Sunday 22 June 2014

Pictures from the first half of the season, Rutland Water

 A picture says a thousand words, so here are millions of words............

Boat Fishing: a season of contrasts..from Rob Waddington
We’ve had two months of incredible contrasts since your last ‘Big Puddle’. Early April saw huge hatches of buzzers with the March stock fish turning on to them with relish. At times, it seemed like there were more fish than water in areas such as Dickenson’s Bay: so close in, that the bank fishing was just as frantic. On a south wind the opposite bank was as prolific from the Transformer as far up as Tim Appleton’s.
Two or three buzzers under a bung accounted for big bags of fighting fish and many were safely released to provide us with ‘more wary’ four pounders later in the year. As April progressed, the trout came higher in the water on cloudy days and emergers or dries worked.
Then, just as quickly, the buzzers seemed to disappear only to be replaced in the trout’s diet by massive hatches of olive nymphs. Then the dry fly fishing came into it’s own.
On very windy days, the rudder saved the day, with a strong wind blowing along the shoreline.
Around the end of April, I suspected that, as the top of the North Arm was fishing so well, there was no reason not to think that the top of the South would also be fishing. Traditional May/June locations such as Hideaway Bay or Cattle Trough may also have been worth a look. Yes, there were big fish in there, initially taking early season lures such as black and green tadpoles. This then turned into some of the loveliest and most exciting dry fly fishing I’ve ever had.
We had some spectacular dry fishing though May with CDC suspenders, Bob’s bits and daddy longlegs working well on the right day.
Lots of large powerful grown on fish mean our leaders must be strong enough to hold them on the take. Many fish are smashing finer leaders like cotton.
A major feature was the incredible clarity of the water; in some places you could see down to 25 ft, just like the Caribbean Sea with weed beds as lush as a chalk stream and full of food for the trout.
Some perfect, ‘proper Rutland Fish’ were caught all over the lake with the top of the North Arm and the top of the South Arm being the place for the better fish.
 
Picture 10A
This brilliant fishing couldn’t last or there wouldn’t be any fish left in the lake: and of course it didn’t!
 
After the bumper start, there commenced a season of meteorological contrasts - often every day changing winds from the West/East/South/North. We also had flat calms, strong gales, and thunderstorms. There was also rain, high and low pressure and cold and hot days. It bewildered us; never mind the fish!
And now, as I write, it seems that every trout in the lake is feeding on the abundance of pin fry and are virtually uncatchable! (Please send your tyings and pics of your special ‘pin fry’ flies for the next Big Puddle). It’s not been unusual to cast at hundreds of fish and maybe fool one: but it’ll be a good one! These fry are tiny, jelly bodied ‘pins’ with two black eyes and are all around the margins. Everywhere you look you’ll see chasing, supping trout gorging on these ‘jelly fry’.
On hot sunny days, the damsels are showing in huge numbers and many fish contain dozens of the nymphs. During one fry feeding frenzy, your editor had some success with a #14 pearl bodied cormorant; just the single fly and figure of eight retrieve, ignoring the ‘risers’:  or a tiny #14 version of the ethafoam floating fry:  or a ‘swiftly’ fished gold and silver tube!
Often you had to cast right on the nose of a ‘supping fish. However, these fish can drive a fly fisherman mad!
There are more stock fish in amongst some biggies in the main basin from the Fishing Lodge to the Peninsula and on the usual Normanton/Sykes Lane bank; with more and more fish now being taken from the open water. These seem a little more receptive to the fly.
Currently, the new ‘beach’ is being built at Sykes Lane. So, perhaps we can look forward to some bone fishing in the shallows off ‘Bondi Beach’ very soon? Maybe, flats fishing for Tarpon.
It’ll be interesting to see how the fishing changes over the next few summer months.
See future blogs.






 



































Sunday 15 June 2014

Another Totally Awesome Fishing Show

Rob of Rutland Water Fly Fishing had another visit from the legendary Graeme Pullen last week. Graeme has an immensely popular YouTube programme 'the Totally Awesome Fishing Show'. This has many followers and recently had its 6 MILLIONTH view!! We wanted to make a show about the amazing dry fly fishing we'd been having. However, Mother Nature had other plans as he was met by strong South Westerly winds.

So, we changed tactics and produced a film about 'Rudder Fishing'. This is far from fly fishing purists' stuff but it can save a hard day. Using a rudder attached to the stern of the fishing boat, we aim the bows with the wind and 'drag' some 'flies' behind a full line. Believe me guys, this can be spectacularly productive and the bigger the wind the better it works.
I'm getting more relaxed with these things now and had some good fun with Graeme, this time without Mike, his son and expert cameraman/editor who was away working. Watch out the the next in this interesting series on Rutland Water, see www.rutlandwaterflyfishing.co.uk to go fishing with Rob.


 

Then last weekend Rob and his Lakeside B&B www.thelodgebarnsdale.co.uk hosted a TV crew from France. They're doing a 50 minute film of English reservoir fishing and filming well known guides and personalities from Chew (John Horsey), Blagdon (Gareth Jones) Bewl (Bob Barden) Grafham (Craig Barr) and Eyebrook and Rutland Water (Rob Waddington).

 Rutland Water had just become incredibly difficult with the trout switching on to the 'pin fry'. These are the minute jelly-like young of perch, bream, roach etc and when the trout 'lock on' to them, the fishing is notoriously 'ROCK HARD' coupled with hotter temps than Spain, blistering sunshine and very light wispy breezes from all directions, I knew that this wasn't going to be easy. The night before I received an email from director Philippe that they'd had an amazing evening on Chew with John Horsey.... so no pressure then!!!!
Saturday afternoon, we fished Eyebrook Reservoir, a beautiful, peaceful (not for me!) lake which is famous for it's top of the water action... daddy longlegs, hoppers and cdc emergers were apparently working well. Good news as the guys wanted to take shots of dry fly action.
Well it was 'scorchio' out there, flat calm, hot as the desert and not a fish been caught by any one that day!
We set off, and had a few takes and follows, I had a fish on the Daddy, so a action good shot was in the can. Many hours later I had another, hard fishing!  Then at dusk, 10.15pm, Philippe finally caught an Eyebrook rainbow off the top, phew! "CUT!!"
This fishing on film is pretty tough, as we all know, fish are wild animals and they do things how they want to do them, and sometimes they just won't play by the rules.
Monday on Rutland Water.... a comp the day before produced more blanks than catches so I know this was going to be a challenge.
It seemed like every fish which ever existed in the world was chasing the pin fry in the Rutland margins. We must have cast to thousands of trout and got some lovely shots of gorging trout, but a couple a fish each to Philippe and myself was the score for the day.
The highlight of the day was capturing an Osprey diving and catching a fish on film, so that's the way to do it!
The evening was spent fishing from the bank by my house www.thelodgebarnsdale.co.uk and for this session we were joined by Craig Barr who, with the confidence of youth greeted us with "pin fry feeders?...easy!" Well, they weren't Craig, were they? Both Craig and I had 2 fish each, and Philippe had 1... a long day ended with a beer or two tying flies in my fishing cabin.
I hope the film looks good, there is much, much more to guiding and filming than merely catching fish and I'm sure that we put over the 'ambience' of fishing in Rutland and did ourselves proud.
Footnote...I'd heard that Grafham was fishing it's head off, so I thought Craig would have a bonanza there on the Tuesday...but it had also 'switch off' with just 1 fish between them all day..
There must be an easier job...lion taming perhaps!
Rob Waddington