Didsbury Dave
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 1 Feb 2007
- Messages
- 39,124
The osprey strike is one to take to the grave. Brilliant stuff.sounds very similar to our trip. They have changed the stocking policy and the number of points they stock - hence the concentration of fish. Where were they? Barnsdale and Yellowstone?
After our trip this year we decided to bin it off for a while. We will be trying Clywedog in May next year for a change. I hear Draycote is fishing well but its been well stocked fort he reopening. It remains to be seen if it stays like that with Anglian Water getting their mits on it.
Anyhow, we have been on a new (for the club) water this season a couple of times- Cobbinshaw reservoir just south of West Craigs in the middle of a peat hag. Its a private club that are now letting other clubs fish it on certain days. Well run water with good boats. The first time we fished was in 20mph winds, last Saturday in monsoon rain and thunder and lightening that had us motoring back to the lodge bdq. Irrespective of the conditions, it fished really well on both occasions with our rod average over 10 each time. The difference between this water and the others I fish was very notable, the fish eager to chase and not nearly as shy coming to dries and fabs/blobs like nobodies business. I put it down to much less fishing pressure than say Lake of Menteith (which is still far more consistent with better quality fish than the Anglian Waters).
Anyway, talking of the Lake, I was out a couple of weeks ago and got absolutely stuffed in the boat 12-0 :-(
I dropped half a dozen fish, I couldn't believe it. The days highlight for me was watching an osprey no more than 20 metres away, dive and catch a trout right in front of us. The bird had clearly underestimated the size of the fish because despite four attempts in couldn't take off and proceeded to swim to shore. It did so by working its wings very much like a butterfly stroke, it was the most bizarre sight. Having got to shore it stood on the trout, in the shallows figuring out what to do next. After numerous attempts it got airborne but only a couple of feet from the lake surface and finally disappeared into the trees, still very close to the ground. The trout which must have been a good 3lb will have been beheaded and the inedible bits discarded to get the weight down b efore taking it back to the nest.
It was almost worth the blank.
In other noteworthy news, one of our number caught a Tench on the Lake. On fly?!?!
First one I have seen caught and can now be added to the growing list of course fish. Pike and Perch (natch) but also Roach, Dace and now Tench. Rumours of a few Carp abound. Global warming? What next? Bloody Bream?
Glencorse tomorrow in 30c heat. Di7 and Booby Basher at the ready.
A night after the barbel for me tonight. I absolutely love a sulty night's barbelling and always fish on the solstace.











