a big fish it was impressively barrel shaped, a light
bulb moment in my pikey brain.
I blanked on that occasion but got back at the first
opportunity, first light on a still, dry day.This time I fished from the opposite bank with a couple of deadbaits and
a lure rod which once again was used for checking depths as much as anything.I’ve done very little pit fishing in recent
years and I was enjoying being back in this once familiar environment. At
around 0830 I had a take on a paternostered smelt which I just twitched
back.I wound into a Pike that bent the
old Tricast nicely but when it popped up in front of me I thought it looked
about seven pounds or so.However once
in the net I could see it was another barrel of a fish and I had to weigh it
just to see, sure enough it was just into double figures.My train of thought now will be obvious to
any Piker…I fished till midday but
didn’t add to the score but once again thoroughly enjoyed myself and who knows
what the future holds?