This month started off being on work placement at Gardner Tackle. It seemed I had timed it just right as well as Lewis and Alan were going on a trip to Abbey Lakes in France to do some filming, and I got an invite too! We were leaving at 4:30am on Friday, hopeful of getting to the lakes before darkness and seeing some showing fish to set up on. After getting lost a few times we finally arrived at the lakes in the early afternoon. We spent an hour or so walking around to try and find any signs of carpy activity, but with most of the lakes only having defrosted in the morning after temperatures of -11 a few days before, it all looked a bit dead. In the end I chose peg 9 on Fox Lake which was on the back of the wind and gave access to a large area of open water. I had a quick lead around, but no spots seemed incredibly appealing so I decided to stick three zigs out for the first night and see if anything happened.
With the rods out I set the bivvy up and soon had the Coleman going to warm me up as the wind was savagely cold. All too soon I had drifted off, sat on top of my bedchair, and woke up in the early hours to a fish crashing out 30-40 yards in front of me, and as I listened it happened again! My rods were fishing much further out at the moment, so I quickly reeled one in and replaced the zig with a short choddy and tied on a high attract CC Moore Optical Illusion pop-up and flicked it towards the range the fish were showing.
The close in rod had savage liners all night, and the shows continued until just after first light. I really felt like I should have had a take so I reeled all the rods in and changed them to chods which I put at the same range the fish had been showing. About an hour later, we were all stood in my swim when I noticed the tip of the right hand rod slam down, the bobbin was at the top, but the alarm wasn’t making any noise! I picked it up, and the fish quickly kited left before going off on a long run. It put up a really good scrap for the camera, but soon was in the net. It looked a definite forty, and the scales swung round to 41lb, which was a new French pb for me so I was well happy.
I quickly got the rods back out, but the shows had stopped and I think the fish had spooked a lot of them with the way it had fought. I was going to stay put for the night in case they did turn up again, but the crayfish wanted to make sure I didn’t get another chance, as my baits were eaten off within minutes of casting out. This soon made my decision of moving to Heron first thing an easy choice.
After wandering around for a bit I chose to go in peg 11, which was on the back of the wind, and a patrol route for fish going into the open water from the famous peg 14. I found a clean silty area between weed beds at about 80 yards range, and chose to put my right hand rod on this with a two pieces of maize and a bit of glow in the dark corn on a size 6 Covert Incizor, which I then put five spods of corn and Live System crumb over the top. I then found another really hard area close in which I put two hinged stiff rigs with bright pop-ups and sprinkled some boilie over the top. The Pro Carp main line was slackened off as I had been told the fish in Heron were extremely line shy, and I was fairly confident. It was good to have a social with Alan and Lewis as we were now fishing close to each other, and we all seemed confident of a bite with the constant liners we were getting.