Now there are wellness retreats costing thousands of pounds where earnest people sit cross-legged beside scented candles attempting to discover inner peace. Personally, I prefer a stick float, a pint of maggots, and a slightly damp meadow somewhere along an English river. The beauty of trotting a float is that absolutely nothing much happens.
In modern life, this is a rare luxury. Emails don't trot downstream. Meetings don't trot downstream. Utility bills certainly don't trot downstream. A stick float, however, drifts away with the current carrying all worldly concerns towards the next county.
The process is gloriously simple. Cast upstream, mend the line, watch the float. Repeat until tea time or darkness, whichever arrives first. It is difficult to feel stressed when concentrating on a tiny painted tip wobbling through a crease beneath an overhanging willow.
Summer is the finest season for it. The river shrinks into polite proportions, dragonflies patrol like miniature helicopters, and every cow in the county appears determined to supervise proceedings from the opposite bank. The scent of warm grass drifts through the air while swallows skim the surface collecting insects with outrageous efficiency.
Then there are the fish. Most of them are not famous. The average trotting session produces a cast of modest performers. Dace arrive in cheerful shoals. Small chub dash about with the confidence of fish three times their size. Roach gleam briefly in the sunshine before returning to their watery affairs.
Yet every run through contains possibility.
That is the great secret.
The next trot might produce exactly the same four-ounce dace as the previous twenty-five trots. Or it might produce something rather more substantial. A proper chub could emerge from beneath the far-bank nettles. A surprise barbel may lumber into the swim. Occasionally the float vanishes with such determination that one's heart immediately attempts to leave via the throat.
This possibility transforms the ordinary into the extraordinary.
For hours nothing remarkable occurs. Then suddenly something remarkable occurs.
Life, if we're honest, works in much the same way.
The float itself becomes a companion. After several hours together you begin to recognise its habits. You know how it behaves in the fast water, how it hesitates over gravel, how it nods politely through the deeper glide. You watch it with the affection usually reserved for elderly Labradors and reliable kettles. Lunch tastes better by a river.
Nobody knows why. A slightly squashed cheese sandwich consumed on a grassy bank somehow rivals restaurant cuisine. The tea from a flask acquires medicinal properties. Even a biscuit retrieved from the bottom of a tackle bag seems entirely acceptable.
Of course, there are occasional setbacks.
A tree may intercept a cast despite standing in exactly the same place all morning. A swan may decide your swim is ideal for a lengthy inspection. A cow may stare at you continuously for three hours, apparently attempting to solve a complex mathematical problem involving anglers.
These things merely add character.
By the end of the day the catch may amount to a dozen small fish and one respectable specimen. Yet the real harvest is something less tangible. The shoulders relax. The mind quietens. The endless chatter of modern life fades into the background hum of flowing water.
You leave the river convinced that next time the big one will certainly arrive.
It probably won't.
But then again, it might.
And that possibility is enough to send a stick float trotting downstream all over again.
Now there comes a point in every angler's life when he stops listening to experts and starts listening to his own aches and pains. For me, that moment arrived when I could no longer see a No.8 shot without assistance from modern science. Once upon a time I happily copied complicated shotting patterns from magazines. The diagrams looked less like fishing tackle and more like blueprints for a suspension bridge.
Nowadays I look at tiny shot with deep suspicion. If I can't see it without squinting, there's a fair chance it isn't going on my line. My answer is simple. A small stick float, a 1-gram olivette and a couple of float stops solve most of life's problems. The olivette sits neatly where I want it. It doesn't slide about, it doesn't tangle and it doesn't require the eyesight of a peregrine falcon to install.
Being a design engineer, I like things that are tidy. If a component stays where it should and performs its function properly, I'm generally happy. This is why shirt-button shotting patterns make me slightly uncomfortable. I fully accept that they work brilliantly, but my engineering brain starts asking awkward questions. Every pinched shot looks like another potential weak point. While other anglers are catching fish, I'm conducting an imaginary failure analysis.
The experts, of course, know better than I do. That's why they write books and articles while I spend half my time looking for things I've dropped in the grass. John Allerton back in the day could probably glance at a swim and instantly know the perfect shotting arrangement. I glance at a swim and wonder whether I packed enough biscuits. The fish themselves seem wonderfully unconcerned. They have never once asked for a detailed breakdown of my shotting pattern.
A dace has never refused my bait because it disapproved of my loading arrangement. Nor has a chub suggested improvements to the presentation. So I'll stick with my olivette system. It suits my eyesight, suits my temperament and keeps the whole rig refreshingly simple.
Will it catch every fish in the river? Probably not. Then again, neither will I.
What it does provide is confidence. And confidence catches far more fish than a packet of microscopic shot I can't actually see, anyway enough of this nonsense I'm down the syndicate stretch with some maggots to drown I better get fishing without the waffle.
Now there are fishing sessions, and then there are fishing sessions. This one started with me splashing about knee-deep in a swim kindly prepared by fellow syndicate member George, who had clearly decided that if I wanted fish, I ought to work for them first. Waders on, dignity off, and into the river I went. The swim itself was a masterpiece of inconvenience.
Reeds lurked everywhere, seemingly with a personal grudge against floats. Every cast felt like threading a needle whilst riding a bicycle. Thankfully, an olivette down the line allowed the rig to slip free often enough to keep me from launching the rod into the nearest hedge.
The fish, however, were in a cooperative mood. Maggots rained in and dace, roach and the occasional ambitious chublet queued up as if tickets were being handed out.
Bites arrived in manic bursts before vanishing completely, only to return twenty minutes later as though they'd all gone for a committee meeting.
At one point I connected with something considerably larger. Unfortunately, the fish had clearly read a different script. It headed for some tree roots to my left with alarming purpose. I attempted to stop it. The fish disagreed. The hook pulled and I was left staring at the water whilst inventing several new theories about what it might have been.
The swim did at least provide shelter from the blazing sun. While sensible people were roasting elsewhere, I was comfortably hidden away, looking every bit like a riverbank hermit who'd lost track of both time and personal hygiene.
By half past nine I packed away and prepared to head home. The session had been enjoyable enough and common sense suggested calling it a day. Fortunately, common sense has never played a major role in my fishing. With dusk approaching, I wandered into another swim where Sean had thoughtfully trimmed back some branches.
A few robin red pellets were dispatched alongside a PVA bag with freebies, with a 15mm robin red with a subtle paste wrap on an hair, and within fifteen minutes the rod erupted in a full-scale meltdown. The fish had practically hooked itself and was heading off with my tackle at alarming speed.
For a brief moment I felt in control. Then the fish found a snag. The snag found the fish. I found despair. Despite briefly feeling the fish still attached, the inevitable happened and everything went solid.
Game over. At that point many anglers would have gone home. I nearly joined them. The car was parked nearby. The evening was fading. The fishing gods had apparently spoken. Then again, they often mumble, so I decided to ignore them and cast out once more, this time well away from the snag.
The evening settled into one of those magical river moments where everything feels possible.
Birds chirped, the river glided past and I began mentally rehearsing my drive home. Naturally, that was the exact moment the rod tip gave two unmistakable bangs before wrenching round with authority.
This was no chub.
This was a barbel.
The fish charged off on three powerful runs, each one reminding me that barbel possess approximately twice the horsepower nature intended.
Eventually it surfaced and immediately my heart rate doubled. It was a proper fish. Seeing the landing net, it decided one final escape attempt was necessary and tore off again.
Thankfully, after that last effort the fish seemed to accept that negotiations were over. Moments later it slipped over the net cord and into the mesh.
What a fish.
After resting it in the net, I convinced myself it might scrape double figures. Anglers are optimistic creatures by nature. The scales eventually settled at 9lb 8oz. Not quite the magical ten, but a cracking opening-season barbel by any sensible measure. The funniest part? Three syndicate members had been there the previous evening targeting bigger fish at dusk and all blanked. Meanwhile I was halfway to the car before changing my mind and stumbling into success.
As ever, fishing remains the only pastime where poor decision-making can occasionally be rewarded with a personal triumph. Had I gone home when common sense suggested, I'd have missed the fish of the session. Sometimes it really is a case of right place, right time and just enough stubbornness to stay for one last cast.
