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Rekindling a faith…

Posted in Trout Fishing by Jim Williams on July 17, 2012 4 Comments

David at his tethers end on the back of having received what he described as the worst and most miserable days river fishing there was to ever experience… the fact that it was his first venture onto one was even more disappointing.

With a quite exceptional casting foundation born out of stillwater fishing there was but no more a need than to concentrate on his presentational skills. Having shared some additional leader set up secrets it was onto an afternoon of pillaging.

With no more than a guiding hand his woes were curtailed as he spent the afternoon slating trout from a high, fast but clear running river on the nymph.

His first wriggling specimen ~ a fat old madam she was too!

David Cunningham

The grinner keeps grinning… chocolate box fish… a most beautiful specimen

David Cunningham

Camera starts to work overtime ~ another!

David Cunningham

Catch me would ya?… I’ll just chew your net then.

David Cunningham

Tut!… can I get 5 minutes?

David Cunningham

Bloody show off ~ Dances with trout

David Cunningham

The #18 red neck draws admirers from start to finish ~ no other fly needed

David Cunningham

David Cunningham

Ello – does it look bigger from here?

David Cunningham

Mate… the batteries are nearly flat

David Cunningham

David Cunningham

Did I say last cast?… you’ve got to be kidding

David Cunningham

David Cunningham

That’s it, definitely the last cast… the fly can’t take any more

David Cunningham

Fly cruelty – a beaten Red Neck Pheasant Tail… no more

Red Neck PTN

What can I say?… pics as promised of what was an awesome afternoons fishing. Keep the faith Angel

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Good to great…

Posted in Nymphing Indicators by Jim Williams on July 15, 2012 4 Comments

On an otherwise perfect day betwixt downpours yesterday and potentially more tomorrow, Warren and I took the opportunity to get out on the Wylye.

Warren

Today was to be a good day… no, actually a great day, trying out 3 new cameras but more importantly an indicator I’d played with earlier this week [Previous post]

Nothing other than expected, still teetering on the edge but slowly regressing from the banks

Wylye

All anglers will know of the required rules of engagement… kettle, cover & the barby.

I strike a ‘it’s nowt to do wiv me mate’ pose whilst arsonist Warren napalms some charcoal.

Warren & Jim

Rosemary and marinade… flamed with a dose of diesel… now cook ya buggers!

Lunch

Indicator set up

Day-glo set up on the trusty 10ft #2

Suitably sustenanced and having fathomed out how head cam, sky cam and new underwater tough cam worked we set upon our rod, reels and lines.

I introduced Warren to a more modified version of the indicator setup I’d tinkered with earlier. Hi-viz, multi coloured and ultra thin with a sexy turnover taper.

Discussing some pros and cons we were making some intricate but meaningful alterations as we went. Having not quite mastered the line connection as yet I looked to a temporary loop to loop set up that wouldn’t compromise or at least minimise the loss of any energy transfer.

Applying nothing more than a 5ft straight tippet I knot on an Olive cdc and make a few prelim casts with a yearning to see how it performs up top.

Jim

Ta dah… as one can see it attracts only the bigger specimens… ‘Today I will mainly be really chuffed’

Jim - trout

Now to let Warren at it, we set up his #2 with the indicator on a 140 grain Cortland Nymphing Line. His choice of ‘arrow’ was a lovely olive quill fly with a ‘blingy’ bead to add sparkle to murky waters.

Olive quill

In this section there’s insufficient opportunity for anything other than a free drifting or towing approach with the leader hovering on the surface. Doing nothing more than blind casting and searching with zero visibility, Warren relies upon nothing but the slightest of movements…

To our surprise the versatility of my previous favoured option [Bristle Art] had been surpassed. Inline with the leader setup it cast beautifully, hovered high and even when gradually submerging using heavy nymphs it was easily visible at given intersections due to its length, the alternating colours also acted as depth markers.

The most appealing aspect was the sensitivity, partly due to it’s lightness, construction and degree of stretch within. I’ve never seen Warren so dumb struck…

Here he tries some high sticking & Czech nymphing at the weir in the lower reaches, yet again with tremendous results.

Warren

Dalek like Warren’s also trialling my new super dooper head cam, an awesome and ultra light POV.

Warren & head cam

A wriggling specimen not wishing to be photographed any time soon.

Grayling

The original leader below now tweaked and superseded… a 10ft & 15ft version now in production

Indicator set up

I’ve some stunning footage from 3 cameras of the indicator(s) to digest and edit, as well as plenty of expletives and secret bits to dub so hopefully something to share soon.

I also worked on an almost invisible weight like system to sink stubborn tippet and perhaps add weight to flies as an alternative to shot all be it at a lighter level… what I tried yesterday worked a treat, I just need to smarten up the application. Again I may post something up here once I’m convinced with a few more tests.

No time to rest even though the weathers poor ~ innovation mode very much engaged at the moment and some weird and wonderful stuff coming to fruition ~ enjoy your fishing!

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