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Cooking on a open fire…when wood smoke gets in your eyes!

06 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in General

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beef, camp, camping, chicken, cooked, cooking, fire, open, outdoors, slow, smoke, wood

Grabbing what looked like the last decent weekend of the summer, (looking back now, thank god we did, autumn has truly set in) The Tuesday Swim set off to Oxfordshire to do one thing…nothing.

While doing nothing in the shadow of the Ridgeway near Uffington’s White Horse, The Tuesday Swim was hungary and one thing we like to do when camping is slow cook and eat well. A hamper with all the basic’s and some luxuries is always ready for such occasions, throw it in the boot of the car and off you go. With plenty of time on our hands, cooking on an open fire is therapeutic and can kill many hours. Build a fire, let it burn down, rest a pot near to the embers, keep the odd log burning to feed the fire, then slow cooking and fire prodding commences.

Day one consisted of a smoked paprika chicken with rice, cooked for an hour and a half, no pre-bought sauces, just good simple ingredients, Chicken thighs, onion, garlic, tomato puree, smoked paprika and some seasoning. To boil the rice a little more fire is required for heat.

Day two, a full english fry up, toasted muffins, fresh coffee and tea…

With full stomach’s we were now ready for an afternoon of doing very little until the evening meal, a newspaper was read in the afternoon as wood smoke wafted around the camp, we were feeling primeval! After the primeval moment passed and with blood-shot eyes from the embers, the fire was stoked up again in the late afternoon.

In the evening, slowed cooked beef in Guinness. Cooking time was three hours so a well spread out fire created the perfect low temperature. Ingredients, beef stewing steak, sliced onions, peppers, mushrooms, mustard, and a bottle of Guinness.

Finally coffee…

Next time The Tuesday Swim ventures out, I shall be going fishing…


Beware, strong winds approaching…Beaufort 9?

06 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in General

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9, beaufort, blown, fallen, nine, over, scale, tree

Mackerelskies…

05 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in General

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horse, King, mackerel, mackerelskies, Oxfordshire, skies, sky, Uffington, White

While The Tuesday Swim paid a visit to Oxfordshire last saturday, a mackerel sky formed over the Ridgeway near the White Horse of Uffington.

“Mares tails and mackerel scales, make tall ships carry low sails.”

Sloes on the Lea…

29 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in The Lea Valley

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gin, homemade, recipe, sloe

My friend and canal boat dweller, Caroline passed on some sloes found on the Lea Navigation tow path. To celebrate the start of autumn and one of my favourite fishing seasons, sloe gin has been produced at The Tuesday Swim.

The recipe is easy.

Two bottles of cheap London Gin (Lidl is recommended).

About half a pound of sloes.

300 grams of caster sugar.

Wash the sloes, dry them, prick them and then add to the gin. Some gin will have to be removed to take the sloes, so a final G&T or three can be had to say farewell  to the summer. Then add the sugar, you can always add more sugar later on, to taste. Shake the bottle every few days to distribute the flavour and breakdown the sloes.

In three months time after a cold days piking, a glass of slow gin will be the perfect warming remedy.

A cased gudgeon…

26 Friday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in General

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angling, auctions, chiswick, cooper, gobio, gudgeon, hall, j, sons, taxidermy, town

While helping out at Angling Auctions on the 26th March, this year, I came across this little cased gobio gobio, the case measuring 11 inches wide. The gudgeon was set up by J Cooper and Sons. Caught by F W Jefferies in a private pool in Bournebrook near Birmingham on the 15th August 1936.

This goliath weighed 3ozs and sold in the sale from what I can remember at £5,500.00!

Shame, I fancied this one for my book shelf.

Sylcast, the aristocrat of fishing lines…

24 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in Tackle

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Tags

andrews, arcadia, ash, ashtray, asti, design, efgeeco, fishing, line, london, market, milan, milano, plastic, sergio, spitalfields, sylcast, tray

Last thursday saw me at Andrews of Arcadia in Spitalfields market to pick up a 1960’s Sylcast ashtray. After some speculation with John, it is unclear of the history behind it but a few clues lead us to believe it was designed by Sergio Asti possibly for Sylcast salesmen to place in tackle shops across the land. On the base it reads R2S Made in Italy tel 598279 – Milano. If anyone has any more information on this please drop me a email or leave a comment…

Aside from speculative talk of ashtray provenance, there were the usual regulars dropping in for a pursue and a catch up on previous summer fishing adventures, stories of Port Eliot Festival and a long anticipated autumn trip on the Tweed.

A fishing tackle stall for the soul…oh and much tea was drunk!

It’s well worth dropping in to see Mr Andrews and all the other stall holders at Spitalfields market on a thursday, whether you are in search of saucy 1930’s postcards, a TWA penknife, a copy of Magazine’s Real Life or a Efgeeco rod bag.

You can also find Andrews of Arcadia here… http://www.andrewsofarcadia.com/

The Fleet Foxes on the Usk…

23 Tuesday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in Music

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Tags

clarke, cooper, festival, fleet, foxes, green, john, man, pecknold, robin, sea, trout, usk, valley, wales

The Tuesday Swim was under canvas last weekend at the Green Man festival, situated by the river Usk. A small intimate festival where ‘folk music’ loosely describes this very chilled out event. The festival meanders around a private garden and surrounding farm land, where a natural basin creates the auditorium for the main stage.

Harbouring next to the river Usk where sea-trout silently run by at night unknown to several thousand revellers engaged in a collective mix of John Cooper Clarke, a pedal powered dance tent and ultimately for me, the Fleet Foxes.

Robin Pecknold filled the Usk valley with his crisp and haunting vocals, the penultimate song performed was Oliver James sung as a solo by Pecknold that held the crowd open-mouthed, the Fleet Foxes were in a league of their own, true masters of harmony.

Night stalker on the Lea Navigation…

17 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in Carp

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canal, carp, east, fishing, lea, london, navigation, night, stalker

After attending a pirate’s party with some ‘continuos cruisers’ (canal boat people) a fortnight ago, I decided to leave before the proceedings got too uncomfortable for a ‘drylander’. Smelling of wood smoke and suitably lubricated with Rioja I set off along the Lea navigation just by Springfield Marina. As the sound of 90’s techno and laughter slowly faded the canal took on a ghostly calm, the night was still warm, with a light breeze and the moon was bright, shadows were cast across the water creating patches of inky blackness broken by sparkling ripples.

Not expecting to stay so late I had no lights on my bike, the view up ahead was limited, as I turned a corner a lone figure appeared quite abruptly, there a young man was anticipating a cast. Swinging on his line was a PVA parcel backlit by the moon and packed with boillies, this brother of the angle was risking his safety in search of London canal carp!

As I passed I gave him a comforting look to say that I was not of a dangerous nature. I slowed in respect, gave him a friendly nod and passed on my way. That night, kids were rioting just two miles away in search of 42″ plasmas but this hero stood alone stalking for carp in the dead of night.

The tuesday swim salutes you sir!

Rolling meat the Ray Walton way…

15 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in Barbel

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barbel, channel, fisher, four, izaak, meat, nick, ray, reels, rolling, screaming, walton

Here’s a video from Nick Fisher’s Screaming Reels series broadcast on Channel Four back in the 1990’s. I used to see Nick walking about in my neighbourhood here in the east end. He used to live just a street away, where his garden backed onto the canal by Victoria Park. Only last week I spotted a few large carp cruising past his back garden but alas no barbel!

From Izaak to Ray, the Walton way…

Cane’d on the Wye and a juicy plum!

13 Saturday Aug 2011

Posted by The tuesday swim in Barbel

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410, allcocks, barbel, cane, carp, fishing, mitchell, pellets, reel, river, rod, split, superb, wye

Sometimes the summer slips by too soon or just never seems to really heat up, this year it seems to be a case of both. So when a fellow piscator friend of mine invited me for three days on the Wye, I grabbed the opportunity for a late summer session.

I’m lucky, as the spot on the Wye near Hereford belongs to my friend’s parents. I spent a week there last year so I knew what to expect and more importantly I knew this stretch of the Wye.

A Georgian house sits one hundred meters back from the river, where a large sloping garden meanders down through an orchard and then through some over-grown shrubbery to the river bank. This makes fishing very comfortable, a cast or two for a few hours then back up to the house for diner, a glass of wine (or two) and then returning to the river, grabbing a few plums along the way and back to our quarry, barbel.

My approach to fishing is simple, anything held in the hand is traditional  the rest i.e the terminal end is completely modern, for me it makes sense.

Rods were held high using very long bank sticks, bites are so severe that the bend in the rod or a ‘churner’ from the reel is enough to tell you a fish is hooked, at night Starlites were attached to the rod tip. No bite alarms, simple.

Traditionalist look away now! The terminal end consists of PVA bags, hair rigs, pellets, boillies, braided hook links and chemically edged wide gape hooks when presenting a bait. The general technique on the Wye was to use two small 8mm pellets, hair rigged with a PVA mesh bag attached containing 4mm pellets, this was cast out on most occasions.

Traditionalist, you can look back now!

Rod and reel consisted of an Allcocks Carp Superb and a Mitchel 410. Cane rods fit well in a natural environment and performs just how I need them to, soft on the strike but as the cane loads with pressure it comes to a stop and then becomes a powerful tool to land bigger fish, this is certainly true on the Wye and the barbel.

Fishing for three days undisturbed, allows you to approach the whole experience in a different light, as you have time on your side.

Firstly, building up a swim can be done methodically adding ground bait in certain areas, resting them for half a day. The theory is that smaller fish arrive instantly and hoover up the smaller ‘cloud’ of ground bait, the activlty from the smaller fish attract the larger fish which move in and start feeding on the bigger offerings in the ground bait mix. At this point after allowing the swim to ‘rest’ another bombardment of ground bait is delivered along with a hook bait. This baiting technique leaves the barbel competing for food and then it’s just a case of waiting…

Also, a three day session can allow you to really get to know the river as the day progresses, observing patterns with the fauna, a peregrine hovers at dusk over the opposite bank for small mammals or possibly a chance sighting of a fish. Salmon were leaping at night although at times it was hard to distinguish between salmon or a carp, either way the splashes created were immense. On one occasion we saw a salmon leap in the late afternoon, it’s silver and pink flanks defining it’s status.Understanding the feeding patterns of the barbel was our priority and it seemed on this trip the evenings were most productive. At night we had some success with the barbel but generally it did tail off and the chub moved in. Fishing during the day was slower but still resulted in a few barbel including one I had on the last morning, I had a hunch to get up and have a final go and literally on the last cast caught a lovely seven pound specimen, a nice ending to the trip.

Three days resulted in some great fish all in pristine condition and all hard fighting, no rods were lost although it was close on a few occasions. The Wye is a great river to fish, in summer it generally glides past but as the autumn rains start it can quickly become quite a brown torrent of fast flowing water, my return to the Wye will hopefully be in October when the river becomes a little more angry…

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