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Fishing & Flying.

14 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Reading

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

and, angling, author, book, F, fishing, flying, horsley, pilot, T, terence, Tunnicliffe, war two, word

Currently there appears to be a trend for publishers to fill the market with angling liturature written by anglers who like to tread in the hallowed steps of anglers/writers like Yates, Walker, Venables etc etc. These books on first inspection can be beautifully produced, normally with some very fine photography and illustrations but when one starts to read these books I get bored very quickly.  These fishy tales seems to come from a very familiar yarn of searching for lost ponds and time spent pouring tea and eating cake while slagging off the ‘bivvy brigade’ (an easy target if there was ever one to have a go at!) and talk of a bygone era that has never been experienced first hand, these books never seem to have a direction they just meander just like the rivers they fish. Also these authors tend to run out of steam quite quickly so the final few chapters have the presence of the publishers cracking the whip to get the book finished in time for the ‘launch’ so a moribund account of angling tales conclude these titles. Then you have the launch, men queueing up to a get as many limited editions copies signed ready to load up onto the Bay of E!

There are some great current angling writers out there at present, Chris Yates’s almost child-like and enthusiastic view of the world and angling to crafted literature like Luke Jenning’s ‘Bloodknots’ and John Andrew’s ‘For Those Left behind’. Luke’s book is a real page turner due to the intreguing plot and characters while John’s book has a far more personal touch but both of these books have been written with care, time has been spent, each sentence  has been considered very carefully, these are not rushed books. I think this is why we are still waiting for another book from both of these authors! Another good ‘page turner’ that springs to mind is Jon Berry’s ‘Benneath the Black Water’ which takes the reader along a journey of obsession with catching ferox trout at the expense of his personal relationships and the financial demands. Jon has written some other books and I have heard good things but I have not yet got around to reading them. Dexter Petley is another fantastic author who has penned many books but has only really touched on angling with articles for Waterlog magazine (when Waterlog was a credible publication). I wish Dexter would write some more on angling, his pieces on fishing the Walthamstow reservoirs in the 1980’s are as dark and brooding and the reservoirs themselves…superb.

There is an antidote to the ‘fruit cake’ authors as I like to call them by tracking down angling liturature from the era that most of my old fishing tackle comes from, the pre and post second world war era. One such book is Fishing and Flying by Terence Horsley with illustrations by T F Tunnicliffe.

Fishing and Flying starts off with a whirlwind tour of Britain in the air from the cockpit of his Spitfire, yes Terence is a World War II pilot and a keen fisher especially for sea trout at night. Every page is rich with descriptions of his experiences in the air, by the river or simply his encounters with people like the poacher in the local pub over a pint. At this time of year a good pile of books is required for fireside reading, there are plenty of books out there at present that can be used to feed the fire, I hope to list some books here over the next few months that are good to read!

Tackle boxes part twelve. The split shot tin.

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Tackle

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

allcocks, fishing, Hardy, Henry, milbro, opsprey, PDQ, shot, split, tackle, tin, tins, wilco, wilkes

I’m not a collector of these little tins but more an accumulator of such items. These tins tend to turn up in job lots of tackle bought, found at the bottom of larger old tackle boxes or bags. I’m too young to remember them being available in tackle shops but I’m quite familiar with them being used by more elderly fishermen when I was fishing club matches on the Sussex Ouse, along the Lindfield stretch in the early eighties. I still use these tins for small items of tackle such as swivels and beads, more for nostalgia than for any other reason, as the sliding lid does tend to stick, especially in cold weather!



Terry Callier dies aged 67.

30 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Music

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

callier, dies, terry

Terry Callier is certainly worth a mention here on the tuesday swim after the sad news of his death yesterday. It was Gilles Peterson who put me onto his path back in the 1990’s, a sad loss.

61 Pall Mall.

17 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Tackle

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

61, dealer, Hardys, historic, london, lost, Mall, old, pall, shop, store, tackle

Twenty or so years ago I walked into 61 Pall Mall and was addressed as “Sir” quite an achievement for me at that time as I was a scruffy looking art student dressed in ripped jeans and a leather biker jacket. The man who addressed me looked more like an undertaker rather than the normal tweed clad (this is how you are supposed to dress like in the countryside young man, don’t you know) shop assistant. I was addressed with respect and asked no awkward questions regarding my request, a Hardy waxed wading jacket. A suitable jacket was found, wrapped and paid for with a credit card that was on the brink of letting me down, those two dreaded words ‘card declined’ thankfully didn’t flash up and I marched triumphantly out of Hardys with a waxed jacket. I was not going to wear this on the chalk streams of southern England but in the shady bars and night clubs of Shoreditch, East London. One day I would wear it on the Itchen or Nadder but until then I was to make my rural fashion statement in the Vale of Hoxton!

Soon after Hardy’s of number 61 Pall Mall closed down, my wading jacket still hangs in the basement and has since been blessed on the rivers banks of southern England for brown trout and Scotland in search of salmon. Looking back now I never thought that 61 Pall Mall was an era on the brink of extinction, I thought this establishment was to go on for ever, sadly it didn’t. If I had known of its impending demise I would have spent more time in there.

For those who remembers the wooden panelled shop and its calm atmosphere only broken by the occasional New York accent of an excited over seas visitor, you may also remember the changing faces of the shop window…


Hackney marshes, a brief Victorian history & its fishing stations.

15 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in The Lea Valley

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

fishing, groom, hackney, hart, history, horse, house, inn, marshes, pub, victotian, White

I’m now lucky enough to live close to the Hackney Marshes, a ten minute stroll takes me through Millfields Park, across the Lea Navigation, through the Middlesex Filter Beds and then onto a large expanse of football pitches, known as the Hackney Marshes. At first site this could look like any municipal area created for Britain’s second most popular participants sport, football but around the outskirts of these pitches lie many interesting natural features along with tales of past goings on, many of a dark and sinister nature. The marsh had been left untouched subject to Lammas rights (land split up into strips and used for producing hay and used only for grazing) hence why no building development had gone ahead in this area.

But in 1893 Sir John Hutton, the chairman of the London County Council dedicated the marshes to be an open space for the people of London after mounting pressure from various public groups including the Rev E K Douglass who ran the Eton Mission at Hackney Wick. Rev Douglass pointed out that the lads football club connected with the Mission has been ordered off the marshes by Drivers who had proceeded to carry off their goal posts! With growing pressure a final sum of £75,000 pounds was paid to the Lord and the commoners who had rights to the land by Hackney Council, giving the land back to the people of the borough for recreational use.

At that time the following extract from a pamphlet set out by the London Parks Committee describes the marsh as “a large area of flat meadow land, lying on the eastern boundary of London and intersected and skirted by the river Lea and its tributaries. It is 387 acres in extent, and three and a half miles from the Royal Exchange.” With this new aquisition, the council was about to change the marshes for ever but for many this was not for the better as the marshes represented a real rural idyl with the central marshes still having a sense of the wilderness about it especially when approached via surrounding villages like Clapton, Hommerton, Leyton and Hackney Wick. One such fondly remembered inhabitant lived on the outskirts of the marsh, there lay a ramshackle building where its occupants would greet passers by, by selling ginger beer and sorry looking cakes together with fish caught from the Navigation Cut laid out in dishes. Unsucessfull anglers could fill their creels with fish on return from the Lea enabling them to feed their families and keep their sense of personal pride. This wild almost anarchic  area was starting to loose its dark reputation as the Lea’s tributaries were drained and access became less of a challenge as one could now wander off the designated paths. The Lea itself was now controlled by new higher banks and flood relief channels, the marsh was now in name and not in nature.

Romany gypsies camped out on the marshes in the late nineteenth century.

The Lea of old held large fish, pike of 25 lbs, trout 11 1/2 lbs, barbel 13 1/2 lbs,  chub 7 1/2 lbs, carp 11lbs, bream 5 3/4 lbs and ells of  6 3/4 lbs. One of the principle spots to catch these monsters was around the White House fishery boasting 150 subscribers each year. The White House pub stood alone in the middle of the marshes run  in the late 19th century by widower Mrs Beresford and her sons. Mrs Beresford reputation as a courteous hostess became well known to the Walton desciples that descended onto the Lea who took sanctuary in the pub with its walls adorned with stuffed birds aquired by Mrs Beresfords late husband George a keen hunter and fisherman. In earlier days the inn was frequently visited by Dick Turpin and other like minded types who felt save in the refuge of the marshes, knowing that only the bravest of law enforcers would venture into this wild area. The inn finally fell silent in 1917 when no interest was taken in the license and so it was demolished.

The White House Inn, Hackney Marshes.

Another notable fishing Inn was the Horse and Groom on the Lea Bridge Road and at the opposite end of Hackney marshes the White Hart Inn by Temple Mills the last point where the river Lea is tidal.

The White Hart Inn, Temple Mills.The marshes are now fully tamed, dotted by endless rugby and goal posts. In the background (above) behind the row of trees lies the river Lea still frequented by a few anglers and indeed the Tuesday Swim. Behind me lies the Lea Navigation where large carp reside, yes the canal carp are still on the Tuesday Swims radar but that will be next year. The marshes have survived the Olympics tidying up policy and still retain a  real sense of the  past with the old Victorian engineering in the Middlesex Filter Beds and the meanders of the old Lea, stubborn in its path. There is still a lot more to explore in this area and I shall come back to it here at the Tuesday Swim.

The Wye in autumn & a barbel.

08 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Barbel

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Aerial, allcocks, barbel, fishing, wye

Just over a year ago I started this blog after returning from my annual pilgrimage to the river Wye. I’m still not too clear why I write this blog as I generally find anglers writing about their catches uninspiring. There are a few that paint an interesting picture on such outings through words, but with the Tuesday Swim I guess I wanted to write about the little things in angling that I found to be interesting and any related items, whether it was tackle, places, anglers, some history, a song or indeed an interesting capture. I have in fact been on a  few trips this year and caught some good fish but fail to record them here as I felt there was no point in turning the Tuesday Swim into a diary. So I will tell you this now, the catch for the Wye for 2012 was one barbel around the 7lb mark caught in the dark and in the pouring rain, only one blurred image was taken as the camera failed to respond in the wet! The catch was a little disappointing but there is still a tale to be told…

So rather than words below is my photo story for my three days on the Wye.





A note from Richard Walker, 6th May 1975

03 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Reading

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

dick, letter, personal, richard, walker

Here we have a letter written by the late Dick Walker giving advice on the process of checking a test curve of a rod with a small diagram and the technique of tying strands from a nylon rope onto white painted hooks to produce translucent fly bodies…always a forward thinking angler. Dick Walker goes onto to give advice on personal issues possibly in relation to walking out on your wife and all done with a stinking cold!

Finally he finishes on a poem! Matt Hayes, I think you need to step up your game a bit!

A pair of Allcocks Aerial C 815 3 & 3/4″ centrepins.

01 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Tackle

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

3 3/4", Aerial, allcocks, angling, auctions, C815, centre, Centrepin, pin

I have always fancied owning an Allcocks Aerial, some models do command a very high price amongst collectors which has put me off but many are quite reasonably priced especially the post war models which are excellent users.

This weekend was an early start as I was working at the Angling Auctions in Chiswick, while browsing through the cabinets on the friday I spotted an Aerial C 815 which was a good ‘user’ and I had a thought that it may just pass by the bidders who seem more focused on Speedias (currently very much the reel of choice amongst traditional users) or the more elite centre pins like the Coxon and the earlier Allcocks that the collectors favour.

Lot 192 came up, a starting bid of one hundred was announced and the room fell silent, my hand raised and the hammer fell, Neil at Angling Auctions does not like to hang about when the room becomes a little sleepy, a few quick lots normally wake the hall. It happened a little later on with a pristine Mark IV thats also fell at the hammer for a £100!

Coincidently, this weekend I had my eye on a EBay lot marked down as a selection of sea tackle, pick up only. Within the single group photograph lay what suspiciously looked  like another Allcocks Aerial. I contacted the seller and my suspicions were correct after two new images were sent. Sunday night, a last-minute bid with a few seconds to go and another Aerial was in my possession for £30, plus a fishing bag, cardinal reel, some sea rods, a fly waistcoat and a fly box! The lot was up in the west Midlands somewhere but this is where my cunning plan came together, I’m heading there this thursday to fish the Wye at Hereford for my annual week after barbus maximus, and possibly a Wye pike to celebrate the start of the pike season. In the meantime the reel pictured will be loaded with 8 or 10 lb line (I can’t decide yet) and hopefully the other Aerial when picked up will get the same treatment as I take it down to the Wye.

Angling Auctions September 2012

25 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Tackle

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

2012, angling, auctions, chiswick, freemnan, london, neil, september

Myself and John Andrew of Arcadia take on the bi-annual task of donning a tie and looking after the rod section at Angling Auctions at the Chiswick Town Hall, London. Twice a year we carefully un-wrap the cling film from the bundles of rods, assemble the rods while avoiding the old light sockets dangling from the town halls ceiling in wait for an excitable bunch of traditional anglers.

I do this twice a year because of my interest in old tackle, I like to hear the tall tails from some larger than life characters and generally listen to John having a moan, wouldn’t miss it for the world! If you are in the area I urge you to drop in either for the viewing on Friday 28th September and Saturday morning or try the auction from noon onwards. Each auction is an education and beyond the usual displays of Coxon’s and Silex’s are the boxes that lay under the tables, old collections of tackle and potential gold. Prices are up and down but there is always a bargain to be had, even without a penny in your pocket it is well worth a visit but don’t tell Neil I said that!

If you like the smell of old tackle shops then pop down this 28th and 29th.

Thems carp are driving me mad, especially on Sundays!

09 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by The tuesday swim in Carp

≈ 1 Comment

I won’t start quoting BB in Confession of a Carp Fisher but his book did paint a picture on numerous occasions of hot still summer days sat by carp pools being tormented by large carp that were basking and occasionally slurping from the surface scum.  The outcome for BB seemed to be the same each time, no carp, just broken dreams.

This week I have grabbed a few lunchtime sessions but not once did I get a take, I came close but again nothing came of it. I ran out of my usual Chum mixers a few days back and opted for Sainsbury’s own brand, have they stopped making chum mixers? I soaked a few in preparation for this Sunday mornings session. By eleven in the morning I had noticed three large carp all ‘twenties’ lurking under the willow tree opposite our flat, so a few handfuls of mixers (Sainsbury brand) were thrown from the balcony. After 20 minutes all three were taking the bait, I ran downstairs with tackle in hand and perched low right on the edge of the canal in front of a concrete planter. Opening the soaked mixers I soon discovered that they would not stay on the hook, too soft, and right in front of me I had a large ‘twenty’ feeding away! Luckily one thing I always keep in my bag is a tub of pop up Cell boillies either to fish on the bottom as a pop up or as a floater. So I tied one on with a hair and cast it out in front of the path of the three cruising carp.

I was well hidden away and the carp had no idea I was there, swimming only seven or eight feet away, I threw a few more free offerings out as one of the carp, at least a ‘twenty’ took down an early lunch. I could see it thinking it was that close to me and I could see that it had spotted my bait…my heart was beating like a drum, the carp slowly approached my bait and then its lips widened and engulfed my bait.

Last time I hooked a carp here on the canal a few months ago (on a Sunday), I had 10 lb line, a hundred year old centre pin reel and a James Aspindale Carp Deluxe rod, which looking back put me at a slight disadvantage so this time it was all ‘stepped up’ with a shortened B James Mark IV, Cardinal 66 (good clutch and fast retrieve) and 12 lb line, surly this time I could bring a London canal carp to the net? Although still an old bit of kit this is by far no compromise and quite capable of handling this situation.

I’m sure as the carp engulfed my bait she closed her eyes, thankfully mine were wide open and I struck into a powerful fish. Immediately the carp bolted for the canal boats as I expected but my fine tuned clutch put enough pressure on her and the tackle to give a balance and hope that I may finally bring my prize home. The Mark IV was bent right over but I had been there before and this time I was not concerned about the tackle failing as the clutch let out ten meters of line. Then slowly I stopped her with the rod tip under the water trying to avoid any snap offs from the metal hulls of the boats. I managed to start reeling in little by little but I knew that the carp at the end of this line was big, powerful and still full of fight. Again the clutch slipped and she took a few metres, if I was a betting man I would have put a 50/50 bet on this tussle at this point in time but just as I thought there was a chance an almighty surge came from beneath one of the canal boats and the sound of a massive “crack” echoed around the wharf as the line snapped! With only two days to go before we leave this little London Redmire I laughed to myself knowing that this was probably my last chance, I will try again tomorrow if it looks promising but I have a new family to tend to, a new house to move into and a business to run, I think this time around it’s not going to happen with the London canal carp…I’m am very disappointed.

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