I'm sure you like me have seen chub that would easily smash your own PB (mine is 6lb 2oz) by a mile and the most recent sighting was the same time Sam and I spotted 'Barbara the Barbel' another fish that would smash my 12lb 14oz PB, I tried and failed to catch that as well despite putting the effort in (thus far).
This chub was massive however it was circling the piece of bread on the surface without taking it just to tease me I'm sure. Two fins and all that. ๐
What do these monster chub eat? Do they feed exclusively on vegetable matter, upon minute organisms like daphnia or upon larvae or nymphs of various kinds? Do they consume molluscs, beetles and other insects? Or do they eat other smaller fish, including their own fry?
Quite probably, they feed-as all fish do-mainly upon the type of food naturally available to them and variations in their feeding habits are related not only to the availability of such food in different rivers but are also influenced by seasonal variations in the abundance of different foods.
The indifference with which chub often regard an angler's baits can almost certainly be attributed to an abundance of natural foods or to a process of 'education' as the result of being hooked once or twice during their early years of growth.
Some idea of how difficult it is to catch one of these monster chub can be gained from the experiences of Richard Walker who once found an 8lb 2oz chub floating dead in the river Ouse.'It was difficult,' he said, 'to know why it had died. Perhaps it was old age; there was certainly nothing starved-looking about it. It had reached an enormous size in a river that has been fished by some of the best anglers in the country.'
Another monster, he reported, could sometimes be seen cruising slowly to and fro through the clear sunlit water but no- one could catch it. 'What it lives on,' he said, 'I really do not know.'
And there perhaps is the kernel of the problem. What do these monster chub eat? Do they feed exclusively on vegetable matter, upon minute organisms like daphnia or upon larvae or nymphs of various kinds? Do they consume molluscs, beetles and other insects? Or do they eat other smaller fish, including their own fry?
Quite probably, they feed-as all fish do-mainly upon the type of food naturally available to them and variations in their feeding habits are related not only to the availability of such food in different rivers but are also influenced by seasonal variations in the abundance of different foods. The indifference with which chub often regard an angler's baits can almost certainly be attributed to an abundance of natural foods or to a process of 'education' as the result of being hooked once or twice during their early years of growth.
So why, it could be asked, do some of these monsters eventually succumb to an angler's bait? Old age and loss of ability to find food probably bring about the downfall of some of them, while others are caught when a shortage of natural foods, brought about by over-population of the water or pollution, causes them to turn temporarily to angler's baits.
Yet others are caught when an abundance of offerings from anglers in the form of maggots or other baits results in a temporary loss of their natural caution. Instinctive reaction, similar to that shown by a salmon when it seizes a fly or spinner, may also account for a few succumbing to various baits, but whatever the explanation may be, certainly far more remain uncaught than are ever landed.
There begs the question by accident or design, you see study of catches of specimen chub reveals that a high proportion are caught by anglers who were not fishing exclusively for chub, which might suggest that the angler who relies upon luck alone is just as likely to catch a specimen as he who seeks them deliberately.
Such a conclusion would however be false, as for every angler who catches a specimen by luck there are many thousands who fish their whole lives through without catching one, and many others who sometimes hook one, only to lose it through using inadequate tackle. In contrast, the angler who deliberately seeks specimens not only finds them more consistently but is also more likely to land them successfully because he is using tackle of appropriate strength.
The odds against any angler catching a real monster are very great but it is possible to reduce them by a considered approach to the task.The first step is obviously to attempt to locate them by sight but if the colour and depth of the water makes this difficult or impossible it is a good plan to fish all likely swims patiently and methodically, using only those baits that are least attractive to small fish.
Really big chub can be found in many different types of swim but are seldom far away from a hiding-place. The overgrown snaggy swims that are so often passed by are the kind that big chub favour more than any other.
If chub show signs of wariness to the common baits an unusual one should be tried (look back at my blog I've tried a fair few of them ๐); either one that can be found in and around the water, such as a small frog or crayfish, or a bait that is completely strange to them such as one of the seed-baits or a meat-bait.A sucker fish ? Pahhhhh !!! already a proven chub bait !!
This will sometimes bring success when all else has failed.In those waters where night fishing is allowed the possibility that specimen chub might be caught more easily after dark is worth experiment, especially in rivers that are very clear. There is a definite increase of feeding activity at dusk and the specimen-sized chub are then more likely to be feeding in open water.
Anyway for this session, I was going to go fishing after all so stop with the waffle, anyway I was down at an area I've not fished for a good while. I didn't have long sadly before curfew time but 1. I wanted to christen my new rod which I will be using for bigger baits for chub, oh and it has got a nice glowing white tip which I like, and 2. I wanted to check out some of the trotting swims for some future sessions.
So a roving session this which was rather quite productive as the further I got down the stretch the fish were getting bigger and the bites more frequent. The best went 4lb 2 ounces and I had something like 7 in total in less than a few hours, sadly no MONSTERS for me today, just the humdrum and one decent one on the bread.
Nic from Avon Angling was bagging up trotting maggots on another section of the Avon and to be honest one of the swims I would have rather being doing that instead. Sadly my fishing time has been curtailed of late and that's not going to improve any time soon with work as it is. I would like to build up a swim but those sessions are few and far between these days, however this roving session was most welcome I must admit even though it wasn't nearly long enough.
Still I shouldn't complain I do get out more than most, anyway heading back to the car I fished the little stream after scaling down and despite the clear stream and the fact I could see the bottom, a few maggot munchers in ten minutes finished the session off. The Avon is a cracking colour at the minute and a nice height, 'make hay' and all that, fill your boots.