I started out making a film about one thing and ended up with a film about something else, sorry about the junk. The music was composed and performed on a Gameboy by a friend and film maker Ewan Brown., what a guy. Cheers Ewan
Monday, 21 May 2012
I started out making a film about one thing and ended up with a film about something else, sorry about the junk. The music was composed and performed on a Gameboy by a friend and film maker Ewan Brown., what a guy. Cheers Ewan
Friday, 18 May 2012
Fishing For Montana
Image Above: The Montnana John Wiggler
A couple of weeks ago
a fellow angler who fishes in Montana called John sent me an e-mail offering his own
thoughts on fishing lures and pike and suggested I make a wobbler and lose the
central treble and replace the rear with a single hook. I have had to learn to
take advice it is not ability that comes naturally I prefer to make my own
mistakes before seeing sense. So after initially rejecting the idea for no good
reason other than it was somebody else’s, I had a little time to think.
I have on balance caught considerably more fish on single
hooks than on trebles, admittedly many have been with bait, flies or as feather
rigs but when it comes to lure fishing I have fallen into that trap of
believing more hooks can only be good. There
is a point when I suppose a lure could carry enough hooks to be considered as a
storage device in its own right rather than a piece of tackle. What are all
these hooks doing they cannot all be hooked into the fish. The initial idea for
multi trebles is to insure that if a predator so much as looks at the lure the
chances are it is going to feel some chemically sharpened metal. Once hooked
the other trebles can become a headache either damaging the fish or hooking up with
other debris when the fish runs for cover. I have a fear of landing nets or
should I say a combination of landing nets, fish and treble hooks. On one
occasion this cocktail led almost to full scale surgery removing one hook from
the fish and other from the fish and the net: I have never used so many forceps
and pliers and still come away with a whole in my net.
Still one lure one hook is a big step. I use a single treble
on the Hybrid casting spoons and that works well especially for avoiding weed
and as I often fish with my feet in water unhooking and returning pike can be
as easy as giving a gentle shake in the right direction. There is always a
chance I could miss a hook up but this is not just a problem with single hooks I
have lost fish on three hook lures.
I sent an e-mail back to John to let him know I would have a
go at making a single hook wobbler when I got the chance.
The Testing Session.
It wasn’t pretty as my prototypes seldom are, but it was through
wired and I was pleased with the way I had concealed the weight. It ran a
little shallow just what I needed to deal with the summer weed growth. But the
action was great a tight wiggle rather than a wobble. As a mark of respect to
that other Great Montanan, Norman McClean the author of ‘A River Runs Through
It’, I dressed the single hook with a bit silver flash.
Once again I found my preparation a little lacking when I
hooked my first pike on the ‘Montana John’ prototype, my camera was poised but
unresponsive. Holding the rod up with one hand I opened the battery compartment
with the other while simultaneously remembering that the battery was still on
charge as it had been all night. I put the camera down and reached for the
mobile phone which also has a camera but not the best quality.
I had been ten minutes at the lake and this was my first
fish all one pound of a pikeling with a single hook firmly in the side of its
jaw. John was right, unhooking the fish was simple it never even left the
water. I put the prototype away vowing to give it a proper coat of paint but
the pikes teeth had already punctured the balsa. I took six more pike over the
next three hours on various homemade lures and made numerous poor quality images
with my mobile phone and all the time planning to put the Montana John into
some kind of production.
Image Below: Mobile Phone Pictures of Pike
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
Five of Jacks
Image Above: Mist on the water, Pennington Flash
The sun was low enough to burst through the bankside foliage
and cut in amongst the mist that had risen overnight. I padded along excited to
be at a new water and a little in awe of the surroundings having spent too long
fishing in an inner city park. The lake or “flash” as it is known sits in a
hollow rather than a valley and owes its existence at least partially to mining
subsidence. This is flood land and there is a dampness about the place that reaches
far beyond the banks. In the distance I traced the low arch of a Pennine ridge
that seemed familiar but the name escaped me. The landscape was still in that
process of naturalisation, its industrial past had been softened with spoil heaps
weekly shrouded in scrub and sun bleached grasses. The lake is something
special as all large bodies of water are, we can build roads, pave earth and manicure
landscapes but a lake will always have something unyielding in its nature.
I set up quickly and made my first cast with a wobbler which
slid through the air trailing a thread that settled out like gossamer as the slap
of wood on the water broke the silence. The water was not deep and the lure
tugged at weed snatching stems, I watched mesmerised as it rolled into view its
rear end flicking like a spark of life. I worked the banks casting from gaps in
the thicket of shrubs that lined this part of the lake. The weed was becoming a
problem; I held my rod high making the wobbler run at a shallower depth but it wasn’t
the easiest way to fish. I moved again and hitched on one of my hybrid casting
spoons in the knowledge that if I kept a steady pace it would run just below
the surface out of the weed. The lure ate up the distance between access points
leaving little out of reach. In the clear water I could watch it react to every
jerk and nod of the rod as it swam and flickered almost with a searching
action, when the rod was still it settled back into a side to side roll,
spooning its way over the weed.
Just off a reed bed, my first pike stopped the lure in its
tracks and then set off for cover, I wound as fast as I could hoping to prevent
a scramble through the reeds to retrieve them. In the end the fish came in parallel
to the bank with his head buried in a mop of weed almost as if he was having a
bad hair day. At about three pounds it was a good start to the day and having
only a single treble to remove meant he was back in the water without too much
messing about. Unfortunately I had run out of bank as fishing is only permitted
on certain stretches of the shore and I wasn’t keen on casting in amongst the
carp fishermen I had passed. I headed back to the car to drive over to the far
side of the lake.
The sun had stirred up a breeze that chaffed through the reeds
and pushed the surface of the water up into wavelets. This was obviously the windward
side of the lake a green film of algae clung to the margins but beyond this it
was almost clear water. I took another jack in the first few casts unhooking it
in the water and before moving along the bank.
A little later and far out in the lake I felt a tug on the
lure and then nothing, I cast again but misjudged the angle required and ended
up far from the mark. The next cast was a little better and I found the tug
again which had come from a seven pounder. I had hopes for something bigger
maybe into doubles but seven pound was nice and heading in the right direction.
I took another two pike over the next hour, not of any size
but it didn’t matter I was catching fish on a lure I had designed and produced myself,
maybe the testing is over.
Image Below: Jack pike on a Hybrid Casting Spoon.
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