Dan Whitelock
Senior Member
Couldn't decide whether to post this on the Ouse thread or on here. I'm guessing on here I'd get a varied response as the Upper Ouse is similar to places such as the Kennet, Loddon, W.Avon etc.
I find myself at bit of a crossroads here and wondered if I could hear some different viewpoints:
I fish a very hard bit of river - 3 or 4 fish a season is good going! Until now I've been adamant that the Trefor West approach would nail it, 20 minutes in each swim then move on. However, I'm starting to question this and after speaking to another chap on the bank and reading an article about a hard stretch of the Loddon I'm starting to wonder whether or not it'd be best to sit it out for longer in a swim - say 4 hours or so before moving as sooner or later Barbel will swim past and find the bait?
My thinking is that the bit I fish is pretty much one long Barbel swim of 3 miles. They literally could be anywhere. I worry that by rotating around 12 or so accessible different swims I'm often bypassing or leapfrogging the fish, or passing them on the way up as I'm on my way down. Or I could be wrongly placing a bait tight in to the near bank when they could be sat under the far bank or mid river! It's not really a suitable stretch for rolling a bait around given the weed and snags and lack of flow in places.
Has anyone else faced a similar quandary? In the past I've had most fish within 40 minutes of fishing but that was when there were an awful lot more fish in the Ouse! I've also had it when I've been sat in a swim with no indications, staring at a motionless rod and then 2 hours later it slams over!
I fear I'm going to have to spend longer on the banks which will mean night fishing and that is something I really don't enjoy! 99% of my Barbel have been caught in the daylight and that's when I'm happiest fishing. Plus the crayfish really do go mental once it gets dark
I'm only on my 8th blank this season though so no need to panic just yet Mr Mainwaring
I find myself at bit of a crossroads here and wondered if I could hear some different viewpoints:
I fish a very hard bit of river - 3 or 4 fish a season is good going! Until now I've been adamant that the Trefor West approach would nail it, 20 minutes in each swim then move on. However, I'm starting to question this and after speaking to another chap on the bank and reading an article about a hard stretch of the Loddon I'm starting to wonder whether or not it'd be best to sit it out for longer in a swim - say 4 hours or so before moving as sooner or later Barbel will swim past and find the bait?
My thinking is that the bit I fish is pretty much one long Barbel swim of 3 miles. They literally could be anywhere. I worry that by rotating around 12 or so accessible different swims I'm often bypassing or leapfrogging the fish, or passing them on the way up as I'm on my way down. Or I could be wrongly placing a bait tight in to the near bank when they could be sat under the far bank or mid river! It's not really a suitable stretch for rolling a bait around given the weed and snags and lack of flow in places.
Has anyone else faced a similar quandary? In the past I've had most fish within 40 minutes of fishing but that was when there were an awful lot more fish in the Ouse! I've also had it when I've been sat in a swim with no indications, staring at a motionless rod and then 2 hours later it slams over!
I fear I'm going to have to spend longer on the banks which will mean night fishing and that is something I really don't enjoy! 99% of my Barbel have been caught in the daylight and that's when I'm happiest fishing. Plus the crayfish really do go mental once it gets dark
I'm only on my 8th blank this season though so no need to panic just yet Mr Mainwaring