Finding chub in winter with the rivers cold, running fast and often heavily coloured is not so daunting as it would first appear. It is to a large extent merely a natural progression from summer chub fishing.
It is just reward for the countless hours spent spotting and becoming familiar with the river's character when it is was running clear, when the deeps and shallow, snags and clear runs, weed-beds and gravel bars were all plainly visible.
Therefore those who have done their homework and studied the river exhaustively will know exactly where to look. They will find that most of the choice 'feature' swims which held chub during the summer will also produce throughout the coldest months.
Certain swims swims beneath road bridges, mill and weir pools, trees overhanging acute bends, dense lines of trees, especially those whose trailing lower branches collect rafts of flotsam, rotting weed, reed stems and the like, these are the absolute certain winter chub haunts.
They in fact contain far greater numbers of fish when temperatures are low and the shelter of summer weed throughout the river has been killed off by heavy frosts and dissipated by flood water.
It stands to reason that chub which were spread throughout the shallow runs both up and downstream of feature swims only a few months back will not now wish to feel vulnerable. They fall back or move up and pack into the nearest sizeable feature in which they feel comfortable.
Where trees are sparse, a single large overhanging willow might provide protection for a disproportionately large population of chub, certainly enough to keep you busy all day, whereas in the summer that same tree might shelter just a quartet of chub and warrant merely a couple of casts before moving on.
And this is what I particularly like about winter chub fishing. Certain swims, even in small to medium-sized rivers, provide the opportunity of sitting there for most of the day and catching a number of fish. For this session though that was unlikely as the river was banging through and with a frost overnight roving would be the key to finding fish.
Tomorrow's looking good.
ReplyDeleteA trickle of warm rain today, temperatures soaring...
does look good,fat chance I'd get out though :( my father-in-law is off to sunnier climes and big family get-together
DeleteConditions are beginning to look excellent for Barbel, I suspect the Chub will still feed.
ReplyDeleteMight try and get out in the week if I can
ReplyDelete