Confidence
is a funny old thing when it comes to pike fishing. Sometimes, you
work harder when you think you're going to catch one any minute. Maybe
the anticipation spurs you on.
Other days, you put more
effort in when you know it's going to be hard, because deep down you
know if you don't put the work in, it ain't going to happen, no siree
Bob.
The other week, I was full of vim on a rare trip
to a large stillwater I used to fish a lot with TC, Chippy Bob and one
or two other characters. One of my favourite swims clearly hadn't been
fished, if the ankle-deep grass was anything to go by.
I
put two legered deads out, one along a line of trees; one tight to an
island. As we finished off the last of an ample fry-up, I looked at the
rods and just knew they weren't quite right, as I wiped the last of the
tomato sauce off me strides and wished I'd brung more bread rolls.
I
knew I wasn't going to get a pull on either of them, even though I
couldn't quite put my finger on why. They were tightened up a treat,
nice baits, sharp hooks. They just had blank written all over them.
Looking across the lake, I remembered a bar which I can just about hit with a float-legered bait when the wind's right.
Off
your back, the cast is a breeze and the braid bows nicely to just pull a
float to half-cocked against a lightly-weighted trace in eight or nine
feet of water.
Five minutes later, I landed a mackerel tail right on the money. Don't ask me why, I just knew I'd catch one there.
And
I was right, for once. The float didn't even settle. As I tightened
down I felt a bump, gave it a couple of feet of slack and pulled into a
cracking double that turned out to be the only fish of the day, apart
from a jack to TC.
I couldn't get another bait back out
fast enough after I unhooked it. I reeled one of the leger rods in and
re-cast it onto the near slope of the bar upwind of the float rod. Both
fouled thick weed as I tightened up, so I wound them in and slung them
back out into yet more more thick weed.
I messed around
with trying to pop the baits up just above the weed. I tried casting
around to find a clear area and twitching back a bouyant pollan on a
long link.
In the end, I dropped the baits under the
rod tops and sat well back from the bank - just in case there was a kerb
crawler or two doing the rounds. I was sure I'd catch another, until
the greylags started squealing overhead and I adjourned to licensed
premises to toast the season's second double.
Funny thing, confidence.
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