notable absence

The fish in this picture is a stand-in for the one I want to show you. Oh so badly want to show you. It's similar, the scenario is similar. A wild brown trout from the same river catchment, caught by me, accidentally and out of season, while fishing tenkara for in-season grayling. There the similarity ends. Because the trout I want to show you is about five times bigger. 

It out-smarts me before I can get a photo. This is a shame because out of season or not, it's the biggest wild brownie I've ever caught, by any method, and an absolute monster for the river in question. A yard long, scaled from my net, if mere numbers could do justice to such a magnificent fish. And the problem is, it's way too big to fit into my scoop net, which up until just now seemed quite a big scoop net.

In all honesty I'm not even sure I can claim I've caught it all, as it stays in my net only momentarily, half in - half out, before flipping swiftly back into the river, snapping the 5lb tippet as if mere formality. It looks for all the world like a torpedo with spots as it runs past my waders, showing me who really is boss in this river. Today it isn't me. On closer inspection I see that the point fly in my grayling team has snagged in the mesh, allowing the trout to snap its short, taught, fluorocarbon leash. My little barbless kebari was only lip hooked though, so most likely shed in that same instant, or shortly after. 

Anyway, I didn't actually touch the fish, and even if I did it would still be out of season, so I guess it doesn't count. But there again, my friend fishing with me says it was in the net so it does count after all, close season or no. My ego is feeling fragile so I'm inclined to believe him

All of which leaves me with a number of burning questions, not least of which is that I can't actually work out if I'm happy or sad. I think that writing this might be a kind of therapy to help me find the answer.

Happy that I connected with such a rare creature and successfully played a fish of this size to the net with tenkara. I'm pretty sure too that I got the job done more quickly than many western anglers would, comprehensively dispelling the myth that tenkara is by default harder on the fish than running-line tackle. It's worth noting though that I'm fishing with the Hellbender, a big fish rod from Brent J Auger that has proven its worth time and again. 

Nevertheless less this was a  powerful fish and smart with it, boring deep and making several runs towards the rapid water in mid-channel. This would surely have parted my line with the weight of water-drag alone. Except that I've read the advice on fighting big fish with tenkara, I've even deployed it once or twice myself before (though not quite at this magnitude) and guess what? The advice is sage, it works. 

I step back and take the fish away from the area where it was first hooked, I apply side strain to turn each run it makes for heavy water because I know if it gets there I'm smoked. So I allow my fish to cruise around in the calmer slack water for a while instead of piling on the pressure, and this seems to calm it right down. With the lightest grip of a 'soft hand' I can now draw the fish to my net. All of the above goes so smoothly that I'm lulled into a false sense of security, so that now I am already planning my hero shot in self-congratulation. Except Fish has different ideas. And looking back I can't help thinking that Fish was just biding its time. Oh well, I guess you don't get this big by being a dumb-ass.      

Postscript

There is an interesting twist to this tale. My fishing buddy and witness on the day had also fished the same spot a few weeks earlier. He too caught and landed a wild brownie there of epic proportions on western gear. The local guide with him that day said that he had never seen a fish that big in this river. We are still waiting for the guide's photo's but he seems reluctant to part with them.

A rare beast indeed, and all the more likely that mine was a recapture of the same fish. My buddy thinks this likely and so do I. So we know where it lives in winter, but targeting out of season is out of the question, and the river is a totally different place come spring, with habits changing after breeding season and the first proper bug hatches. 

Many say that a fish of this size will be almost exclusively a predator of smaller fish, so my little kebari seems hardly worth getting out of bed for. Except that I don't think the predator theory is all of the truth. Even so it must be pure fluke that I drifted my fly right on its nose, as the water was fast and coloured that day and I can't believe the fish moved much to hunt down my fly. 

Before you cry 'streamer!', they are banned on this beat, so I'm resigned to the strong possibility that this was a once and for all time fish, the like of which may never grace my net again (well almost). Respect.    






Comments

  1. Good story! Hard luck, it happened to me...too big for the Net! Anyway the Kurasu did the job, must give you confidence for the future ☺ Interesting point about it's catchability in the warmer months when there are plenty of fry about.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Neil! Yes it was a confidence booster, just hope I get the chance of a rematch!

      Delete
  2. Oh man! I love stories like this more than catching big fish. You will never know. A much better memory than catching that is, if you catch big fish now and then. Better yet is when your heavy handed friend breaks one off trying to help you. Then you have a reason to rob him the rest of your days.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It all adds to the drama! .. and serves as a reminder that nothing is ever really a done deal..

      Delete
  3. What a wonderful story, I would say you "caught" it. My metric is my hand or net has to touch the fish... Anything else is a long distance C&R :)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment