Friday 21 September 2012

Finally I can plan my next fishing trip?

After about 2 months, my knee has finally healed enough for me to begin thinking about going fishing again.  Maybe next Tuesday afternoon and evening.

I have missed nearly two months of the season now and it is time to catch some fish.  I have had a terrible season so far, just one decent fish.  From now on, things can only get better surely.

So maybe a trip to the Thames near my home for the first one of the autumn.  Not sure what to fish for yet - chub or barbel?  At the moment I would just like to get on the bank, let alone actually catch anything.

On an entirely different matter, I have just come back from France.  No private fishing clubs in France.  You just pay E70 a year and can fish more or less anywhere you fancy.  The River Charente and the Boutonne near where we were staying looked very inviting in places.  Apparently the chub can grow to over 4kg and the barbel, though rare, can reach 10kg.

Maybe I should consider a fishing trip to France.  A 10kg (22lb+) barbel would certainly cheer me up

Friday 7 September 2012

First post for ages - my knee is on the mend!

Slowly the knee is improving.  For one week walking was near impossible, for the next two weeks I had to hobble around using a walking pole for support and the joint would frequently give way.  Now I am just about able to walk again without the use of a pole.  And while on holiday in France, I was able to swim ok and walk at least a couple of miles in one go

We are going back to France next week for a few days and then I am hopeful that I will be back to fishing soon after.  But even then that means I will have missed nearly two months of the season, including all of the best river conditions after the June-July floods.

Tuesday 7 August 2012

New fishing video - My Fishing Life 12

I had some footage left over from the last trip I did before I hurt my knee.  This was a short session of about 2 hours fishing the top peg of a local stretch of the River Thames nearest the point where I parked the car.  In the past this has produced some decent fish.  I have had several five pound chub from this spot with a biggest of 5-10, and I am pretty sure that there has been at least one six pounder.

But for me today, ledgering sweetcorn just produced a handful of small fish.  Four chub and two roach of about 4-6oz each.  It is good to know that there are immaculate small fish in the stretch, even if I am not catching bigger fish.

The virus that has caused my knee problem seems to have passed a few days ago and my knee is now getting better quite quickly.  I have been able to walk two miles on it without needing a pole for support, and I expect it to be back to normal while we are away in France for the next two weeks.  Then I shall be back fishing to relaunch my season. 

Hopefully September will see me back catching bigger fish.


Youtube link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4FK6vjBELQ&feature=plcp

Sunday 5 August 2012

Getting better?

It has been nearly three weeks since I last went fishing and I can at least report that my knee is improving day-by-day.  I can now walk unaided by a pole and have managed walks of up to a mile so far.  But walking on a muddy path by a river is probably not possible at the moment.

We go on holiday on Wednesday this week and there is a slight chance that I might go fishing on either Tuesday evening, or Wednesday morning.  But it will have to be somewhere I can drive to quite close to where I will be fishing, with no tricky paths.  I am thinking perhaps Northmoor weir.

If not then, my next fishing trip will be the weekend of August 25th - a gap of six weeks between trips.  That half a close season!

Monday 30 July 2012

A major scare . . .

Last Thursday, I woke up with a pain in my right knee.  By Thursday evening, this had grown progressively worst, so that I was unable to walk without some sort of support.  On Friday I was reduced to hobbling about using a walking pole for support.  Driving was just about impossible as, in the first instance, I am having great difficulty getting in and out of the car (10 minutes to get out of the car and into the house on one occasion) and in the second instance, I have trouble pressing the brake pedal!

Saturday and Sunday were spent with the leg immobilised and a bag of sweetcorn on the knee.  Yet I had suffered no obvious trauma to cause the problem in the first place.  Also the knee wasn't swollen at all, though very sore when I put pressure on it. 

At one point I actually began to wonder if I had done some serious long-term damage to it, one implication being that my preferred style of fishing - roving on rivers - might no longer be possible.  This is quite a shock at my age - 49. 

Then a little brightness.  One of my wife's clients is a former doctor (now a psychologist).  I took advantage of her being round to ask her about the knee and she rather surprised me by concluding after a few questions that I probably had "viral arthritis".  Some viruses can apparently cause imflamation of joints which produces the symptoms of arthritis. Its not real arthritis, just something that looks exactly like it. 

Now I think about it, I have had a bit of a bug in the last week, the main symptom of which is a dry cough.  In theory, as I fight the virus, the knee will get better with no lasting damage at all.  In fact, there is a good chance that I will just wake up one morning and it will be better.

So from thinking that I might be facing weeks of physiotherapy and the possibility of not walking properly again, and so no more fishing, I may only have a few more days of trouble. 

But I have no plans to fish this week - ironic as conditions are now the best they have been all season.  Maybe I can go on Sunday or Monday next week.  Then, later next week, Wife and I depart to France for our main holiday. 

So really I might not fish again until the last week of August, four weeks away.

It has to be said, this season is really not going to plan at all!

Thursday 26 July 2012

A short morning session

A couple of hours free before work starts and just time to see if conditions have improved much at the river. 

Yes, the level is down a few inches, but would chub be on the feed?  I fished two spots, both quite close to the car.  Float fishing sweetcorn in the first swim produced no bites at all.  Ledgering sweetcorn in the second produced half a dozen small fish - 4 chub and 2 roach - but nothing bigger than perhaps 8oz. 

I have actually not caught many small fish over the last 12 months so in some ways it is good that there are some around (at least for the long term).  But still no decent sized fish appearing. 

The forecast is for more rain this weekend, and my new plan is to fish into the dark a couple of evenings next week. 

Monday 23 July 2012

The season so far . . .

Well the current river fishing season is now just over five weeks old and I have had one of the poorest starts to a season that I have ever had.  It had been even worse than five or six years ago when there were also really bad floods at the start of the season.  But that year I was usually able to catch one or two chub each trip - now I am not even getting that.

All sorts of reasons have gone through my mind, from the idea that maybe the fish hadn't spawned and were all holed up on some gravel shallows somewhere, to the idea that maybe my filming of trips is somehow to blame - perhaps I disturb the fish setting up the tripod, perhaps I fish in a more anxious, less-patient way as I am being filmed . . . .

One possible issue is that I am mainly fishing for chub.  Barbel would be a better principal target perhaps, but numbers are so low on the Upper Thames that deliberately fishing for them is almost bound to lead to long sequences of blanks anyway.

So what is my current plan?  Well I went for a walk at the river on Saturday morning and remarkably, the river is higher again.  It had possibly peaked a little bit higher still (though the evidence for this was rather patchy).  But as I write this, we have had 3 days without rain and no rain is forecast for the next few days.  So tomorrow I will pop to the river first thing and assess the level yet again.  If it is down again (as I'm pretty sure it will be), I will have a trip on Tuesday afternoon / evening.  This will be a multi-swim bait and fish in rotation plan, with sweetcorn or boilies as the bait.  Then I might go early on Wednesday or Thursday morning for a couple of hours float fishing.

If the river is no lower, this plan will be moved back to Thursday evening. 

One other point - I do think that I ought to fish a bit longer than I have been each trip.  I have been tending to go for just a couple of hours.  This should go up to sessions of four or five hours I think.

And venues?  For the moment I will stick to the local stretches of the River Thames - at least I dodn't have to travel far to get to these spots.  But when conditions do improve I am thinking of having a few trips to the Thames at Northmoor weir.  Or maybe the Pickfords stretch.

Thursday 19 July 2012

Two short evening sessions

Tuesday

Based on the rain we have had here, I was expecting the river to be down a bit on last week and prospects for chub to be better, so I was somewhat shocked to find it actually up a few inches.  Moreover, the path by the river is now a very liquid mud and is really treacherous to walk along. Nonetheless, I was keen on going fishing and so settled in one of the swims nearest the car for an evening's float fishing after chub.

After about 30 minutes I landed a small roach of about 3oz, so at least I wasn't going to blank!  But a further hour and a half produced no more bites and the mystery of the whereabouts of the chub remains.  Only one decent fish all season in the current poor conditions.


Wednesday

A last minute change of domestic plans opened up the possibility of a short, two hour, evening session.  As the river was higher yesterday, I thought the best chance might actually be to fish for barbel - never a great chance of success on the upper Thames, but given the conditions, possibly my only chance of a good fish.  I had baited a swim last night with hemp, corn and boilies and so planned to fish "bait and wait" in this one swim tonight. 

So I was at the swim by about 7:30.  It was actually a much nicer evening than last night with a decent sunset over the far bank.  It is possible that I had one bite during the evening, but there was also quite a lot of weed coming down and it might have been that. 

Packed up just before dark as the walk back to the car is really difficult in the mud.

The weather forecast now suggests more rain till Friday and then a change in weather towards hot and sunny.  So maybe next week will see improving conditions.  My next planned trip is Tuesday and I will fish much longer sessions once conditions start to improve.


Youtube link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZmslnlHtBI&feature=plcp

Wednesday 11 July 2012

Newest video - "Rain"

It was only when I was watching the video footage from last night that I realised how odd it looks in many respects.  For much of the time I am touch ledgering, but also watching the quivertip.  And so I was not always fully aware of the extent to which I was being rained on.  Actually some of the rain is extremely hard!

I wonder if my youtube videos will still exist in cyberspace in, say, 200 years time.  By then, climate change, pollution or something might have wiped out fish stocks and angling might be a sport of the distant past.  A cyber-historian might come across a dusty old server in a back room somewhere and when fired up, might discover my fishing videos.  And so he will discover what our wonderful sport had to offer - sitting in nettles for hours at a time as the rain pelts down, watching a stationary rod tip and not catching any fish.

In these postmodern times, my latest fishing video is, perhaps, the perfect embodiment of the sport.  Or perhaps not.  Or, as Gilles Deleuze** put it, in a passage I selected at random from Cinema 2,

The sheets of past exist, they are strata from where we draw our recollection images.  But either they are in any case unusable, because death is a permanent present, the most contracted region; or they can no longer be recalled because they are breaking up or becoming twisted, scattered in a non-stratified substance (p.111)

** French Professor of Philosophy and a key figure in poststructualism.  Cinema 2 draws on the work of Henri Bergson to offer an analysis of the representation of time in film and the cinematic treatment of memory, thought and speech.  Most of it is bollocks of course.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Css8XBwIj4&feature=plcp

No success with the newest "cunning plan"

My latest "cunning plan" to catch some chub consisted of me baiting up four swims at about 5:00pm and then fishing each in turn through the evening and into the dark.  Bait for each would be two pints of hemp, a tin of sweetcorn and two dozen of the smelliest boilies I still have.  Then I would not rebait later, simply hope to land on some feeding fish who would recognise the bait straight away, even if they had already eaten everything I had put in earlier.

There had been no rain since Saturday when the British Grand Prix just up the road had been so badly affected, and there had even been some sunshine early this afternoon.  So loaded down with the usual stuff I made the 3/4 mile walk down to Shifford lock.  I had been there less than 10 minutes when it started to pour down, which it then kept up for the next two hours.  I switched my planned four swims to include a couple that were a little sheltered by trees, but I was pretty wet even before I had made my first cast.

And the only possible action I had in the next five hours was in swim two, where I did get a series of very fast taps on the tip when using sweetcorn.  I expect these were small fish, but I failed to connect with anything each time I struck.  Not a touch on the boilie and no decent pulls on the corn. 

But at least it did stop raining about 7:00 and it was actually quite a pleasant evening.  Some bats were hunting mayflies along the river.  The odd fox was barking.  Several kingfishers flew by, or the same one three times.  It certainly is a lovely spot in which to not catch fish and a change from last week when my main problem was dehydration.  I wrapped up about 10:30 and endured the long walk back to the car through the thick mud that now covers most of the path.  But I have to say, I did rather enjoy being out in the dark again.  Come late August / September, I shall fish quite a few evenings into the dark.

My next trip will probably be Thursday evening again - I may try the same tactic as tonight.  Or I may abandon the river and go trout fishing at Bushyleaze instead!  The weather forecast is already really bad for the end of this week, but is suggesting slightly better weather for next week.

I am thinking of publishing a video from today's footage that just consists of me sitting in the rain watching a stationary rod tip.

Monday 9 July 2012

Video from last week's trip posted

I was away over the weekend and have only just had time to cobble something together out of the video footage from last Thursday.  There are the three boats that pass through my swim in the space of a minute.  There is a heron that takes off from close to where I was fishing and which I hadn't spotted before then.  There are the two bombers that flew over, presumably from Brize Norton over to the west.  But sadly no fish.  Three others were fishing that evening.  Mark apparently blanked but is seeking barbel so that is a good excuse.  And two others were fishing in the first main glide and had caught a few roach and perch up to about 8oz.  Where are the chub?

I have been sorting out bait for this week and am planning, should the rain hold off a little, to go for an evening on Tuesday.  I have a new "cunning plan" to find some chub!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HytjhBkTv0U&feature=plcp

Friday 6 July 2012

The excellent "Fishing for memories" blog / videos

There are dozens of fishing blogs out there of course, and some, like mine, are linked to companion video channels on Youtube.  The one of these I like best is Mark Erdwin's Fishing for Memories (http://fishing-for-memories.blogspot.co.uk/)  I have been studying this blog-video channel in some detail, looking at what he does differently to me, looking for ideas I can use, and so on. 

One of the first big differences is frequency of posting.  Mark's blog goes back to 2007 and has 103 postings so far, 17 a year on average.  I have posted 75 entries in 2012 alone.  He has posted 37 videos in that time, while I have posted 8 in just the last few months.  This could be that this is the frequency that he fishes, but I actually suspect it is because he is happy to post only when he has a good catch or some interesting film.  That's fair enough, and there is no doubt that it leads to an exceptionally high quality blog and video channel - he is an excellent angler with some amazing catches - I am of course mostly interested in his amazing chub catches.

My philosophy is slightly different but shares the view that my blog and video channel are there to preserve memories.  So I have taken the view that I should post regardless of success and try, over the entire sequence of entries and videos, to show what "my fishing life" actually consists of day-to-day, week-to-week, and so on.  So my current poor start to the season is shown, "warts and all". 

So when I'm 90, I will be able to watch myself in my late 40s blanking in a variety of venues while pursuing huge chub and barbel!

I have downloaded all of Mark's videos and am slowly working my way through them - really excellent stuff I have to say.

A frustrating afternoon-evening

More rain and the local rivers are actual up again - still, the urge to go fishing is overwhelming.  I did actual plan to go trout fishing for an evening at Bushyleaze but the local forecast was that it was going to rain hard again around 6:00pm which would wipe out about half my fishing time - not a good idea when the evening ticket costs nearly £20.

So it is back to the River Thames, this time the main river below Shifford Lock.  I figured I would have an afternoon float fishing for chub in a couple of my favourite swims down there, not with a high chance of catching anything, but more for the enjoyment of being out. 

What I hadn't reckon on was that the afternoon would be so hot.  I was expecting some rain and was dressed accordingly, but it was actually quite a nice afternoon with only a few scattered clouds.  By the time I reached Shifford Lock I was really overheated and made the mistake of drinking most of the liquid I had brought with me. 

What I had also forgotten about was the possibility of extensive boat traffic on this stretch, something that didn't occur back in February-March when I was fishing this area a lot.  I had just baited up two swims when two barges came through.  I am sure the fish are used to boat traffic overall but that it does spook them for a while and especially early season.  So I left the two swims and settled in a swim at the downstream end of Duxford Loop.  No boats here and also no fish in the hour of sweltering sunshine that I fished here.

Back to below Shifford Lock and less than five minutes in the first swim when one barge and four pleasure cruisers came through the swims more or less one after the other.  So much so that they had to queue at Shifford Lock to get through.  One or two boats might be ok, five might be too much.

So a change of plan.  I would switch to ledgering and a "bait and wait" approach in one of my favourite chub swims on Duxford Loop.  The sun kept shining and no rain appeared.  I became more and more thirsty and was reduced to pouring water from the river over my head.  Around 7:30 I was surprised to see Mark from Witney, who I had seen lots at the end of last season.  I didn't recognise him at the start as he didn't have his thermal hat on and I've never seen him with hair!  I complained about the poor start to the season I'd had and he complained about the excessive vegetation growth by the river compared to March - some of the swims we fished last season are too overgrown to get to now.  He was kind enough to let me have a few mouthfuls of his rather-nice lime drink.  I would have happily drunk it all.

I stayed until just after 9:00.  It was actually a really nice evening and clearly I should have gone to Bushyleaze.  I will start fishing into the dark soon I expect. 

So no chub again and no fishing till the middle of next week as I am off to the Lake District for a few days with Daughter - the weather forecast is for up to 10cms of rain to fall this weekend!

Still I did take a rather nice photo of a spider

Monday 2 July 2012

Long range weather forecasts

In the hope that the rain might be coming to an end soon, I was looking at the local 10-day weather forecast and basically there is a 70% chance of rain every day for the next week and a half.  It rained quite a lot here yesterday and it is doing so again today.  This is all rather disheartening.  It might be ok if barbel were a serious local target, but chub fishing is just constantly hit by the river rising and colouring up, just as you expect it to be getting better.

As I left on Saturday, I left a marker at the top of the stretch and popping back today, the river is up an inch or two.  It reminds me so much of the start of the season in 2007 where the rivers remained in flood till August.  Earlier in the year, when I was planning my season, I had been expecting good catches of chub from the local stretches, maybe some fun fishing on clear rivers for chub with floating crust or natural baits.  Certainly not this. 

If there is a break in the rain tomorrow afternoon, I might go and have a few hours in a single swim, rather than moving about lots.  But that's only to be able to get out by the river, not due to a view I will catch much.

I have just been reading the new Angling Times and Angler's Mail for the start of the new river season and they have no chub captures of any note at all.  Maybe my 5-05 was actually pretty good!  If I had said I caught it on the Windrush, I might have got my picture in the fishing papers again!

Or maybe I sould have a trip after trout again - maybe Bushyleaze?

Addendum - Tuesday

No large chub reported in this week's Angler's Mail.  Also, I have been catching up with my favourite fishing blog - Phil Smith's http://www.barbelblogger.blogspot.co.uk/

He has just turned his attention to barbel, fishing from early pm to around 11:00pm on three afternoons last week, managing one really nice barbel.  This does suggest that the afternoon into evening might be the best focus for longer sessions.  But that is one fish for 24 hours fishing with two rods.

I had a quick trip down to the river this lunchtime and it is up about 2 inches from the weekend.  Rain showers are occuring every couple of hours, so the earliest I am planning an evening session is perhaps Thursday.  I may go and bait some swims on Wednesday afternoon.


Saturday 30 June 2012

Another short session, another blank!

I had about two hours free first thing on Saturday morning - just enough time for a short session after chub on one of my most-local stretches.  Of course the river is still high and coloured but it is a little lower than recently.  Today's plan is to ledger a strong-smelling boilly in a couple of swims, the alternate bait being lobworms. 

My first swim is the one closest to where people park cars.  As such it is often fished but I have had a rather mixed record there.  Years ago, it was a good barbel swim, especially fishing upstream on the gravel beds below the willow.  But I'm not sure many barbel have been there recently.  Last season I had two five pound chub from this spot from four or five attempts and Mark, I guy I often see fishing this stretch in winter, had a 5-12 chub and a 3-03 perch.  So it can fish well.  This morning I only gave it 40 minutes or so and had no suggestions of a bite at all.

Just after I settled in the second swim, where I planned to spend the remaining 90 minutes of my trip, there was a long rain shower - so hard that I actually stopped filming as I was worried about the camera.  I may have had one bite in this spot - on one occasion there was a definite small twitch and the bait was gone.  But as always, this could have been crayfish.

I spent the last 20 minutes bumping a lobworm bait along the far bank with no success. 

So no fish again.  Other than the state of the river itself, I think my current problem is that I'm not fishing for long enough.  I have been 5 times this season but have probably only fished for about 12 hours.  So this week's plan is for a longer trip of perhaps 6-7 hours, maybe Tuesday or Thursday.

But the forecast is for more rain and so the rivers will remain high and fishing will be quite hard I suspect. 

Today's video does show me fishing in the rain and so is an accurate example of what so many of us fisherman face on a regular basis.  "My fishing life" aims to reflect the true circumstances of my fishing, not just when things go well.  So for the moment, I am continuing to post videos of me not catching anything!  There is something almost Zen-like in a series of fishing videos in which no fish are caught - a direct pointing to the emptiness of reality.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJf3m4jo_kI&feature=plcp&noredirect=1


Sitting in a bed of stinging nettles in the pouring rain at 6:30 on a Saturday morning not catching any fish.

Sunday 24 June 2012

At last, a decent sized fish!

I've missed four days when I could have gone fishing as a result of my bad eye, but things have been getting better since Wednesday and I thought it worthwhile to take a little chance and go first thing this morning for a couple of hours.  The venue was carefully chosen so I was not too far from my car if the eye flaired up again and I had to make a speedy getaway.  It was also north-facing so I wouldn't have to squint into the sun.  I also had eye wash and savlon with me should I get a slight twinge in the eye.  No more wiping with rough tissues or cotton wool pads.

So I managed to make it down at the river at 4:30 this morning.  There had been more rain during the day yesterday and overnight and some of the ditches were already pouring water into the river.  After a couple of days of what have probably been quite good conditions, and which I'd missed, it might have been that today would be another tough day with a rising river.

Today's plan was to fish just one swim, a long glide that has produced plenty of big chub in the past.  I would be float fishing sweetcorn, with hemp seed as an additional attractor.  Four or five catapults full of each went into the swim when I arrived with regular top ups every couple of casts - classic trotting tactics of course.

It took about 30 minutes to produce the first fish and what a fish.  After what has been a very poor start to my river-fishing season, my first decent sized fish is a chub of 5-05 1/2.  A really lovely conditioned fish given that it is only June and a possible high five, low six later this year I would think.

I would have expected maybe one or two more fish over the next couple of hours, but though I may have had at least one more bite, I didn't in fact manage any more.  There were two or three brief showers and then a longer period of rain and by about 8:00 I was ready to call it a day. 

And just as importantly, my eye seemed fine.  So maybe I can try a couple of more days this week (weather permitting).

Back home and a rather exciting look at the video I shot, which does contain decent footage of the chub being caught.  So after a few trips where I haven't managed much, my 2012/13 season is well and truly off and running I would say. 

The video of the trip is at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgllwkTuHaM&feature=plcp


Better than my usual fishing photo!  A still from the video

Wednesday 20 June 2012

Acute hayfever strikes!

A bitterly disappointing day.

The plan had been to start early, bait up four swims before initially fishing two swims I'd baited yesterday but which I hadn't added any new bait today, while hopefully some fish found the bait in at least one of the four swims.

I started later than intended due to an unplanned trip to London yesterday evening.  I walked the mile or so necessary to bait the four swims and then settled in swim number one.  Gradually my left eye seemed to be getting more and more irritated.  I had some eye drops with me but they seemed to make little difference.  Over the next couple of hours the discomfort got worse and worse and it became apparent that my eye was swelling up.  The odd thing was that my right eye was wholly unaffected.  Had I got a seed or something in my left eye?  Or maybe some pollen had landed in it?  No idea really, but it was getting very unpleasant.

I had fished the first two swims with only the odd tap on the rod tip.  I then walked to the far end of the fishery to fish the first of the baited swims and had only been there about 10 minutes when I reached the conclusion that the eye was now too bad and needed to get some treatment.  By then, a boat had passed through the one baited swim I did fish in briefly.

And the other three baited swims weren't fished at all. 

Back home and a long bathe of my eye seems to get some sort of gunk out, but this could have been just the goo my eye was now producing in huge amounts.  The rest of the day was a constant series of eye-baths and periods when I just had to stay in a dark room and keep my eye closed.  It doesn't hurt anymore but it has more or less sealed shut - like a black eye really.  Yet my right eye remains fine! 

A shame as the river is getting back into good condition and I was quite confident for today.  It was a lovely morning with mist rising as I walked along the back around 5:30.  I also spotted a heron in the far distance which I was able to get some film of.

I suspect that this means that fishing will be out of the question for at least the next few days.  I have only had this type of extreme hayfever reaction once before and that was more than 10 years ago.  It will probably take a day or two at least for the swelling to go down and I should avoid going back into pollen-infested areas for a few days more.  Maybe I could try again on Sunday?

I do wonder what I have been taking daily hayfever tablets for over the past month or so.  I was supposed to have built up tolerance for pollen by now!

I have posted a slightly-shorter-than-normal video because I quite liked the misty scenes at the start, the cows and the heron.  But the video also shows me playing around with my eye far too much and the wrap up scene has the swelling quite apparent.  Not good!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccenNA6AWY4&feature=plcp



Such is "my fishing life" at the moment - no fish and an extremely sore eye!

Monday 18 June 2012

Float fishing for chub

If it wasn't the start of the river fishing season, I suspect I wouldn't be going fishing at the moment, but I am so excited to be back out on the rivers that I went again this morning for a few hours before work.  When I woke up at 4:00 it was raining heavily again, but by 6:00 the rain seemed to have blown over and it was actually looking quite sunny.  So I figured that a couple of hours float fishing on the Thames might be ok.

The river remains high and coloured but was definitely a little lower than yesterday - maybe an inch lower?  I planned to fish two swims not too far from where I park the car, so it wouldn't matter much if I struggled again.  So I was set up by about 6:30, as three swans made their way through my first swim and then had a chew at the tree at the top end.

At the end of last season I had taken some rather nice chub on float fished sweetcorn from this swim - the best being well over 5lbs.  My approach was to feed the inside line of the main flow crease on the assumption that some fish would be willing to feed on this line.  But an hour later, all I had to show for my efforts was a small roach of maybe 3oz. 

So down to swim number 2, which entails a short wade out through to the edge of the reeds, giving a nice trott down the main flow.  This spot was where I had filmed quite a few chub taking floating crust (what became the video "My Fishing Life 3").  So I was reasonably confident as I made my way slowly across the margins.  The extra water meant that getting to the river meant wading to thigh high, which was a bit awkward.  It was also actually quite cold.  But I stuck it out for 30 minutes without any bites at all.

Back to swim one, and a final 30 minutes during which I managed one tiny chub. 

I have been pondering on whether my fishing video series should include trips where I don't catch anything of particular interest.  Do I want the videos to accurately reflect my season - blanks and all - or do I want them to show my successes (which makes the videos more interesting of course).  At the moment, my plan is to produce videos where the footage looks ok, regardless of whether fish were caught or not.  Maybe two blanks in a row might be merged together into one film, or one of them just ignored.  Don't know yet. 

Anyway, I did knock out a short film of this trip, if only because I quite liked the footage of me wading in the river.  It can be found at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvxHHNoZnSQ&feature=plcp


Thigh deep in the margins

Sunday 17 June 2012

Different venue, same result

I switched venues for my morning trip on June 17th to a local stretch of the River Thames.  Though still high and very chocolate-coloured, this stretch does have some slacker swims where there might be some fish.

I started at the old ford.  Usually the river drops a foot it goes over the ford, but today you can't even tell there is a drop there - the river's surface is just flat.  On the nearside of the river, there is a large bay with a tree in the water.  In the past, this has been a good perch swim and this morning I fishing a large lobworm just in front of the tree.  One or two sharp taps on the rod tip (which could have been crayfish), but no firm bites.



Off downstream to another tree swim.  Usually this is about 2 foot deep, but in current conditions, it is now about 4 foot deep.  However the main significance of the extra water is that this swim now has a very stready flow.  Once again, I dropped a lobworm into the main flow and let it swing round under the tree.  But no bites at all here.

The next swim was one which has produced the odd barbel in the past and which I have been baiting with boilies for the last few days.  I had another series of very fast taps on the tip, and one mangled boilie, but no firm pulls.  Again, it is easy to conclude that these indications might have been from crayfish. 


Two more swims close by were also fished with boilies, but no touches at all.  I am beginning to assume that maybe the chub still aren't keen on feeding, but I would expect the barbel to be keen.  However, location remains a huge problem for them.  Even if they are feeding, they could be hundreds of yards away.

I finally made my way down to another favourite barbel swim.  Fished it for 40 minutes with no touches whatsoever. 


So trip 2 of the new season was also a blank.  Still, conditions are quite poor.  If it wasn't the start of the new season, I probably wouldn't be fishing.  But at least the wildlife was out in abundance.  I reckon I saw at least 4 kingfishers (or the same one four times) flying along the river with small fish in their mouths.

My tentative plan for my next fishing trip is to float fish sweetcorn in one of the steady glides.  But really I am waiting for the river to start fining down - then I really expect things to improve hugely.

Saturday 16 June 2012

Opening day - early morning on the Windrush

June 16th has been a magical day since I took up fishing aged 10 or so - even more magical than the previous day, June 15th, which is my birthday.  For the next few years after I was 10, I would have new fishing tackle for my birthday and could try it out the next day.  There was the year I got my first "Avon" rod from Billy Lane's tackle shop in Coventry.  Or the year I got a Mitchell 300 reel (which I still have - not sure about the rod though).  This tradition of fishing-related presents has even continued this year - one of my presents was Matt Hayes' book Fisheye: A Guide to Angling Photography.

So the alarm goes off at 3:30 this morning and I can hear the sound of rain.  Not huge amounts, but some.  I am up and out of the house by 4:00, for a shortish session on the Windrush.  My goal is to catch a barbel, which is really quite a foolish plan.  For one thing, the Windrush barbel stocks have been decimated over the last dozen years or so - indeed, I haven't caught one since 1996.  But, on the other hand, there was also the issue of river height.  The constant rain in June has pushed the rivers up.  The Windrush is a thick chocolate colour at the moment.  This suggested that chub, my main quarry, might be very hard as well. 

Over the last few days, I have baited four swims that regularly produced barbel in the distant past and by 4:30 I was settled in the first.  Conditions were worse than I had thought.  The flow was very fast and there was quite a lot of debris coming down.  I was constantly getting taps on the rod time and the occasional stronger looking pull which would turn out to be a clump of weed.  I moved swims every 20 minutes or so without any sign of a real bite. 

However, in the second swim I fished I did see an otter for about 4 seconds and this had appeared in the background on the video I shot.  Otters are one of the main reasons for the demise of the Windrush as a fishery and so I have rather mixed feelings about seeing one.  This is actually the second I have seen this year.  Most people will never see a wild otter, so there is some pleasure in seeing this one.

I also scared a heron that was only a few yards from me when we came across each other.  They are surprisingly big birds when you meet one close up!  I am still very keen to get some good, close-up video footage of herons.

One effect of the trip was to produce my worst hayfever attack of the year so far, with my right eye in particular being really badly affected.  I have bought some stronger eye drops - it would help if I wasn't tempted to keep rubbing it!

So because it was the glorious 16th, and because I have a small clip of an otter, I have made a video from today's trip.  Going forward, I am not sure there is too much point posting film of blanks, but maybe if something interesting does happen . . .

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdEcbLOd8qk&feature=plcp

Thursday 14 June 2012

Only two more days to go!

Up at 5:00 for a walk along a nearby stretch of the Windrush.  Over the last couple of days, the water levels have peaked and have now dropped an inch or two - still a murky brown colour though.  Ideal for roach and (possibly) chub, maybe passed the peak for barbel.  Nonetheless, barbel are my target for Saturday.  I have been baiting some "old favourite" swims on the Windrush, but the vibe remains very poor for the prospects of catching barbel on this river - even the lady in the tackle shop yesterday had nothing good to say about such prospects.  It's not like it was in the 90s it seems.

A large flock of what I think are greylag geese are in residence on the Thames at Newbridge and I've taken some video footage to use as filler when making fishing videos in the next few weeks.

Mid-morning I went for a second walk, this time along the Thames.  Still up a foot or two, but some swims look really good, especially a couple of new swims where trees have fallen into the water over the last few months.  One or two swims just scream "perch" so I may have a go for them if the colour remains till Sunday or Monday


One of my better wildlife photos - heron near the Thames at Chimney

Monday 11 June 2012

RAIN, Rain, rain . . . and more rain

We have been away in Italy for the past week - many days on sunshine and temperatures into the 30s.  Apparently back in the UK, it has rained more or less constantly for the past week, slightly spoiling the Queen's Jubilee it would seem.

While this is good for the drought (which should really be over for the summer at least), it has started to cause me some anxiety about my opening day plans for river fishing.  When thinking about all this over the last month or so, I hadn't really factored in the idea that the rivers would be in flood. 

I had intended to visit the river a few times this week to do some prebaiting.  Though I have made a gallon or two of hemp today, I'm not sure I should be throwing it in the river quite yet

Wednesday 30 May 2012

A surprisingly easy evening trout fishing

Way back in time, just after 9-11 in fact, I was due for a day's trout fishing at Chew with my banking friend Robert and the famous fishing guide, John Horsey.  Due to 9-11, Robert couldn't attend so John and I shared the boat and both fished.  When I got there at 12:00, John was really excited saying that huge numbers of fish were hovering just below the surface and we would have a great day on dry flies.  And so it proved.  We caught something like 120 fish that day, split 75-45 to John.  Despite becoming acutely aware of John's obviously higher skill level, I was really pleased with my 45 fish, all taken on dry flies - who wouldn't be?  I doubt I will ever have such a day trout fishing again.

But yesterday came close!

Actually really easy fishing days are, in an important sense, actually quite uninteresting as there isn't the challenge there is usually.  The story was this.  I fished Bushyleaze trout fishery arriving at just after 4:00pm.  Bushyleaze is one of my favourite fishing spots though I have only managed a couple of trips to it over the past few years.  In particular, it responds well to my preferred fly fishing method of dries or nymphs just below the surface.

I started in the bay at the south end of the lake and soon discovered a huge collection of fish holed up by a tree and keen to take dries or nymphs.  In the next four hours, I had about 40 takes, hooked around 20 fish, and landed a fair few (including three foul hooked fish - which is a bit unusual, but just shows how close to the surface the fish were), all of which I returned.  Best fish was 5-05, two others over 4lbs and the rest about 2 1/2lbs.

It didn't seem to matter that there were frequent disturbances to the area from hooked fish, the others just kept on taking.  I actually hooked 9 fish on the same fly, until it became so tatty that I had to replace it.  Virtually every fish was caught on a size 12 daiwl bach nymph - the one with the touch of red.  And in the end this actually became a bit dull.  Once past about 6:30, I rarely went three casts without a take, at one point hooked five fish in seven casts, and on another occasion had three takes in about 10 seconds, two of which I missed and one fish I lost.

But it is also important to remember that such days are really, really rare.  Hardly anyone else caught anything (a guy I showed the fish location to had a couple from there) and I have had many, many hard days catching one or two fish after hours of effort.  So such freakishly good days should be accepted gratefully when they occur and remembered fondly when times are much tougher.

Because there is so much action on the video cameras, I have ended up posting three videos of the trip, edited so it doesn't quite look like I am catching one fish after another!  I suspect this is rather over-the-top but it did give me lots of good practice at making the films and to do some experimenting with editing.  No doubt there will be plenty of videos later in the year where nothing much happens.  One thing I did notice with the video is that it appears I am fishing really close to the fish.  There is a slight telephoto effect from the camera.  I am actually about 15 to 20 yards from the tree, casting down to it so that the fly lands as close to the tree as possible.  At times it looks like I'm virtually on top of the fish!


Part One: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6PA_v_bbE0&feature=related

Part Two: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TuF1sWGWGoA&feature=related

Part Three: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYFKb7z_kcU&feature=related

Thursday 24 May 2012

New thoughts on filming - a second camera

I was talking to my friend Jerome the other day about video making and he happened to mention that he had just bought a secondhand video camera on ebay for about £10.  It was three or four years old, but seemed fine for what he wanted it for.  So with that in mind I went onto ebay to see about acquiring a second camera exactly the same as my current one.  Several hours later, I now have two Sony Handycams, having paid the princely sum of £29 for another one.

It seems to me that this has quite an impact on my planned filming.  Now I can have one camera quite close by to which I direct comments and hopefully show off caught fish, and then I can have a second camera sited well away from me that just takes longer range shots. I have also picked up a long life battery for the new camera as well as a couple more memory cards.  Now I can shoot about 6 hours on each camera.

Finally, I came across some tiny video cameras used by people skateboarding, snowboarding, mountain biking, and so on, to take head cam shots.  Another £20 has got me one of these.  It shoots to a 32GB memory card but apparently has really poor battery consumption.  This could be quite a nice add on though.

So now I am really kitted out with video stuff for the new fishing season

Sunday 20 May 2012

Another walk by the Thames

The constant rain of the last few weeks has finally abated and we have had a few days of dry weather.  Getting up at 5:30am on a Sunday morning to walk the river was a bit of a shock but I thought it might enable more wildlife to be seen down there. 

Duxford ford was still very high but the path further downstream was no longer under water, though very slippy.  I was quite surprised by the evidence for how high the water had got - maybe 3 or 4 foot higher than it now is from the silt that had been deposited over the plants growing by the river.  Also I was surprised by the number of big tree branches that had split off from their main tree trunks.  In 3 or 4 places, the path is now effectively blocked.  And much further down, there is now a new tree in the water that could potentially be a very good new fishing spot. 

I had brought a few slices of crust with me, more to examine the floodwater flow than on any expectations that I could persuade a chub to rise.  But much to my surprise, at one spot, I did actually get about a dozen pieces taken.  That was the only spot though where they did seem happy to take it.  I wonder if that is a new potential strategy - floating crust in receding floodwater!

I walked as far as the chapel near the downstream end of the section.  Some swallows or swifts have arrived down there and were feeding over the river.  Attempts to film them in flight failed completely.  Two herons also about but I couldn't get near enough to them, and a pair of tufted ducks - the first I've seen this year. 

I did take some more video, mainly for a possible short film showing various spots back in March when the river was low in comparison with now when it is just past the peak flood.  But I didn't walk all the way round to the hide at Chimney this time. 

The weather is supposed to continue improving and we may get some sunshine this week.  I might be able to have an afternoon / evening trout fishing and quite fancy Bushyleaze this time.  Maybe Tuesday or Thursday.

Friday 18 May 2012

Latest fishing reading

With just a few weeks to go to the new season, I am doing a spot of pre-season, fishing-related reading.  For the last couple of days, I have been reading John Wilson's account of his fishing in 1990.  Years ago, when I had only been fishing for a year or two, my parents bought me John Wilson's A Specimen Fishing Year.  This remains one of my all-time favourite fishing books and was the main reason I started a fishing diary back in the mid-late 1970s.  Go Fishing Year is in the same style but his fishing now has a huge international bias to it, related to the TV shows.  I was hoping to glean some valuable fishing-programme-making tips, but it seems that the main lesson is that the teams that make the TV shows are actually quite large - 5 or 6 people - and that each show takes several days to make.  But the info about filler and continuity shots was interesting and is exactly the sort of stuff I am thinking about lots at the moment.  Really nice photos too.

I bought Targets set and Achieved directly from Phil a few months back.  I am a big fan of his fishing blog and the book very much follows the same format as the blog.  The individual entries are all very interesting and I have been thinking alot about some of the points made.  So overall, I rather like the book.  My one and only gripe is actually the whole "targets" approach.  I don't think the fishing stories are enhanced particularly by this overall theme - they stand up themselves without it.  And it does lead to the unfortunate feature that once the target is caught, that's it, its off to another place. 

This book is a self-published affair and interesting because of this.  A fair few typos and some odd phrasing here and there, but actually a really good effort more or less on his own.


Next up will be Chris Yates' The Deepening Pool, then maybe Miles and West's Quest for Barbel, both older books from my collection - and I want to read the 60 back issues of Course Angling Today that I acquired over the winter. 

Monday 14 May 2012

Tentative goals for the new season

Much of my thinking about fishing for the new season has been driven by my planned filming. Within these filming plans, a tentative list of goals / venues is beginning to form.

I expect most of my fishing to take place on the Thames between Duxford and Bablock Hythe persuing chub and barbel - about 4 miles of river, with four or five distinct venues. Northmoor weir is one of my first planned venues on the theory that, early season, fish will like the well oxygenated water. This might be where I first try a "bait and wait", two-rod approach for the first time.

Other nearby venues include the Evenlode and Windrush, both of which I plan to fish for barbel on during July and August, though the chances of catching anything at either venue are not high.

Further afield, I have a couple of stretches of the Kennet which I want to fish a dozen times or so over the summer.

Finally, two rivers that I only plan to fish two or three times each - private stretches of the Hampshire Avon (after a huge chub or barbel) and the Frome (after a personal best grayling).

One other possibility might be to go trout fishing in the Lake District - I thought I might try one trip on Esthwaite Water and maybe one trip to one of the high tarns after tiny wild brownies. I will also do a couple of fly fishing trips to Barnes Lake and Bushyleaze.

I have been studying the various issues involved in filming these trips and am beginning to get an idea about what I am really trying to achieve with this. I am intending to shoot all trips, blanks and all, but perhaps edit consecutive blanks together into shorter clips. This way, the videos will be a complete diary. I am also going to try and film a number of fishing techniques, including things like floating crust for chub, so the films have a good level of variety. My goal is to make somewhere around 50 films in 35 weeks. That is hugely ambitious I suspect.

Friday 11 May 2012

Walking the flooded Thames

A brief pause in the almost constant rain and a chance to go for a walk along the river - or so I thought.  At Duxford the river was over the bank upstream of the ford and the ford itself had virtually disappeared - the water flow over it left it virtually flat.  I would guess the river was up about 2 foot.  This meant that the footpath downstream of the ford was underwater and it wasn't possible to get much further down.

Following me down to the river were a oldish couple who were apparently there to scatter the man's mother's ashes at Duxford ford.  I think they decided to wait for a better day.  The man looked quite a lot like famous barbel angler Ray Walton, but it probably wasn't him!

So I returned to Hinton and walked down to the lock at Shifford via the path Bernie uses when he comes dow to lay crayfish nets on his quad bike.  The bottom field by the lock was flooded a little - enough to encourage swans to settle on the water and for me to get wet feet walking across the ground.  I took a little bit of video of some of the swims in flood conditions and might have some shots of the same area from back in March when it was desperately low.

A few years back, early summer floods rather washed out the first two months of the fishing season - much as I want rain to keep falling, I also want to be able to get to the river to fish, so a let up in the rain in early June, say, would be good.

Thursday 10 May 2012

Detailed review of another John Wilson fishing video

A couple of years ago, I transferred some old videos onto DVDs and then copied them onto one of the external hard drives on the PC.  Today's video review is one of my favourite episodes of Go Fishing, the one where John Wilson is fishing for barbel on the Wensum and catches two fish, including an immaculate double from just under a bush on the far bank.

This clip lasts about 10m 40s in total and is made up of 51 seperate clips, for an average of 12 seconds each.  Five or six clips are actually quite long, over 30s with a maximum of 54s, but these long clips are the sort I wouldn't be able to take, generally featuring a moving camera recording JW playing a fish.  Tremendously exciting, but not possible for me to replicate.

The film also has several shots of fish in the shallow water, also something that I doubt I could replicate. 

My next fishing video review will be something from Catching the Impossible - a very different style of fishing programme.  Then I will start to summarize my review results so far, and draw up a small checklist of things to remember when I am filming my own fishing.

JW heaving against his double figure barbel - just shows the strain that the tackle can take


Not a bad picture, given that it is a screen capture on a PC from a copy of a video made more than 10 years ago

Wednesday 9 May 2012

First fishing video - "My Fishing life 1"

Producing my first fishing video started with a review of yesterday's footage - all 180 minutes of it.  Shots showing me casting well were highlighted, some bits of me fishing with bird song on them in the background, shots with fish rising and, in one case, jumping, the actual capture of a fish, various filler shots, and so on.

Gradually a structure for the clip came together.  The introduction is fine, there are some ok clips with me casting to rising fish, or the one jumper.  Then I switch to the other lake, finally catching the one fish of the day.  Shame this bit of the film has a poorly positioned camera angle.  The filler shots are ok as well.  I decided to not bother with music this time, but I did use some captions.  Also I was quite pleased to have hit on the idea of using a neutral clip of me casting for the title page and end page.

I am getting slightly better at edited as well, eventually producing a video of 13 mins 11s in about two hours.  As I write this, my video is slowly being uploaded to youtube, something which seems to take ages.

So what did I learn from film 1?  Well I did notice that my fly casting technique needs some work.  I am letting the rod slip back too far and not loading it properly for the forward cast.  And I don't have the rod low enough when I'm retrieving. 

And in respect of the movie?  I do need to concentrate on getting the shot well framed.  I could usefully have a notebook going as I film so I can find the interesting bits a bit easier than viewing it all.  And I need to do something to improve the sound.  And buy a second memory card so I can record 6 hours instead of 3.  And keep a notebook while fishing.

Finally, I did make one mistake initially, which was to prepare the initial upload in 4:3 format rather than 16:9, which is the youtube format and which I did shoot the actual footage in.  So the project did have to be uploaded twice before I got it to look correct on youtube.  If you do prepare the video in the wrong sizing format, then youtube displays a black border around the movie and it is relatively small on the standard screen.  Five minutes to fix, but another 6 hours to upload (we have such low upload speeds out here in the country!)

But overall, I'm actually rather pleased with the film.  Roll on the next trip.  Here is the video link

http://www.savetubevideo.com/?v=g6gAdwwNTx0

My first fish caught on camera - rainbow trout of about 2 1/2lbs

Tuesday 8 May 2012

Trout fishing at Barnes Lake - first fishing video

It has rained more or less non stop for the past few weeks.  The rivers are pretty full round here, though the Thames is back within its banks having flooded briefly the other week.  But the main reason to not go trout fishing is that it remains quite cold.  The other day it was just 1 over zero over night - and its May!

I called into Barnes Lake last week for a quick look round and to take some "filler" filming of wildlife and trout rising.  It had looked pretty good then - indeed I should have fished then as the weather deteriorated again the next day and I've had to wait a week for it to clear up enough.  Today was not perfect, but it was the best appearing on the forecast for the next week or so.

My aim today was to try and shoot enough footage to make my first fishing video.  I intend to film most of my trips over the next season, so I need to get started on working out some of the logistics.  My plan was to set up the camera in each spot I fished and then take about 15 mins of video with one or two variations.  Then, depending on what I caught, I would cut it together about 10 minutes or so from it.

I was the only person there when I arrived at around 2:30 and I started on the corner of the smaller lake, where a number of fish seemed to be moving.  I was joined soon after by a guy from Newcastle down here on work and the owner, John Barnes, both of whom interrupted my first clip.  When they'd moved on, I was able to concentrate on fishing the ripples. I had one or two takes which I missed but probably got video footage of.  Some good shots of me casting, with some fish rising on several of the clips. 

About an hour later I switched to the big lake, settle in at the far end with the wind behind me to help with casting.  Quite a few fish rising, but generally a long way out.  Finally, just before 5:00pm, I had a firm take and hooked a fish.  This fought really well, though was perhaps only 2 1/2 lbs or so and hopefully made for some ok video. 

But after that, things went very quiet and the hoped-for evening rise didn't really happen at all.  Yes, some fish were rising but maybe at the rate of one fish a minute when a good evening rise would be over 50 per minute.  I did have a couple more takes which I missed.

I stuck it out till around 8:00, remembering to get a wrap-up clip.  A quick look at the video when I got in and it seems ok.  The one fish I caught is on the film, but the camera wasn't positioned very well for that shot.  Enough to make a movie from though, which I plan to do tomorrow.

Monday 7 May 2012

A detailed examination of a John Wilson fishing programme

One of the many sound pieces of advice which I learnt from reading Go Wild with your Camcorder was that you should watch programme similar to what you are trying to achieve with your own films.  In particular, closely examine the time spent of each shot (surprisingly low), what angle the shots were taken from and whether they were far, mid or close-range.

So today I have made a detailed study of a John Wilson Go Fishing programme on catching grayling on the River Test.  This was an excellent example of what I would like to make, subject to the constraint that I don't have two camera men with me each time I go.

I have discovered that the programme lasted about 22 minutes and contained 193 separate clips of film, an average of just under 7 seconds per clip.  The longest clip was the re-cap clip at the end, 33 seconds, while there were a further 4 clips of 15 seconds or longer.  The shortest clip was 2 seconds, a splashy strike when the float disappeared.  Most clips were 4 to 6 seconds long.

But often there were clearly some extended clips taken from the same spot that were then cut apart afterwards.  And while some of the clips were ones I can't take myself (the occasional pan shot of playing a fish - all my shots are clearly fixed), many of the clips were exactly the sort of view I could take.  For instance, the shot below is the sort of thing I should manage ok.

John Wilson, long trotting for grayling on the River Test

But also by reading Simon King's book Wild Life, his autobiography of his life as a wildlife photographer, I have begun to learn something of the tricks employed in making such films.  Most importantly is the insight that finished films are not made chronologically.  Instead, once an important clip has been obtained, clips are then built to fit around it.

So, for instance, suppose I started off in the position John Wilson is above, and caught a fish long trotting.  I would have taken one long sequence with the video camera.  But having caught a fish, examined it and popped it back, I could then move the camera and take some filler shots from side on, then maybe a few clips from way downstream, including one that looked like I was striking.  Then perhaps I could focus on the float and film just it going down the glide.  And so on.  Then these other clips could be inserted afterwards, though they make it look like a continuous, multi-camera operation. 

Finally, I need some filler clips for each trip.  Clips of me walking the bank, baiting up, etc, or clips of wildlife seen (JW has swans, a buzzard and some sheep, and even some snowdrops).  These are used in the John Wilson programmes to break the sequences of actually catching fish and to mark his move to the next spot.  And I'd need some introductory remarks - where I am, what time of year it is, what I am fishing for, etc.  And maybe some wrap-up remarks.

Such a lot to think about but I am definitely making progress in getting it all straight in my mind.

First post - introduction

With a bit of effort, I have managed to create a new blog from my existing fishing diary.  This was a little more effort than it might have been, but then perhaps I should have started planning a fishing blog earlier!

I am hoping to fish several times a week from June onwards, with specific targets for barbel, chub roach, perch and pike.  I am also planning to film as many of my trips as possible, so this blog will also act as a link to my Youtube account.

All very exciting - I can hardly wait for the start of the new fishing season, five and a half weeks away now.

Wednesday 2 May 2012

The Thames in flood

A brief trip down to Standlake to visit Barnes Lake, a local trout fishery that I am planning to fish for an afternoon / evening in the next few days (weather permitting).  It has rained virtually everyday for the past few weeks and the Thames has finally burst its banks at Newbridge.  What a contrast to the end of the fishing season when the river was really low and slow moving.  On the plus side, this might have finally cleared out some of the debris accumulated over the winter.  On the negative side, it might disrupt spawning.

Yet we remain in drought.  The effect of April's rain has been to just about contra out the lack of rain in March.  But the drought started two winters ago and ground water levels are the real issue, not vast flows in rivers and associated flooding.  I read somewhere that April's rain has only reversed about 10% of the drought's effects so far.  It is really down to next winter to clear the drought.  Another poor winter for rain and the summer of 2013 could be exceptionally bad.



The Thames at Newbridge, over the fields on the right bank.  The regular bank is where the faint line of vegetation is in the near foreground by the trees in the garden of the Maybush pub (to the left)

Thursday 26 April 2012

Walking the Thames - Northmoor

After several days of heavy rain, it is just about bright enough today to tempt me out for a walk along the Thames.  Today's chosen route is from Bablock Hythe back to Northmoor Weir following the Thames Path.  Years ago I used to sometimes fish this stretch, when I think it was on the Newlands ticket (or some other club, not sure).  So a slight surprise when I started walking was the occurance of signs for Reading and District Angling Association.  When I was on their website somewhile back, I don't remember seeing this stretch mentioned.  But it would be very interesting if it was.

The other side of the river is owned by David Gow, who may be the "Farmer Gow" of Appleton, though that actually may be his sister.  We used to take Daughter to their farm to see the spring lambing when she was about 5.  Today the lambs are out in numbers in the fields and are charging round like lunatics as lambs do.  This far bank is quite overgrown with unpollarded willows along much of the stretch.  But this is a good thing for fishing, providing lots of cover.  It could be fished reasonably well from the Northmoor side though.

Northmoor weir is one of those old fashioned weirs based on lowering wooden slats down alongside groved wooden posts.  Some time ago, there was a plan to replace it with a modern automatic weir, but that plan seems to be on hold at the moment.  I had a brief chat with the lockkeeper at the weir and he said that in his 8 years of work there, he had only sold a handful of tickets to fish the right bank, but that such tickets were still in operation though the stretch being shared with another club. 

It is ages since I last fished a weirpool and I have Northmoor weir as a possible candidate for next season.  Today's weir configuration resulted in two main flows, left and right of centre, which produce a calm area between the two flows.  Were I fishing today, I would be ledgering in this calm area, on the edge of the fast water.  I have been watching more of the fishing videos set on the river Swale and noting the bolt rig methods he uses.  There was also an article some years ago on fishing at Burghfield weir on the Kennet which suggested something similar - so-called "codding" set ups with semi-bolt rigs, baitrunner reels, etc.  Northmoor weir might be a good spot to adopt such a tactic.

It rained quite hard on the walk back to Bablock Hythe but the wind was behind me and it wasn't unpleasant.  The river is up about a foot on recent levels and has quite a rich chocolate colour - the first time I've seen that for some while.

I called in at Barnes Lake on the way home.  This is a small trout fishery just down the road from where we live.  No one was fishing there today and the thought has occured that this could be the venue for a fishing video test.  So I have re-stocked with trout flies this afternoon - my usual early season order of daiwl bach nymphs, plus red, black and orange hoppers.  I rarely use any other type of flies.  Maybe I could go Monday or Tuesday next week?

And back home I confirmed that Reading DAA have taken a new lease on Northmoor after a year without it on the ticket.  I have been looking at some of their other waters - famous stretches like Upper and Lower Benyons on the Kennet - and I might well join them this year.  I suspect that the stretches I've just mentioned are very popular, but my fishing niche remains that I mainly fish during the week, so maybe they wouldn't be so busy then?

Sunday 22 April 2012

Another Sunday morning on the river

Wife and I had spoken of regular trips to the river and nature reserve to see the development of spring, but the lure of extra sleep was too much this morning for someone.  But I made it out before 7:00 on what was actually a really nice morning - a brief gap in the recent rain.

Armed with another bag of bread crust, one aim was to see what might be tempted to rise this time.  In the first swim I tried, at least 10 pieces of crust were taken, but downstream, interest seemed to peter out and very few takes occured.  I haven't caught a chub on floating crust for about 20 years - that would make a good video later this year.

My goal at Chimney was to get some film of deer, but none appeared in the 90 minutes I was at the hide.  I did get a brief film of a blackcap in the hedge, plus a short clip of a moorhen leading 3 chicks along the stream.  A couple of sightings of deer, but too far away to film.  And then when I did get close to one, I accidentally switched the record function off and missed a decent few minutes of film.

Back by the river and an odd sight - 45 swans gather together at the bottom of the field, all feeding on the grass.  Quite rare that you see so many together.  This gave me an idea for another video clip of just them, so I shot about 20 minutes of them from a variety of view points, which might be interesting.

Further upstream again, I managed to get about 20 seconds of a heron sitting on a branch in the river, including a shot of it taking off.  Attempts to get a clip of ducks taking off have proved quite tricky, but I may have got a single clip of about 5 seconds.  I also attempted to film a kite in the air, but had difficulties keeping it in view and in focus.  Still not really sure how the auto-focus works.

So now I have enough film for about 3 more video projects.  Firstly, the various birds coming to our feeders in the garden.  Secondly, the swans.  Thirdly, the current Chimney Meadows film, though this needs more deer and perhaps another heron clip.   

Wednesday 18 April 2012

My second video project - chub taking floating crust.

Last time at the river, my attempts to film chub taking floating crust rather failed.  I managed to get just one take on camera and that was 30 yards down the river and barely visible.  But a second trip has produced over 20 takes caught on camera, a sign perhaps that I am beginning to think more about video recording and am getting better at it.

The most surprising set of takes occured in the second glide on the stretch, just downstream from one of the spots that I have floatfished for chub.  I have never fished this spot but it produced a dozen takes of which I managed to film six or seven, including one really big, splashy rise at the downstream end of the swim.  So this spot will definitely be added to my fishing plans for the start of the season.

On a couple of occasions I was able to see the fish concerned and they looked a nice size.  One was certainly over 4lbs.  My best ever chub caught on crust was something like 3-08 from the Cherwell years ago, so this is a target that I have a good chance of beating next season.  And one fish that I was able to watch closely for 10 minutes or so, resolutely refused to rise to a piece of crust despite something like 30 pieces passing over its head.  Still, much of this bread then became the free samples in the next swim down and were taken there instead.

It took me a day or two more to edit the video - I am not very good at this at all yet and will be putting much more thought into this going forward.  But it has turned out ok, and I was especially pleased with the captions I used this time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjdwQ3sMW3k&context=C498e460ADvjVQa1PpcFOSWvR1If_Bz48TItOyaBWDvllCLRJc5v4=


A rather extreme chub take from my video

Monday 16 April 2012

More practice video - feeding chub

Another video testing day, this time mainly about comparing the two tripods I now have. I suspected that the heavier, but taller tripod would turn out to be best afterall, but a decent test was worth doing to confirm this. So off to the river again.

But this time I have a couple of slices of bread crust and one aim would be to see whether I could attract and film some chub taking the crust off the surface. I felt my best chance would be a relatively shallow glide which is slowly filling up with lilies as spring rolls on. So sighting the camera at the head of the run, I threw a dozen or so pieces of crust across the river and lo and behold, several pieces were taken. The photo below shows a few pieces of crust over to the left of the view, while the chub that took the bread were all down by the raft on the right hand side.


I followed the crust downstream about another 100 yards and one or two more pieces were taken, but I managed to film none of the them well. What I did discover is that it is better to move the camera as little as possible while tracking the crust, and also that a tiny piece of crust is quite hard to find using the little viewing screen. Focusing is not easy either.

One chub was actually seen - one about 3 lbs which had a very good look at a piece of crust as I was watching. Maybe tomorrow, armed with more bread, I will get some better video.

Thursday 12 April 2012

My first video upload to Youtube

After a few days studying some notes on how to work Movie Maker, I have produced my first video for Youtube, 8-55 of wildlife footage shot at Chimney Meadows over the last few weeks. I am actually rather pleased with this, especially the footage of the two mallards and the coot and moorhen. This is a practice for when I try and shoot some fishing videos later this year.

http://www.savetubevideo.com/?v=WAU2CzBOeAg&context=C4486d00ADvjVQa1PpcFPek9EzK7fIvLTrmkfSlSzmOgPWt1ziqs0=
The first of many I hope.

Sunday 8 April 2012

More filming at Chimney Meadows

Early Sunday morning and a trip along the river to Chimney Meadows with the video camera - the main aim being to test out a travel tripod I have bought as an alternative to the trusty but heavy tripod I have had since I was 16.

I am the only one about at this time as one might expect and before 7:00 I am settled in the hide that Wife and I visited the other week. Over the next couple of hours I shot film of two muntjac deer, some mallards, a coot and a moorhen, and a roe deer. No heron this time, and the roe deer film was very distant. But the footage was reasonable and the tripod seemed to work ok.

The other test I wanted to do was of various fishing spots to assess ease of filming there. This showed up some problems as the tripod is quite low and is unable to fit in much of the river. At times I will need the camera to be at about 5 to 6 feet high and the travel tripod is barely half that. So perhaps I will end up having to carry the older one.

Next task is to work out how to use the basic editing programme I have on the PC. I will put together a 10 minute extract from what I shot today and post it on Youtube, hopefully by the end of this week.

The first of what I hope will be many nice videos over the next few years.

Wednesday 4 April 2012

Day out at Chimney Meadows & a fishy pub

Wife is not working for the next few days and we decided that today would be our "wildlife" day for Easter, with a trip to Chimney Meadows, the local nature reserve. Over the past few months, I have seen loads of interesting wildlife down there while fishing - my hope was that Wife would also get to see some today.

As it was, we were in luck. On the walk down there were loads of birds around which we were just about able to pick out in the trees. We saw a hare close up, which we startled as we rounded a corner and entered the field it was in, plus lots of ducks and swans as usual. By Shifford lock we spotted the three female roe deer which I have seen loads of times over the past few months. At the time, I thought this was a shame as I'd have liked us to have made it to the bird hide before they had appeared, but soon after we got to the hide, two other deer, probably males appeared and were happy to feed for the next twenty minutes in the open space. I had brought my video camera with me (but don't yet have the travel tripod) and did take about 10 minutes of film of them. Later a heron flew in and settled quite near us and I got some decent film of that too. Over the next couple of days, I will use this footage to learn how to edit film and how to post to youtube.

We then drove on to Burford and then back round to Faringdon by the scenic route that took us past the Swan Hotel at Radcot. We stopped here for a drink and I was delighted to find that it had a bar with loads of stuffed fish in it - a pike of 15lbs, two cases of bream (around 5lbs each fish), two trout of up to 7lbs, a perch of 2 1/2lbs, two cases of chub (5-07 and 4-10) and a barbel of 8-02. All caught locally as well and dating from about 1950 to 1962. I wonder how much a cased barbel costs.
One of the stuffed chub from the fishy bar.