Now there are, blog readers, days in angling when one feels touched lightly, reverently, almost suspiciously by the invisible hand of piscatorial destiny. Days when the float dips with the punctuality of a Swiss train, the fish queue politely beneath your peg like well-mannered theatre-goers, and even the wind seems to whisper, “Go on then, have another one.”
And then there are days like this.
Days when your workplace IT infrastructure collapses with the quiet dignity of a soggy Rich Tea biscuit, and you find yourself staring into the abyss of a login screen that refuses—point blank—to acknowledge your existence. A screen so indifferent it might as well have sighed audibly and muttered, “Not today, mate.”
Our corporate vessel, once a proud ocean liner of productivity and synergy, currently sits somewhere between “adrift” and “being gently nudged toward relevance by a man in a borrowed kayak.” Systems flicker in and out of life like haunted Christmas lights, while hushed conversations circulate about a benchmarking document yes, a benchmarking document being assembled by myself and two equally weary engineers. A document so vast, so unnecessarily thorough, that it may yet be entered into the annals of history as The Most Expensive PowerPoint Ever Created by People Who’d Rather Be Fishing.
But then—glory be—CATIA returned.
Not in triumph. Not with fanfare. More in the manner of a slightly embarrassed guest who left a party early and has now crept back in through the kitchen pretending nothing happened. Still, it was enough. Enough to convince management that progress was occurring. Enough to convince me that I could make a dignified exit without being chased down the corridor by someone wielding a spreadsheet.
And so, with the urgency of a man escaping both digital despair and impending responsibility, I bundled the gear into the car and set off for that most enchanting of destinations: Tramp Alley.
Now, let us be clear. Tramp Alley is not—nor has it ever been—the sort of place that features in glossy angling magazines accompanied by sepia-toned sunrise photography and poetic captions about “nature’s quiet embrace.” No. Tramp Alley is a canal stretch that looks like it has witnessed several minor crimes, at least one major misunderstanding, and possibly a low-budget science experiment involving eels and regret.
The towpath itself is a rich tapestry of humanity. Dog walkers with dogs that appear to be walking them. Cyclists moving at speeds suggesting either urgency or poor planning. Joggers who look as though they’re being pursued by existential dread. And, of course, the occasional nocturnal philosopher who may or may not be arguing with a traffic cone.
It is, in short, character-building.
But—and this is crucial—there are fish.
Proper fish.
Roach with the sort of shoulders that suggest a disciplined regime of canal-based resistance training. Hybrids that look like they’ve made questionable life choices but are committed to them nonetheless. And the occasional chub—broad, knowing, and faintly judgmental like a retired pub landlord who’s seen everything and approved of very little.
I arrived with purpose. Also with wind. Quite a lot of wind, in fact, which had apparently taken a personal interest in my float control. Undeterred (or perhaps simply stubborn), I assembled the delightfully agricultural overdepth float setup: a 2SSG foam pellet waggler perched optimistically on the surface, with an AA shot anchoring matters somewhere near the Earth’s core.
It is not a refined method.
It is, however, a confident one.
Cast tight to features—overhanging branches, submerged mysteries, and at least one shopping trolley that looked like it had given up on life sometime around 2007—and present bread where fish feel safe and anglers feel mildly concerned about their surroundings.
Hookbait: bread.
Feed: liquidised bread.
Philosophy: “Let’s see what happens.”
A couple of teenagers were already fishing nearby, which was genuinely heartening. They reported missed bites always a comforting sign that fish exist, even if they’re currently laughing at someone else.
I nodded sagely, as though I too had experienced bites that day, and wandered off to a stretch known for producing decent roach.
I fed several swims with the enthusiasm of a man who believes in outcomes. Then I waited.
And waited.
And waited some more.
Half an hour passed without so much as a twitch. At one point, a lure angler appeared, as if summoned by the collective disappointment of the canal. He delivered a sobering report: years of struggle, rumours of electrofishing, predators now rarer than a functioning printer in the office. It was, frankly, not the pep talk I needed.
Still, I persisted. Because that’s what we do. We persist. We stare at motionless floats and convince ourselves that any second now something magical will occur.
Two hours later, I had achieved precisely nothing—an accomplishment that mirrored my earlier workday with alarming symmetry.
And so, with the quiet dignity of a man reaching for his “get out of jail” option, I packed down and shuffled back toward the car, pausing only at a last-chance swim known to harbour a mixed bag of opportunists: hybrids, roach, and the odd chub with ambitions.
The bread went out.
Five minutes later—five!—the float gave a confident, almost theatrical bob before vanishing beneath the surface like it had remembered an urgent appointment elsewhere.
I struck.
Contact.
At last, something alive, something substantial, something that pulled back with the sort of authority that immediately erases two hours of existential doubt. There were head shakes—serious ones—the kind that make you think, “Ah. Now then. This could be the roach. The roach.”
It was not the roach.
It was a chub.
A perfectly respectable, slightly smug, entirely uninvited chub.
Not the target. Not the dream. But in that moment—after the day I’d had—it might as well have been a personal endorsement from the angling gods themselves.
And you know what?
That would do me.
