Graham Tremble
Senior Member
If you’ve made up your mind I’m sure you can find good carp fishing for much less than you have quoted. Safety is paramount alongside rivers and lakes. Good luck,I'm at a bit of a crossroads in my angling career. In my younger years, I suffered a few too many Rugby injuries, resulting in one or two (9) operations on my knees. With the very nature of our chosen angling discipline being on a river bank, I'm finding it more and more difficult to access the river due to the banks being very un-even. The swims mostly slope towards the river, and after a spell of rain, they can for me, become quite dangerous. Not to mention the swims with rocks in them. I can't just hop onto another leg if I start to slide, or stop myself tripping over on the undergrowth, the rocks, boulders and un-even ground. I have to let myself go, and that means into the water if it's nearest. Walking any distance is also painful, so I mostly fish swims I can park behind which cuts down my choice. Add to the fact that I don't actually catch many Barbel, none this year on the upper Trent, and only two last season, I'm thinking I might as well knock the Barbel fishing on the head and have a go at another side of fishing.
I'm not really into the Carp fishing scene, I've been a couple of times and it's been OK. The swims are comfortable for a session, it's generally clean, and you have a captive audience so to speak. I do enjoy my two or three day Barbel trips though, but invariably I'll reel in during the night for fear of stumbling in the dark if I get a take during darkness. Kind of defeats the object of being there if I'm honest. I'm being drawn towards Carp fishing simply because it offers me a safe and pain free alternative to river fishing. Paying £100 for a three day session on a day ticket lake as opposed to £80 for a season ticket on the Trent will make a dent in to how many trips I make a year, but I'm struggling to see any other way round my problem.
G.T.