Neil Maidment
Senior Member
I was introduced to dropping hemp into the Dorset Stour and Hants Avon in the late 1960's early 1970's. But, back then, it was a totally different situation to the one barbel fishers face today on those two rivers.
It was almost a team effort as we arrived on the river but I was young and very wet behind the ears and often had the task of "laying the table". First job was to introduce the hemp, typically via home made droppers, in several likely spots spread over a fair distance, perhaps two fields worth of river. Only then would we get tackled up and sometimes alternate between the spots. It was a very effective "method" on the Littledown Estate (now Throop Bt3) especially when hemp was banned on Throop (not that the ban was adhered to by some!).
I had my first ever Stour barbel from Littledown in 1971 after the above process.
The second image is of Alan Sellars, also at Littledown, a couple of years earlier.
The same process was implemented on the Avon, particularly at Sopley Millstream, during that same period, and proved to be very successful.
Third image is of my late uncle with an excellent Sopley barbel.
Fourth image is me with a 9:14 barbel from Sopley.
I continued to typically use the same basic method throughout the 1970's on both Stour and Avon.
Fifth image is me in 1976 with a 11:06 Sopley fish (spot the hemp seeds on the tail and fins!). That venue produced a fair number of massive fish throughout the mid/late 1970's including a big 12 and a 13.
All a dim and distant memory now!
As an aside, many decades later, when I was trotting on Throop, I'm pretty sure it was Pete R. who told me to catapult my hemp and caster much higher up into the air to create a "bigger sound" as they hit the water. Superb advice!
It was almost a team effort as we arrived on the river but I was young and very wet behind the ears and often had the task of "laying the table". First job was to introduce the hemp, typically via home made droppers, in several likely spots spread over a fair distance, perhaps two fields worth of river. Only then would we get tackled up and sometimes alternate between the spots. It was a very effective "method" on the Littledown Estate (now Throop Bt3) especially when hemp was banned on Throop (not that the ban was adhered to by some!).
I had my first ever Stour barbel from Littledown in 1971 after the above process.
The second image is of Alan Sellars, also at Littledown, a couple of years earlier.
The same process was implemented on the Avon, particularly at Sopley Millstream, during that same period, and proved to be very successful.
Third image is of my late uncle with an excellent Sopley barbel.
Fourth image is me with a 9:14 barbel from Sopley.
I continued to typically use the same basic method throughout the 1970's on both Stour and Avon.
Fifth image is me in 1976 with a 11:06 Sopley fish (spot the hemp seeds on the tail and fins!). That venue produced a fair number of massive fish throughout the mid/late 1970's including a big 12 and a 13.
All a dim and distant memory now!
As an aside, many decades later, when I was trotting on Throop, I'm pretty sure it was Pete R. who told me to catapult my hemp and caster much higher up into the air to create a "bigger sound" as they hit the water. Superb advice!