I'd not been out for about two weeks - with a cold or something coming on before going away at Christmas, I didn't want to push my luck, but I felt like fishing a river for the last time this year. Temperatures were good and the local Trent's a (rare) good level, but the forecast was brisk downstream winds and the banks are mud slides now, so I went up into Derbyshire where the Derwent is sheltered, flows the other way and you don't need a rope to get into and out of your swim. The only problem is I'd be unlikely to catch any coarse fish.
I lost my balsa slider on the last trip and I hadn't made another yet (the spring wire I need for the eyes was delivered while I was out, from China, the only place I could find to buy a short piece. Capitalism provides me with many things, for which I'm grateful, but you can't buy a top and bottom slider, I notice) so, with a deep swim and an upstream breeze, I fished out a pretty crowquill Avon that sat nicely with a 2.5g olivette. But I couldn't see the flippin' thing, looking straight into the sun, with a ripple on the water and the river reflecting the trees on the wooded banks. I was tempted to wrap up after an hour, but luckily the wind dropped a bit and the sun went behind the hill facing me.
Once I could see what I was doing, I was pleased I'd stayed, as a string of small grayling and trout showed up. As the day warmed up and I fed more bait, the trout got bigger. Lovely fish with a special mad energy
The last two fish ended the day, and the year, in a bitter-sweet way. Second to last was this pristine chublet. The first coarse fish I've caught here (I'm told grayling are coarse fish but .....) in half a dozen goes, and this from a river that was once a chub mecca, with match catches of them in three figures. So, small but welcome
The last fish I hooked ploughed off across the river as if it had a clear sense of where it was going, until it buried itself in one of the fallen trees that litter this stretch. I didn't have light gear on, a size 12 Drennan Wide Gape and .14 hooklength, and from my limited experience, if trout get you snagged they do it by accident not design, so I'd like to have at least seen what this one was. Still, nice afternoon's fishing and Happy New Year to all you FM members who add to or look in on this thread.