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Batteries charged…

Posted in Grayling Fishing by Jim Williams on October 17, 2012 2 Comments

Hectic is my excuse for the lack of blog entries over the last 2 weeks, prior to going on holiday I met up with Ian May to do some filming on the river whilst nymphing. The very man below with more guts than I to expose nigh on six grands worth of kit to the river.

Ian May

The aforementioned holiday saw Sarah, Holly and I take to a cottage in Barbrook (Exmoor) for some much needed peace & quite. The downside however was the trout season had ended and the cottage had access to a lovely stream… tut!

Are we there yet?… a rather disgruntled Holly.

Holly

Luckily the weather stayed mild and mostly dry so days were spent either visiting the glorious beach at Woolacombe or exploring the moors. Ahhh the fresh air…

…oh! and lots of sheep, cow and horse s##t which holly found ideal as a snack in between meals.

Exmoor

Although the peace and quiet were welcome, I couldn’t venture out without the just in case, you never know fishing stuff. I managed to tie up with good friend Pete Tyjas in the hope of some fishing. Unfortunately an early morning deluge put pay to any hopes we had of tucking into a few target grayling… high and stained is probably a polite way to describe the rivers appearance.

Never mind, we enjoyed one of our far too infrequent get togethers and talked about developing the ESF ezine over coffee for a few hours at a local pit stop.

Pete Tyjas

Having returned home subsequently with an unfortunate 8 hour trek on the back of an AA truck due to a breakdown (What a calamity of biblical proportions that was), it’s been back on to the river with Warren… we’re looking at shot patterns and fly weight for nymphs. The recent rainy weather has given the river some height so plenty for us to work on. Yesterday afternoon was superb with Warrens setup coming up trumps to steal the days best numbers and catch.

Warren

Although olives were abound we saw no more than 2 rises throughout the afternoon, regardless… they were to be ignored today for the sake of the nymph.

Olive

Shallow stretches that were no more. It was good to know the river well and where the pockets and hazards potentially exist. Not for safety I might add, I just didn’t want dunking.

Jim

Fishing into the wee small hours, I say ‘wee’ & ‘small’ but meant about 6pm… I was almost blind as a bat from there on in, the only downside to October onwards – your fishing days get shorter.

Jim

Now it’s prepping for the AAPGAI meet up this week. I’m assessing candidates and doing demos… the highlight is meeting up with guys ‘n’ gals I’ve not seen as a result of the country fair cancellations that have dogged us throughout the year. If you’re up for a day out we have an open day on Saturday the 20th… more details.

Here’s looking forward to many grayling days from here forthwith… until then, enjoy your fishing.

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Take One…

Posted in Other Stuff by Jim Williams on September 16, 2012 4 Comments

Away on the chalkstream at Longford with Ian May. An exciting new project filming some stuff… fishing stuff… normal stuff… all will be revealed in the next decade or so – I kid ye not!

Ian sizing up the perfect shot and a place to start in the glides that are Longford

Ian May

Dorothy (Ian) walks through a scene, not quite the yellow red brick road.

Ian May

My lowly #2 amongst Ian’s rack of ‘Ones’ ready for filming duty… a new 10ft #4 was christened today. I was even let loose on it, probably the nicest dry fly rod I’ve cast for some time.

SAGE Ones

Mayfly

The mayfly hiding inset a reel, out of sight of circling birds hunting for food on the wing.

Ian takes a break from filming and fishes amongst the iridescent fronds that carpet Longford

Ian May

Take One completed… all the action and interesting stuff went to video – Sorry! Now Ian has some editing to do, for every hour filmed there’s a minute worth watching – apparently. Absolutely great fun and lots to look forward too.

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