Accounts of East Sussex Fishermens Carp fishing experiences.
6:05 am - Arrived at Fishery
Me, my brother Matt, and our mate Rob pulled up into the Normanhurst
Lake car park early Saturday morning. We grabbed our gear out the boot,
dipped our nets and began the long walk to the lake. After walking for
10-15 minutes through the woods we finally reached the edge of the wooded
lake. There was a light mist swirling across the lake and the sky looked
clear.
6:17am – Investigated the lake
I decided to walk around the lake to see if I could see any activity,
and to find a good swim. I dropped my gear and started to walk around
the lake, I soon saw we were the only ones on the lake.
6:25 am – Found a swim
We decided to fish the swims that we first arrived at. The three swims
had access to the large open water, overhanging trees and bushes, lilly
pads and reeds in the margins.
6:30 am – Threw some dog biscuits out
I decided to throw some dog biscuits out as I always like to do when
I go carp fishing. I threw some out in the open in front of me, some
to the left of me, some to the right of me, and some in the margins
just in front of me.
6:35 am – Set-up rods
I began setting up my rods. I set-up both rods up with a ledgered bolt
rig and a hair rig with a long hair. I hooked one peach flavoured boilie
to one hair and then tied a PVA string of peach flavoured boilies to
the rig, with some of the boilies broken in half so as to open the flavour
up to attract the carp. I set the second rod up on an identical set-up
but with two chocolate peanut flavoured boilies and a PVA string of
chocolate peanut flavoured boilies tied to the rig.
6:40 am – Carp slurping dog biscuits
Just as I had finished setting up my rods, a carp appeared on the surface
about 15 metres out in front of me, slightly to the right, slurping
up the dog biscuits. He wasn’t hanging back, he couldn’t
get them quick enough.
6:45 am – Quick change of tactics
I wasn’t going to miss out on this, I quickly removed the peach
boilie rig and began quickly setting up a very small float with a dog
biscuit. I didn’t want to spook this fish, so I set the rod up
well away from the waters edge, and this was the reason for using a
very small float, I wanted it to make as little splash as possible when
I cast it in the water.
6:49 am – Cast into the lilies
I decided to flick the dog biscuit into the lilies in the margin about
3 metres in front of me. Perfect, the dog biscuit was sat floating on
the surface just on the edge of the lilies and the float had landed
on a lily pad which had meant no splash. I hid myself behind a bush
so the carp would not see me if it got near the bait.
6:54 am – Hooked into a big one!!!
The carp was still mooching around slurping up any dog biscuits he could
find and he was heading my way. My heart started racing, this carp had
a very big mouth and was about 5 dog biscuits away from my bait. 5…..4…..3….slurp,
I struck the rod and the carp took off towards the trees on the far
bank, tearing line off the reel like it wasn’t there, this felt
like a big fish. After about 10 minutes of fighting the fish, it finally
gave up the battle.
7:05 am - Landed the fish
I lifted the netted carp out of the water onto my unhooking mat, unhooked
the fish, and began weighing the fish. It weighed in at 20lb 6oz, it
was my first 20lb fish.
10:30 am - Lots of activity in the middle of the lake
There was a lot of activity in the middle of the lake, carp cruising the surface and feeding bubbles.
11:05 - Moved swim
I decided to move swim so that I could try and latch onto some of the carp I could see out in the middle of the lake. I set both rods up using the original set-ups, both ledgered bolt rigs with strings of PVA boilies.
3:29 pm - Screaming run
The monkey climber shot up, the alarm was screaming and line was being taken.
3:30 pm - Hooked into another big one!!!
I struck into the fish and it felt like a big fish once again. After battling with the fish for 5 minutes or so, the fish finally found its way into my net. I pulled the fish from the water, placed it on my unhooking mat, unhooked it, and began to weigh it. This was a fat carp. The scales read 18lb 09oz.
6:50 pm - Called it a day
We decided to call it a day, the boys had caught a tench between them and were bored and frustrated, I'd had a good day anyway.
Please send written accounts of your carp fishing experiences to support@fishe.net