Sunday, 24 April 2016

Back to Holly Farm Lakes for another lovely days fishing

Last Thursday, the 21st April, I returned to Holly Farm lakes for another day's carp fishing. This is the view of the lakes from near the car park:-


It was a lovely sunny day, but still with a cool breeze that became more noticeable in the afternoon when some hazy cloud moved in. I arrived about 11.30 and headed down towards the lake furthest from the car park. I wanted to fish where I had been before, facing into the sun, but most of the platforms on that side had been taken. I did think about the platform furthest away on that side by the end of the lake but the reeds were quite close at that point and I thought that I might end up losing fish and tackle in the margins. So I ended up on the other side again near the end of the lake.

After setting up with my pole rod again, and fishing with sweetcorn, I had a couple of nice carp before lunch fishing close in to where I was sitting and just in front of the platform:-


This nice looking mirror was about 37cm long or 15 inches. For comparison, the last time I was here the average size of the carp I caught was about 16 inches.


This similar length fish looked a lot more rangy.

Things went a bit quiet about lunchtime and I found it a bit frustrating as someone had arrived at the platform I had rejected opposite and was catching a lot of carp, one after the other. I kept wondering what I was doing wrong. In these circumstances I alter my tactics and try everything; fishing close in or far out, in the margins, at a shallow depth and then on the bottom. Nothing seemed to be working. Then an hour and twenty minutes later (!) I caught another mirror:-



This nice coloured and healthy fish is 15 inches.

The guy opposite me (a nice bloke who chatted to me as we fished) had hauled in a pretty big roach which must have been a pound and a half at least. Not much later I caught this decent one as well:-


This fish is 30.5cm or just over 12 inches. Looking at this chart from the Idler's Quest this fish might weigh 1lb 3oz! Looking over my recent fishing I haven't caught anything of this size and I reckon this might be a personal best!


Another half an hour later my fortune and the guy's opposite me reversed. I began fishing literally just over the edge of the platform at a relatively deep depth and started catching carp at a rate of about one every 7 minutes:-



Interestingly, it is not necessarily the larger fish that gives the biggest tussle. Sometimes, as with this slightly smaller 14inch mirror (above), a healthy fish is less keen to be landed.


This was a nice 17.5 inch mirror.



This one was 17 inches.


This was a smaller but chubby 13 inches.



This was a slightly damaged fish of 14 inches.


Twenty minutes later I had this bronze beauty of 20 inches, the largest I have caught so far.



This poor fish of 15.5 inches has a severely damaged or deformed mouth.


This is a younger fish of 12 inches. I did catch a very small carp around this time, so the water has either been restocked or the fish are breeding successfully.


Things quieted down for about an hour and so I changed tactics again by fishing very shallow but right in the margins at the end corner of the lake. My friend across the water was by then catching carp regularly again.



Another dark 15 inch fish.



Twenty minutes later a nice bronzey 19inch fish.


This penultimate fish was 15 inches.


This final fish was 18.5 inches.

It is interesting to see how all these 15 mirror carp vary quite a lot in shape, scaling and coloration. Some are a lovely bronze whilst others are pale and silvery. What doesn't make me so happy is that a lot of these fish appear to have damaged mouths and I suspect that this is because they are caught time and again and the fishing line cuts into the flesh. Of course, I am as much to blame, but I feel bad about it.

All pictures and text copyright Duncan Hale-Sutton 2016.

Thursday, 14 April 2016

Great carp fishing at Holly Farm Lakes, South Walsham

As I had some bait left over from my visit to Hockering I decided to try out Holly Farm Lakes at South Walsham which is about half an hour's drive from where I live. It had been misty and wet most of the morning but when I set out about 11am it had begun to clear up and by the time I arrived at Holly farm the sun was out and I was quickly shedding waterproof gear. The owners don't seem to have a website of their own but in case you need to find them their postcode is NR13 6EQ. They charge £6 a day for one rod (an extra rod is another £2). They have two lakes, and after asking a fellow fisherman, it seems that the lake furthest from the car park fishes the best and that's where I went:-



I was using my pole rod again, as you can see, with the same set up as I used at Hockering. I wondered if this Middy Battlezone 4 metre Carp Margin Whip would be up to the job, but I am pleased to say that it was and it was really good fun. The bailiff reckoned that the margins would fish best for carp, so I began with a few maggots and then switched to sweet corn. Initially, I think I was fishing too close to the margin as I ended up getting tangled up with the bushes a couple of times! The bailiff had said to fish the bottom but I wasn't getting much success apart from a few small roach. Then I noticed that some carp were loitering around the surface so I tried the opposite tack of fishing really shallow with immediate success as I caught a small bream (or perhaps a roach/bream hybrid). I then began to catch succession of very nice carp. These two I had about lunchtime:-


This first one looks like a common and is about 36cm in length or 14 inches.



The second is a nice 40cm or 16 inch mirror carp. After lunch, whilst it was still sunny, I caught two more mirrors, both of which were unfortunately foul hooked.


This one is about 45cm or 18 inches.


This was a lovely looking specimen of 47cm or 18.5 inches.

The weather than began to close in and alarmingly, I could hear thunder in the distance. Then as the afternoon progressed flashes of lightening could be seen. I wondered if I should give up but I stuck with it. The lightening was at least 6 miles away. Still fishing shallow I had this lovely roach:-



This is 23.5cm long or 9 inches and probably weighs about 10oz. The rain started hammering down by then and instinct told me that I should fish deeper. In the rain I had another six more carp. The first two I photographed but then it became impossibly wet to photograph any more. I think they were all mirrors. Here are the first two:-


This first one is 37cm or 14.5 inches.




I think the largest fish I landed came soon after this but everything was sopping wet by then and the camera wasn't an option. All of these fish were caught on sweetcorn. I packed up about 5pm when the rain started to abate.

All pictures and text copyright Duncan Hale-Sutton 2016.


Monday, 11 April 2016

Day Out at Park Farm Lakes, Hockering

My brother and I were getting a bit twitchy about not having been fishing for a few weeks so we decided to have a day at Park Farm Lakes, Hockering yesterday. These lakes are west of Norwich and not far from the A47. We arrived about 10.30 on a lovely spring morning. There was a match on at the largest (Deer House) lake and so we had the choice of the two smaller ones. As we walked past the next largest lake and nearest to the entrance (Woodhouse), there was a swirl in the water down near the mucky end but for some reason we decided to ignore this fishy invitation and continue on to the smallest (Copse) lake. Having read somewhere that fish like to be on leeward side I decided to choose the platform on that end of the lake nearest to all the floating muck as I thought that the fish might be hiding underneath it. My brother took the next platform to the right of me and slightly further upwind.

We were both float fishing which I guess is not the norm for a carp lake. Most other people were ledgering on the bottom. My brother used to be a real carp specialist but these days he just likes turning up without much kit and was happy to float fish. I had brought my pole rod with a new pole float that had specifically said "carp" in the shop which I took at face value. I used a No. 12 hook on 4lb line and the float was weighted with two No. 4 shot. I had brought maggots, sweet corn and luncheon meat as bait. I had also brought my traditional rod and reel and it was already rigged with a waggler and a size 16 hook, so I began with that with a couple of maggots. My brother had a similar waggler set up on his rod.

I was pleased that we had bites straight away and were catching a few small roach. As I wasn't sure how long it would take to get bites from the carp I opted to fish with both rods. I had a piece of sweetcorn on the pole rod and I placed the float in a gap in the muck (mainly rotting vegetation) at a depth of about 3 feet (the lake was about 4 or 5 feet deep where we were). I fed a few pieces of corn by the float.

It was lovely sitting on the grassy bank with the sun on our faces. A nice chatty lady came round to collect our fee and only charged us £5 each rather than the usual £7 as the match had been on. I started to get bites on the pole rod and had this small mirror carp to begin with:-


I then caught this common carp which was similarly sized (perhaps 7 inches at most):-


My brother then hooked a bigger common of perhaps a pound and finally in the morning I had fun landing this slightly battered common on the pole rod:-


This last fish is about 34cm in length or about 13.5 inches. It is difficult to say how much this fish weighed but probably between 1 and 2lb. I was glad that it headed straight into deeper water when I hooked it rather than into the "muck". I dread to think what it would have been like to hook a fish of say 10lb on such light tackle.

As lunchtime wore on the carp seemed to stop feeding and we didn't have any more for the rest of the day. We moved to Woodhouse lake after lunch as we could see fish cruising around in the shallows. There was frogspawn at the bank edge and I think they were feeding on this. We saw a couple of decent carp being landed by the ledgering boys but for the rest of the afternoon we were catching a few roach on sweetcorn and maggots.

All pictures and text copyright Duncan Hale-Sutton 2016.