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An interlude…

Posted in Grayling Fishing by Jim Williams on March 7, 2013 2 Comments

Since my last blog mid February it feels like my feet haven’t really touched the ground, in more ways than one it’s probably true. Sarah and I are privileged to be able to fly over to Canada in February of each year to participate in the Canadian Challenge with ‘Team Taylor’ and travelling cohorts.

A long haul flight and even longer drive from Rocky Mountain House to Prince Albert is where the all consuming chaos transforms into a well oiled four legged machine.

Jillian’s on the move… mile zero… only another 320 miles to go.

Team Taylor

Geared to the hilt with head cams, sled cams and all else I could get across the pond… I’ve hours worth of footage to scan and edit into something that looks something near plausible. Here’s a quick 11 minutes I put together whilst out there to capture some of the ‘trail’ and ‘tribulations’

During the Northern loop from La Ronge to Grand Mothers Bay we get to pass scenes like this… in melt the river Churchill has awesome power and presence. I’d love to put a fly through here!

Churchill

Saskatchewan – I’ve yet to visit a place, in a time, where everything looked so crisp and clear, and with air that’s so clean, you felt healthy just breathing it. Even with temperatures plummeting to –29 d/c, there’s no summer holiday destination I’d ever swap for this. 

Canada

That being said, I’m for ever finding my self trekking across frozen rivers that I’d truly love to fish. Winter holidays here make that otherwise impossible. I have however been invited back for a Team Taylor wedding in September, the Indian summer that has descended upon them for the past two years beckons again, and I get to do some fishing either side of the big day… River Red Deer and Bull trout here we come!

Returning to blighty it was then straight out on to the water for 3 days with fellow Vision WT member Tony Riley and all round great guy Albert who’d both journeyed down from Cumbria… some pleasure and Vision stuff would therefore ensue with the help of Ian May who took care of the photography and video.

Tony & Jim

Playing in fair weather we managed to tuck into some not so co-operative fish who took more convincing to come to the fly than we’d anticipated.

Albert changes to a more tempting morsel… one hopes.

Albert

One of his delectable shrimps was just to irresistible.

Albert

Tony meanwhile mixes it up, hopping between both dry and nymph as we fish on through.

Tony Riley

Mixed fortunes throughout… all welcome admittedly

Trout

… but some were preferred

Grayling

Following on from a great few days with the guys and having made sure they’d returned across the border and back North, I managed to snatch a day out with Warren. If you’re a follower of ESF you’ll know Warren from the many superb fly tutorials he’s published.

Using a nymph he’d concocted from another successful pattern, we fished the Nadders pocket waters and weirs with some ludicrous amounts shot, not to just sink the fly I might add but more to slow the whole system down…

Warren - Nadder

Kersplosh!… you know the stone that downed Goliath?… Warren’s just cast it.

Warren - Nadder

Warren’s thinking out of the box, success came for both of us. Nothing much bigger, we were sure we’d hit upon a particular generation of grayling.

Nadder grayling

Come midday I have the headache of all headaches (and I don’t get them ever!), instigated from a bout of man flew I picked up on the plane home from Canada in a cabin full of coughing, spluttering lepers… sniffle sniffle

Just going through the motions… 3, 2, 1 and stuff it, that’s me done and the season finished.

Nadder - Jim

The grayling season is but for a week at an end, for some the trout season has already started. On most of my home waters however we have to wait until the 1st April.

Until then I’ll not regret some free time to catch up with a few guys, do some articles for the next ESF ezine, photography for the Vision website and spend part of next week in Cockermouth assessing at our next AAPGAI get together… did I say free time?

Tight lines all if your up and running, patience otherwise for those that aren’t. What ever stage you’re at be assured your fishing will not be affected through any lack of water which is more than can be said for last year… so if nowt else I’m definitely thankful for that.

Until we meet… Jim

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Snowly does it…

Posted in Grayling Fishing by Jim Williams on January 18, 2013 10 Comments

The snow brings the country to an almost standstill. In the absence of having any kids with which to throw down a hill on a dustbin lid towards a barbed wire fence, nor the capacity or will to sit at a bench and tie flies, it’s off to Narnia to pester fish… me thinks, me hopes.

River Avon

Not just for x-ray fish vision, squint free snow blindness avoided…

Polaroids

PTN – The perfect morsel if there ever was one. I chose this in the vein hope of not needing to migrate to any other as fingers fail to cooperate…brrr

RNPTN

There’s a chill in the air, that’ll be hypothermia then. Only the best nets double up as a wind sock…

Brodin Net

Gung ho… son of a @#&%$ that’s cold. And so commences the seeking of fish… I seek ye here…

River Avon

I seeked ye there… ah… gotcha!

River Avon

uh… tut!

Trout

I seek ye everywhere… ooh…ooh… no… yes… aha… yippee

River Avon

Having nailed a handful of tiny chub in tree covered deep pools, a few of the most rancid rainbow trout I’ve ever seen and a singular unfortunate brownie, my expectations are exceeded. In a rip snorting current I tuck into the first grayling I’ve had out of this river in some 5 or so years. In fact the first I know of any angler in the syndicate, perhaps a corner is turned… I wonder.

Grayling

The grayling was to be my last, it almost put a full stop on the day… not even so much as a nibble from then on. To be honest my extremities had long since had enough, my fingers were frozen and there was ectoplasm dribbling from my nose… either that or my brains had melted.

Vision Hoppers

It was a great day to be out on the water, the scenery was to die for… come to think of it I nearly did.

Enjoy the weekend whilst there is a white out. Next week will see us back to some sort of normality although I’m not quite sure what that is exactly.

‘Who cares as long as there’s always fishing’.

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