Thursday, 14 May 2015

Friends to the rescue..

Since I haven't got a car yet again I have been sitting home doing nothing and this really drives me mad! Thankfully my mate Ronnie wanted to have a go blade-baiting for the pollock up in Etive and so yesterday he picked me up with his friend John and we headed north. The day was beautiful with perfect weather and incoming tide at my mark so I was very positive that we would get among the fish..
We put on various blades on our lrf combos and started casting and working the lures near the bottom. I was expecting bites from the start but I was wrong and it proved a very slow start to the day... After about an hour or so without bites, I started getting some and after a few missed strikes (zx are tricky on hooksets) I finally landed a small pollock. I kept casting and got a couple more fish (a pollock and a codling) in quick succession although I lost a couple more who shed the hooks. The guys didn't stick with the blades but they did manage a few fish on jigs. Overall though it was very slow. I decided to have a few last casts and change presentation to a simple 4" hydrotail worm on a 3g jighead worked slowly near the bottom and this gave me a pollock from a spot we had previously worked with blades and metals showing that the fish were in a more passive mood. Thus we decided to head to Loch Fyne as we knew that the action would be much better there. On arrival the mark was looking perfect and as expected we got fish from the first casts on our metal jigs. I was using my MC Crostage CRK-T787AJI tubular tip rod as its perfect for working blades and jigs along with my little Shimano Stradic and 0.4PE line with 6lbs fluoro leader. Knowing that I will encounter reasonably good fish, I thought of trying something that is mainly done in baitfishing when faced with toothy predators. This was to double up the line by making a long loop. Thus I made a rapala knot that created a loop about half the length of the leader and in the end I tied my snap by a palomar knot. This way I was hoping to have a better chance of landing the bigger fish as I could use a tighter drag setting and have better abrasion resistance in the critical last meters of the leader. Moreover this allows to get some of the leader back in case of a snag instead of just using heavier line for leader that usually gets cut on the leader knot or on the braid as the leader is stronger. I also find it more practical than tying a second thicker leader on the existing one... The session continued by pulling out fish after fish, the vast majority of them being small pollock along with a few codling and poor cod.We kept at this pace until sundown really enjoying ourselves with the non-stop action even though no large fish were caught.
The doubled up leader.

They preferred flash today..

ZX 35 does the damage..

A nice 'agro' looking codling on the blade.

Fish wanted finesse in the end..


Metals rule in Fyne!

Double hook-up with Ronnie. Had quite a few of those throughout the day...




Tried some little creatures too...

...and cheburashka of course.

Nice codling towards the end of the day..

In the end of the day and even though I pulled numerous fish out of the kelp and rocks, the doubled up leader seemed to have worked. It was frayed but held up much better than normal. Certainly I will try it again next time..
From what we observed it seems that fish definitely need a few more days or a couple weeks of good weather to show up in numbers in Etive. There were definitely more of them than last time but it still doesn't feel as good as it should be.. Loch Fyne was teeming with fish but you have to go through thousands of the little ones to get some better fish.
All in all a most welcome session and I thank my friends Ronnie and John for it. Hope to find a new car soon though before I go mad!

Tight Lines!

Gear used.
Rod: Majorcraft Crostage CRK-T782AJI
Reel: Shimano Stradic 1000 fc
Mainline: YGK G-soul x3 PE 0.4
Leader: Sunline FC guide special fluorocarbon, 6lbs doubled up.
Lure: ZX35, metal jigs, hydrotail worms/paddletails on cheburashka.

2 comments:

  1. hi , any chance of more details on the lures you use (brand,weight and sizes)..
    paulknott20@hotmail.com

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    Replies
    1. Well I think most are mentioned in the text, but in any case I rarely use heavier weights than 12g on jigheads/cheburashkas/metals and more than 5g blades/lipless crancks. For the soft plastics it depends on the venue and morphology of the bottom along with the current thats there.. As a rule of thumb the less amount of lead the better while you can still reach the fish and have 'feel'. Sizes are usually 2"-4" slim profile lures..
      All the best. .

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