Autumn canal basin

Autumn canal basin

Monday 2 March 2015

Winter Canal

The canal can seem like a bleak and uninviting place in winter. Gone is the vibrant bankside vegetation, the trees stand as bare bones with only the hint of new buds and the expectant promise of new life. The water is cold and inhospitable seemingly devoid of living things. People hurry by on their bikes or with dogs. Collars turned up, scarves wrapped tightly, walking briskly, pausing only perhaps to throw a few scraps of bread for the ever hungry ducks. Of course as an angler you get  to slow everything down. There's ample time to just sit and watch, to notice the tiny things, the almost imperceptible changes that are going on around us all the time. You may be joined by a friendly robin who will happily eat any tasty morsels of bait you invite him to take. A water vole may scurry past in the undergrowth at the waters edge and if you're really lucky you could just catch the electric blue flash of a kingfisher speeding down the canal. All of this adds to the pleasure of being out fishing, of escaping for a few short hours to pit your wits and skills against the fish you hope you can find.

After an unavoidable absence from the bankside during December and January, February has seen me approach the canal with a renewed enthusiasm. I now have a permit that allows me to fish some 35 miles of the canal although I intend to concentrate on the areas closer to home to begin with.
On a pleasant January afternoon I cycled along the towpath for some six miles or so south of Lancaster to explore an area of the canal that I had never seen before let alone fished.
With the reconnaissance done I have now have a selection suitable areas to target that I can either cycle or walk to. I will be travelling light in much the same way as I did as a boy. Rod, landing net handle and bank sticks tied to the crossbar, a small rucksack with tackle and food and a bag with unhooking mat. landing net and bait hung from the handlebars. The aim is to see what I can catch and build up a picture of the area as a whole.  I know there are roach, bream, perch and pike and I have even heard of tench still being around. Who knows there may even be the odd carp lurking about but generally it is a very under fished waterway, written off by many as only containing small fish if any. Of course I don't believe this is true at all and want to explore and document my findings through the year.
With the plan made and tackle prepared I headed out the other week to an area I liked the look of. As I was passing by the large basin in town I came across another cycling angler. Wielding a battered looking pole he was happily catching bream in mid canal. I stopped for a chat and discovered that the previous week he had been fishing a little further along the canal and had found a large shoal of roach that were eager to feed and claimed fish up to a pound were present. Information duly stored away I carried on to my chosen spot.
After some three hours without a single bite despite moving three times I decided to head back into town. Inner city roach fishing. Maybe it would work and save me from a blank.
By 3pm I was set up in what I thought was roughly the area the pole fisher had told me about. Behind me is the college and in front of me a block of flats. The towpath here is wide with a tarmacked path and enough grassy edge to sit on allowing you to stay out of the way of passers by.
I began fishing a single maggot on a size 20 hook roughly two thirds of the way across the canal trying to place the bait just off the edge of the shelf. Within ten minutes my first fish was in my hand.



Small but beautiful. Bites continued for the next hour and a half with the fish, all roach, varying in size up to around two or three ounces. It became apparent that the fish were all over the swim and I could virtually drop the float in anywhere and get a bite. They seemed happy to take either maggots or tiny pieces of punched bread with equal enthusiasm. I finished with 25 roach before my hands had lost all feeling. The wind chill gets you every time.


I finished work at 2pm the next day and despite having been up since 4am I was back on the bank by 3pm. This time I only had bread with me and decided to use a size 14 hook with either discs of bread or small pinches of flake. It was very windy so I fished just off the near shelf a few yards down from where I sat. Bites began straight away and roach of two ounces plus were duly caught. I managed 10 roach before dusk with the best being a good six ounces. The were a lot of bites that I failed to connect with but I put this down to the bread being attacked by the really small ones so it was a case of ignoring a lot of the little dips and waiting for a positive float sailing away bite before striking.


The best of the day
The following week I popped down for another short late afternoon session. This time I upped the hook size to a 12 with a larger piece of flake. Once again I fished just off the near shelf as the wind was whipping up quite a swell. With plenty of bites again mainly from roach of around two to three ounces I managed another 10 fish including a roach/bream hybrid or around a quarter of a pound. On my last cast, as dusk drew in, I hooked something much bigger. For a few minutes it dragged me around the canal in a very slow, ponderous yet powerful way before the line finally parted company with the fish. I did get a glimpse of a golden flank as I raised the fish up in the water but I couldn't say for definite what it was. It could have been a big bream or maybe a carp but maybe that's just wishful thinking.
All evening I couldn't help but wonder what is was as well as feeling a definite sense of excitement about the fact that larger fish do still exist in the canal.
The next morning the weather was fine so I went down for a couple of hours again. Once again I fished bread flake on a size 12 hook but also took a few worms I'd managed to find in the garden before leaving.
The first bite of the day and I'm into something decent as the cane hoops over. I'm glad I've upped the line to 3.2lb from the finer one I was using yesterday and I slowly bring the fish up in the water. I can't believe what I'm seeing. It's a pike of around a couple of pounds that has taken a piece of flake.


'I'll eat anything me'

Now I've read of Jeff Hatt catching both a perch and a pike on bread but he attributed that to the fact that blood had got onto the bread from a cut he had. I wasn't bleeding so either the pike tried to take a roach that was taking the bread or it took the bread itself. It was nicely hooked in the scissors so maybe it took the bread itself. I will never know for sure.
I caught a few more roach before giving a worm a try just on the off chance that a nice perch might be lurking about. The float sat still for at least five minutes before diving under. Once again the cane bent over nicely and I carefully played the fish up to the surface. Another pike. I slipped the net under her and lifted it on to the bank. This one was a bit heavier, probably pushing three pounds. So far three roach and two pike. I went back to fishing flake and managed a couple more roach before heading home to get ready for work.
I'm hoping to get out again later this week once the snow and hail showers stop and the temperature rises a few degrees. Who knows what I will catch next.

1 comment:

  1. I've had lots of jacks on bread, believe it or not. Most undoubtedly grab it when a lots of small fry are attacking it - I've seen this in clear water on one occasion. The pike shot out from under a bush (I was stalking some canal chub at the time), smashing straight into this ball of tiny roach attacking a piece of flake. The strangest occurrence however was catching one on floating crust! I kid you not! And there weren't any small fish around the bait on that occasion. There was just a little slurp and next thing, 8oz pike. I think this time of year is the time you are most likely to catch them on strange baits. They snap at anything after spawning. Had them on corn too on the local cut.

    ReplyDelete