I had to work on
Saturday but afterwards the Purple Princess and I hurtled northwards and by
dusk were pitching a tent on the Norfolk coast.
I love the long summer evenings and we still had enough light to enjoy a
walk on the beach though not enough light to use the cameras. We’ve camped here many times and expect to
see Seals in the surf and sure enough we spotted one before we’d even descended
from the dunes. We walked northwards
seeing more and more seals as we did so, after about a mile we climbed up a
tide break and we greeted by the sight of a whole group of seals laying on the
beach. Their calls were strange, some
high pitched and musical, others deeper almost barks. We walked slowly forward but didn’t want to
get too close and disturb them. Further
along the beach were even more seals around a hundred in all and there were
dozens more swimming just off shore. We
made sure we kept a respectful distance and walked along enjoying something we
may never see again? The Seals certainly
noticed us and some of the younger ones shifted position, a couple actually
shuffled towards us to get a better look.
The sun setting behind the dunes gave the scene an eerie light, we couldn’t
manage to capture it on camera but the memory will stay.
After a night in the
tent we packed away in the morning and made our way to the staithe. By midday we were afloat on a bouncy broad,
surrounded by yachts. Through the yachts
I opened the throttle; the fresh south westerly threw spray off the bows and
temporarily prevented the PP clicking away with a new Nikon. After a little cruise around I stopped the
boat in a sheltered spot and began tackling up.
I fished two open end feeders on helicopter rigs using corn or maggots
on 16 hooks on a two foot link. The
groundbait was the remnants of the Expo mix I’d used in the spring, bulked up
with more brown crumb and given a good squirt of liquid Brasem.
With the cuddy half
up, the boat nicely organised I tuned in radio 6 and we chilled out with a brew,
or at least I tried but bites came to maggots immediately. I missed a few and hit a few more and caught
fish regularly, all Roach up to 4ozs and after a couple of hours I’d not seen a
single Bream. I was already planning to
move before the Pink footed Geese starting fighting in front of us. This plan became solid when one of the
combatants launched itself skyward and through my line, dragging my rod and
reel out of the boat and across the broad.
Thankfully the bird became untangled and the rod floated. All ended as
well as could be expected when I picked the rod up on the way to a second swim.
A short while later
we pulled the boat into a secret, sheltered bay and got everything settled and
sorted once more. I chucked the feeder
into a clear area between weedbeds. The
rods were mostly forgotten while I fried brunch and topped up the flasks, when
I wound in I found either sucked maggots or a Roach had hung itself. The day had threatened rain but we only felt
a little drizzle on the wind, it stayed bright and breezy making good light for
photography and the Purple princess was in her element. Meanwhile I was in a nice rhythm, recasting
regularly and catching fish, mostly small Roach with the occasional Rudd. It didn’t take long before the rod stayed
bent and I boated a Bream of about three pounds, followed quickly by another
one a bit smaller. This pattern
continued throughout the afternoon; I caught mostly Roach but from time to time
Bream would drift in and I would catch a couple before they wandered off
again. In future I’ll take more bait to
hold them in the swim… All in all it was
a good day’s fishing.
As always in
Broadland there were plenty of distractions and photo opportunities that
dragged my concentration away from the rod tips. We saw all manner of wildfowl, in particular
another Pink footed Goose which came right up to the boat. I’m not sure if it was trying to scrounge a
feed or if it was trying to make amends for earlier… We see far fewer birds of prey in the summer
but a couple of Marsh Harriers ghosted over.
Dragonflies buzzed by but didn’t stay for a photo. The bay was ours and only ours, we didn’t see
a soul though we heard plenty and no one knew we were there. Radio 6 came up with some blinding tunes and
I was dancing in the boat with Leftfield and Lydon. We even switched stations just in time for
the tie break that led to Andy Murray winning Wimbledon. I’m no tennis fan but fair play.
It was a lovely
afternoon and it was tempting to stay out to watch the sunset but the pub was
even more tempting. We made it in time
for a lovely seafood platter washed down with a pint of ‘Ghost ship’. We somehow ended in in the pub quiz and didn’t
disgrace ourselves… We packed loads into a day and a bit and arrived home late, thoroughly knackered. We really must do
this more often!
2 comments:
The pinks are in the Arctic for the summer. That goose is a greylag. ;-)
Well it had pink feet but I'm happy to take your word for it!
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