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Alan Whitty

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Odd those marks, usually leeches latch on near the vent, belly, gills or head, argalus are similar, they look similar to sea lice marks, which obviously they're not, I wonder if in France you have a different species of fish parasite?
 

Steve Arnold

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In the Spring I caught a carp of 35lbs. There was this wound that was a couple of inches long, I could only think a big lamprey could have caused it, though it may have been an injury during winter floods......

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In all other respects it was fit and healthy.....

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The river Lot is a bit prehistoric, who knows what size the parasitic species are! :eek:
 

terry m

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The Hants Avon is very swollen but not flooded, so as I have a full week I thought I would spend a few hours in a slack as I won’t have another chance until next week. After an hour of nothing I thought my afternoon was going well when a 17lb 12oz pike picked up my mackerel. I was chuffed my biggest so far this winter. No sooner had I released it and lobbed the same bait back into the same area when the deadbait pencil again lifted and lay flat. I lifted into a fish that truly went berserk. Eventually banked a behemoth of 27lb 12oz. A fish that will likely go 30lb in February. Wonderful afternoon, even the later downpour couldn’t remove any smile.
 

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peterjg

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I fished the K&A canal yesterday, on a flowing pound. Started laying on with a piece of peacock quill flat on the surface catching roach and a couple of small bream, bait was flavoured bread on a size 12. Six canal workers passed me walking upstream with lawnmowers and strimmers and then apart from the already floating leaves there were huge rafts of cut grass, etc floating past making the laying on impossible. I swapped to a shorter 12ft float rod and used a sidewinder quiver indicator. I've had it for years and have hardly ever used it because I thought it too resistant to bites? The rod tip was about 6 inches under the water so that the line avoided all the floating leaves, etc. Surprisingly it worked quite well and I caught a few more roach (nothing big). I can't help feeling that there must still be a better way of avoiding floating stuff, any ideas?
 

mikench

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Gordon and I had a pleasant days fishing on a quiet pool. We had a few showers but with no wind , the rain fell vertically and so we were protected under our brollies. I sat facing the sun( when it appeared) and Gordon had his back to it.

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Gordon was on the float and I was on the feeder. Not only could I not see the tip , I couldn’t see the rod section.
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The shadows and reflections made visibility difficult and we both struggled with catching. I had 4 common up to 5lb and Gordon had 3 plus a few roach. No pics as the fish were nothing to write home about but we enjoyed being out and fishing and had only one other angler there who didn’t stay long. Cheers Gordon and sorry about the absence of a bacon butty .😉
 

John Aston

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The endless rain has screwed my winter perch 'campaign', as it would be called by a serious angler. But the high rivers have meant barbel have been obliging - I've had several sessions on the Yorkshire Ouse and Swale in the last week. Levels have been up to 5 metres above normal so it's been 2.75 TC Fox barbel, braid and 12 lb hooklengths . Both worm and meat have produced and session highlights have included 4 barbel to 7-8 on the Ouse before being harried off by psycho bullocks - something I really don't need and which can be bloody scary in a tight swim . No cattle on the Swale, and two lovely fish of 8-4 and 10-3 - the latter trying very hard to dislocate my shoulder in heavy flow. And - whisper it in case the barbel police are watching - the banks were so soft and squishy that no unhooking mat was needed . That's me cancelled then.
 
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Alan Whitty

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I am not keen on herds of frisky bullocks, they can be quite dangerous, although I've never had an issue personally I've seen a few close calls in my time in angling...
 

no-one in particular

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A bit of a break in the weather yesterday saw me out for a couple of hours but one squall came through and soaked me. Nothing to report, excuses, mank left over bait, missed the high tide, wind in my face and got wet, so, not a bite, not even a crab tug However, did have a nice flock of Oystercatchers to keep me company until someone's dog came and chased them away grrrrr. Back to wind and rain this morning.
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Skoda

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Met up with Micky yesterday at a mutually halfway day-ticket venue that we hoped wasn’t under water; Micky’s syndicate water had been totally flooded for days with anglers stranded! Weather was pleasant with a gentle breeze and scattered clouds. As usual there were two vans in the car park, both from a firm of central heating engineers (Central Heating Solutions, why is it always solutions these days?)

Settled in a couple of comfy swims, my intention was to stick out a method feeder rod on a bit alarm then float fish with maggot. Micky would set up both rods on alarms and dazzle me with his accurate catapult work. We had a good long chat about his spectacular French carp fishing holiday and made plans our forthcoming four-day trip to the Severn.

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On the method feeder I had five carp, the best was a cracking fully scaled mirror, and a couple of largish bream. On the float I caught nice small roach all day long and increasingly smaller perch, plus a surprise carp of about five pounds which was hooked under my rod tip while I was attempting to untangle an enormous wind knot that had formed! That could have turned out badly.

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The day was spoilt by most of the carp having badly damaged mouths. One can only speculate how this happens on a water that has a barbless hooks only rule. Maybe some anglers use very heavy lines and large hooks and just haul the carp in as quickly as possible, who knows?

Andy
 

wetthrough

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An excellent day yesterday thanks @mikench. You forgot to mention the one that got away, one of mine:( Me and my big mouth extolling the virtues of Guru hooks. I still think their good hooks but there has to be a first. Pic of the sprung hook from the one that got away, an unsprung one next to it. Hard to believe they're the same hook from the pic but they are both 16s LWG.

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No harm in one fishy picture.

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no-one in particular

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Nice fishing Wetthrough but does that hook look a bit weak or is it just me, not sure I like the flattened design or the angle of the bends, not sure really maybe just a minds eye thing.
 

wetthrough

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Nice fishing Wetthrough but does that hook look a bit weak or is it just me, not sure I like the flattened design or the angle of the bends, not sure really maybe just a minds eye thing.
They are light wire gauge hooks so might look a little weak if you're more used to heavier hooks. I quite like the bend. To each his own.
 

Alan Whitty

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Use the old Drennan carbon chub pattern or the red bream, they are flattened crystal bend hooks, bloody strong for their wire gauge...
 

wetthrough

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Use the old Drennan carbon chub pattern or the red bream, they are flattened crystal bend hooks, bloody strong for their wire gauge...
Not keen on full crystal bends. I don't find hooking seeds such as tares easy with them. Not sure about red Bream? Tried red maggot and found them quite weak. Had a Drennan silver fish open up on a skimmer which put me off Drennan hooks.
 

Alan Whitty

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Red Bream are similar to the carbon chub hooks, Drennan's best ever hook imo(and several other good match anglers in my area), they are micro barbed so depending on your fishery rules may not fit for you, brilliant hook that will probably be discontinued when world supplies run out, then we will be stuck with rubbish like red maggot and acolyte hooks....
 

no-one in particular

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Red Bream are similar to the carbon chub hooks, Drennan's best ever hook imo(and several other good match anglers in my area), they are micro barbed so depending on your fishery rules may not fit for you, brilliant hook that will probably be discontinued when world supplies run out, then we will be stuck with rubbish like red maggot and acolyte hooks....
I nearly always use Drennan just the plain specimen barbless in mainly sizes 14-8. never had a problem with them, very sharp and strong although I can understand anglers wanting more specialized hooks for certain fishing. As I am just general fishing the Drennan ones suit me.
 

Alan Whitty

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Drennan do a big range of hooks and as with all tackle it's a personal choice thing, their hooks are generally sharp(though a few patterns lose their points easily), your plain specimen barbless would be next to useless on my small river barbel fishing, on float or lead, so for my fishing life revolves around four or five patterns, depending on fish being targeted and line strengths, rods etc, the hooks you use are a good hook, but some Drennan hooks are poor, for me(and Gordon obviously) anyway, the red maggot hook is as weak as pi$$ and opens on a whim, a friend swears by them(as did Simon, I gave him a few packets) so I gave them a go, I went trotting one morning, Normark Titan 2000 and 4lb line and an 18 red maggot, first trot the float sunk and I hooked a decent perch, landed it a fish 2lb plus as I remember, upon looking at the hook in the fishes lip I remember thinking that it held up well during a decent fight, then I went to disgorge it, that was it, it was so soft the hook buckled under the slightest of pressure and ended up the most incredible shape, I tied a new hook on and several trots later I was into my target, a chub, I landed it, God knows how, the hook was straight, only the barb held it, I have used very fine wire hooks for squat and bloodworm fishing in my match fishing days, but nowadays I have a massive gap between medium wire to forged strong hooks.

The Drennan carbon chub or red bream are hooks that aren't heavy wire like superspades, but are very strong without being too heavy in the wire which would ruin presentation, some think this is a myth, but sadly it isn't....
 

sam vimes

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Red Bream are similar to the carbon chub hooks, Drennan's best ever hook imo(and several other good match anglers in my area), they are micro barbed so depending on your fishery rules may not fit for you, brilliant hook that will probably be discontinued when world supplies run out, then we will be stuck with rubbish like red maggot and acolyte hooks....

Unless they simply don't list them on their website, it looks like they were discontinued some time ago. The only red Drennan hooks currently listed appear to be Red Maggot, Carp Maggot and Acolyte Red Finesse. The older Red ranges, including Red Bream, passed me by completely. I don't recall having ever seen them in any local tackle shop. Only when searching for them did I find that Drennan has done several red hook patterns. I don't recall having ever seen any of them.

Benwicks still have limited stocks of Red Bream (30-60 packets, size depending). They also have Fine Red, Red Roach, Red Match and Ultra Fine Pole but all in much lower quantities.
 
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