Bluemoon Angling Thread

Thanks for the heads up. I've decided I'm going to give bread a proper go over the next few weeks, something I've been meaning to do for years but never have the patience for when I got a maggot option.

Irish trip in July postponed and still sweating on the Wye in June !!
Surprised you don't fish bread tbh. Get some liquidised bread in a light cage feeder with a piece of flake on a long tail and it will be something fish don't see nowadays as everyone is preoccupied using pellets. I've had some good bags of roach and chub in the past on this method.
 
Exactly the same mate, rediscovered it later last year after some lads at worked kept on asking me, came home absolutely buzzing for my next fix. Went about 6 times in all just to commercials (these never used to exist when I fished as a teen/early 20’s
We’re out this weekend as soon as I find one open
Commercial fisheries are great for those who want to learn how to catch, or those wanting a confidence boost in not fishing rock hard natural venues that don't contain the amount of fish commercials do. I'm a purist and hate commercials. Give me a stickfloat rod waders and a bait apron and I'll guarantee I'll catch more than the top anglers who empty fish stuffed commercials. Each to their own and all that but for me stickfloat fishing is THE most skilful art of coarse angling, and once adept is the most enjoyable way of catching. Spent many hours learning my skills on the Dane holding a float back against an under hanging tree willing my float to go then bam, float sails away. Flick of the wrist and rod arches round by a big chub trying to nose it's way into a sunken snag. Fantastic!
 
Commercial fisheries are great for those who want to learn how to catch, or those wanting a confidence boost in not fishing rock hard natural venues that don't contain the amount of fish commercials do. I'm a purist and hate commercials. Give me a stickfloat rod waders and a bait apron and I'll guarantee I'll catch more than the top anglers who empty fish stuffed commercials. Each to their own and all that but for me stickfloat fishing is THE most skilful art of coarse angling, and once adept is the most enjoyable way of catching. Spent many hours learning my skills on the Dane holding a float back against an under hanging tree willing my float to go then bam, float sails away. Flick of the wrist and rod arches round by a big chub trying to nose it's way into a sunken snag. Fantastic!
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Commercial fisheries are great for those who want to learn how to catch, or those wanting a confidence boost in not fishing rock hard natural venues that don't contain the amount of fish commercials do. I'm a purist and hate commercials. Give me a stickfloat rod waders and a bait apron and I'll guarantee I'll catch more than the top anglers who empty fish stuffed commercials. Each to their own and all that but for me stickfloat fishing is THE most skilful art of coarse angling, and once adept is the most enjoyable way of catching. Spent many hours learning my skills on the Dane holding a float back against an under hanging tree willing my float to go then bam, float sails away. Flick of the wrist and rod arches round by a big chub trying to nose it's way into a sunken snag. Fantastic!
Flippin'eck ! Chub used to jump on to your hook at Swettenham !
 
Commercial fisheries are great for those who want to learn how to catch, or those wanting a confidence boost in not fishing rock hard natural venues that don't contain the amount of fish commercials do. I'm a purist and hate commercials. Give me a stickfloat rod waders and a bait apron and I'll guarantee I'll catch more than the top anglers who empty fish stuffed commercials. Each to their own and all that but for me stickfloat fishing is THE most skilful art of coarse angling, and once adept is the most enjoyable way of catching. Spent many hours learning my skills on the Dane holding a float back against an under hanging tree willing my float to go then bam, float sails away. Flick of the wrist and rod arches round by a big chub trying to nose it's way into a sunken snag. Fantastic!
Sorry mate but ive got to disagree with you on your comment regarding top commercial anglers
Im not doubting you as a great river angler but to say you can guarantee you would beat a top commercial angler on a river is a bit much in my opinion. The top commercial anglers are just that , top anglers , and would catch thier fair share on a river aswell
 
Sorry mate but ive got to disagree with you on your comment regarding top commercial anglers
Im not doubting you as a great river angler but to say you can guarantee you would beat a top commercial angler on a river is a bit much in my opinion. The top commercial anglers are just that , top anglers , and would catch thier fair share on a river aswell
where is this river aswell,ive got all my stuff out of the shed ready,hooooooorah
 
Commercial fisheries are great for those who want to learn how to catch, or those wanting a confidence boost in not fishing rock hard natural venues that don't contain the amount of fish commercials do. I'm a purist and hate commercials. Give me a stickfloat rod waders and a bait apron and I'll guarantee I'll catch more than the top anglers who empty fish stuffed commercials. Each to their own and all that but for me stickfloat fishing is THE most skilful art of coarse angling, and once adept is the most enjoyable way of catching. Spent many hours learning my skills on the Dane holding a float back against an under hanging tree willing my float to go then bam, float sails away. Flick of the wrist and rod arches round by a big chub trying to nose it's way into a sunken snag. Fantastic!
@snorky likes a big old chub, but he's only got a little rod and they have to find his bait by sense of smell in the dark.
 
Sorry mate but ive got to disagree with you on your comment regarding top commercial anglers
Im not doubting you as a great river angler but to say you can guarantee you would beat a top commercial angler on a river is a bit much in my opinion. The top commercial anglers are just that , top anglers , and would catch thier fair share on a river aswell
Ok, perhaps I came across as boastful saying that, I didn't intend being. I wouldn't say I'm a great river angler either as anglers are always learning, especially on a river as rivers change year on year. Under water features like sunken trees get washed through, and depths change, especially with heavy rain flush throughs.

I've been fishing 50 years from being 6 and have done many many hours fishing rock hard canals in winter scratching for bites. Now if you know canal fishing it often means fining down end tackle, and when I say that I'm talking using a size 26 fine wire red bloodworm hook hand tied to a 6oz bottom, with a single joker(small bloodworm) as bait! Thin bristle pole float carefully shotted to just have 1cm of tip showing. Pole in hand down boat channel, then changing to single caster trying to outwit a wily roach on far shelf. Fishing all day to be lucky to catch half a dozen bits. Sometimes I'd blank, not even a bite but dedication and angling obsession meant there's always another day.

Don't get me wrong here, some very good all rounders who fish commercials would spank my arse if they were on the fish on a river, it happens. But many of the new breed of anglers go straight into fishing commercial waters and only fish them. Many rivers are now devoid of anglers that once had anglers fishing regularly, weekends you couldn't get on known pegs. Sorry but out and out commercial anglers couldn't compete with a river angler who's spent many hours on a river bank. Horses for courses and all that and I consider myself an experienced all rounder, not a one trick pony many commercial anglers are.

A mate of mine is a top commercial angler(mainly pole fishing) and regularly wins club and open matches, if he doesn't win he's often picking up in the places or wins his section. We had a discussion a while back in the pub about fishing natural waters and when he has to use rod and line, especially on a river he admitted he is quite limited. And this is a guy who I think said has caught over 400lb in a 5 hour match.

Made me laugh when we went to the Ebro in Spain and he hooked into his first big catfish, it had him on his knees shaking like a leaf playing it. So much different than hauling a 20lb carp in on heavy elastic on a commercial fishery! :)
 
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@snorky likes a big old chub, but he's only got a little rod and they have to find his bait by sense of smell in the dark.
I think he's pulling our pisser about having a tiny todger mate. He still pulls women and I doubt they'd be satisfied with his claimed acorn dick. He's probably got a small conger eel in his pants; )
 
Ok, perhaps I came across as boastful saying that, I didn't intend being. I wouldn't say I'm a great river angler either as anglers are always learning, especially on a river as rivers change year on year. Under water features like sunken trees get washed through, and depths change, especially with heavy rain flush throughs.

I've been fishing 50 years from being 6 and have done many many hours fishing rock hard canals in winter scratching for bites. Now if you know canal fishing it often means fining down end tackle, and when I say that I'm talking using a size 26 fine wire red bloodworm hook hand tied to a 6oz bottom, with a single joker(small bloodworm) as bait! Thin bristle pole float carefully shotted to just have 1cm of tip showing. Pole in hand down boat channel, then changing to single caster trying to outwit a wily roach on far shelf. Fishing all day to be lucky to catch half a dozen bits. Sometimes I'd blank, not even a bite but dedication and angling obsession meant there's always another day.

Don't get me wrong here, some very good all rounders who fish commercials would spank my arse if they were on the fish on a river, it happens. But many of the new breed of anglers go straight into fishing commercial waters and only fish them. Many rivers are now devoid of anglers that once had anglers fishing regularly, weekends you couldn't get on known pegs. Sorry but out and out commercial anglers couldn't compete with a river angler who's spent many hours on a river bank. Horses for courses and all that and I consider myself an experienced all rounder, not a one trick pony many commercial anglers are.

A mate of mine is a top commercial angler(mainly pole fishing) and regularly wins club and open matches, if he doesn't win he's often picking up in the places or wins his section. We had a discussion a while back in the pub about fishing natural waters and when he has to use rod and line, especially on a river he admitted he is quite limited. And this is a guy who I think said has caught over 400lb in a 5 hour match.

Made me laugh when we went to the Ebro in Spain and he hooked into his first big catfish, it had him on his knees shaking like a leaf playing it. So much different than hauling a 20lb carp in on heavy elastic on a commercial fishery! :)
Fair comments mate and i agree with you . Its just seemed that you dismissed commercial anglers as all one trick ponys which judging by your reply you dont . I wouldnt fancy many river anglers chances against , say , Andy May on the Dane but i get your point
 
Coarse fishing is ok, if there is no proper fishing to do.
Get yourself along to one of the big English reservoirs - Rutland, Eyebrook, Chew, Draycote, they will be opening within days I would have thought. They will still be well stocked and without fishing pressure for the last few months those bad boys will tear your arm off.
 

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