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Night Fishing - Part I
Some
Helpful Hints To Make It More Enjoyable
We all know the feeling, the sun is
sinking in the evening sky, the day's fishing
almost over. It's been a good day, plenty of runs,
a few average sized carp, but you just know that
the fishing's about to get better. And that inevitable
task that we all hate is now just around the corner
- packing up.
The weather's muggy and there is an
absolute mountain of gear to get back to the car,
which is parked as always at the other side of
the lake. Just another 10 minutes, see if that
last run of the day appears and produces the fish
you've been waiting for. Ten minutes passes. Fifteen.
Nothing. "I'll pack everything up that I
don't need; leave the rods out". 30 minutes
later; nothing. The carp are beginning to splash
around on the surface, laughing at you, in the
knowledge that you are about to leave and they
can move in close and mop up the bait you have
dropped into the front of your swim.
Well, now it's time to fool them.
Forget going home to sit in front of the TV. Forget
the boring journey home and the unloading of the
car. Tonight it is sleepover night. With a few
simple additions to your gear and maybe an understanding
partner, it's not as hard as many anglers think
to enjoy a nights fishing and maximise on that
time of the day when the fishing and the lakeside
can be at its absolute best. Even if your partner's
not understanding, they have probably realised
long ago that you are completely barking anyway,
most of us carp anglers are, or maybe they will
even join you.
So,
what are the essentials for an enjoyable nights
fishing?
I think there are three key ingredients
to a successful trip:
Organisation
ComfortSafety
So let's take them one at a time and
talk them through.
Organisation
During the course of a day's fishing,
your tackle tends to get spread around the swim
a bit. The landing net at the back of the swim
where it was put after the excitement of the last
catch. The baiting needle is, at best, under the
chair, or somewhere else laying aroud the swim,
the boilies in their bag on the floor, somewhere,
and the scales and sling are behind the tree just
out of sight. Sound familiar? Well this is fine
during the daytime. It may not be ideal when you
hit that run with one hand, holding a coffe in
the other and a half eaten sandwich hanging out
of your mouth, but you can get away with it. At
four in the morning, this ain't gonna work! You
need to be organised. You have to know exactly
where everything is in and around your swim and
be able to reach it in a hurry. It doesn't matter
how long you have waited for that run, it will
always happen at the most unexpected and downright
awkward moment possible. Pour a drink, light the
stove, take one shoe off, bite into a soggy sandwich
which requires both hands to keep it intact or
worst of all, retire to the nearby bushes for
a call of nature. All guarunteed to produce a
run. Unless you are ready for a run. Then it won't
happen.
So what do you do? What your mother
nagged you to do for the majority of you childhood.
Go and tidy your room. Keep everything close to
hand. Landing net, unhooking mat, scales, weigh
sling and maybe forceps at the front of the swim,
keeping anything sharp away from the mat of course.
You need to be able to reach the net and get it
into the water without losing the fish and without
taking half a tree branch with it. Everything
you may need to re-bait or re-tackle should be
kept tidily in the bivvy and you should almost
be able to find everything blindfolded. Remember,
not every night is a full moon, and it can get
very dark away from the towns and streetlights.
When (if) you land the fish, you must
be able to get it straight onto the mat without
damaging it or placing it at risk. You may then
want to weigh it, and again everything needs to
be close to hand. A small pocket torch can be
useful here, but whatever you choose, you don't
want to be leaving the fish flapping around on
the mat while you search the bivvy for gear.
If
you plan on a bit of night photography, a camera
close to hand is needed, especially if you are
alone. Make sure it stays dry of course. I find
the zip up plastic bags available in supermarkets
are great for this purpose and for a lot of other
uses as well.
OK, hopefully your fish has been landed,
carefully unhooked, weighed and photographed,
and is ready to return to the water. One last
thing to remember now. Where is the edge! Again
a torch may be useful here. I do mean a torch
as well, or better still a miners type headlight
so that you can work hands free. What I don't
mean is an anti-aircraft search light like I have
seen some anglers with. You want to see a part
of your swim, not half the county, and other anglers
don't want to see it.
So your fish swims gracefully away,
and it's time to re-bait. If you got it right,
you can now go straight to the right place to
find bait, baiting needle, dips, boilie stops,
pva, whatever you need, without emptying out your
entire bag onto the floor ready to be trodden
on with the next footstep. If you got it wrong,
your pva is dissolving in the nearest puddle,
your dip is running downhill fast towards your
spare clothes, monster crab flavoured socks -
not nice, your boile stops are .... somewhere
... , your baiting needle is in your left ankle
and that nice family of water voles you were watching
earlier are just making off with your last boilie.
Comfort
So, it's time to stop being Mum now,
enough nagging, your room's so tidy you can even
see the floor, and it's time to be ... well er
Mum again. This time it's "Are you dressed
up warm?" It's fine to wander round in shorts
and T shirt during the day, and even into the
early evening, but it can get extremely cold at
four in the morning, you'll be surprised, even
in June, and there is nothing worse than being
cold, tired, hungry, wet or maybe even all four.
You need to be prepared for the worst of everything.
Being comfortable is key to a succesful trip.
Remember, this is England, and the weather can,
and quite likely will, do its very best to catch
you out. If you don't have a bivvy, you can survive,
but be prepared to get cold, wet, bitten or worse.
Good waterproof clothing and plenty of layers
underneath are the answer. With a few layers,
you will stay warm, but can remove just some to
suit the conditions. Trainers are fine during
the day, but at night, your feet are often the
first thing to get cold, and if they get wet,
they will stay wet. A change of socks doesn't
take up much space. I always keep a pair in my
fishing bag just in case. A hat is always worth
having as well. A ;arge amount of body heat is
lost through the head, and however silly it looks,
a warm hat will keep you warm. Anyway, no-one
can see you at night.
A good bedchair is also worth its
weight, and prices now seem to be dropping all
the time. Try and go for a fairly lightweight
model, some I have seen weigh an absolute ton.
If you can afford it, go for a three legged version,
they can save a lot of embarassment when you try
to leap towards the rods in the middle of the
night, forgetting that they have a habit of upending.
Hot drinks are always welcome, but
taste even better in the early hours, especially
if you can convince your mate to make them! A
kettle, stove and tea and coffee making equipment
are, to me anyway, absolute essentials. Some stoves
run on unleaded fuel, so you won't be caught out
with an empty gas cylinder just when you need
it.
If you've got the stove, may as well
take a frying pan and some bacon as well. A fresh
cooked bacon sandwich at dawn tastes like no other
sandwich ever tasted before, believe me. Again,
even better if someone else makes it!
The key is, stay warm, dry and comfortable.
You will fish better if you feel good. If you
are cold, wet, hungry or tired, you will probably
end up going home miserable.
Safety
Back
to Mum again. Fishing at night is great fun. You
have a whole world of different sights and sounds
to get used to, you're not stuck indoors getting
bored and the fishing can be great. Now it may
sound like I am nagging here, but get it right
and you will have a great time. So just one more
thing to consider - safety.
You are in the dark, at the edge of
maybe deep water, you may be tired and you need
to be able to move around without taking involuntary
swiming lessons. A few simple steps can make the
experience much safer and more enjoyable. Remember,
keep tidy and you will be in much less danger
of hooking yourself or stabbing yourself with
a baiting needle. Make sure bivvy pegs are not
sticking out all over the place, and guy ropes
are either out of the way or visible. In the wet,
don't take risks on a steep bank. Make sure you
can either see the edge of the lake or you know
just where it is.
If possible, fish with a mate, or
at least make sure somebody knows where you are.
If you have one, take a mobile phone, so that
you can at least call for help if needed. Don't
however spend half the night chatting to mates
on it, you are likely to get thumped by other
anglers. That goes for radios, tape players and
the like as well. If anybody else can hear it,
it's too loud. Better still, leave it indoors.
And one final but very important safety
point. NEVER cook or light gas lamps inside the
bivvy. I have read too many times in the angling
press of anglers who have been killed doing this,
either gassing or burning themselves to death.
It's dangerous - don't do it. If it's raining
and you want to cook, tough. Wait. It won't rain
forever altough it may seem like it. You won't
starve to death, but you may die if you are stupid.
If you follow all of the above advice,
you will have fun even if you blank. There's nothing
like playing boy scout on a nice summer evening,
and with the right gear you can extend this throughout
the year. So, what about gear? What do I need
for night fishing?
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