Evening Tope Fishing off Ilfracombe

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I was delighted to be invited to join a few friends on Dan Welch’s new boat Predator 2.  Dan had spotted a window of opportunity with light winds forecast over the evening high water. Strong winds were forecast to sweep in overnight irradicating any boat fishing trips over the weekend.

Five of us climbed onto Predator 2 at 3.30pm. Skipper Dan Welch, Dave Welsh, Derek Stevens, Jonathon Stanway and myself.

The sea was calm and the water clear as we set out from Ilfracombe’s harbour. I relished the familiar scenery of North Devon’s rugged coast and landmarks. It is always refreshing to leave the hustle and bustle of the town to reach the tranquil detachment of the open sea.

We stopped for a drift off the tunnels outfalls catching a few mackerel for bait. We then steamed out to drift over a few reefs for bass. I stuck with the feathers and ensured that we had a full bucket of fresh bait for the main event.

Our intended target was tope over the high water slack. After  several drifts without bass Dan suggested we head out and drop anchor. The tide would be running quite hard but would soon ease ensuring that we capitalised on the maximum time for tope action.

I always feel a sense of anticipation as the boat settles at anchor and the engine is cut. A peaceful silence descends, just the gentle slurp of water against the boats hull and the occasional cry of a seagull.

Several manx shearwaters were circling gracefully above the water. I was unsure if they were shearwaters but a quick google as I write this confirmed my identification. I was fascinated to learn that the manx shearwater are long lived birds sometimes living beyond fifty years of age. A fifty year old bird has it is estimated flown over 600,000 miles on migration throughout its life.

         Looking up the Bristol Channel the dark towering cliffs of Great Hangman and Holdstone Down were capped with wisps of white mist. The sea was oily calm, thousands of jelly fish drifted past in the clear water. To the West weak sunshine struggled to break through a sky of grey.

         I prepared a mackerel flapper and sent it into the depths with 1lb 8oz of lead to combat the strong tide. With all our baits in place we chatted of our appreciation of the evening and the prospects ahead. A couple of dogfish rattled the rod tips and were brought to the surface often just hanging onto the baits letting go at the side of the boat.

                  Dan was first to hook into a hard fighting tope bringing a fish of perhaps twenty five pounds to the boat after a good tussle in the strong tide.

         Jonathon hooked a good fish that came off after a few seconds. I felt a sharp rap on my rod tip and paid out a couple of yards of line. I waited until the rod tip ripped over hard and tightened into a powerful fish that headed off down tide at a rate of knots ripping several yards of line from the reel. I leant back bending the rod, relishing the powerful force at the end of the line.

         After the initial powerful runs the fish started to succumb to constant pressure and I pumped a heavy weight to the surface. From time to time there came heavy lunges and I was forced to give a little line. As the fish neared the boat we peered into the depths to catch a glimpse of the sleek shark like creature.

         The tope was a good fish and caused a few anxious moments as it thrashed at the surface demolishing Dan’s tailor in the process. Plan B of a large landing net eventually secured the prize.

         The fish was carefully weighed in Dan’s capacious weigh sling registering a weight of 36lb. After a quick photo the tope was returned and swam strongly away.

         The next couple of hours saw tope caught by all on board most around 25lb.  Several fish were also lost as hook holds gave way or in one case the braid was severed as the fish probably rolled in the line.

Jonathon Stanway holds a fine tope

Dave Welch with good tope

         Derek Steven’s was thrilled to catch his first tope and told me that he has fished all over the world but still relishes the beauty of the North Devon coast that is undoubtedly his home territory.

Derek Stevens is delighted with his first tope

         Weak sunshine broke through the grey sky illuminating the seascape. We chatted making plans for future fishing forays all keen to join with Dan on Predator 2. At present Dan is only doing a few trips for mates with a limited number of short range local charters. In the longer term Dan will expand his Chartering to compliment Ilfracombe’s fleet. Offering exciting options for both local and visiting anglers as Ilfracombe’s reputation as a recreational boat fishing destination grows.

Skipper of Predator 2 Dan Welch

         As the tidal flow increased and holding bottom became difficult Dan suggested it was time to head back to port. The boat bounced over the calm water seagulls following in the slipstream as always keen to savour any discarded bait.

 

 

65lb 4oz Catfish from Paradise

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Anglers Paradise
Report from Zenia Gregorek 
PB CATFISH
Well done to 5C’s member Joe Dietrich who caught a personal best 65lb 4oz Catfish from Anglers Eldorado’s Carp & Cat Lake 2 as well as a few more!!
Joe shared –
“Had a good session on the cats, ended up with five landed and 2 that fell off, 24lb, 28lb, 32lb, 38lb and the big one at 65lb 4oz! My brother in law Neil had a small one of 17lb as his first ever cat so a great session even though we had some mental thunderstorms! No buckets needed as got soaked several times thanks!”
Congratulations Joe 😸🎣👏🏻🥳
Not sure if you’re going to get away from the buckets though…A PB is a PB…💦🪣💦😸😆
Book with 📲 @gocatchfish gocatchfish and please read the rules before fishing…someone was caught using a bait boat and casting over other anglers lines and also had a friend with them that hadn’t booked…rule breaking is not tolerated at our fishery and will result in a ban at the Baliff’s discretion‼️
Simply stick to the rules, respect the others around you and everyone can enjoy their fishing.

COMBE MARTIN SAC – Open Lure Competition Result

(Above) Seth Tuson won Combe Martin SACs Open Lure Fishing competition with a fine bass measuring 62cm. The fish was tempted on a black back sparkle Chappy surface lure from High Street Tackle

Ross Stanway registered several bass up to 56cm and I caught four bass up to 52cm.

The competitors were hampered by strong North West Winds on the Saturday making fishing difficult across large sections of the coast.

(Above) Seth Tusons winning bass
(Above) Nick Phillips with a good bass caught in shallow water

A small bass caught in the surf

 

(Above) Ross Stanway with one of several bass he caught during the competition

 

Norway: Wild salmon numbers crash

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Many thanks to Richard Wilson for another thought provoking  article. Click on link to read more of Richards articles.

Norway: Wild salmon numbers crash

The politics of profit before conservation.

 

The facts are indisputable. Norwegian salmon runs are shrinking dramatically. The Norwegian Environment Agency says this year’s run is a lot less than half of what it should be – and that 2023 was 30% down on 2022. This is a long-term trend going back years.

The Oslo government’s response is to ban rod fishing on 33 rivers. And it seems likely this ban will spread, although the phrase fiddling while Rome burns springs to mind.

The root problem is that for decades wild salmon stocks have been negligently mismanaged by the Norwegian Government – a confession that’s missing from the finger-pointing list of guilty parties it blames for the collapse. Ellen Hambr, the Environment Agency’s director, says the big threat is climate change and then a range of human activities that include hydro and other river barriers, disease, commercial exploitation and last a bracketed after-thought; (fish farming) – the gorilla on the table.

Some Norwegians underscore this position (it’s the climate, stupid) by pointing to Sweden where there is very little salmon farming and a similar decline in the salmon run. They don’t mention that the almost land-locked Baltic Sea, home to Sweden’s salmon, is becoming a cesspit with a huge and growing dead zone caused by pollution. The Baltic is not a good place to be a salmon.

Climate change, to state the obvious, is universal. Warmer river temperatures reduce smolt size which in turn increases mortality and reduces the numbers returning successfully to sea. Once back in the ocean, the record-high temperatures in the North Atlantic suppress food chains and further impact salmon growth and health. Salmon are an indicator species for climate impacts and, for this reason, their future looks grim.

So we need to act on climate, but that’s not something Norway can do on its own. Cue hand-wringing and empathetic green tears. The poor salmon are victims of a global crisis, what’s a small country meant to do? Shrug,Sigh. More hand-wringing.

So what is the Norwegian Government up to? Why flag climate change, on which Norway has a decent track record but little influence, and treat fish farming as a bracketed afterthought?

As ever, the answer is money. Fish farming is a mainstay of the Norwegian economy. The Government licences an industry that produces half of all the world’s farmed salmon, worth $8b a year (2nd only to its oil and gas earnings). That’s before factoring in the benefits to the domestic economy. It’s not a business with a good track record in anything except generating profits. Last year the fish-farm mortality rate was nearly 63m fish (17% of the total stock). Would you trust these cowboys with your river? How about a chicken farm?

Sea lice, the major by-product of salmon farming, don’t restrict themselves to killing millions of farmed salmon. Many of the fish pens are in Fjords that connect ocean-run Atlantic Salmon with their home rivers, bringing wild fish into contact with farmed lice. According to the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research, fish-farm lice killed an estimated 50,000 wild salmon in 2019 – as many as 30% of the run in some rivers. Since then, fish farming has grown.

Aquaculture has devasting impacts on wild salmon populations and it’s the gorilla on the table the government can’t or won’t see.

Closing rivers can help, and it delivers a financial body blow for fisheries, hotels, guides and all the small businesses that depend on their summer trade from anglers. However, their collective contribution to Norway’s economy is about US$1.25b. A drop in the Atlantic when compared with the wealth-generating fish farms. So no prizes for guessing why wild salmon are sacrificed to keep their farmed cousins in business.

The ban on the 33 rivers is open-ended, and it is assumed it will remain in place until the stocks show sufficient recovery. This could be never, because if Hambr is right and it’s down mostly to climate change, then closing a handful of rivers won’t improve anything much. If, instead, the government curbs the shit-show fish farms then there can be a significant revival, albeit within the context of slower long-term climate decline.

The choice facing the Norwegian government is simple. It can carry on with business as usual and hurry the wild salmon into marginal irrelevance, or it can improve it’s own act. And it’s not just the fish farms that fall within their purview. Take Catch and Release: In 2023, 51,000 out of the 70,000 rod-caught Atlantic Salmon in Norway were killed. What’s that about?

So the bottom line for saving the Atlantic Salmon is money, and the Norwegian government won’t achieve anything much until it reigns in its multi-billion $ fish-farming money monster. Meanwhile, I’m hoping the gorilla on the table will finally throw a temper tantrum and bloody some noses. We can but hope.

There is one small consolation: For the fish that successfully make the run up-river this year the prospects are good. River flows are healthy and, so far, water temperatures are lower than in recent years. The conditions are favourable for those fish that make it to the redds. And in 33 rivers there will also be, because of the bans, more returning smolts for the sea lice to latch onto. We can thank the Norwegian Government for that.

TREVOR TELLING MEMORIAL COMPETITION – POSTPONED

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*REMINDER… We are really disappointed to have to do this, but unfortunately circumstances beyond our control mean we will have to re-arrange the memorial for another date, possibly in October.
Jeff will be in touch with all of you that have booked boats or bank fishing on the 7th July to see what you want to do with your tickets, the lake will be open as usual for those of you wishing to fish the day as normal…

PB MONSTER CAT FROM NIRVANA

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Anglers Paradise
PB MONSTER CAT FROM NIRVANA
Ryan Cottle joined us for the first time with his partner, and he set his targets to catch a Golden Tench and a 50lb+ Catfish and he smashed both!!
Ryan obliterated his previous PB Cat of 30lbs and managed to land this monster Cat at 70lbs from the Nirvana’s Specimen Cat Lake
Ryan shared –
“First time down to anglers paradise after years of watching it on the great rod race, featuring two my favourite anglers Matt Hayes and Mick Brown. I Had 3 objectives, to catch a tench & a 50lb Catfish!
Having caught my Tench the first day, I headed over to the specimen catfish lake for the night. Fishing the bottom corner swim, feeding halibut pellet and krill boilie. Suddenly I hooked what felt like a monster!! After hooking the fish at 1:15 and landing it at 2am it was surely a giant. Toby (the bailiff) was fishing across from me and was on hand to take pictures and a video of the release . Below are the pictures of the 70lb beast of the night.
Caught on a 28mm krill boilie topped with corn.”

COMBE MARTIN SAC – SUMMER UPDATE 2024

Its half way through the year; a good time to put out an update on club events. What’s happened and what is planned for the rest of the year.

I think its fair to say that many sea angling clubs are going through a difficult time. Times are changing and it seems that COVID had a lasting impact on the angling scene and perhaps society as a whole.

Combe Martin SAC are one of the longest standing sea angling clubs in North Devon established back in 1962. At the end of last year our membership was around forty, Nick will give details in his update.

At the start of the year in February the club launched a species league to encourage participation in the Ilfracombe area and a sector of the club that offers a bit of fun and community. The club has a serious side with a dedicated band of  successful anglers chasing the big specimens. Whilst we need to cater for the hardcore angler we also need to encourage new blood and perhaps cater for the older generation who can no longer hop around on the rocks like mountain goats.

Thanks must go to Toby Bassett whose energy and passion has invigorated a new section of the club. Amazingly club members have caught 32 species from the pier since February 1st. At present Toby Bassett is leading the league with 29 species. Runners up are Ross Stanway and Dan Welch with  23 species each. Solly Welch is third with 14 species and Lenny Lake forth with 13 species. Paul Lorrimore and Gary Prout fifth on 12 species and Ted Childs sixth on 10.

         Apologies if I have made any errors I would ask all members of the group to list their species with their images.

         The league is sponsored by several local business including High Street Tackle, Turton’s Butchers, Ilfracombe Aquarium and numerous others. I will organise a get together with Toby to formulate things a bit more. We try and have a pop up fishing event each month alternating between Sunday mornings and Thursday evenings. The first few have attracted a good number of members. The last one clashed with a strong wind and summer business. I did manage a mackerel and a few blennies. The Autumn months should see a surge in species and it would be good if club members can get past fifty species.  The tally so far below! This is quite an achievement and it is fascinating what can be caught with some anglers dropping down to size 20 hooks to tempt the mini species.

Club Species total

Common Shanny
Rock Goby
Pouting
Whiting
Conger
dogfish
ballan wrasse
plaice
pollock
shore rockling
tompot blenny
scorpion fish
poor cod
dab
cling fish
small eyed ray
thick lipped grey mullet
3 B Rockling
corkwing wrasse
bass
spotted ray
bull huss
spurdog
garfish
Leapord goby
Anchovy
top knot
montagu’s blenny
dragonette
Pilchard
turbot
grey gurnard

The clubs specimen fishing has been good with  the clubs dedicated anglers catching some superb fish. Kyle Bishop seems to be in a league of his own recording 15 specimens so far this year. Including spurdog to 15lb 3oz, cod of 18lb 5oz, tope of 36lb 15oz, bull huss 10lb 5oz, smoothound 13lb 4oz and blonde ray 10lb 3oz.  Fish of the winter was Kyles cod of 18lb 5oz a specimen rating of 152.6%. Fish of the Spring was Kevin Legge’s conger of 26lb 9oz. Leading the summer so far is Ollie Passmore with a stunning gilt head bream of 6lb 10oz.

         The clubs competitions were well attended early in the year but have dropped off as the summer approaches. The Putsborough Open attracted thirty anglers from across the West Country and the meet up at the end revealed that it had been an excellent night with most competitors registering fish including smoothound, small eyed ray, blonde ray, bull huss and the inevitable dogfish. Winner was Simon Springell with smoothound of 12lb 2oz. The club would like to thank sponsors of the event Sakuma and Quay Sports. Full results of this competition and all other competitions can be found on North Devon Angling News. https://www.northdevonanglingnews.co.uk/2024/05/19/combe-martin-sac-putsborough-open-2024-3/

         Peter Robinson has done a sterling job in trying to organise club boat trips. Sadly the weather has conspired to cancel a couple. We  did get out in early May with Steve Webber and enjoyed a great day with good numbers of ray brought to the boat.

https://www.northdevonanglingnews.co.uk/2024/05/16/out-of-minehead-ray-and-hounds-with-cmsac/

         The clubs boat fishing activitys should receive a boost with club member Daniel Welch now operating out of Ilfracombe with is charter boat Predator 2.

We have several events to come throughout the rest of the year. The Ilfracombe Fun and Harbour Species league continues with pop up fishing competitions in July and August along with the Fun Fishing Event on September 1st.

         The clubs bass lure fishing league competition sponsored by High Street Tackle is well underway after a slow start with bass hard to find. The competition is for the best five bass by length. Current leader is Reece Woolgar with three bass for 175.5 cm. Runner up at present is Mark Drewer with two bass for 130.5 cm.

         An Open shore lure fishing competition is being held on July 5th, 6th, 7th. Fishing commences at Midnight. Entry is £10 winner takes all for the longest bass. Book in via club pages and contacts or at High Street Tackle.  Meet up for prize giving at Ilfracombe Pier 6.00pm

         July and August – Summer League best three specimens mixed species. Prize to be announced from local sponsors.

August 10th – Summer Evening Fish
Fishing 6.00pm to 11:30pm £10.00 Entry
– Meet up Ilfracombe Pier Midnight

Very Best wishes to all Club members from myself (Wayne Thomas – Club Chairman) and Nick Phillips Club Secretary)

SECRETARYS COMMENTS

Thank you Wayne for an excellent round up of Club activities so far this year.

Membership does fluctuate slightly year on year but we are at a strong point now with membership already at the forty mark, only halfway through the club’s year.

I do get enquiries on how to join the club and on our website are details of our BACS and don’t forget members can of course leave membership monies and details with Danny at High Street Tackle, Ilfracombe and of course with Craig at The Braunton Bait Box. The website contains our calendar, specimen and minimum size lists and details on up and coming events. An interesting area is the history of the club, which will be updated soon. The website is new to me so bear with me in some areas.

We are still members of The Angling Trust and Wyvern Division and members can benefit from this including the award scheme and knowing that a national body is working to help protect our sport in many ways.

I can only reiterate your thoughts and agree that so far this year club events have exceeded expectations especially the targeting species around Ilfracombe Pier which has generated a great interest. This can only bode well for our Fun Fishing event on the Pier in September. Of course our Putsborough competition went very well back in May, so many thanks to all those involved, especially all at Putsborough.

There are some great events coming up in our calendar with the Lure Fishing Weekend, Lyn Fish Mullet Weekend and of course our Flounder competition in November which of course always creates interest. Don’t forget running through the summer is our Lure Fishing League.