Yes rumour has it that Tina Turner dedicated this song to Ray Walton and I can well believe it. Geoff and I headed to the Kennet for the afternoon and evening and I was hoping to try out my latest acquisition: the new RW rolling pin MKII.
It was a very pleasant day, overcast and with maybe an outside chance of some rain. I tackled up the Torrix with the pin which was loaded with 20lb Power Pro braid and tied directly to this was a size 2 Korda hook. I had molded some extra heavy tungsten putty onto the shank and covered it with some shrink tube. This would hopefully mean that less plasticine would be required.
So off I went fully of expectancy, the mad fool that I am! I tried numerous swims and failed in all of them. For those that haven’t tried this method I shall try and explain. Basically you put on a large piece of luncheon meat, by simply pushing the hook right through and then turning the hook and pulling it back into the meat. You then cast upstream and put a large bow into the line. This means that the bait can then trundle downstream, bouncing along the bottom, in a straight line. If you keep the line too tight to the bait, it will obviously pull it off line and create an unnatural path down the river.
The beauty of the rolling pin is that you can turn the spool and cast out normally and then return the spool to it’s normal position and keep paying off line. The idea is that that you feel the meat bouncing along the gravel bottom. You just keep allowing the pin to turn to give line and allow the bait to travel downstream, under tree and bushes and between weed (if there is any). If you feel the meat is going through the swim too quickly, then add a little plasticine 5 or 6 inches from the hook to slow its progress down. Bites are often quite gentle plucks but you’ll know it’s different to the normal gravel bumps that you get. If in doubt strike and strike hard.
Well as I said after a few bite less hours I decided to move into a swim for the evening. I had found an area of shallow water but with a deeper margin flanked by reeds and heading upstream to a large bridge. This seemed a good interception point. So about 7pm I swung out a feeder and a couple of super glued Elips pellets. 10 minutes later the rod top slammed round and a feisty little barbel fought for freedom on the other end. It was a nice conditioned fish of about 6lbs. Thirty minutes later and the rod top did it’s thing again and this time it felt a better fish. After a good scrap I weighed this one and she went 9lb 1oz on the scales and was a stunning barbel.
That was pretty much the end of the action for me fish wise at least. I was treated to a rare sight though. A barn owl swooped down at the back of my swim, no more that 8 feet or so from me, to grab a mouse. The only sound I heard was as the owl’s talons as they grabbed at the tall grass. Then it lifted off silently, empty taloned and worked it’s way along the water line in search of another tasty meal. I also saw what I think were a pair of plovers in the field behind me. They walked a bit like an upright pigeon and made a funny sort of call. Having checked the RSPB book I’m fairly certain they were Plovers.
So, all in all a reasonably successful session. I will persevere with the meat rolling but it may take some time to become even half decent at it. Practice is the key.
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