Saturday, 21 February 2026

The Tiny River Alne - 101st Chairborne's and Chronosynchronicity

It has been, one of those weeks where the news alone makes you want to retreat to a quiet riverbank with nothing but a loaf of bread, a box of worms and the faint hope that extraterrestrials might at least have the decency to show themselves before teatime. 

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor having his collar felt, UFO files being waved about like a raffle prize at a village fête, former presidents hinting that “they’re real” but apparently not in Area 51 honestly, if little green men did land, they’d probably take one look at us and reverse straight back out of the solar system muttering, “Nope. Not today.” And somewhere in all this cosmic kerfuffle I found myself thinking: yes, take me back to the 90s (fingers crossed), when the biggest mystery was why your maggots had all turned into casters overnight.

Still, while politicians rummage through filing cabinets marked “Definitely Not Aliens,” there are more pressing matters namely, a neglected 800 yards of the River Alne that I had somehow managed to ignore thanks to my cartographical incompetence. 

You see, I had been fishing what I thought was the entire stretch, only to discover—via a chance chinwag with Nic from Avon Angling that I had effectively been operating on half a tank. The point I believed to be “the end” was in fact the halfway mark. Eight hundred yards! That’s not a missed swim or two; that’s practically a small expedition. I’ve seen lesser oversights spark public inquiries.

Now, who doesn’t like exploring a new bit of river? Who doesn’t like roving a small, intimate, slightly moody watercourse that looks as though it was designed by someone with a fondness for bends and overhanging branches? Not I. I cannot sit behind motionless rods like a garden ornament, especially when it’s cold enough to make your tea freeze mid-sip. Ten minutes in a swim, no dithering, no existential debates just in, fish it properly, and if nothing obliges, move on with the brisk determination of a man late for pudding.

My tactics were as subtle as a brick but, in the right conditions, gloriously effective: liquidised bread in the feeder, a small piece of bread on the hook or a couple of worms from my industrious wormery. 

The worms, incidentally, seem to live a more structured and productive life than I do. They compost. They contribute. They don’t read maps incorrectly. I envy them.

The Alne has been up and down more often than a yo-yo in a wind tunnel. One minute it’s fining down beautifully after a flood, the next it’s back to looking like a vat of over-brewed tea. 

It’s enough to make the float-trotters sigh theatrically into their centrepins. 

But small rivers have a saving grace: when they begin to fine down, they reveal their secrets. You can see where the crease forms, where the steadier water tucks in under a far-bank bush, where a dace might sit like a silver coin waiting for a tip.

Ah yes, the dace. The Alne can throw up some clonking specimens when it’s coloured proper shoulders on them, not those apologetic slivers that look like they’ve skipped breakfast. There is something deeply satisfying about a big dace in turbulent water, all shimmer and indignation. 

They don’t so much bite as object. And in my more optimistic moments I allowed myself to picture a chub lurking in the wild stretch one of those broad-headed bruisers that picks up a feeder with the quiet authority of a headmaster confiscating contraband.

The new section felt wilder, less “towny,” as though it had shrugged off the background hum of humanity. Fewer dog walkers offering tactical advice. Fewer metal detectorists asking, “Caught anything?” with that hopeful tone suggesting they might accept one for dinner. Just the river, the trees, and me, stomping about like a mobile bread dispenser.

Roving in such conditions is not merely a tactic; it is a state of mind. You are hunter, gatherer, mildly confused naturalist. You peer into slacks and undercut banks as if expecting a chub to wink back at you. You convince yourself that the next swim always the next swim will produce that decisive pull round. And when it doesn’t, you mutter philosophical observations about water levels and atmospheric pressure, as though delivering a lecture rather than admitting you’ve just blanked again.

But there is hope on the horizon. The weather is due to turn milder next week, which in angling terms is akin to hearing that the buffet has been restocked. Warmer air, steadier levels, and the whispered promise of the Warwickshire Avon being described by an unlettered 'anonymous' blog reader, no less as “barbel soup.” Barbel soup! The very phrase causes the rod to twitch involuntarily. It conjures visions of powerful fish charging downstream, of quivering quivertips and clutches singing like overenthusiastic choirboys, or inebriated head-wand tappers on the snakebite.

And really, after a week of headlines about aliens, secret files, and the general wobbliness of the world, what could be more grounding than a proper bend in the rod? No conspiracy theories, no classified documents just a fish on the line and the honest, uncomplicated thump of life at the end of it.

So yes, let the governments release whatever they’re releasing. Let the skies reveal what they will. I shall be on a small river, marching from swim to swim with a bag of bread and a pocket full of worms, content in the knowledge that while the universe may be vast and mysterious, at least the Alne is only 800 yards longer than I thought. And this time, map in hand (not really), I intend to fish every last yard of it.

Now it wasn’t so much “fishing in the rain” as “standing in a mobile car wash with a rod.” The sort of weather that makes you question your life choices and your waterproofs in equal measure. At one point the rain was coming in horizontally, which is always impressive this far inland, and I briefly considered turning round to check for a sea behind me. Still, it was milder than the recent Siberian nonsense we’ve endured, so I told myself this was practically tropical. Monsoon chic. Very River Alne couture.


Access, as ever on this particular stretch of the River Alne, is not what you’d call “match friendly.” If you’re the sort of chap who travels with a seat box the size of a modest semi-detached and enough attachments to dock with the ISS, you’d have wept quietly at the first stile. This is more a venue for the minimalist, or the terminally stubborn. I opted for stubborn. A pleasant first swim winked at me crease, slack, all very postcard and the fish promptly vacated the parish. They were not in the slack. They were not in the crease. They were, I suspect, in conference elsewhere discussing my arrival.

The river was still hoofing through like it had somewhere important to be, but in these conditions at least you can read it. Big water simplifies things: the fish are where they can breathe without being relocated to Stratford. The next swim had “chub residence” written all over it deep, a tidy back eddy, a gentle slack, and enough cover to conceal a minor scandal. 

I wedged the rod on what I believe was barbed wire (health and safety need not apply) and awaited developments. One shy pluck became a proper melt-down and we were attached. A pleasingly argumentative scrap ensued, all head shakes and dour intent, before a two-pounder slid into the net looking like it had opinions about the whole affair.

Given the visibility somewhere between “pea soup” and “builder’s tea”—I wasn’t about to grumble. Up the stretch I trudged, interrogating likely spots like a damp detective. By the time the rain was doing its sideways trick again, I’d winkled out five chub in cracking nick. The best went 3lb 8oz, which on this bit of the Alne is a fish you nod respectfully at, and another three-pounder came from the same swim while the heavens were emptying buckets with malicious enthusiasm. 

No umbrella. Obviously. We’re not made of sugar, and besides, umbrellas are for people who don’t rest rods on agricultural fencing. So there it was: five solid, winter-toned chub from a river that looked like it wanted to be somewhere else entirely. I was soaked, mildly perforated, and grinning like a man who’s found treasure in a drainage ditch. 

A new stretch walked, a fishing fix administered, and the sort of day that reminds you why we do this in the first place. Jobs a good’un, as they say preferably while wringing out one’s sleeves and checking for livestock-related tetanus. Oh I forgot to mention bread did the business, not even a tap on worm bizarrely. 

Thursday, 19 February 2026

Warwickshire Avon - Kiertravesties and Kakorrhaphiophobia

Fishing, I’ve decided, is essentially a long-running experiment in optimism versus common sense. Last Friday was a fine example of this delicate balance. The Warwickshire Avon had been rising steadily all week, carrying just enough pace and colour to get the imagination working overtime. In my head, hefty chub or barbel (potentially) were queuing up behind every crease, nudging each other out of the way to get at my hookbait.

I seized a late afternoon opportunity with all the enthusiasm of a man who had already pictured the trophy shot. The rods were in the boot, bait prepped, waterproofs reluctantly packed. I even made it to the club car park, which is normally the point of no return. 

Unfortunately, stepping out of the car revealed two degrees of icy reality and rain that felt personally vindictive. The river was charging through like it had somewhere urgent to be, and I quickly concluded that bravery is overrated. The pub, on the other hand with the Wife, was warm and serving decent ale.

By Saturday morning the rivers had risen to such an extent that Noah was probably pricing up timber. There was nowhere remotely fishable unless I fancied freelining from a tree branch. 

Typical then that the weather improved, just to rub it in. So I opted for a lie-in, followed by a family excursion to witness the legendary Flying Scotsman steaming through Henley-in-Arden. The kids had never seen it, and I took it upon myself to deliver a full historical briefing, complete with dramatic hand gestures and references to 100 mph heroics.

We positioned ourselves strategically, which is to say within comfortable range of the station pub. Three pints later, anticipation was high. A distant plume of steam appeared and the unmistakable rhythm of a steam locomotive grew louder. 

This was it British engineering glory in motion. And then it thundered past at speed… towing backwards 🙈. We barely had time to register its existence before it vanished down the line like an embarrassed celebrity avoiding eye contact. Sam looked up at me and asked, “Is that it?” I had no satisfactory answer.

Sunday dissolved into rain and mild regret. I toyed with the idea of attacking the canal for a zander, just to salvage some angling credibility, but the sofa mounted a persuasive counterattack involving wine, and films. 

It was relaxing, certainly, but there’s always that underlying guilt when you suspect the fish might be feeding while you’re horizontal. Anglers are cursed with this peculiar paranoia. The evening meant a good wine, good rum, a movie and a roaring fire, a time to chill in other ways.


No Sunday roast dinner this time (rare), as the night’s culinary virtue signalling began, as it so often does, with the noble intention of “eating well” and ended in a skillet of Pad kaphrao featuring pork belly so crisp it could’ve applied for planning permission, crowned with an egg fried to the structural integrity of a Victorian mill roof arteries aghast, tastebuds euphoric.

One tells oneself this is balance, especially with a forthcoming Glasgow sabbatical looming Sunday into Monday: a wholesome pilgrimage of food, drink, and the sort of enthusiastic excess that requires an elasticated waistband and plausible deniability.

There will be “just a couple” of pints, no doubt escalating into a symposium on fermentation via the Bon Accord and the Inn Deep, before tinnitus with Deep Dish at famous Sub Club reminds my knees that they are no longer undergraduate. Still, one must nourish the soul as well as the cholesterol count; life is short, the pork is crispy, and repentance like the dancefloor will be over far quicker than it began.

Anyway enough of that, this week, however, the Avon began dropping nicely. Not raging, not unfishable just that lovely steady fall that suggests things might be happening beneath the surface. I managed to carve out an hour and a half after work and headed for the Secret Swim, the one where bites are almost suspiciously reliable. Simple tactics were deployed: small lead, large piece of flake sprayed with garlic oil and underarm cast in to the coloured water, minimal fuss. It’s a swim that rewards confidence and punishes overthinking.

Last time out it had produced a 4lb 10oz chub that fought like it owned the postcode. Naturally, I wondered if something larger had moved in during the floods. The first cast settled perfectly into the slack and within minutes the rod tip gave that firm, purposeful nod that every chub angler recognises. No dithering, no tapping, then just a proper pull round that nearly took the rod in !!.



An unmissable bite !!!, that obviously I missed 😆

Still 10 minutes later I had a second chance !!, this time the strike met solid resistance. The fish bored downstream towards the snag with steady authority, not frantic but powerful, head thumping away as if mildly offended by the interruption. Then a broad bronze flank rolled in the current, a fish a fish !!

Not monstrous, not record-breaking, a 3lber or so. But a proper Avon chub, all muscle and disdain. In that instant, the sodden Friday, the flooded rivers, and the backwards steam locomotive were completely forgiven. Fishing has a habit of doing that  hours of inconvenience rewarded by a single, satisfying moment.


The forecast now hints at a positively tropical fourteen degrees. next week, however a cold morning may have nipped the fingers, but the promise of milder air has the barbel anglers twitching. It’s not quite shorts-and-T-shirt weather, but it’s enough to stir hope again. I’ll be watching the levels closely, pretending to exercise restraint.

Because if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that next time — just maybe — it’ll be bigger.

Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Warwickshire Avon - Subconspiratorialism and Seclusionaryness

Well, with the rivers looking less like rivers and more like mobile sections of the North Atlantic that had accidentally taken a wrong turn at Gloucester, fishing had, in the most British understatement possible, been “curtailed somewhat,” which is to say that every stretch of water within sensible driving distance was either the colour of builder’s tea or attempting to annex the nearest towpath, and so when Friday arrived work concluding mercifully at midday like a benevolent headmaster ringing the last bell before summer I found myself faced with that most dangerous of propositions: opportunity. 

The sensible angler inside me, the one who owns far too many rods for a man with only two hands and a slightly unreliable left knee, suggested a speculative wander down the canal for a zander or two, because canals at least have the decency not to rise three feet in an afternoon; but the Avon, swelling faster than my blood pressure when subjected to the six o’clock news and its parade of doom, gloom and men pointing at graphs, was doing its level best to resemble a liquid freight train, and in truth I simply wasn’t feeling it. 

There are days when the piscatorial muse whispers sweet nothings about chub beneath far-bank willows, and then there are days when she shrugs, orders takeaway and tells you to put your feet up, and so it was that I, alone in the house and answerable to no one but the kettle, drew the curtains with theatrical finality, powered up the surround sound system I had installed in a fit of technological optimism back in 2008, and committed myself to cinema rather than cyprinids.

The film in question Sinners, as recommended by my twin brother, who shares both my face, my questionable judgement and well worn liver turned out to be an unexpectedly rich slice of Mississippi-set supernatural mayhem, all juke joints, gangsters and things that go bump in the Delta night, and I must confess it was rather splendid.

The sort of movie that grips you by the lapels and refuses to let go, much like an irate bailiff or a particularly committed barbel; indeed I’d go so far as to say it was one of my favourites in a good long while, and as the bass rumbled through speakers that had previously known only the Shipping Forecast and the occasional overenthusiastic weather bulletin, I felt entirely vindicated in my decision to swap waders for popcorn. 

Outside, of course, the meteorological farce continued unabated, low-pressure systems queuing over the UK as though waiting for discounted pasties, all because a stubborn slab of high pressure had parked itself over Scandinavia like a Volvo abandoned outside a fjord, blocking the usual eastward progress of weather fronts and ensuring that we, down here, received day after day of mizzle, drizzle and full-fat deluge, the rivers remaining emphatically knackered and in no mood to entertain a man with a landing net and misplaced optimism.

And yet, as every angler knows, the soul requires variety, and so it was that Liverpool beckoned, specifically the WAV Garden, where for a solid twelve hours twelve, dear reader, which is roughly the gestation period of a small mammal I found myself enthusiastically rearranging my limbs to the sounds of progressive house DJs, Sasha headlining with the sort of authority normally reserved for monarchs and particularly confident carp, the bass so insistent that one could have navigated to the venue blindfolded, guided solely by the rather large seismic wobble in one’s sternum. 

The covered ground level did its noble best to muffle proceedings for the sake of civic harmony, but even so you could feel it half a mile away, a subterranean heartbeat pulsing through the city, and when proceedings shifted downstairs (Steve Parry one of favourites was playing) into the dark and dingy tunnel club mercifully before the neighbours could marshal their complaints, I was granted a tour of the labyrinthine interior from a well known fella and DJ (Thanks Paul), a temple to rhythm that left me grinning like a newcomer to raving who’d just been transported to a rave in the 1990's. 

It is, I find, a remarkable tonic, this occasional surrender to music and motion; at 53 years of age, when society gently suggests you take up beige hobbies and begin sentences with “back in my day,” there is something gloriously defiant about dancing until the early hours, and the wellbeing boost it provides is not unlike that first savage pull on a rod tip when a fish decides your offering is irresistible proof that one is still, in fact, alive and kicking as is the tinnitus STILL !!

Fishing hovered at the back of my mind throughout, of course it did, because once afflicted we are never truly cured, but I did not miss it that weekend; the rivers would continue their impression of liquid chaos regardless of my presence, and sometimes absence sharpens the appetite better than any groundbait.

Thus it was that a midweek work-from-home day presented itself like a conspiratorial wink from the universe, and I seized the chance for a quick smash-and-grab on the Warwickshire Avon, which, though still high and carrying more debris than a teenager’s bedroom floor, had at least ceased its attempt to relocate entirely to the Midlands. 

With perhaps two viable swims and less than an hour to deploy my dubious cunning and one my slightly off the beaten secret swim, I approached the task with the efficiency of a burglar on a tight schedule, rod assembled in record time, bait introduced with minimal ceremony, every sense tuned to the possibility of a chub lurking behind some crease in the slack water, smug and silver and entirely unaware that a middle-aged man with damp boots and renewed optimism had come calling.

Whether I caught or blanked is almost beside the point, for in truth the joy lay in the opportunism, the snatched hour between spreadsheets and responsibilities, the quiet rebellion of stepping down a muddy bank while colleagues elsewhere refreshed inboxes. 

As I stood there watching the swollen river slide past with deceptive calm, I reflected that life, like angling, is rarely about perfect conditions; it is about choosing your moments, embracing the distractions be they horror films or hedonistic dance floors and returning, when the mood and the river both allow, to the water’s edge with just enough hope to make it interesting.

Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Warwickshire Avon - The Untrodden Pt.48

Dry January is now safely in the rear-view mirror, crushed beneath the mud-terrain tyres of February, and I emerge blinking into the daylight with the faint realisation that sobriety, while technically survivable, is not something I would ever choose recreationally. 

Still, it must be said, it passed with suspicious ease. No white-knuckle cravings, no midnight bargaining with myself in the kitchen, just the quiet satisfaction of knowing that I am, above all else, a stubborn old git. Dry January for me is not wellness; it is resistance training. A ritualistic breaking of the festive feedback loop where Christmas becomes a month-long pub crawl lubricated by mince pies and poor decisions.

Naturally, the Wife did not share my monk-like resolve and required taxi services on a couple of occasions. I provided these with magnanimity, smugness, and the faint moral superiority of a man clutching a bottle of sparkling water while surrounded by slurred karaoke. Willpower, it turns out, is hereditary, and sadly she married into the wrong bloodline. LOL, as the youths say, though they say it without irony and usually while being deeply disappointing.

With the calendar flicked over and the seal broken, it was only right to reacquaint myself with the pub, where a couple of pints of 6.6% Exmoor Beast’s awaited a beer that tastes like it was brewed by someone who hates you personally. 

A proper pint and less than 3 quid in spoons. The kind that doesn’t so much refresh as challenge. This was merely a prelude, however, because Sundays in this house are less “day of rest” and more “low-level endurance event”.

By sunrise I was vertical, and from that moment until six in the evening I did not sit down once. There was fishing to do, errands to run, a pub to attend, football to half-watch, and a Sunday roast to cook for six people which in reality means twelve opinions and zero help. 

Sam’s mate Matthew was present, along with his mother, who had been visiting friends the night before and had somehow wandered into this culinary hostage situation. She looked vaguely alarmed but game, like someone who’d accidentally joined a cult but liked the biscuits.

Before all that domestic theatre, though, there was the river. The Warwickshire Avon a river which, of late, has been performing like a pub band that peaked in 1994. Still there, still capable, but mostly going through the motions. I had hopes for chub, real hopes, the kind that make you ignore recent evidence and tie rigs anyway.

The track down to the syndicate stretch was waterlogged, though I didn’t give it much thought until I was already committed. This is where the Jimny comes into its own. 

Narrow all-terrain tyres, selectable four-wheel drive, low ratio if things get biblical, and weighing approximately the same as a family-sized box of cornflakes, it simply doesn’t care. It revels in adversity. Mud? Puddles? Ruts deep enough to lose a Labrador? Excellent. It scampered through like a mountain goat with a mortgage.

At the top of the stretch I parked, mashed some bread like a medieval peasant, and walked the bank depositing freebies into every slack, crease, and fish-shaped suspicion I could find. The river was still high and coloured oddly not the reassuring brown of honest rain, but that unsettling hue that suggests paperwork and a corporate apology are imminent. 

Then came the foam. Suspicious foam. The sort of foam that doesn’t belong in nature unless something has gone very wrong. No doubt a gift from Severn Trent, who recently hiked my water bill to such a degree that I briefly considered whether the neighbour behind me had been siphoning off my supply to top up a duck pond under cover of darkness. 

We are apparently “heavy users”, which sounds less like a billing category and more like a support group. Dishwasher daily, washing machine constantly, two teenage boys who emit smells previously unknown to science —yes, fine, but £100 a month? Jesus wept. Infrastructure investment, they say. Shareholder dividends, they mean.

This stretch doesn’t see much bait, and the chub, when present, are usually a better-than-average stamp. What I didn’t expect was that after five swims without so much as a tremor, the first fish would be… well… disappointing. Not a monster. Not even pretending. A chub that looked like it had been printed on reduced-quality paper. Another followed, same size, as if they were being issued in pairs.

So, plan B. Or rather, plan Z the last-gasp, most awkward, most swear-inducing swim on the stretch. A snag-ridden horror show where fish go to test your mental resilience. I’d caught chub here before, so I switched to cheesepaste, reasoning that if nothing else, it smells like regret and ambition.

Ten minutes in, a couple of plucks on the one-ounce quiver tip. Then it went properly round, pulling left with intent, and I struck… immediately clouting the large branch to my right like a man fencing an invisible opponent. 

The fish, meanwhile, made a determined bid for the roots on the left. What followed was less “playing a fish” and more “hostage negotiation with violence”. I bullied it, unapologetically, because snag fishing is not the time for politeness.

Eventually it rolled, popped its head up, and slid into the net with all the grace of a defeated tyrant. I thought it might scrape four pounds, but it didn’t quite. Still, a proper chub. A fish with shoulders. A satisfying full stop to the session.

Then it was back to civilisation. Pub visit with the rabble. Errands. Home. Apron on. Dave Seaman on the speakers one of my all-time favourites, a man whose sets have soundtracked more questionable life choices than I care to admit. 

Seladoria parties, Seaman and Steve Parry, conversations that wandered everywhere and nowhere. Three hours and forty minutes of exactly my kind of beats, football murmuring in the background, roast aromas filling the house.

By the time I finally sat down, plate in hand, pint poured, the day felt perfectly complete. Fishing, family, food, music, mild outrage at utility companies all the essential food groups.

And that, really, is what Sundays are for.

Monday, 2 February 2026

The River Leam - Quivertipping and Quasi-philosophising

I fancied a change of scenery for this short morning session, which is angler-speak for “I was bored of the usual places and deluded myself into thinking novelty alone might improve my catch rate.” Thus, I found myself once again standing beside the River Leam, a river I’ve not fished for ages, mainly because of a change of job and the inconvenient reality that I no longer finish work, leap into the car like an escapee from a low-security prison, and arrive at the river fifteen minutes later just as the light begins to fade and the fish presumably alerted by some ancient piscine WhatsApp group decide to feed for precisely fifty-eight minutes before going on strike again. 

Back then, nothing of particular note was caught: a few chub with expressions of mild irritation, the occasional roach that looked as if it had been interrupted mid-thought, and a general sense that I was participating in something deeply traditional and profoundly pointless, which of course is the very essence of river fishing.

The plan, if it could be dignified with such a term, was to fish two of the WBAS stretches and stretch my ageing legs, which much like my tackle still function but occasionally make worrying noises. Last year I averaged 10,000 steps a day over the entire year, which isn’t bad at all for someone who spends a significant portion of life welded to a chair, staring at a computer screen and wondering if this is really what evolution had in mind. 

Roving tactics were therefore employed, partly for fish-finding purposes and partly because standing still for too long now results in joints seizing up like forgotten bait tins. A small feeder filled with liquidised bread was deployed, along with a modest piece of bread on the hook a bait that has fooled fish for centuries and continues to fool anglers into thinking it will solve everything.

The river itself was fining down nicely after having recently been in the fields, which is the riverine equivalent of saying it had been out drinking heavily but was now pulling itself together. The Leam, to its credit, drops fast, and on this occasion it was perfectly fishable a phrase that always sounds optimistic but usually just means “not actively impossible.” The slack by the bridge swim, however, was utterly devoid of interest, life, or any indication that fish had ever existed as a concept, so I roved onwards, performing the familiar angling march of quiet hope interspersed with exaggerated care not to fall in.

In the next swim, something interesting almost happened. A chub or possibly a figment of my imagination appeared to grab the bread on the drop, because the feeder refused to settle properly. I struck heroically into absolutely nothing, which is a skill I have perfected over many years, but the very next cast produced a bite in under a minute and suddenly a fish was on. 

Not the biggest fish, not a river-defining leviathan, but a chub nonetheless, and as all anglers know, scores on the doors. There is something deeply reassuring about actually catching a fish, if only to confirm that one has not completely misunderstood the basic premise of angling.

What followed was a sequence of swims that could best be described as extremely quiet indeed. The sun, however, was rather nice, and this is how rivers get away with things. You forgive them everything when the light hits the water just right and the world briefly looks like a brochure. I settled into the big, deep bay swim the very same swim where I once won a syndicate match, an event that now exists mainly as a personal legend trotted out whenever morale is low. 

After twenty minutes without so much as a twitch, I decided that destiny was clearly elsewhere and headed to the other stretch, only five minutes away, because nothing says optimism like repeatedly uprooting oneself.

That’s the thing with the River Leam: it’s a lovely river, moody and understated, but it’s a 25-minute drive for me, and I’m spoiled by the Arrow and the Alne being less than fifteen minutes away and generally more inclined to provide bites rather than philosophical reflection. Still, variety is the spice of life, or at least the mild seasoning of angling disappointment. 

On the next stretch, I managed a nice chub first cast, following a series of tentative nibbles and quivertip tremors that suggest a fish deeply conflicted about its life choices. I struck more in hope than expectation and discovered a chub was indeed on, leading to a spirited battle in which it attempted to bury itself under my feet amongst some dead reeds, presumably in an effort to end the whole affair quickly. Eventually, it was persuaded otherwise, and that, sadly, was my lot.

I fished several more swims, introduced cheesepaste at one point the olfactory equivalent of shouting into the river but the remaining fish were resolutely uninterested. 

Eventually, I packed up, legs stretched, soul mildly soothed, and expectations once again recalibrated to a sensible level. The Leam hadn’t produced miracles, but it had delivered sunshine, movement, and the comforting reminder that fishing isn’t always about catching although it does help. And besides, there’s always tomorrow… or at least somewhere closer.

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