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Mike
Thrussell - All about attitude
I learnt early on in my fishing career to always fish at
100% effort. It stands to reason that a good fish, maybe your
only fish on a bad day, can come right on the last cast. This
doesn't just apply to short sessions of a few hours, I also
follow this philosophy on prolonged trips of a few days or
even a couple of weeks.
It's these longer periods of intense fishing that can see
you fall in to a lazy mood that sees your fishing productivity
fall, especially when tiredness creeps in. Yes, I know fishing
should be fun, but you owe it to yourself to make some memories
of big fish and special places, and you can only do that by
concentrating hard. It's all about attitude!
This was my intention on a recent trip to the Gambia in West
Africa. I knew the fishing was hot there, and that I had a
chance of catching species I hadn't come across before. That
made my motivation easy to hold on to, and I intended to fish
hard every cast right through each and every session to make
the most of the opportunities in front of me. Luckily, the
hard work paid off.
Not that much is known about this piece of coast. Many of
the fish have local names that make written identification
difficult. Research before leaving suggested that the captain
fish might be the same threadfin salmon found in Australian
waters. Something called a ninebones appeared to be a Ladyfish,
and the "Jacks" looked like a familiar friend the
jack crevalle. The list was endless!
The area holding the captain fish was typical threadfin country.
Right in the mouth of the mighty Gambia River itself is a
rock ledge falling into rough ground and big boulders with
a fast tide running over it. The captain fish tend to show
here during the bigger tides either side of low water.
I chose my tackle carefully. A UK style uptide casting rod
9ft 6ins long, a medium sized multiplier loaded with 30lb
line to handle the rocks and fast tide, and a simple sliding
ledger rig with a 4-foot hook length of 60lb line. The hook
had to be strong to hold these fish. I went for the Mustad
Suicide 92554NPN in size 5/0. Baits were whole small mullet
or a local fish called yahboy.
There were two other anglers on the boat. They both missed
early bites and one guy had a fish estimated at just under
40lbs. My rod stayed totally still and unnoticed the whole
morning. Time to do something different.
I lifted the rod and allowed a little line to spill from
the reel holding my thumb on the spool of the multiplier.
After a few seconds, I released a little more line. Some thirty
seconds later I felt a gentle "tap tap" on the rod
tip. I gave a few feet of slack and waited. The line pulled
tight and a big fish took off down tide like a scalded cat.
These fish fight hard near the seabed making long runs, but
will swim in tight circles when they feel the need for a rest.
Several times when I thought the fish was tiring it would
turn back in to the tide and run fast and far. Twice when
at the surface this fish turned back for the seabed and made
it all the way with ease. A frantic 15 minutes of fast action
finally saw the fish at the boat side. It was guessed at 40lbs
and released.
I worked the baits in the same way and was soon in to another
fish. It was hard work continually allowing line off the reel
and occasionally retrieving it when it got too far away, but
that was the successful technique on the day and the effort
in the baking heat was justified with two more fish to well
over 40lbs.
I've since verified the captain fish as true threadfin salmon.
The identical species to those from Australia.
The hard work ethic also bears out in having a range of tackle
set up, immaterial of whether you think you might need it
or not.
On the same trip, even when fishing a big bait for the chance
of big fish, I was also fishing a lighter 8lb outfit, just
to see what was around. This "fun stick" accounted
for cassava to 17lbs, jack crevalle to 8lbs, ninebones (ladyfish),
grouper to double figures, bream like sunpat, plus small stingray,
rock cod, moray eels, mangrove snappers, banded eels and weird
looking butterfish. All fish I wouldn't have caught if I'd
been too lazy to fish two rods.
One of the other guys and myself also stole a brief interlude
fly-fishing for garfish, which appeared by chance and took
a Mustad Crazy Charlie Variant fly fast stripped on the surface.
If we hadn't taken the trouble to set the fly rod up, just
in case, we would have missed the chance of catching them.
Likewise the Mustad Fish Skin Sabiki bait rigs I'd rigged
that proved irresistible to beautiful little tapendal, angelfish
and sardines that lurked around the pylons of a road bridge.
Hard work always seems to eventually bring a reward. None
more so than in fishing. I love the peace, quiet and total
serenity of fishing, sure I do, but I need, want and just
simply enjoy catching fish. Giving 100% effort gives me the
best chance of doing that.
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