Saturday came around again, high tide was due at 1630 which isn’t ideal but at least on these shorter days darkness comes earlier every week. But where to fish? I had a couple of ideas but Giles came up with a different suggestion; he’d fished ‘posh beach’ once before and had been tipped off it fished well on the outgoing tide which if true would be ideal. I left in the early afternoon and had a strange journey through rural Suffolk with a kamikaze motor cyclist coming straight at me and a lost caravaner caused chaos on a narrow village street, rumour has it he was last seen at the low bridge in Needham…
Eventually I broke free of the carnage and found myself at
the beach which is conveniently lined with a road. This is good as obviously we don’t have to
hump the kit too far but it does have some drawbacks… There were other cars about too, mostly very
large ones with vanity plates and also a couple of fellow anglers. Giles was already fishing and his tips were
bouncing, the waves were high and the sea was roaring but the fresh wind was
blowing over our backs and the shelf gave shelter.
By 1430 I had two
baits out and it was pleasant sitting there but for two hours nothing happened
except the sea marched towards us, the waves grew bigger and louder. We sat and chatted and pretty much let the
baits soak, with all the commotion we’d be hard pushed to tell a bite but when
we wound in we still had bait attached.
Behind us cars came and went, some people sat eating chips and a couple
of others just stood looking at us, as if we were some kind of spectacle put
there for their amusement.
By 1700 with the tide on the way down and things relatively
steady I thought I saw a fishy tremble on ragworm which I’d had to cast further
than I normally would due to the big waves and heavy undertow. This didn’t develop but when I wound in there
was a fish attached, well an Eel but at least I’d avoided the blank. A few minutes later so had Giles with a
Whiting also caught on rag and this was the first of very many he caught over
the next couple of hours. As for me I really
struggled to see bites or more to the point my tips wouldn’t stop moving and it
looked like I was getting constant action.
Even moving the tripod and following the sea back down the beach didn’t
help, for some reason my lines were at the wrong angle and waves were breaking
over them at regular intervals giving false fishy rattles. Giles had no such trouble and kept on
catching Whiting regularly on rag or strips of mackerel, with darkness the wind
dropped a bit and the action continued.
I did manage to catch a couple of Whiting on the lighter rod which I
still had to cast further behind the waves than usual, to be honest I didn’t
see either bite, the fish were just there when I wound in. Then a few seconds of anticipation when I saw
a thump on the heavy rod, the result was another Whiting.
Tonight we were reminded what a scary entity the sea can be,
the waves weren’t just big they were unpredictable with rogues occasionally
swamping shingle we trusted to stay dry.
This caused me two wet feet but Giles trumped this when releasing a
Dogfish the first we’d seen in months, by falling over in an unsuccessful
attempt to out run a wave while back peddling.
I did apologise for my spontaneous laughter. By 2030 the fishing had slowed but Giles had
massacred the Whiting, literally as he was well into double figures and took a
load of legal ones to feed the family. I
had another Whiting, another Eel and after a decent rattle on rag a Bass which
though not particularly big knew how to use the waves to its advantage.
By 2130 we’d used all the rag and had enough so we packed up and hiked for yards back to the car. Posh beach isn’t as appealing as the wilder beaches but is definitely a good option for when conditions don’t favour our preferred places. The drive home was longer than it should have been as I missed a turn and found myself going in the right general direction but on entirely different roads but it all worked out in the end.
It was the unplanned bank holiday and my presence in the house was not needed so I spent a few hours in the garden, not doing anything at all that requires green fingers. It’s that time of year, the great shed reversal ahead of the winter spent mostly Pike fishing? I went through my bags and checked I had all I needed, Sharpened up some lures then went through the rods one by one, rigging them up for the season ahead. When that was all done putting some of that gear to the test seemed like a good idea.
Isaac and I were fishing by 1600 on an afternoon that had
become cool and cloudy with a light north westerly. We took a boat out onto an old lake and after
a long row commenced fishing with lures.
Isaac fished with floating divers worked slowly over the weed, I covered
the same zone but fished with sinking lures, shads and curly tails. It was slow to begin with but after a couple
of moves we found a few fish. Isaac was
first to hook up with a Jack that nailed a salmo perch and unhooked itself
beside the boat. I bumped one on a big
curly tail then shortly after hooked one on the same lure, this too was
unhooked beside the boat, I reckoned it was about the same size as Isaac’s fish
but he swore his was bigger.
We moved again and had a couple of fish that swirled at our lures and disappeared for good but it didn’t matter, we’d got what we came for, my first attempt to catch a Pike for six months was successful so I rowed back while Isaac trolled a lure but this didn’t entice anything. A couple of weeks ago I wasn’t thinking about Pike but now it’s nearly time, I’m getting the pull.
Another day spent doing odd fishy jobs ahead of the autumn,
putting the finishing touches to my Pikey kit ahead of the season. There’s bait in the freezer and petrol in the
can, I’m ready now. But before that
there’s still time for a bit more beach fishing and this weekend the high tide
was pretty much where I wanted it. All
things considered it all looked good for another trip to the Cauldron.
I arrived at the shore at 1720, bang on tow tide and looked
down at the boiling cauldron. It was
hissing violently as I expected but I’d seen it much worse. I was in no great hurry to set up knowing the
sea would become more manageable as time went on. As the current eased so the waves should
build, at the moment there was the barest ripple hitting the shingle but I knew
this would increase and by high tide there would be a boom and crash. By 1745 I had my usual two set ups cast out,
or more accurately lobbed out a few yards as the current would allow. Too far and the leads would be on their way
to Holland.
The forecast had been iffy enough for me to hump the oval brolly across the marsh but once at the beach, for the first time this year, I discovered the north easterly was not half as strong as I’d been led to believe. At least I’d be sheltered from the drizzle which blew through from time to time and I’d be snug and comfortable for the long evening ahead. By 1800 I was all settled, sitting comfortably with tea brewing, all was right in my world and at that moment there was no place I’d rather be. All I needed was a fish or two. After five minutes the light rod signalled something had grabbed my ragworm, a decent Bass was winched ashore and I hadn’t even drunk my tea yet.
What experience I have of this beach suggested the fishing
would be slow to begin with but I expected darkness to liven things up and the
two hours leading up to high tide at 2345 should be the best time. I had an eel on ragworm at 1830 and then
waited two hours for another bite by which time it was deepest dark and the sea
was growling, somehow I managed to miss it.
Another hour passed before the light rod rattled again and I had a
second Bass of the evening. I expected
this to be the first of many but it didn’t work out like that. I had bites alright, every now and then,
never in bursts like can happen but I just couldn’t connect with any. Many were plucks and rattles that didn’t
develop into anything but for some I was too quick, some too slow but others I
don’t know how I missed. Most were on
the ragworm fished close but there were two good thumps on the heavy rod which
got the heart pounding.
I kept trying, kept casting and varying the distance on the
heavy rod, kept dropping the banker bait into the dead cert spot but by 0015 I
still hadn’t added to my tally. Part of
me wanted to stay on and keep trying but the sensible voice took over saying
‘get home you idiot you’re fucking knackered.’
A disappointing night on what will probably be my last beach trip of the
year, probably but not definitely.
No comments:
Post a Comment