"Reports that say that something hasn't happened are always interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns- the ones we don't know we don't know"
Donald Rumsfeld
I doubt The Don was an angler, but this is how I'd describe what's going on down the local river at the moment.
The more I fish, the more I realise I understand very little about what's going on.
At the weekend I fished a reliable mark at a good state of the tide with surface and subsurface lures without a touch.
I'd got some ragworm in the car and thought I'd try them on a float. Fifteen minutes later I'd landed five sizeable bass in the same spot as I'd been thrashing away with the lures. I was surprised to say the least.
Last week I saw the biggest shoals of feeding mullet I've seen in a very long while. I would have bet a hefty sum that I'd have one or two.
Not a touch, despite having feeding fish all over the flies.
Yesterday I tried a tiny piece of maddie on a size 14 hook for the mullet, that were feeding a foot out in six to eight inches of water.
After a five minutes I hooked in to a fish that bolted out in to deeper water. It surfaced and I saw it was a decent bass. The tiny hook was wedged nicely in the jaw, but really, I didn't expect bass to be feeding in ultra shallow water in the middle of a sunny day.
As I say, I now know I know nothing, whereas a few years ago I didn't know I knew nothing.
Thanks Don.
I'm 58 and still learning!
ReplyDeleteYep, it's a non stop process isn't it.
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