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Advocated
January 30th, 2004, 07:40 PM
Just wondering, Who fishes for carp in the uk here?

Cheers

Baal
January 30th, 2004, 09:59 PM
Carp fishermen, perhaps?

--
I smile and go off waving
(Amiably) - for that's my way

Baal

"Advocated" > wrote in message
...
> Just wondering, Who fishes for carp in the uk here?
>
> Cheers
>
>

Bob
January 30th, 2004, 10:00 PM
I do two or three days a week.

Bob


"Advocated" > wrote in message
...
> Just wondering, Who fishes for carp in the uk here?
>
> Cheers
>
>

Advocated
January 30th, 2004, 10:55 PM
cool, where abouts do you go?

Zoe
January 31st, 2004, 07:40 PM
I do. The best course fish IMO!

Where are you?


"Advocated" > wrote in message
...
> Just wondering, Who fishes for carp in the uk here?
>
> Cheers
>
>

Hoot!!!
January 31st, 2004, 09:30 PM
Most people will fish for carp, lots of puddles with pastie carp
and the pools with the big fish in are all sindicate (sorry cant spell)
I like to catch barbel and catfish (more fun)

Phil L
January 31st, 2004, 10:08 PM
Hoot!!! wrote:
: Most people will fish for carp, lots of puddles with pastie carp
: and the pools with the big fish in are all sindicate (sorry cant
: spell) I like to catch barbel and catfish (more fun)

The bigger carp arent always in syndicate waters, there's many day ticket
fisheries with carp over 40lbs....that said i dont think it's that
important, sure I'd like to catch a big fish, but it's not imperative to my
days enjoyment, on the contrary, some of the best fishing I've ever
experienced has involved fish no bigger than 7 -8lbs, mostly carp but plenty
of hard fighting barbel too.
A grand day in the height of summer with rod, reel and hook, no other
tackle, just a landing net and a pocketful of Hovis and floating fishmeal
pellets...Ah!!..bliss!

( I could have gone to a fishery holding much bigger fish, but that had the
risk of blanking - I just wanted to catch fish.)

Bob
February 1st, 2004, 11:33 AM
All over the place, I am a ticket holder at Langholme Carp Society ( at
least when I get this years ticket returned), Pride of Derby (gravel pits
and the Trent, Derby Railway (gravel pits and the Trent), Derby County
Anglers (gravel pits and the Trent). I do three trips a year to the Ebro
(my cousin lives close by) plus visits to other places when I can get
tickets. I don't fish commercials as I like the challenge.

I do other fishing as well, barbel, general course stuff but my first love
is carp. I also do some sea fishing from time to time mostly in winter when
I fish with a mate from Newcastle.

I took early retirement last year after 30 years in the IT business and I
have never enjoyed myself so much. The problem is that at teh moment my
wife is very ill so these trips are curtailed but I will be back.

I tend to fish alone because I have not yet met anyone who can spare the
time to fish as much as I do.

Bob





"Advocated" > wrote in message
...
> cool, where abouts do you go?
>
>

Zoe
February 3rd, 2004, 04:50 PM
Catfish. Now there's a different type of fish.

What's it like hooking one of these ugly monsters?



"Hoot!!!" (nospam)> wrote in message
...
> Most people will fish for carp, lots of puddles with pastie carp
> and the pools with the big fish in are all sindicate (sorry cant spell)
> I like to catch barbel and catfish (more fun)
>
>

wemfish
February 4th, 2004, 10:12 AM
Awesome power, hooked one on the Seine (France) had no chance with carp
tackle!!


"Zoe" > wrote in message
...
> Catfish. Now there's a different type of fish.
>
> What's it like hooking one of these ugly monsters?
>
>
>
> "Hoot!!!" (nospam)> wrote in message
> ...
> > Most people will fish for carp, lots of puddles with pastie carp
> > and the pools with the big fish in are all sindicate (sorry cant spell)
> > I like to catch barbel and catfish (more fun)
> >
> >
>
>

Pepperoni
February 4th, 2004, 11:56 AM
"Zoe" > wrote in message
...
> Catfish. Now there's a different type of fish.
>
> What's it like hooking one of these ugly monsters?
>

They aren't really "ugly". Channel cats, for example, are sleek and
beautifully colored. They have a powerful forked tail. I usually find them
in the deep river current. When hooked, they tend to move smoothly
upstream, and unless you can turn them, they will just keep going as if they
don't notice your best efforts. They are at home in swift water, and are
difficult to turn or raise from the depths. Once hooked, their tough mouths
hold the hook well, and they will take advantage of any mistake you make;
drag too tight, short of line on your spool, forget to tie your rod down
when you open the cooler, pinch the mono with the weight, sloppy weak knots,
light wire hooks, frayed leader ......ooops. They will straighten your
hooks, find the weak spot in your line or technique and they know every snag
on the river; they will leave you telling the stories of the legendary "one
that got away".

A carp will make a sizzling run and likely turn to cross the current, a cat
feels like tying your line to a car bumper at a stop light; he just keeps
moving away.

Pepperoni

Zoe
February 4th, 2004, 08:46 PM
They sound very exiting!




"Pepperoni" > wrote in message
...
> "Zoe" > wrote in message
> ...
> > Catfish. Now there's a different type of fish.
> >
> > What's it like hooking one of these ugly monsters?
> >
>
> They aren't really "ugly". Channel cats, for example, are sleek and
> beautifully colored. They have a powerful forked tail. I usually find
them
> in the deep river current. When hooked, they tend to move smoothly
> upstream, and unless you can turn them, they will just keep going as if
they
> don't notice your best efforts. They are at home in swift water, and are
> difficult to turn or raise from the depths. Once hooked, their tough
mouths
> hold the hook well, and they will take advantage of any mistake you make;
> drag too tight, short of line on your spool, forget to tie your rod down
> when you open the cooler, pinch the mono with the weight, sloppy weak
knots,
> light wire hooks, frayed leader ......ooops. They will straighten
your
> hooks, find the weak spot in your line or technique and they know every
snag
> on the river; they will leave you telling the stories of the legendary
"one
> that got away".
>
> A carp will make a sizzling run and likely turn to cross the current, a
cat
> feels like tying your line to a car bumper at a stop light; he just keeps
> moving away.
>
> Pepperoni
>
>

Pepperoni
February 4th, 2004, 09:50 PM
"Zoe" > wrote in message
...
> They sound very exiting!
>
>

Yes. I fish corn for carp all day and usually hook up about 2 an hour. As
evening nears, the bank shadow covers the river and I switch to 1/4 inch hot
dog rings (natural casing works best--holds the hook) As the shadow covers
the shallows, the cats come up and feed. I fish from a roadway bridge with
a wide pedestrian walk on each side. (streetlight overhead....it's great)
The place is filled with carp The problem with the cats is that they almost
always run upriver and under the bridge. If you can't stop them, they are
gone, gone, gone. They average about 34 inches, but get much larger.

Carp don't seem to have a good sense of direction, they will run back and
forth across the river and seem easy to turn compared to the cats. The cats
are built for current and they slide under the bridge like submarines....no
head shaking or turns; just straight into the deepest heaviest flow.

The problem with hot dog bait is that the river is filled with soft shelled
turtles. They will home in like cruise missiles from 40 yards away. They
must have great smell and eyesight. They are also very dexterous with their
claws, and will snatch the bait right from the hook (or cut narrow "V"
notches with their narrow snout) They fight well, too, but a nuisance to
unhook with huge claws and hissing all the time. You come to hate those
turtles, tearing up your line and stealing bait. (they run a foot to 18
inches across)

The river also holds monster walleye, bass, muskie/pike, and striper
hybrids. I fish for them when I can afford minnows or leeches. The
walleyes are seasonal, preferring cold spring water, but early in the year
they hold in the shade under the bridge. (four lanes with 6 foot walk on
each side) A crawler or minnow drifted underneath when the sun is high is
excellent strategy.

Where did all these fish come from?....haha 12 years ago we had a "100 year"
flood and the fish hatchery upstream released everything into the river.
Some species didn't last (need too much gravel bottom to spawn), but most
will always be here, I suppose. Haha you should have seen the fly fishermen
chasing the brood trout from the hatchery; 15-20 pound brown trout,
steelhead and stripers. All of these fish were scheduled to be planted into
rivers running into the Great Lakes, but we had them all trapped by dams, 30
river miles inland.

Huron River between Ann Arbor and Belleville Michigan. USA (Just stay off my
bridge)
I'll take my camera down in a couple months and post some pics.

Pepperoni

Activeviii
February 5th, 2004, 09:33 AM
I take it you from USA pepperoni.


have a look at a European wells cat.

they are getting landed on rod and line in France and Spain to over 200LB
andwell over 7 foot long.

snap of rigs are one of the best, 70lb main line with a 100+braided leader.
a single hook to a livebait, row the bait out into the river and tie a weak
link of 30lb line from the marker buoy to your main line and then take your
rods back to shore.

when you get a hit from a cat you wait until the weak link brakes then the
fun starts.

http://www.catfishgroup.co.uk/page2.html

have a look as big rons fish on here to get the size

All the best.
Phil.
"Pepperoni" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Zoe" > wrote in message
> ...
> > They sound very exiting!
> >
> >
>
> Yes. I fish corn for carp all day and usually hook up about 2 an hour. As
> evening nears, the bank shadow covers the river and I switch to 1/4 inch
hot
> dog rings (natural casing works best--holds the hook) As the shadow covers
> the shallows, the cats come up and feed. I fish from a roadway bridge
with
> a wide pedestrian walk on each side. (streetlight overhead....it's great)
> The place is filled with carp The problem with the cats is that they
almost
> always run upriver and under the bridge. If you can't stop them, they are
> gone, gone, gone. They average about 34 inches, but get much larger.
>
> Carp don't seem to have a good sense of direction, they will run back and
> forth across the river and seem easy to turn compared to the cats. The
cats
> are built for current and they slide under the bridge like
submarines....no
> head shaking or turns; just straight into the deepest heaviest flow.
>
> The problem with hot dog bait is that the river is filled with soft
shelled
> turtles. They will home in like cruise missiles from 40 yards away. They
> must have great smell and eyesight. They are also very dexterous with
their
> claws, and will snatch the bait right from the hook (or cut narrow "V"
> notches with their narrow snout) They fight well, too, but a nuisance to
> unhook with huge claws and hissing all the time. You come to hate those
> turtles, tearing up your line and stealing bait. (they run a foot to 18
> inches across)
>
> The river also holds monster walleye, bass, muskie/pike, and striper
> hybrids. I fish for them when I can afford minnows or leeches. The
> walleyes are seasonal, preferring cold spring water, but early in the year
> they hold in the shade under the bridge. (four lanes with 6 foot walk on
> each side) A crawler or minnow drifted underneath when the sun is high is
> excellent strategy.
>
> Where did all these fish come from?....haha 12 years ago we had a "100
year"
> flood and the fish hatchery upstream released everything into the river.
> Some species didn't last (need too much gravel bottom to spawn), but most
> will always be here, I suppose. Haha you should have seen the fly
fishermen
> chasing the brood trout from the hatchery; 15-20 pound brown trout,
> steelhead and stripers. All of these fish were scheduled to be planted
into
> rivers running into the Great Lakes, but we had them all trapped by dams,
30
> river miles inland.
>
> Huron River between Ann Arbor and Belleville Michigan. USA (Just stay off
my
> bridge)
> I'll take my camera down in a couple months and post some pics.
>
> Pepperoni
>
>

Pepperoni
February 5th, 2004, 10:39 AM
I've seen those sites before. Monsters, aren't they. We don't have
anything quite like the wels.

There is a new record catfish caught last month; taken alive and put on
live display in Texas.
121+ pound Blue cat,
http://espn.go.com/outdoors/fishing/s/f_fea_cat_blue_record_121-8_Burkhead.html
http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/fish/infish/hatchery/tffc/newsrel/bigbluecat.htm

The worlds largest catfish, however , is the Mekong catfish.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/05/0515_030515_giantcatfish.html

"Activeviii" > wrote in message
...
> I take it you from USA pepperoni.
>
>
> have a look at a European wells cat.
>
> they are getting landed on rod and line in France and Spain to over 200LB
> andwell over 7 foot long.
>
> snap of rigs are one of the best, 70lb main line with a 100+braided
leader.
> a single hook to a livebait, row the bait out into the river and tie a
weak
> link of 30lb line from the marker buoy to your main line and then take
your
> rods back to shore.
>
> when you get a hit from a cat you wait until the weak link brakes then the
> fun starts.
>
> http://www.catfishgroup.co.uk/page2.html
>
> have a look as big rons fish on here to get the size
>
> All the best.
> Phil.

Todd Norris
February 7th, 2004, 10:34 PM
Hi,

Reading over some of these posts. I guess
I can add my two cents worth,in answering Zoe's question. Hooking into
a very large catfish means a very long dogged underwater
fight. Especially with channel or blue catfish.
I have seen men use meduim size carp for
bait to catch catfish up to 100 pounds,when
trotlining or jugging. They are faster then you
think, I had caught a 25 pound channel cat and
found two rainbow trout in the stomach. They
were about two pounds in weight.
Also fresh caught catfish is very delicious on
table.
Trouter

Zoe
February 14th, 2004, 06:45 PM
A friend of mine was out Piking a couple of weeks ago. Whole Mackerel as
bait, 20lb line, 3lb test curve rod.

Apparently, just after midnight he had a screaming run, he struck into it,
and it just kept running! Eventually the fish took all the line of his
spool and snapped the line.

Sounds like those Cats are one hell or a fish! What gear do you use to
tackle them?



"Todd Norris" > wrote in message
...
>
> Hi,
>
> Reading over some of these posts. I guess
> I can add my two cents worth,in answering Zoe's question. Hooking into
> a very large catfish means a very long dogged underwater
> fight. Especially with channel or blue catfish.
> I have seen men use meduim size carp for
> bait to catch catfish up to 100 pounds,when
> trotlining or jugging. They are faster then you
> think, I had caught a 25 pound channel cat and
> found two rainbow trout in the stomach. They
> were about two pounds in weight.
> Also fresh caught catfish is very delicious on
> table.
> Trouter
>

Todd Norris
February 15th, 2004, 11:29 PM
I usually use a heavy spinning or spincast
rods and with reels that have 20 to 25 lb test
line. Terminal gear is a heavy egg sinker and
two hooks baited small baitfish or nightcrawler
worms.
Best time to fish is at night here in Michigan
for the big channel catfish or blues.

Trouter