Steve Double
Senior Member
You cast in. It's likely that in some time in the first hour, or even first few minutes, you'll get knocks on the rod tip, or even one that makes the whole rod rattle. You know it's a chub and you sit on your hands. There's some consolation that at least you know your hookbait is in play.
Then it goes quiet. Where I fish, this is quite likely to be quietness that lasts hours rather then minutes. Then there's another knock, rarely more than a rod tip movement of an inch. You can't put you're finger on why this knock is different, but you know it is. You touch your head torch to make sure you can remember where the "on" switch is, and double check your landing net is where it is meant to be. You might even lean forward in your chair in anticipation.
Ten minutes pass - it's nearly always ten minutes - then wham, you're in, and battle commences.
That's been the scenario for virtually every barbel (I'm not counting the Wye!) I've caught this season. How I'd love an underwater camera to see what produces that first barbel knock. I nearly always back-lead so it won't be a liner, can't see how they're mouthing the bait without getting hooked, either. Are they churning up the gravel? I suppose fishing without mysteries wouldn't be the same.
Then it goes quiet. Where I fish, this is quite likely to be quietness that lasts hours rather then minutes. Then there's another knock, rarely more than a rod tip movement of an inch. You can't put you're finger on why this knock is different, but you know it is. You touch your head torch to make sure you can remember where the "on" switch is, and double check your landing net is where it is meant to be. You might even lean forward in your chair in anticipation.
Ten minutes pass - it's nearly always ten minutes - then wham, you're in, and battle commences.
That's been the scenario for virtually every barbel (I'm not counting the Wye!) I've caught this season. How I'd love an underwater camera to see what produces that first barbel knock. I nearly always back-lead so it won't be a liner, can't see how they're mouthing the bait without getting hooked, either. Are they churning up the gravel? I suppose fishing without mysteries wouldn't be the same.