Improve Your Coarse Fishing Issue 346 (PREVIEW)

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ith... Fish better w

HOW TO LAND EVERY FISH YOU HOOK! P P I H S DES EXPERTS ANSWER YOUR ANGLING PROBLEMS

DEC

DAI E GRIBBLub

APR

TOMMY PICKERING

Awesome ch bait revealed

Bag up on carp on the 5m line

FEB

ANDY MAY al

n Catch ca bread h it w s r e silv

R SECTION E P M U B E 2 4 - PA G

H E X P E RT T I W D E K C A H G U I D E P R I T E S P EC I ES ! T N O M Y B MONTH U R FAV O U O Y L L A R O T I PS F OCT

DEA MACENY Tie this

sim barbel rigple

NOV

PHIL SPINKS Top

tactics for day-ticket perch

MAR

PHIL RINoGurEneRt

Fill y der using a fee ISSUE 346

TESTED: MIDDY'S NEW REACTACORE XT15 POLE

Jan 15 – Feb 12, 2019 £3.80


INSIDE

Issue 346 January 15 – February 12, 2019

24

Iain Swanson shows why specimen hunters targeting perch should use match tactics

GREAT BRITISH FISHING 8

14

Sedge your bets with silvers – Dan White Clean up in town centres – Graham West

TACTICS

24 Big perch love casters! – Iain Swanson 28 Keep cold-bites coming – Nick Speed 32 Mix that excites sight & smell – Jake King 36 Best feeders for stillwaters 38 Head to the towpath this winter – Matt Godfrey 4 • IYCF Issue 346

43 10 steps to perfect preparation – Kristian Jones 47 Wobble your way to success – Dan Brackley 50 Fish better with Des Shipp – land every fish you hook 55 Q&A 58 Rig school: Chub feeder rig

CARP TACTICS

100 Top tips for winter carping 104 Carp Q&A 106 Catch carp on winter rivers

TACKLE

88 Daiwa TDR reels 90 Live test: Middy pole 94 Korum Snapper accessories

YOUR IYCF

20 Subscribe and get a free set of bait bowls 96 Your letters 98 Mission: your catch shots 108 Crossword 110 Bob Roberts’ diary


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2019

EXPERTS’ YEAR PLAN

p63-87 JANUARY

Gary Knowles

Catch pike on lure and deadbait tactics

FEBRUARY Andy May

Bag up on canal silvers with bread

MARCH

Phil Ringer

Easy feeder tactics for a netful of skimmers

28

Top match angler Nick Speed demonstrates the five edges that he relies on to keep catching in winter

32

Do skimmers find food by sight or smell? Thankfully, Jake King has a mix that appeals to both senses

47

If there’s one method you should try for pike this month it’s wobbling a deadbait. Dan Brackley shows how

50

In his column this month, Des Shipp shows you how to land every fish you hook on the pole and waggler

APRIL

Tommy Pickering

How to tackle th 5m line for carpe on the pole

MAY

Paul Garner

Fool finicky crucian s with a Method feed er

JUNE

Paul Elt

Catch specimen te from gravel pitsnch

JULY

Ian Russell

When it comes to you can’t beat big carp boilies

AUGUST Andy Lo

ble

Simple tactics to bag up on stunning rudd

SEPTEMBER Mike Lyddon

How to locate and catch specimen bream

OCTOBER Dean

Macey

Try this simple rig for hard-fighting barbel

NOVEMBER Phil Sp inks

Target commercial car p waters for perch

DECEMBER Dai Gr ibble

Chub love cheesepaste! Here’s how to fish it

100

Considering putting the carp rods away until spring? Don’t! We reveal our top winter tricks

IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 5


Sedge your bets with silvers Dan White proves that snake lakes aren’t all about summer-only carp and F1s during a super silver fish session at The Sedges in Somerset Words & Photography Tony Grigorjevs

8• IYCF Issue 346


FISHING ● H S Ac

EAT BRIT I GR

EAT BRIT I GR

elebr of the be ation st lake and river, ca fishing t nal h the UK h at as to offer

FISHING ● SH

IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 9


FISHING ● H S Ac

EAT BRIT I GR

EAT BRIT I GR

elebr of the be ation st lake and river, ca fishing t nal h the UK h at as to offer

FISHING ● SH

14• IYCF Issue 346


Clean up in town centres When it’s cold and the water is clear you can avoid the dreaded blank by heading to warmer urban waters, says Graham West Words Tony Grigorjevs/Graham West Photography Lloyd Rogers

IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 15


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BIG PERCH LOVE CASTERS! Iain Swanson reveals why specimen anglers should take a leaf out of the match angler’s handbook when targeting perch Words & Photography Tony Grigorjevs

TWO LINES

Feed a second line in the same manner as the first. Use this as a back-up once bites dry up

TACTICS: POLE SPECIES: PERCH DIFFICULTY:

24 • IYCF Issue 346


TACTICS

C

OMMERCIALS were always dismissed as a viable option by keen specimen anglers. Bagging carp and F1s didn’t appeal one single iota to any of them. The challenge served up by canals, rivers and natural stillwaters was much more appealing to connoisseurs of big fish. But in recent years there has been a shift in mentality and one species in particular can take much of the credit. Perch. Specimen examples are now commonplace in commercials all over the country, and these once-dismissed venues

are now on the radar of any angler on the hunt for a personal best stripey. At many venues a 2lb fish is highly likely, a 3lb specimen could become a reality and even a fish over the magical 4lb barrier isn’t out of the question. Using large lobworms or prawns on the hook and sitting behind a set of bite alarms is the stereotypical specimen perch angler approach. But could taking a leaf out of the match angler’s handbook provide more consistent results? Iain Swanson certainly thinks so. The Fishing IT angler has caught loads of big perch in recent winters and has

noticed a pattern when it comes to which bait they prefer. “Perch are a predatory species and it is understandable why lots of people turn to big baits such as worms but my experience shows me that they absolutely love crunchy casters. “I’ve caught fish to over 3lb on them and they are the only bait I take with me when big perch are my target. “Combine them with the accuracy that fishing with a pole provides and you have a tactic that is going to outscore everything else,” declared Iain.

START HERE

Kick off on a line around 7m out, cupping in a generous amount of casters at the start

AVOID THE CARP

Don’t be tempted to fish close to islands because this is where the carp are lurking

IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 25


TACTICS: FEEDER / BOMB SPECIES: CARP DIFFICULTY:

28 • IYCF Issue 346


5

WAYS TO KEEP COLD-WATER BITES COMING Match legend Nick Speed runs through the five simple tips that help him keep bites coming through the cooler months... Words Nick Speed Photography Mark Parker

U

NLIKE in the warmer summer months, it is extremely difficult to keep sport consistent throughout winter. For a successful day’s fishing at this time of year you need to get everything right. Location needs to be spot-on, bait choice requires careful consideration, and your feeding must be correct.

There’s no margin for error. But get these things right and there’s no reason why you shouldn’t end the day with a netful of fish. So, to help in your quest, here are my five essential nuggets of advice to keep those bites coming, regardless of what the weather throws at you over the next couple of months...

1 Fish further out Obvious as it sounds, to get regular bites you need to fish in the right areas! This tends to be the middle or the widest area of the lake. The reason for this is that regardless of wind direction, fish always feel safe in this area. That said, I would always recommend sitting with a cold wind off your back – in the calmest part of the lake. Or, if it’s a warm wind, sit with it in your face, because this will improve your chances of getting more bites. There’s another reason for this. Today, I’m on Loco Lake at Lindholme Lakes with the wind off my back, as it’s quite cold. Even though my main line is 50 yards out, towards the middle of the lake, I always feed a line closer in – around the 20m mark – heavily in the winter. The plan is to catch a few on the bomb here

later on, when the fish feel safe and are ready and willing to eat. There is always a window in the day when fish will feed in this shallower part of the venue you’re fishing. Effectively, I am extending the margins. When the water is cold and clear, what would be classed as my ‘summer margin’ line will be 20m out, rather than under my feet, while my main line will be at 40m-50m rather than the more conventional 20m-25m that it would be if the water were warm and coloured. Also, when I say “heavily feed” the close-in line, I catapult a whole tin of sweetcorn over a wide area, whereas the longer line is fished with a clipped-up Hybrid feeder. This enables me to slowly build a tight area of loosefeed. I’ll cover both of these points in more detail later. IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 29


TACTICS: POLE SPECIES: SKIMMERS DIFFICULTY:

32 • IYCF Issue 346


TACTICS

Mix that excites sight and smell Not sure exactly how skimmers are locating food? Then it’s time to stimulate two of their senses. Jake King shows how it’s done Words Tony Grigorjevs Photography Lloyd Rogers

I

T’S up for debate which senses fish rely on the most. Some will argue that the scent released by your bait plays the biggest part in triggering a feeding frenzy, while others hold the view that sight is the primary tool when the fish are trying to hunt down a meal. In reality, it is incredibly difficult to get a definitive answer on the topic, so covering several bases is the way forward. Bag’em Matchbaits and Trabucco-backed Jake King launches a silver fish campaign once the temperatures dip, and when it

comes to commercial skimmers he reckons he has latched on to a bait recipe that will get plenty of bites, no matter which sense the fish are relying on. “We’ll never know for certain what it is that makes fish feed so I have worked on a feed that is both vibrant in colour and packed with flavouring. That way I get the best of both worlds,” explained Jake. “It started as a trial at a local fishery but it seems that skimmers everywhere love it. Even when the going gets tough, it keeps the bites coming.”

IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 33


Head to tHe towpatH tHis winter If you’ve never fished a canal, now is the perfect time to give it a go. Guru’s ginger ninja and England international, Matt Godfrey, reveals his top advice for tackling these venues Words & Photography Matt Godfrey

tactics: pole species: mixed difficulty:

38 • IYCF Issue 346


TACTICS

L

OCATING fish on canals is vital in the winter months, as many migrate to their cold-weather haunts. When the water drops clear and weed cover dies off fish naturally migrate into built-up areas to avoid cormorants and other predators. Areas of canals such as town centres, around bridges and houses, or places such as boatyards and marinas are real hotspots at this time of year. You’ll find these places on most canals all over the country, and they usually have great access and are easy venues to fish.

Play the joker

Love it or hate it, joker is a superb bait on canals. Often, people overcomplicate it or have reservations about fishing it, when in reality it’s cheap and simple to use. You only need to feed a small amount at the start of a session to give your swim a good kickoff. Moreover, you will often catch really well with other baits on the hook over the top of it – baits such as maggots and casters work great as hookbaits over joker. A match pack of bait that costs around £14 can be frozen, and will comfortably last you three sessions.

Finesse feelings

Fishing with light line and hooks is a massive edge on canals in winter. Again, the clear water means that fish can see your terminal tackle much easier. If anything, fishing with lighter tackle will help you catch bigger fish, especially when species such as roach, skimmers and bream are the target. The key to getting them out on light tackle is to fish balanced. By this, I mean using a soft, light elastic, matched to the lighter lines and hooks. My typical canal set-up for quality fish on the pole is 0.11mm N-Gauge mainline, to a 0.08mm hooklength of supple N-Gauge Pro to a size 18 or 20 Pole Special hook. Although it’s light, it fools the bigger fish and you can enjoy some great sport while landing big fish.

Light lessons

In co-ordination with the light lines and hooks, using light rigs is lethal on winter canals. Again, the lighter the rig you use, the bigger the fish you often catch! I believe this is simply because bigger, wiser fish watch feed falling, and the closer you can mimic your loosefeed, the more likely you are to catch the wary, clever fish. When targeting quality fish, casters are my go-

Joker is easier to fish than people often think. Casters work well over the top

IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 39


APR SPECIES:

P R A C L A I C R E COMM ering y Pick m m o T : T R E P EX d former World e k c a b re v a M e Th the country’s f o e n o is n io p Cham h anglers tc a m d te ra o c e most d

t... s i l g n i Sh opp 6mm pe lle ts

& ve r 1. 4mmg or 0.4 g M ae s 3 2. 0.3 i ne s se Se r i MV R FPo le flo at re o Du a l C t i c r e v a s 3. M 1-13 e l a 1

70• IYCF Issue 346

I

F YOU fish commercials on a regular basis you’ll often hear anglers referring to the ‘five-metre line’. This line is actually the most important area of any commercial lake swim. If I had to pick one part of my swim that could guarantee me a netful of big carp then I would pick the 5m line. Fish will regularly patrol it and there are several reasons why it is such a banker.

Finding the slope

Most commercials have been dug in a similar fashion with a common topography. A small ledge is constructed close to the bank to provide shallow water in the margins before a slope begins, dropping down into deeper water. On most venues you will find the bottom of the shelf by shipping out to 5m. Any leftover bait that is chucked in after a session or wafted about in the margins rolls down to the bottom of this slope and fish get used to patrolling this area for food. It is important to plumb around carefully when you start, so that you find what is called the crease. This is where the slope meets the flat bottom. When plumbing up, set the depth and ship out very slowly. Keep lifting and dropping the plummet every foot you move. You’ll notice the depth changes slightly each time but once it levels out and remains the same no matter how much further you go out, you have found the bottom of the slope. I prefer to fish a foot up the slope to keep my rig away from any silt built up at the bottom.


Keep on feeding

It is rare that an area of your swim will get fed from the very first minute of the session to the last, but I never lay off the 5m line. Most parts of your peg only get bait added to them for a small window in the day. For example, if I am fishing the pellet waggler I will regularly trickle in bait while attacking it, but when I abandon that for, say, the margins I am done with it for the day. The 5m line is the exception. I feed it by hand right from the start and keep doing so until the end. I don’t expect the fish to be sat there instantly, but they can turn up at any time so you need to make sure there is plenty of bait there to hold them when they finally arrive. If a mixture of F1s and carp are the target then feed a small handful of 4mm pellets every five minutes, switching to 6mm when carp are the primary species. Once I start to fish on the 5m line I change from feeding by hand to cupping in the bait. This helps concentrate the fish over the exact spot where your rig is sat.

Swim rotation

I never start fishing at 5m because the fish tend to inhabit other areas of the lake at the beginning of the day. As the hours pass they gain confidence and come closer to the bank. The 5m line is a great place to try when the bites dry up on another line. I will only

Loosefeeding a few pellets while playing a fish will prepare the swim for the next drop-in

give it a brief go, and if I haven’t had a bite within three minutes I leave it alone for a while because the fish obviously haven’t turned up yet. But I keep feeding at the same rate as I was previously. Sport tends to be prolific in the last couple of hours.

The 6-6-6 rule

I always use a float that won’t get knocked around easily by big fish. I need to be able to tell the difference between a line bite and a proper indication where the fish has mouthed the bait. A Maver MVR Finesse helps me do just that. The shotting pattern is incredibly simple and I use a bulk and two smaller dropper

shot below. I go with what I call my ‘6-6-6’ rule. This is a six-inch hooklength, six inches between each dropper shot with one tight to the hooklength, and six inches between the top dropper and the bulk. In water less than 4ft deep I switch this to the ‘4-4-4’ rule which works on exactly the same principle. When big carp are on the cards I use 0.18mm Maver MV-R Rig Mono to 0.16mm MV-R Hooklength Mono and a size 16 CS27 hook that is baited with a banded 6mm pellet. Stay patient, keep the bait trickling in and the 5m line is almost guaranteed to produce some very big carp next time you’re on the bank. d ing by han Start feed p cu a to but switch g the area when fishin

le 0.3g or Use a stab help spot to 0.4g float es proper bit

A banded 6mm pelle t will help pick o ut the b carp in the iggest lake


OCT

BEST BAITS FOR BARBEL

SPECIES:

BAR BELacey

nM EXPERT: Dea r Olympic e rm fo d n a r te TV presen d all over e h s fi s a h n a e decathlete, D a range of species the country for

Use paste to wrap your hookbait or plug the hole in the Grippa lead

Fill your PVA mesh bag with a mixture of different sized pellets

Hinders Barbel Bomb Feeder Mix will keep fish grubbing around

82 • IYCF Issue 346

A 2ft fluorocarbon hooklink is almost invisible in water


DEAN’S SIMPLE BARBEL RIG

Thread the PVA bag on to the hooklink so that it doesn’t come off too soon and roll downstream away from the rig

Grippa leads hold bottom in the flow of the river and you can plug the hole with paste for added attraction

Y

OU can’t beat barbel fishing in the autumn. I love it! And when it comes to venues, the River Wye in Herefordshire is one of my favourites. My approach for targeting barbel here is incredibly simple. There’s no need to overcomplicate things. I start by baiting up a few likely spots with some hemp stodged up into a sloppy mix with a little groundbait. Hemp is an excellent base ingredient because all fish love it. I introduce the mix using a baitdropper and make five or six casts. By the time I return to the spot the fish have usually arrived and it’s just a case of getting a rig out without spooking them. When you cast a baitdropper it’s important to let it drop on a slack line. This ensures it descends in a dead straight line to the riverbed and your freebies are deposited on exactly the same spot every time.

Cut the sides off an oily 11mm pellet to release the scent quicker

My barbel kit comprises a 12ft, 1.75lb test curve rod paired with a small freespool reel. I use 10lb Guru Drag Line for my mainline unless conditions are really snaggy in which case I step up to 12lb. On to the mainline I thread 6in of anti-tangle tubing for abrasion resistance against the rocks which litter the riverbed. Below this, I add a Guru Micro lead clip and attach a 2oz-4oz Grippa lead depending on the weight required to hold bottom in the flow. Grippas, as their name suggests, are by far the best style of lead to stay in place on the bottom. Another advantage, and this is one of my favourite little tips, is that the hole in the centre of the lead can be plugged with paste for extra attraction. I then tie a 2ft Pure Fluorocarbon hooklink to a size 10 Guru MWGB hook with a hair-rigged 11mm oily pellet hookbait, trimmed so it releases extra oils.

ms . . . e t i e l k c a T pe lle ts 1. 11mm z le ads o 2. 2oz - 4 Pu re u r 3. G u bon Fluoro c a r o o k s h 4. Size 10

I complete the set-up by threading on a mesh PVA bag of mixed pellets. I thread it on to the hook as opposed to just nicking it on as this prevents it coming off too soon and rolling downstream away from the hookbait. I tie my bags the day before the session so that the PVA absorbs some of the oil which gives me a few extra seconds of leaking time in the water. IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 •

83


LIVE TEST

Top spec without the price tag Find out how Mark Sawyer got on with Middy’s new feature-packed and affordable pole

CAN TRUS OU

T

REVIEWS Y

MIDDY REACTACORE XT15-3 13.5m POLE PACKAGE RRP: £799

CAN TRUS OU

T

REVIEWS Y

IYCF’s tackle wyer editor Mark Sa g in ew vi re en be has ore m r fo fishing gear s to re ca he an years tb r remembe


TACKLE

A

COUPLE of weeks ago a reader e-mailed asking: “What pole would I choose if I was limited to a budget of around £500.” This really did get me thinking. Would I pick a tried and trusted model with a proven track record, or go for a new cutting-edge model with a high technical specification? It was a difficult decision. And in truth, one that I never really got to grips with until Middy’s new 13.5m Reactacore XT15-3, that can be found on the net for less than £500 if you shop around, landed on my desk. It didn’t need much more than a quick scan under the office lights to reveal a stunning pole that has an awful lot going for it. Technically and build-wise it’s one of, if not the most, advanced pole of this price I have seen. For the tech-spec boffins among you, the Reactacore XT15-3 has been constructed using a unique four-layering carbon process called Quad. Each carbon layer is precisionplaced at specific angles which ultimately aids the pole’s responsiveness and rigidity. The Quad section manufacturing process is then further enhanced with a new Maximus wrap system which strengthens the section joints as well as reducing wear and tear.

I should also mention at this point that Middy’s new Reactacore pole range is made using the same mandrel as the firm’s hugely popular Shock-Core Fusion and Nano-Core 2 pole collections and is therefore totally section compatible with both of the above flagship predecessors. As with all the models in Middy’s new Reactacore range, the XT15-3 comes with an array of clever add-ons. Depth Lines on the top kits enable depths from 1ft to 3ft to be accurately checked and during this live test I found these marks extremely handy to check that the shots on my rig hadn’t slipped, as often happens when netting fish. A Spine Line ensures that the pole is always fished at its optimum performance, the numbering system used on the pole’s butt sections are placed 5cm apart and should be used for precision feeding. To that you add CKB colour-coded top kits that ensure tip-ends can be cut to fit Middy PTFE bushes, Safe Zone mini butts with dome-top protectors to prevent elbow and shipping back damage on larger sections, and a simply superb S-Slide friction-free finish that makes shipping back fast and effortless.

IYCF IYCF January February 15 16 – February – March 15, 12, 2019 2016 • 91


TIPS, TACTICS & RIGS MORE RE TO CATCH MO

100 • IYCF Issue 346


CARP

R O F S P I T P TO

R E T WIN NG I P R CA away until s d o r p r a c utting your tricks to keep your p t u o b a g Thinkin ! Try our top ough winter... ’t n o d l l e W spring? ing all thr m a e r c s s m alar d Rogers graphy Llyo Photo es Furness Words Jam

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IYCF January 15 – February 12, 2019 • 101


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