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Back down "The Forbidden" for a very quick dusk session.
Four modest chub and several others bites in the clear, bottle green water. Certainly not perfect colour, but not gin clear.
It was cold, maybe three or four degrees, but no wind, ideal for watching the quiver.
After those chub, I baited the bream swim with a few feeder fulls of chopped worm and left it for half hour. I expected a bite straight away but the tip remained motionless for probably twenty minutes, when, out of the blue, it gently pulled round.
A very good sized bream did its best to reinforce the stereotype of the species being useless fighters.
A cracking fish though, in pristine winter condition, weighing a respectable 6lb 10oz.
By this time it was properly dark and I was freezing, so I headed back home for food and football on the radio, with the warm glow that comes from a successful session.
I almost didn't bother fishing, it was dull, dank and cold, but I grabbed the gear and thought I'd just give it a quick go at "The Forbidden" around dusk.
I missed several roach bites, despite fairly light tackle....well not chub gear anyway, I had a 4lb hooklink and no 10 fine wire hook. Just before moving swim I had an average sized chub, then upped sticks and walked down river.
I decided to move in to the "bream swim" just before dusk. It's at the end of a long straight with a depth of maybe 7 foot, before it narrows and deepens, falling away to 10-11 feet on the bend. Oddly enough I've always done best in the area before it really drops away into the deep water.
It was probably only two or three degrees, so just four tiny cage feeder fulls of chopped worm and bread were deposited into the swim and I say back and waited.
After no more than ten minutes I started getting liners and bangs on the rod tip. Then a fish rolled, perhaps fifteen yards upstream. It was looking promising.
The tip eased back gently and as I struck, a heavy winter bream hooped the rod over. As is usual with bream, it was unspectacular, but at over 5lb and in immaculate condition it was well worth catching for a change, especially as I'm constantly told there's none left in the river.
Next cast a smaller sample, again in good nick.
The next bite was slow but firm and at first I thought I'd foul hooked a big bream. After the fish had taken several yards of line in an unstoppable fashion it was obvious that this was no snotty.
It turned out to be a 13lb 5oz carp in absolutely pristine condition and the first Ive caught from river in many years.
No marks anywhere, including the mouth. I very, very much doubt it had been caught before. A "bonus fish" indeed !
Didn't hang around after that, being well pleased with four decent fish in a couple of hours. I might have to try that spot again very soon
The camper was packed with the essentials. The usual, fishing gear, bait, food and drink.
It was a bloody disgrace, I'd not cleaned it out since the last trip in November, but I have to admit I like going feral sometimes.
I reached the river at dawn and was greeted with topping fish and dozens of cormorants. I really don't know how long the rivers can keep taking this endless battering from the dreaded " Black Death".
Tackling up with a very small feeder and half a lob worm in pursuit of a perch or two, I started off with a couple of smallish perch, then a better one, followed by a few skimmers and proper silver bream. I do like a silver bream, especially when they're of decent size and these were....maybe 8 - 12 oz I guess.
It's a funny place to fish. The locals are very friendly, but you don't half have some funny comments along with the usual " Do you eat them ?" type stuff.
I had "Are you using grass as bait" from one woman.
Another said, and this is word for word, "Do the swans swish the fish in for you?". Honestly, WTF does does that even mean ?
An angler next to me said "That great crested grebe is making an unusual call". I said to him it was an ornamental duck not a grebe. He said " No, its a grebe with his silver winter coat ".
I went over to him, smashed his rod over my knee, hit him with a viscious uppercut and chucked him head first in the river.
Actually, I didn't, but should have.
Back to the fishing. Loads more skimmers, some very decent roach ( what matchman would call " dog roach " ) and one clonking rudd.
The skimmers carried on chomping my hard won lobworms, even when I changed from a half lob on a size 10 to two on a size 6.
Still, it's January, you can't complain when the quiver is constantly rattling and you're getting action on and off all day can you ?
Bully was further upstream and was also having plenty of fish, so it was another enjoyable day out.
It's been bloody freezing this week, nightime frosts, sunny, but bitterly cold in the day, with the rivers in flood to boot.
For once, I made a sensible decision. Work this week and then fish all next week and beyond, if the forecast is correct. If.
When I say work, I mean two to four hours a day, let's not get carried away.
I've been prepping the gear and stocking up. Found some very nice mini cage feeders which are perfect for "the job".
Last Sunday we had a rogue day when the temperature rose to eleven degrees for literally a few hours. I was out worming that evening and there were loads everywhere.
I was not on top of my game and missed too many, but still came back with about eighty. If my back could take more than about an hour of it I could have filled my boots.
I've liquidised and frozen a few, along with some dendras and redworms from the compost heap, for my perch attack next week, take a look.
Looks a bit nasty eh ? The perch will love it I reckon.
I stocked up on some hooks, ten packets of the old faithful Kamasan B953, put them in an envelope and then chucked the envelope in the bin. What an idiot.
I do like the Guru Feeder hooks for the rudd fishing on the feeder too. Bit lighter gauge than the Kamasans and ultra sharp.
In the garage to sort a bit of gear out, only lasted a few minutes before the old fingers were frozen.
I made some lobworm floats too. Cork body with a fat goose quill top, to take the weight of the worm when you're just tripping the bottom.
Yes, I admit they are ugly and could be finished a bit better but they'll be perfect I reckon.
Can't wait to back fishing next week, the fire still burns bright.