…something
I attempted frequently as a young man but I’d never fished for, or indeed
caught a Catfish. Why? Well I could claim lack of opportunity but in
truth there are a couple of waters that are fairly local and hold Cats. Both are commercial Carp fisheries and
therefore often crowded which is one of the things that has put me off. Both of these waters have a low head of cats
too so in reality, catching one from these would require a sizable investment
of both time and money. So do I want to
spend a lot of time shoulder to shoulder with carp anglers and spend a fair bit
of cash along the way? No!!
My mind
started to tick over recently when a customer brought in a leaflet for a
commercial fishery in Norfolk which had a fair head of Cats and reasonable
prices. He confirmed my fears that the
place got packed at weekends though.
However I had a little mid-week time coming so after consulting the good
lady, I made a couple of phone calls, done a little research and began to make
plans for my first attempt at Cat-fishing.
We
rolled through the gates at about 4pm on a Sunday afternoon and had a little
look around. Toilet block, gravel roads
and cut grass, not my sort of thing and I didn’t really feel at home but I
could put up with this if it meant putting a Cat on the bank. We found ourselves at the pool containing the
Wels which looked much nicer than some of the others on the fishery which were
little more than holes in the ground.
The Cat pool is about an acre in size, fringed with reeds and had some
lovely Weeping willow trees which added character. There were Carp showing all over, rolling and
swirling but the water was like green pea soup and it was impossible to gauge
the size of any fish. The pool looked
okay but there were about seven other anglers squeezed in, however most of them
showed signs of packing up. Shelley and
I chose to fish at the western end of the lake beside a weeping willow. The tree was an obvious feature but we were
also as far from other anglers as we could get.
Fish of some description were fizzing out in front of me and Carp nosed
around the margins. The banks didn’t
look too trodden so I hoped no one had fished this area over the weekend. Most of the anglers that were about didn’t
look particularly clued up, not that I am either when it comes to Carp or
Catfish but I know not to charge down the bank and strike wildly at liners.
So how should I fish? I decided to hedge my bets on one rod fishing fishmeal boilies ‘snowman’ style with a PVA bag full of pellets and a handful of loose boilies. This was fished on a 2.5tc Tricast rod and swung beneath the willow to my right. This I hoped might catch me a carp but still give me a chance of a Cat. On my second rod I fished a hair rig baited with two 22mm halibut pellets, tipped with a fake boilie. Once again I attached a PVA bag full of various sized pellets and dropped this about five metres in front of the willow. I didn’t put out too much loose feed at this stage as I wanted to wait and watch. Shelley fished with her usual whip and maggot set up but bites were slow to come, I was hoping she’d be able to supply me with a few silver fish that I could use as bait.
It took
me ages to get the bivvy set up and sorted as I was watching the water, looking
for clues of what to do and how to fish.
Shelley showed no signs of catching any silver fish which cut out the
livebait option. The bailiff wandered
round for a chat and recommended luncheon meat as a top bait for the Cats, sods
law meant it was one bait I didn’t have with me but he kindly gave me a tin to
try. The sun was sinking slowly and most
of the other anglers had departed, the rest were packing up so it looked like
we’d have the pool to ourselves for the night, lovely! I just had to decide how to fish.
I
decided to stick with the boilie rod which I dropped into a reedy margin spot
where carp had showed. I walked round
and baited up by hand with about fifty free offerings, that was one rod sorted. With Shelley catching nothing on the whip we
replaced this with another out and out ‘Cat rod’. Incidentally the rods I used for the Cats
were my most powerful Pike rods, both ten footers usually used from the boat;
one of Dave Lumb’s Loch Tamer and a Fox Predator elite. On both I had 50lbs braid and helicopter type
rigs, hooklengths were made from either Fox Armadillo or Coretex. Hooks were Kuro 2b barbless, for once I was
complying with fishery rules. Anyway, I
fished two large Halibut pellets with a big PVA bag of pellets about fifteen
metres out to an area where fish had been fizzing all evening. Having read that Catfish are eating machines
I baited this spot up with a couple of kilos of mixed pellets and a few
boilies. If I was lucky enough to catch
anything I’d top up the bait. The other
rod was baited with a large chunk of luncheon meat and swung beneath the
willow. I put a couple of handfuls of
pellets on top thinking it might help fish to find my bait in the soup like
water.
Throughout
the evening the indicators sounded as my lines tightened and fell slack. I put this down to either liners or smallish
carp trying to eat my too big baits. I
felt sure that should a Catfish take my bait, there’d be no messing about. By this time we had the pool to ourselves but
kept getting visited by strange locals, one carrying a large rifle along with a
very skinny and very loud cat of the four legged, furry variety. As the sky darkened our visitors departed and
there was loads of fishy activity from leaping or rolling Carp. There were also more sinister slurps and
slaps that may have been Catfish feeding in the upper layers. I can’t be sure but I suspect that’s what
they were and I wished I had a livebait or even a bunch of lobworms out there. It was a lovely starry night and we sat
drinking tea, listening to the Olympic closing ceremony on the radio whilst
chatting and putting the world to rights.
By midnight the closing ceremony had finished and the temperature had
dropped considerably so we retired to the bivvy. I was a little disappointed that the evening
hadn’t brought me a Catfish and my confidence was low, what would the night
bring?
The
sleeping bag was warm and I began to slip away into sleep then all of a sudden
an alarm was sounding a constant single tone “Showtime!” and I found myself
scrambling out of the bivvy with shoes on the wrong feet. The rod baited with halibut pellets had been
picked up and I wound down into a fish that pulled back with power, it was
apparent pretty quickly that I had hooked a Catfish! There has been lots written about the
fighting power of these fish and it hasn’t been exaggerated much. To me the fight was like an Irish Pike of the
same size but with more stamina. When
the fish went on a run it couldn’t be stopped and started off with a surge that
juddered the rod tip in a manner that seemed strange to me. I guess it was due to the long muscular fish
tensing itself then uncoiling? It was
bloody good fun battling this creature in the dark and after a while I felt I
was winning. The loch tamer was doing
its job, the runs became shorter and a long pale shape materialised over the
net, I had my first ever Catfish!
The fish
was as ugly as I knew it would be and actually very slimy but I was surprised
by how well it behaved on the bank. I’d
read about the pads in the fish’s mouth but they were more ‘toothy’ than I
expected, the gill rakers looked scary!
My hook was just in the corner of the mouth and I also removed another
from the other side, along with a length of leadcore and several yards of line. I weighed my Wels, no monster but a very
pleasing weight for me, then Shelley reeled off a few photos. One last look at this strange prehistoric
creature then I returned it back to whence it came. I then sorted out the mess, got the bait back
out there and topped up the groundbait.
I’d got a Cat! Result!
Sleep
didn’t come easily after that, although I was very tired my brain wouldn’t
switch off. I kept reliving the battle
in my mind and hoped I’d get another chance.
Next thing I remember there was this sound and Shelley was murmuring,
“was that your bite alarm?” Then I heard
that sound again and crawled out of my kip bag again to find a bait running
buzzing away. It was an un-missable take
but somehow I managed to wind down into nothingness. Had the fish dropped the bait? Had I pulled the bait out of its mouth? Who knows?
By now it was about 0500 and growing light so I recast the two Cat rods
and topped the freebies up on both before returning to the comfort of the bivvy
once again.
I
managed a bit more sleep but all too soon it was 0800 and fully daylight; that
would almost certainly be that fishing wise.
I began to think about getting out of the comfortable kip bag when
another alarm sounded, this time it was the rod baited with luncheon meat. By the time I reached the rod the alarm had
stopped and the water boiled as a large fish made it’s get away. I suspect a Cat may have somehow shed my hook
and I’d missed another chance.
After
that I gradually began to tidy up our kit.
I cooked sausages for breakfast while Shelley had another try at catching
something on the whip. Eventually her
persistence was rewarded and she managed to catch a couple of tiny Roach,
maintaining her record of never having blanked but she is a fair weather
angler! I was very pleased that I’d
managed a Catfish but I knew I could have had a couple more. I’d learnt loads and now have more ideas of
how I’d go about it in the future. I
enjoyed the whole Catfishing experience and I’m positive I’ll find the right
time and the right place to have another go.
I now have a 100% record when it comes to chasing pussy but I wasn’t
anywhere near that successful as a young man…
3 comments:
Nice fish mate, they do pull a bit, don't they?
Thanks! They sure do, all the best
Top stuff Sir Michael.....or is it now cowboy!!! LoL
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