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.







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