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Should have gone there last week…

Posted in Trout Fishing by Jim Williams on August 17, 2012 6 Comments

The morning after the night before… sunrise creeps above the treeline as viewed from the Cammarch Hotel on the Irfon. For Warren, James, Richard, John and I it was to be the start of a few days fishing for the Maxia team and the hopes of a misinformed and ever changing forecast.

Powys

Irfon

Breakfast devoured we load up only but the essentials and pile into the sunshine bus, a Peugeot thingy built in an age when manufacturers thought that installing useless electrical gadgets was a really good idea. There was some weird flashy light s%#t going on with the dashboard and stuff!!!

Sunshine bus

…it reminded me of something but I couldn’t quite put my finger on it…mmm

Sunshine bus

We’re fishing the upper beats to start with, a foray here last year proved very successful so we couldn’t really do any worse than to revisit some of the known lunker locations.

Irfon

WarrenWe had it in mind that with conditions slightly against us and deteriorating it would be prudent to fish subsurface with a nymph… we’re all using 10ft #2 with ‘RYR’ indicators and 7ft leaders.

The RNPTN’s a favourite, probably the most prolific here with but the odd exception.

RNPTN

We’re concentrating our efforts in the channel where a significant ledge drop off occurs on the right bank which can be seen in the picture above as Warren guides his indicator waiting for the slightest of movement. (The rain is imminent)

I’m fishing in the same channel downstream of Warren, I miss netting my first fish… beneath tree cover which I’d forgotten was there, I had no place to go whilst attempting to maintain rod tension so the fish slipped off with ease – what else?

Almost immediately and in the midst of a forthcoming downpour, a fish rose twice within the zone I’d just nymphed, having spotted a few stonefly and olive some moments earlier with haste I slipped on a CDC olive in the hope of meeting the fish during rise No 3. With presentation somewhat slightly compromised as the tapering was more favoured to a nymph, I managed to place a cast all be it luckily in the perfect spot… slam dunk, this beauty nailed the fly and took off downstream before succumbing to some unwieldy pressure and my desire to get it to the net pronto.

Jim - Trout

Here it cometh ‘the rain’… meanwhile James is underneath the tree way down stream of Warren below and has just hooked into a superb grayling on a RNPTN – his personal best.

Warren

The picture doesn’t do this fish justice, James is shaking with the adrenaline rush.

James

An absolute stunner

Irfon grayling

Guided by James who decides to have a break, Richard jumps into the same pool. A few casts later having run the RNPTN through the same pocket water… Richard hits into yet another grayling.

James - Richard

Another beauty… the rain’s now falling harder

Irfon grayling

Now we’re stuffed, the heavens let rip almost immediately. 2 weeks of lovely Olympic weather then this, we’d been waiting so long for this opportunity to all come together… ruddy sods law.

Warren’s so pleased he’d had his hood sewn up, that flat cap more than makes up for it though.

Warren

My jacket is to being waterproof what Chernobyl was to the environment… useless

Jim

John, Richard and James with no where to hide… stair rods ensue… 3 hours of it non stop

John - Richard - James

As fast as it falls, is as fast as it rises, and as fast as it colours… oh joy!

River Irfon

Having stopped with only but the odd shower as an after thought, riffles and pockets have become just long murky glides, the visibility that once was is now all but lost… the likely hood of any fish?

River Irfon

In the hope that it’ll run off quickly and clear to a point so to mistake it for a chalkstream, we wait in vein for something to happen… like it’s ever going to… we’re willing it to happen… Bored anyone?

Jim - John - Richard

Some observe and fiddle with tackle… some just kip

James

We sit and relax for an hour but fear the worst, the forecast is for more rain and lots of it. Deciding to make our way back prematurely to the hotel and the bar, it quickly dawns on us that the likely hood of fishing the river tomorrow is futile at best.

Early the next morning having seen the river continue to rise and colour, we’d decided to settle up and leave the hotel for blighty and to the Coln. I know this river like the back of my hand and new that although the rain had pretty much hit everyone hard, it would still be fishable.

What a contrast… arriving midday we were inspired to see clear water, the wind however knocking 20mph didn’t deter us as there was plenty of good cover.

Jim

Almost mimicking the setups of the previous day all be it with slightly shorter leaders we covered the length and breath of the river, one fish coming to a dry midge but the remainder by all to the RNPTN or a pink head Hairy Mary.

John has a very successful afternoon in the upper reaches

John

Covering all eventualities I spend the day on the duo trickling through the glides

Jim

This peach came to the RNPTN #18 drifting 4ft below the klinkhammer fished tight into the margin

Jim - trout

Leaving no stone unturned as it were…

Warren

Sunshine all day long, a pleasant contrast to the previous day and not a drop of rain

Warren & James

It was certainly worth the drive back for some good fishing… Richard eagle eyed in the lower reaches

Richard

fish spotted, targeted and nailed… the nymph on ceremony yet again.

Trout

The only fish I could tempt to a dry fly today… olive cdc

Jim - Trout

Warren hunkered down at the ford. Interesting here in that he lost 3 fish very quickly, under tension the fish seem to extricate themselves with ease, offsetting the throat off the hook slightly seemed to rectify it from there on in.

Warren McCarthy

They were lost no more

Grayling

Thankfully the day on the Coln rescues our dampened Welsh spirit, with such a premature visit it sounds like another good excuse to get out and away for a further few days, Wales anyone?

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Keith takes the honours…

Posted in River Wylye by Jim Williams on July 21, 2012 5 Comments

With a welcome change in both weather and forecast it is perhaps a smile and a warm glow that adorns anglers keen to put behind them some ‘topsy turvy’ conditions that have either made or ruined an otherwise good days fishing.

Today good friend Keith Passant joined us for his first visit to a stretch of the Wylye… with lush green foliage but yet still high water we looked forward to something… anything… that would show interest to some of our meagre offerings.

Wylye

Whilst I spent the best part of an hour dithering with my recent leader/indicator innovation, Warren and Keith made haste with their setups and went on to wet a line…

Paying particular attention to a fly Keith tied and decided to fish (I daren’t show you its scale)

Grasshopper

Needles to say a good fish rose to the far bank opposite Keith. Now this fish is significant in that since April, Warren, Richard and I have tempted this particular fish to the fly but never quite nailed it… Keith had all but two well placed casts with said fly and…

Keith Passant

well… nailed it he did… a stunning fish falling to a fly that did nothing other than command surprise.

Keith Passant

Before even wetting a line myself for having dithered so long, it was time to play chef… bacon baps for lunch. Not sure if Warren’s enjoying my efforts or is about to ‘chunder’

Jim Williams

Warren McCarthy

Desperate to make amends for not having yet fished, it’s to the one handed bacon butty technique

Jim Williams

Post lunch of baps, crisps, mars bars and tea… then more tea, we soon got down to the more serious business of fishing.

Warren below in the weir (testing) pool at the bottom of our beat with the new indicator

Warren McCarthy

There’s the take right there…

Warren McCarthy

I wish I could say he nailed the fish but fly fishers don’t lie.. @#&$!

With exacting setups we both focus hard and look for any micro movement… easily seen they are too

Jim Williams

Unlike Warren I’m nailing mine… (It’s my blog and I can write what I want so ner ner)

Jim Williams

Keith trying all manner of his excellent flies at the top of our stretch

Keith Passant

With light fading we fish both dry and nymph to tempt some of the more regular incumbents. Given the weather we were quite surprised there was so little surface activity…

Warren McCarthy

…even though a good mixture of fly were regularly active throughout the early to late afternoon: Cased and free swimming caddis, long horn sedge and a healthy number of mayfly

Let’s hope this vein of weathers continues… enjoy your fishing ~ Jim

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