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One
Man In A Boat
(First
published in Fly Fishing and Fly Tying Magazine - September 2009)
I
always had a soft spot for chub. I was brought up on tales from my dad
about being smashed up by big chub on small streams. "You should've
seen the size of it, couldn't stop it getting into the roots, smashed
to bits!"
I loved articles on
stalking chub with slugs and worms and floating crust - real jungle warfare.
And I've done a lot of chub fishing since, catching them on everything
from slugs and worms, to crust and luncheon meat. I've caught them freelining,
ledgering, and trotting.
I'd read the odd piece
on fly-fishing for chub, but until a couple of years ago for some reason
never tried it. I wish I had!
For several years
I spent the summers chasing down some big chub on the middle Thames. All
the fish caught were individually stalked and taken on dry fly. And all
of them were caught from a drifting boat.
The middle Thames
is a beautiful river: broad and tree-lined, slow and stately; and in parts,
hardly ever fished. And there is a lot to go at! There are chub all the
way from Oxford to London - all you need is a boat, a rod license and
a British Waterways boat registration (see side panel).
The boat, it seems
to me, is the crucial bit. It allows you to access parts of the river
that hardly ever see a fisherman, and surprise-surprise, this seems to
be where the better chub are. You are looking for stretches of overgrown,
tree-hung bank; and a steady current. The good news is that there is lots
of this on the Thames. The bad news is that not all of it has chub. Look
for depths in the three to five foot range, over a bed of gravel rather
than silt. Chub move around a lot in summer, so you do need to plan to
cover a lot of ground in a session.
My method is very
simple: First of all, get up early! In midsummer I was on the water by
0430 at the latest, which means getting out of bed very early indeed to
get to the water, and launch the boat. This allows me time to motor upstream
a couple of miles, giving me a good long drift back down to arrive back
at the launch ramp for lunch! The early start also avoids the worst of
the boat traffic, which on the Thames can get crazy, with big cruisers,
rowing skiffs, and speedboats all fighting for the same water. Early in
the morning you only have the odd mad-keen rower to contend with.
Fly-fishing
for chub really gets into its own from mid July onward. This gives the
chub time to get over spawning and move back into their main-river locations.
Good fishing can extend into early October if the weather holds. Warm
and clear is the weather you need for this, keeping the chub on top where
you can readily spot them.
The approach is to
move slowly down river, spotting fish and casting dry flies at them. It's
quite easy fishing, but does need a little organisation and coordination.
Drift, row, or slowly
idle downstream about 15 to 20 yards out from the bank. Wear polarised
sunglasses and stand up. Keep your eyes glued to the water next to the
bank, as far ahead of the boat as you can see. Pay particular attention
to overhanging trees and bushes. Eventually you will see fish. Typically
you'll see groups of 3 to 10 chub holding near or under cover, about six
inches beneath the surface. However occasionally you'll get surprised
by a lone chub (sometimes a shoal!) cruising slowly along an open shallow.
The chub holding near
cover are the easier proposition. You have more time to adjust the boat
speed/position if need be, and the tightly knit shoal will be more competitive
in chasing the fly.
As soon as you see
the fish your first thought should be the boat's speed and direction.
If you are idling along cut the engine, ensuring that the boat's path
continues on a parallel track to the fish. It's easy to misjudge this
and end up drifting too close. Once you've sorted the speed/position thing,
you calmly grab the rod and make a speedy cast, picking out the fish you
want...or that's what you'd like to happen. Only you (a) forgot to place
the rod where you can quickly reach it, (b) forgot to strip any/sufficient
line from the reel ready to cast, and best of all (c) you've got the fly
snagged on your net/fishing bag/seat. By the time you've sorted that lot
out you've drifted 20 yards past the fish; or if you didn't sort the speed/position
thing out, you've drifted into the bush where the fish were and will have
to extract boat, body, and tackle before the next rower goes past and
laughs at you!
So, keep the rod handy,
with line stripped and coiled in a tangle free area, and the fly in the
keeper ring or somewhere else tangle free. If you do have a problem and
just drifted past without casting, it's worth making a wide circle and
getting back upstream to set up another drift. Thames chub aren't boat
shy, and you are likely to get another shot if you're careful.
Assuming
you do get off a decent cast, I have found it's not necessary to lead
the fish. One foot ahead or behind is good. Chub react well to the sound
of the fly landing. In fact on occasion I've got them to come out from
under a bush by slapping the fly down hard on the edge of the branches.
If the fish looks like it's hesitating or veers off, give the fly a six-inch
twitch. This usually does the trick and the chub will come and take the
fly. I've been surprised as to how gently the fish take. Even if they
accelerate towards the fly they slow down at the last moment and sip the
fly from the surface.
What you don't want
to do is strike quickly! Wait for the fish to get its head down, and then
tighten. Once you've hooked the fish, keep the rod low and pull the fish
quickly away from the bank-side snags. At the same time keep your wits
about you for boat traffic and other obstacles that you'll have missed
while concentrating on the cast. You may need to manoeuvre the boat and
the fish at the same time!
A handy hint here
is, as part of your pre-prep, to have your mud-weight/anchor organised
so that you can drop it at the pull of a loop. This makes everything easy
as the boat won't go anywhere and you can concentrate on the job of landing
the chub.
Chub pull hard, but
don't run far. With reasonable tackle, you should have no problems and
the fish will be in the net in no time. Excellent! Put it back, sort out
the boat again, and off you go for the next chub.
Initially I thought
all this was a one-fish-and-go technique, and that the close-quarters
nature of the fishing meant that the shoal would spook. This can happen.
Especially when other shoal members follow the hooked fish to the net.
However, there is
a way to get several fish out of a shoal before they spook. Rather than
casting to the fish as you pass by, you drift past the fish and then (because
the Thames is slow flowing) you can either use oars or, ideally, an electric
motor to sneak back up to a safe casting position behind the fish. About
15 yards is good. With an electric motor you can easily hold the boat
against the current while you fire off a cast.
When you hook a fish
get the rod down low and off to the side and drag the fish away from the
shoal. If necessary use the electric motor to move the boat downstream
and away from the shoal at the same time. You can then land the fish,
return it, and quietly sneak back up to the shoal for another shot. I've
had up to four fish from one group fishing like this.
Catching cruising
chub is fun! You don't have a lot of time if you are drifting downstream
and the chub is swimming upstream. You won't necessarily have time to
slow the boat before casting so fire off a cast as quickly as possible,
and try and get some slack into the line to allow for the faster boat
movement. If you run out of slack and the fly drags, let it drag for a
few seconds. Sometimes the chub will chase it down!
A
few words on tackle: I generally use a five-weight rod. You may want to
over-line one size to allow for speedy loading. Line is a weight forward,
but a DT will be just as good. The tapered leader is 9 - 12ft long with
a copolymer tippet of a minimum of 6lb bs. Remember these fish live near
snags, and you do need to bully them. Don't risk lighter tippets.
Flies: Big, bushy,
and leggy! My favourite is a size ten stimulator with rubber legs. I also
like big foam grasshopper patterns. I have encountered selectivity only
once, where a couple of smallish fish seemed focused on caenis, the rest
of the time the chub seemed only too happy to munch on a ready-meal sized
offering.
So, there you go!
Drift-boat fly-fishing for chub. Sight fishing for big fish on a big river.
Just like Montana, only with more boat traffic than the Yellowstone, and
parakeets instead of bald eagles!
©
William Shaw
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