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![]() Ring The Changes, Reap The Rewards By Andrew Kennedy
With very few bites, and a single measly 10 ounce chub to show for several after-work river sessions, I knew I had to change something. My initial focus, along with trying a variety of different swims, was to change my baits until I found one which caught. Starting with the common contemporary choices; pellets and boilies. Not a touch. I next tried luncheon meat and lobworms - still nothing. Then the first of my chance meetings happened. Whilst helping out at a National Fishing Week event held at Barlow Lakes, I started talking to Ray Stoner of Strike-One Baits (www.strikeonebait.net). He waxed lyrical about his range of baits and assured me his mini boilies were the business for barbel, and kindly gave me some samples to try. I tried them on my next session with no luck, but as they had fared no worse than any other bait this season, I thought I owed them another outing.
The next chance “meeting” was an unexpected phone call from Editor of the Angling Star, Jim Baxter. Upon hearing of my paltry results for the season so far, he suggested I try a longer tail down to the hook. I had been using quite short hooklengths for a couple of seasons and had not experimented with longer ones, so I thought “Why not?” I also switched from using leads accompanied by PVA bags full of mixed pellets, to using big groundbait swimfeeders - forcing the fish to seek out larger particles, and hopefully my hookbait! The groundbait mix I use for barbel consists of 30% crumb, 40% crushed hempseed or "Frenzied Hemp", 10% crushed tiger nuts, 10% fishmeal or trout pellet powder and the rest a mixture of small pellets and PV1 binder to hold the mix together until it hits the river bed.
A short session on the Trent ensued. I set up in a swim I had fished last year. I had never heard of a barbel coming from there, and had only previously caught carp, chub and bream from the swim myself, but on this evening I just had a feeling. I quickly set up and fished worm & meat as bait, while I tied up the new, longer hooklengths. Then I switched from meat to two hair-rigged Strike-One mini-boilies on the first rod. Twenty minutes later I got a bite, but in a moment of madness I struck with one hand and forgot to disengage the baitrunner. This was an outrageous mistake. The resulting bird’s nest was so severe it locked the reel solid. Line could go neither in or out – and I had a fish on! Fearing the fish might be a barbel or carp, likely of making a surging run at any moment, I decided the only way I stood any chance of landing the fish would be to pull the line in by hand! This was surprisingly easy, and the fish came in with very little resistance, until it saw the landing net. A golden flash and a mighty splash was all I saw of my fish as it bolted and snapped the hooklength, right at my feet! It was dark, but to me the fish looked like a very big chub, but I shall never know for sure. Gutted. I quickly reeled in my other rod and removed the worm from my long-shank Nailer hook, replacing it with 3 side-hooked boilies (the Strike-One boilies are very soft, so excellent for side-hooking). I have only recently started using the Nailer (made by Carp 'R' Us), but it has proven to be an excellent hook to mount worms on, due to it's extremely long shank. Because it's designed as a carp hook, it is extremely strong and sharp - perfect for barbel!
Within 3 minutes of re-casting the rig I had a very violent take! As I leaned into the fish, it made several surging runs towards some far-bank willows. Several nervous minutes later, my back-lead emerged from the river and to my relief, a few feet behind it was the long, bronze flank of a barbel! I eased it over the net and punched the air. My barbel season has started at last! The dial on my Avon scales told me that my first barbel of the season weighed 9lb 2oz – not too far off a PB, and a cracking first barbel.
Finally, my first barbel of the season, which came as a result of making successful changes to my bait and rigs. The fish weighed 9lb 2oz and was caught using Strike-One mini boilies. I've since had another short evening session where I combined lure fishing and barbel fishing, using the same tactics and bait which caught me this first barbel. I was fishing a smaller river, but this estimated 6lb to 7lb barbel gave me an arm-acheing scrap and took the best part of ten minutes to land! Again, this was caught using 3 side-hooked Strike-One mini boilies on a Long-Shank Nailer hook, using the same groundbait mixture in my swimfeeder. I also had another screaming run, from what I presume was a barbel, but my hooklength snapped almost immediately, so it must have been damaged in some way. One thing I did note with both barbel I have caught on the Nailer hooks, is that they were perfectly hooked, firmly in the corner of the mouth. There was no chance of them throwing the hook during the fight, despite them being barbless.
Have you been experiencing more blanks than usual when barbel fishing in the summer of 2007? Have you managed to break the deadlock? Did you stick it out with your usual methods and baits, or did you keep changing your setup until something worked? Please email me any of your views, I'd be most interested to hear how your barbel fishing has been going.
I can be contacted directly on the following email address: andrew@just-fish.co.uk
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