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The weather that day really did warm up to the point where I could comfortably sit outside in a T-shirt and absorb some overdue rays from the lovely spring sunshine, as I gazed out watching the water I fully expected to see signs of a few carp in the surface layers. My eyes were fixated, scanning for a visual sign, a dark shape or a line of bubbles but It wasn’t long before I could feel the bite of the dropping temperature with the sun setting behind the tall tree’s and be honest I was a little bit surprised having not seen a single sign of carp all afternoon. A few people had also arrived for a nights fishing and with all anglers well spaced out it would be a great opportunity to find out whether anyone saw anything of worth to give me a clue for the rest of my session.
It was a good few weeks before I managed to get back down the lake again with work and family commitments eating up two consecutive weekends. I had a couple of days off planned in over the run up to the Easter bank holiday and I’d planned in a 48hr trip. As you’re probably all too aware the weather was atrocious, with day time temp’s struggling to hit two or three degrees but with the extended daylight hours I thought it would be worth a go anyway. Those who dare and all that.
I’d booked the Wednesday and Thursday off work so I decided to take a trip over to the lake on the Sunday after what had been a very warm day to see if I could work out what the fish were up to. The lake looked completely different in the late afternoon sunshine with warm oranges and reds reflecting off the still water’s surface. There was plenty of sludge floating around on the surface where the weather had warmed the bottom of the lake causing it to gas up and more evidently the amount of insect activity had gone mental, clearly the warm weather had caused some kind of fly hatch.
When I finished work on the Tuesday I went straight to the lake and engulfing a large portion of sausage and chips on route and on arrival was greeted with the pleasant surprise of only two cars in the car park, the only problem being there was an angler set up in the swim I’d pre-baited a few days previously. I did a few circuits of the lake and the other area I’d baited in the south westerly corner just looked lifeless so I set up in an area of the lake where I’d seen the fish showing on the Sunday evening, it gave me a good view of the area I’d baited and the opportunity to observe whether anything would give it’s presence away as the easterly wind lapped into the swim.
The day was extremely warm and I even managed to sit outside in nothing a T-shirt and get some well required sun into my skin. I got a massive boost in the middle of the afternoon when I caught sight of a low twenty common swim through the shallow water, making the most of the warm sunshine at the front of the swim, it was my first proper sighting of a fish for a long while and if there was one around I was more than content that a few of his scaly friends wouldn’t be too far away either.
The next thing I knew was the right hand rod was shrieking at me, again just pulling up tight and almost bouncing. I ran out into the cold wind a drizzle and struck into the sea serpent on the end and was a bit surprised as it felt like I’d hooked the bottom with nothing move, then the bottom started moving and became a very slow and heavy feeling fish. For a while I just pumped it toward me but then what ever it was decided to but a few yards between me and it and slowly but powerfully strip line from the spool heading out into the lake. At this point my mind started to wonder, had I hooked one of the lakes big commons. This procedure repeated itself another three or four times, neither of us wanting to give an inch. My hand were freezing but after about 15 minutes I felt the fish come up the marginal shelf and I saw a big pale shape ghost past me in the shallow margins. From that point I knew it was the lakes big common and it huge shoulders broke surface. I jumped into the margins and scooped with my ESP sniper net and engulfed my prize. I quickly grabbed the tail too check the top lobe which is missing and although it was clear from the bulk of the carp it I had to convince myself I’d done it. With the help of another member the fish was weighed in the trakker retention sling at 40.00lb exactly and photographed in all her fine winter colours, big gold scales and a glowing red belly. My quest for my first 40lb common was over and after giving her a big sloppy kiss I reluctantly slipped her back into her cold watery home to make some body else’s dream come true.
