First though before the tide got really moving we decided to have a bash at the blennies, it was great fun lowering our power isome along side rocks had the wee blighters sticking there heads out and pouncing on our hooks, most came adrift on the strike but a few stuck.
After half an hour we decided to get our heads down to try and tackle the bass, hours went buy as we thrashed the sea in various corners with our clousers , to no avail, still we kept our heads up and carried on. Then a splash caught my eye followed by a fish clearing the water, I immediately thought seatrout, Brian reckoned bass.
Anyway it gave us renewed enthusiasm and after a move brian hooked into a bass, it was really good to see, he had his second and third before I managed my first, but they kept coming steady for an hour or so, nothing big just typical school bass but great fun, it feels like boom or bust type fishing at times.
The sport then began to subside as the offshore wind gathered pace , and we decided to call it a day fairly contented with our days fishing. It was nice just to catch some bass as Brian pointed out it had been over a year since we last did so.
Like a coat of arms |
Nice outing, thanks for bringing it to us.
ReplyDeleteHow are those bass as table fare?
hi alan, its always a pleasure. apparently they are excellent eating , so much so there plight may be threatened by that. i dont think though i could bring myself to kill one, we have a size limit in the uk, and unfortunately though some ignore it and take everything, even just to sell , there also very slow growing fish and takes a while to get to sexual maturity, so my ethics tell me to return them.
ReplyDeleteLooks like you done well boys Good stuff :)
ReplyDeleteThanks George it was nice to cast a fly rod again.
ReplyDelete