Showing posts with label snake lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snake lake. Show all posts

Monday, 6 January 2014

Winter League Fishing: How the mighty fall...

Match: TBF Winter League (Round 3)
Venue: Tunnel Barn Farm, Shrewley, Warks
Date: Saturday, 16th November
Angler: Shaun Little (MAP Designer and Consultant)

Morale was high going into the third round. The weather was mild and the team was sitting in second position. The team vibe was one of laughter and general banter. What could possibly go wrong?…

Well, I’m going to keep this one short and sweet because pretty much everything went tits up. For those of you who have been reading my blog might of realized its been few weeks since I last posted one (four weeks to be precise), as I didn’t want to re-live the memories.

Anyway enough of my moaning; considering the mild weather for the time of year, the fishing was hard over the whole complex in the week leading up to the round. The team plan was simple; start by dobbing bread towards any features, as the colour had dropped out, then switch to pellets short and if this didn’t produce bites we would loose feed maggots over it for the last hour and rotate maggots further out. 

At the draw Kurtis was once again required to work his magic and he didn’t let two of the team down. Would you believe it Mark Malin was on Extension 21… again! I honestly don’t know if this has ever happened in this league before, bearing in mind that there are 76 anglers fishing and it’s completely random where you draw each week. To draw the same lake 3 weeks in a row is good but the same peg is insane. As for the rest of the draw Aiden was on Club 11 this is a peg you would always fancy. Kurtis was on House 1 the most unpredictable of pegs it could be rigid or void of fish. Then I was on New Pool 4, which always seems devoid of fish. 

I’m not going to waffle on about how crap my peg or day was; the peg is about eight metres wide (seven if you take into account the reeds) and about 4ft deep. I caught pretty much nothing until the last hour fishing maggots at 13-metres into peg 3 and peg 5 for a total weight of 28lb. Weights around the lake were very tight – another 4lb would of propelled me into the top half – but I didn’t have 4lb more so only beat four others on my lake. Disappointing is a word that comes to mind.  As for the rest of the team, Mark once again won the lake; actually he destroyed the lake with 30lb to spare. He pretty much knows each fish by name on that peg now! Well done again mate.  Kurtis and Aiden both had days similar to mine; so on the team front things weren’t looking to rosy.

With a team score of 32 points we were next-but-last on the day, dropping down to seventh in the overall table. What a rollercoaster – hours before it was all smiles and banter, now the atmosphere was slightly less buoyant.


I suppose this is the addiction of match fishing, the extreme highs and lows of winning and losing. It will be case of trying to hit the ground running for the next round. But there’s still a long way to go with seven rounds left....  

Monday, 11 November 2013

Winter League fishing: The campaign starts here...

Match: TBF Winter League (round1 )
Venue: Tunnel Barn Farm, Shrewley, Warks
Date: Saturday, 19th October
Angler: Shaun Little (MAP Designer and Consultant)

After months of anticipation the start of my winter league fishing had finally arrived, the first of these being the Tunnel Barn Winter League that is widely regarded as one of the toughest commercial leagues in the country. This year would be no different, with 19 teams of four entered and with the likes of Steve Ringer, Des Shipp and Jamie Hughes fishing it (to name just a few) it would obviously be a very difficult league indeed.

I’m a massive fan of winter fishing, hence most of my fishing is participated during this time. I know many people associate this time of year with the drawbag playing more of a part than any actual angling skill – I don’t believe that by the way – but I find that if you are prepared to work that little bit harder and think that little bit longer than the anglers around you, the rewards will speak for themselves.

Anyway, that’s my philosophy; onto the winter league.

I had been fishing the odd match to get a feel for the venue again in between working tradeshows and getting an earful off the missus for never being around. As a team we felt we were on track, until the usual British weather turned that upside down; the temperature dropped and it lashed it down. So a mid-week trip was called for and the team player that I am, I offered to go at sit in the rain all day working things out.  I drew 31 on House pool and for those of you who know Tunnel Barn, this is a decent peg and with 30 not in it’s even better.  The aim of the day was to establish if maggots or pellets would be the preferred bait. As a brief overview, it fished incredibly hard with maggots outperforming pellets by far… 58lb won the match and as some people I know would say, I was the first ‘loser’ with 55lb. More importantly though, I had gained important knowledge and confidence for the forthcoming winter league round.

Or had I….

That night the team calls were made to teammates Mark Malin, Aiden Mansfield and Kurtis Trantor, and the knowledge spread around. That was Wednesday; air temperature 12 degrees. Thursday, Friday and Saturday air temperatures were between 15-17 degrees – bollocks! But more of the effects of that later…

The night before the match anticipation was running through my mind as I was putting the finishing touches to my gear. This is what’s great about this time of year, you just can’t predict what will happen. Will I be fishing for 100lb or 40lb? What bait, depth, shotting pattern or feeding pattern will work best? These are all questions that are hardest to answer at this time of year.




Tunnel Barn Farm is one of the most popular venues in the UK and its winter league attracts some of the best anglers there are.

The morning of the first round arrived. I woke up to my alarm and it was still dark, the first sign that the winter league season is here. As I left the house I was greeted by a typical autumn morning; overcast, damp yet surprisingly warm.  As a team we opted to get there as early as possible to get in the draw bag before all the flyers were gone (Match Fishing magazine’s Joe Carass usually grabs one of those!). With the team draw made we had two great pegs in the shape of New Pool 25, occupied by yours truly, and Extension 21 to which the smile on Mark Malin’s face said it all. The other two pegs were below average in my opinion; Top Pool 8 and House 1. Both these sections are split with Club Pool and at this time of year it’s almost impossible to compete against the other lakes that stand alone. But that was the draw, no point in crying over spilt milk as they say. A positive attitude is a must regardless of the draw and in team matches, damage limitation is imperative off the bad pegs because every team will have one or two duff pegs.

Moving on to my peg, New Pool is an oddly-shaped snake lake that meanders its way around itself. Peg 25 is on the ‘road bank’, which is a long straight and also one of the widest parts of the lake at 15-metres. At this time of year I think this is always an advantage, as it offers a lot more water to target and brings options to explore.

Upon arriving at my peg I had a scout around to see who was in my section; Jamie Hughes and Mark Pollard were two I had to deal with. It’s never easy in this league with the caliber of anglers that enter. 

The plan of attack was pretty simple and although I had caught well on maggots in the week with the weather warming up, I opted to start on pellets. My opening line was plumbed up at five sections straight in front of me, which is about six inches deeper than the rest of the peg. It’s so important to spend that little extra time plumbing around the whole peg to get a feel for the features and contours before making a decision on where to fish. The next line was at 3.5ft deep and I just plumbed around on the far bank until I found that depth. After a lot of rain sometimes the fish like to sit off the bottom and working a rig up and down the far slope can really be the difference. The third line was set at two feet deep, tight to the far bank, which also doubled-up perfectly with my inside to the next pallet. 

At the whistle I compressed 30 micro pellets into my bottle top pot and slipped a 4mm expander on the hook then shipped out to my five-section line. My thinking was to start off negative in terms of feed and judge it from there. After five minutes of regular lifting and dropping, the floats dipped and the first F1 was hooked and safely netted. The swim looked like it was going to improve but after three fish, the activity tailed off. Confident that the fish were there but requiring more feed I started to introduce a full pot; this resulted in a few fish but again it just died. I reverted back to feeding 30 pellets and it did the trick; 10 fish came to the net, all near the 1lb 8oz mark and giving me a good enough weight to keep up with the other anglers in the section. By feeding like this I was able to keep my short line fishing longer than everyone around me.

As always though there comes a point where you are having to work harder and harder for a bite and its vital to know when it’s time to move on. I’d had 15 fish and felt reassured I would catch on my other lines. The original plan was to feed maggot by hand over my five-section line once I came off it, but it seemed too much of a risk given how the first hour had fished and if the other lines didn’t fish then I’d be screwed… and how right I was; after 45 minutes of trying my other lines I just couldn’t string any fish together.

This was the pattern for the rest of the match; I had to keep reverting back to my five-section line, have four or five fish then rotate around my other lines picking odd fish up. By ‘big potting’ maggots tight across I managed to snare a 8lb ghostie, although I wouldn’t normally do that at this time of year but sometimes when a swim isn’t working a calculated risk can pay off. As the all-out whistle sounded I had around 38 fish, which I felt would maybe push 70lb. At the start I would have taken 60lb so I felt reasonably content. When the scales arrived Jamie Hughes was winning the lake with a fantastic 87lb off an unfancied peg – what a performance! I placed 77lb on the scales, which was good enough for second on the lake and in the section. The warmer, more consistent weather of the previous few days had clearly made a big difference to the fish. If I had been on the same peg on Wednesday I feel I would struggled for 60lb. 

It was now a case of anxiously ringing around the lads to see they had got on. Mark had done the job finishing fourth on his lake, Aiden & Kurtis were a little more downbeat, both coming mid-way in their sections. Come the all-important final placing the general consensus was that we would be about halfway out of the 19 teams. As the teams were read out from last to first our smiles gradually grow as more and more teams were read out. Eventually it came to us – MAP/Bait Tech was shouted out in fourth place overall, just two points behind the third-placed team. This just goes to reiterate my earlier point that it’s all about damage limitation from those bad draws and that’s exactly what the lads had done.

That match was only the first round – there are nine more to go in the league – and there’s no guarantee that we’ll get those all-important better draws over the forthcoming rounds, we can only hope.

Just before I sign off I have to say a massive well done to Joe Carass and his team; not only did he win the match outright but also his team wiped the floor with a massive 70 point score… well done guys.

Here’s to the next round and I’ll definitely keep you posted…

Shaun Little
MAP Designer and consultant