Wednesday, 30 December 2015

30 December 2015, Gold Lake (Gold Valley)

I normally suffer the misfortune of having to work from Monday to Friday so I very rarely get the opportunity to fish mid-week matches - however being the week between Christmas and New Year I was able to get out on the bank today and made my way back to Gold Valley for one of the Wednesday opens.
  
Looking left from peg 25 on Gold Lake
  
  
  
On Monday's silver fish only event local legend and Barney's Worms head honcho Dave Carter had suffered to the misfortune of hooking carp after carp from peg 4 of the same lake we were fishing today (Gold Lake) so naturally I was looking to draw in this area - so of course I drew peg 25, literally at the other end of the pond!!! Still this peg was apparently in a good area as it appears to be at the crease where the deeper main body of the lake really shallows-up as it approaches the parallel bank that is furthest from the clubhouse.
  
PVA and hard pellets today
  
As today's match was an open (where carp definitely counted) I went for a simple, one rod approach that is pretty much the norm at Gold Valley at this time of year. As it seemed like a near 50m chuck to the central dividing rope I decided to make things easy for myself an left my usual 10' tip rod in the bag an instead dug out a 12' Preston Innovations Carbonactive that I carry for such situations - such longer rods can seem a little unwieldy when you are used to fishing with 10' models, but I find the extra casting ability is well worth it.
   
I also stepped-down my usual 8lb mainline in favour of a lower diameter 6lb breaking strain of my usual brand (Daiwa Sensor), with 3' of 10lb Drennan flurocarbon added loop-to-loop to the end of the mainline ready to take either a 1 ounce Guru inline lead or a 36g small Guru Hybrid feeder (both fitted a with long X-Safe stems with black Hydro). Hooklengths were 30cm of 0.19 N-Gauge with a size 12 QM1 and a hair-rigged pellet band for the lead and 10cm of 0.22 (same hook) for the Hybrid feeder.
  
Shhhh - new top secret hookbaits!
   
Even though it has been really rather warm for the time of year (double-figure temperatures today) I decided that I'd feel my way into the match and not actually feed anything during the first hour. This plan seemed to work pretty well as in the first hour I managed to hook two carp in three casts just short of the central rope on the straight lead with a Ringers chocolate orange wafter - unfortunately though only one ended-up in the net as the first one snagged me on an underwater obstacle just 5m or so from the bank and I had to pull for a break. (Both bites came after the rig had been in the water for at least 15 minutes.)
      
A 36g small Guru Hybrid feeder with PVA bag attached
  
  
  
Going into the second hour the match I decided to risk feeding a little bit of bait and switched to a 36g small Guru Hybrid feeder loaded with a PVA bag of 4 and 6mm hard pellets held in place by a simple loop of black Hydro. This change worked really well and by the end of the first half of the match I was sitting pretty with a tidy total of six carp in the net - again most bites came after 15 minutes or so, but one or two came pretty quickly (just 3 or 4 minutes), and all bites came to the Ringers chocolate orange wafter.
 
Patiently waiting for the rod to fold in half
  
Unfortunately the second half of my match so nowhere near as good as the first - a fish that was hooked on the straight lead and an 11mm pellet hookbait fell-off on the way in (though it did give a very funny bite and was probably foul-hooked), and my final carp of the day came at 14:15 (this one fell to the Hybrid feeder arrangement).
  
Nice to end the year with an envelope
  
In the end my seven carp went 53-12-0, enough for second in the match behind Gold Valley open match regular (and reigning Garbolino Club Angler of the Year) Stefan Gent who put seventy plus pounds on the scales from a peg towards the middle of the lake. So a good end to 2015 and hopefully a sign of things to come in 2016!!!
  
Until next time ...
  
  

Monday, 28 December 2015

28 December 2015, Gold Lake (Gold Valley)

After a self-imposed match fishing hiatus lasting for nearly two months it was finally time to get back into the fray today – and what better way to do so than with the belated Apollo Guildford Match Group Christmas match at Gold Valley?
  
Red sky in the morning!!!
  
  
  
Today’s event was held on the Canal Bank of Gold Lake at Gold Valley and saw a decent turn-out of 19 anglers trying desperately not to catch the resident carp that are the usual target – no, not a bout of collective insanity, but as this match was a silverfish only event catching carp can be rather annoying as they don’t count!!!
  
My dip into the bag of dreams meant I would be stationed on peg 22 for the day – I was told that this was a pretty decent draw, but as Gold Lake is essentially a large rectangle with just two or three small islands (none of which are anywhere near peg 22) my view was that the recent weather conditions would probably dictate where the best pegs on the day would be as the fish would no doubt be influenced by the wind as much as anything.
  
Red, white and green
  
As today’s match was silvers only my bait selection was focused mainly on maggots and Old Ghost Green Alga groundbait, with a small smattering of micro and 4mm expander pellets. In terms of tactics I gave myself four options: a light pole rig for fishing down the edge to my right (towards some dead rushes) with maggots for roach and perch; a rig for fishing the pole with groundbait and pellets at 13m for skimmers; a free-running cage feeder for fishing at 25m (halfway to the central rope); and finally a rod for fishing either a small Guru Method or Hybrid feeder at the same distance as the cage feeder set-up (but in a slightly more positive/modern way).
  
Waiting for a pull
  
On the whistle I fed six decent balls of Green Alga on my 13m line (which with hindsight was a massive mistake), followed by half an hour spent fishing the cage feeder – the set-up here consisted of one of my Daiwa Tournament 10/11 tip rods fished at 11’ (for some reason these rods have softer actions at the longer length, plus casting light feeders becomes easier), 4lb Daiwa Sensor main line (again to aid casting), a 15g Drennan cage feeder attached via a Preston Innovations feeder bead link (which gives a free-running paternoster arrangement), finished-off with 30cm of 0.13 N-Gauge to a size 18 Guru LWG hook. Unfortunately this didn’t lead to any bites – a bit of a worry as I saw this approach as something of a banker!!!
  
A switch to the margins (where I’d been feeding live maggots by hand since the off) at least saw a few bites and two dumpy roach in the net to get me off the mark – before this line inexplicably died and I couldn’t get another bite from it all day!
  
Guru Method and Hybrid feeders
  
A switch back to the 25m line, though this time swapping between a small 24g Guru Method feeder or a small 24g Guru Hybrid feeder loaded with soaked 2mm pellets and a little groundbait, saw four proper pulls and three skimmers in the net – as a result I ended the first half of the match with about 4lb and at least in touch with those around me as nobody really seemed to be bagging-up. (Hooklengths used on the Method/Hybrid feeder were all 10cm of 0.17 N-Gauge to a size 16 QM1 with a hair-rigged pellet band. A 6mm hard pellet was the only hookbait used. I was once again using the Guru X-Safe system, though as I was targeting skimmers I used a short stem fitted with white Hydro.)
  
Damn - silvers only!!!
  
After putting those skimmers in the net is fairly quick succession I had assumed that I'd stumbled on the right approach and a few fish, and would go on to win the match in fine style - so obviously the second half of the match turned into a complete disaster with the only bite I could muster coming from a 6lb carp that I had to slip back!!! I did try the 13m pole line a number of times - there was lots of fizzing, but clearly my opening gambit of six balls of groundbait was way, way too much as I couldn't manage a single bite from this line. (With hindsight I would've fed this line with a tiny ball of micro pellets every half an hour and tried to just catch one fish at a time.)
  
Ready and waiting for the scales
  
In the end my two roach and three skimmers went 4-5-0, a reasonable weight on the day, but nowhere near a prize! Overall results:

  1. Shaun Sylvester, peg 16, 21-15-0
  2. Lee Simmons, peg 25, 12-5-0
  3. Paul Williamson, peg 21, 11-9-0
   
Section winners:
  • Paul Taylor, peg 24, 10-5-0
  • Pete Franklin, peg 15, 10-8-0
   
Until next time ...