Matt Hayes heads for Devon in search of two species that have cast a golden spell on him for more than 15 years...
Very experienced anglers will have one or two waters they'll wax lyrical about. It might be a venue where they caught their first fish, a place where they achieved a landmark capture or water surrounded by great scenery.
I'm lucky to have visited many special places, but among my favourite wild and exotic venues is a commercial fishery in deepest Devon.I'm talking about the Anglers Paradise holiday complex - a regular pilgrimage of mine for more than 15 years.
Paradise was where I caught my first 30lb carp and where I filmed some of my first angling videos, which was obviously a big deal for me at the time. But I was really captivated by two fish species that kept drawing me back. What am I talking about? The fabulous golden tench and golden orfe - the fish that have become trademarks of the fishery.
Planning my trip for this 'Fishing Britain' feature, I realise Anglers Paradise HAD to be on my destination list. Not only is it a special place, not only are its golden fish amazing, but its delights are open to every single one of you. So I loaded the truck, pointed due south and aimed for Paradise.
The pool I focused on for this
trip is called the Specimen
Tench and Golden Orfe Lake, a
1.5 acre pool that's home to big
'goldies'.
Both the golden tench and
golden orfe have topped 8lb and
there is a good head of back up
fish over 5lb.
Having fished this lake several
times, my main target has been
the orfe that swim in its upper
layers. I've caught numerous 5lb
and 6lb fish with the best just an
ounce short of 7lb.
Although I've heard anglers
be disparaging about orfe,
dismissing them as ornamental
oddities, the species is simply an
ide with colour bred into it.
I just don't understand why
it is okay to catch the fish if it's
silver but not alright when it's
golden!
However, what interests me
most about orfe isn't their
colour. No sir. What I find most
beguiling is the challenge they
present.
You see, orfe, just like ide,
spend the vast majority of their
life swimming and feeding in
the upper layers.
Although you can catch the
occasional fish on the bottom,
you'll do far better if you master
catching them near the surface.
This means you need to do
two things.
First, you need to set up a
waggler float designed to fish
on-the-drop and present a slowfalling
hookbait that tempts the
fish with a hookbait slipping
past their faces.
Second - and this is the key
- you've got to get on your feet,
be mobile and look for them.
Obviously, if the water is clear
and the orfe are just under the
surface, you'll be able to see
them very clearly. They look like
huge floating carrots!
But in most lakes, where the
water is at least partly coloured
and the orfe are a little way
below the surface, the signs
you're looking for are less vivid.
With polarising glasses to cut
through the surface glare, you
should spy the ghostly outline
of the fish moving through the
water.
The best description I can
think of is that you're chasing
golden shadows - you can
make out the glowing shape of
the fish without being able to
see its exact detail.
Walking round the lake I
soon spotted a few orfe close
to the star-shaped island in the
middle of the pool.
The fish were holed up inside
the small bays created by the
arms of the island and they
were close to the reeds lining
the bank.
Unlike some visits to the
water, when the orfe have been
rampaging all over the lake,
these fish didn't look like they
were up for a huge feed.
Instead of swimming around
with a purpose, as if hunting
food, these golden shadows
were aimlessly drifting about.
I reckon the layabouts were
sunbathing!
Catching fish in the upper
layers of the water is a style
used by too few anglers.
We've been conditioned to
carefully plumbing up before
we cast out so we can find the
depth and fish accurately on
the bottom. But that doesn't
mean that laying the hookbait
hard on the deck is the right
thing to do every time we
venture bankside.
In warm water conditions
many species, not just orfe,
spend lots of time mooching
about in the mid to upper
water layers.
In summer, once you know
how deep the lake is, it often
pays to fish anywhere except
the bottom.
The detailed diagram (left)
shows you the waggler float rig
I used at Anglers Paradise.
With the water measuring just
over 4ft deep, I set my float at
half-depth and locked the float
with the bulk shot placed at the
base of the float.
To ensure my hookbait then
mimicked the behaviour of the
loosefed maggots, I pinched
two number 10 shot on to the
line half-way to the hook.
I know many anglers find it
strange to put shot on the line
when fishing on-the-drop.
Instead, they don't put any
shot on the line, believing the
hookbait will then behave most
naturally.
While there is some logic
to this, the reality is that a rig
with no shot down the line just
won't behave properly.
As the inset diagram shows
the water resistance against the
sinking line will make it act like
a parachute.
When the large bow forms in
the sinking line, the hookbait
will unnaturally hang in the
water. So, far from looking
tempting to the fish it will
appear very suspicious.
By contrast, the two dust
shot give the rig just enough
weight to cut through the water
and ensure the
hookbait sinks at a
similar speed to the
loosefed maggots,
fired into the water
every minute or so.
Once I'd set up and started to
feed it didn't take long to see
signs of life - tiny splashes and
rings on the surface indicated
small orfe were snatching the
maggots as they landed.
Peering through my polarised
glasses I could see shoals of
tiny orfe, just an inch or two
long, grouped into tight balls
on the surface, ready to pounce
on anything. This is one of the
main problems with maggots
- they aren't selective.
Nevertheless, by spraying 3040
maggots every 45 seconds or
so, I managed to feed through
the tiny fish and spark a steady
supply of orfe between 8oz and
1lb. The big fish were being
strangely elusive, though.
Despite walking round the
lake a couple of times to scan
the water, the big orfe weren't
showing themselves.
In a bid to drag them to my
swim using sheer weight of bait
supply, I stepped up the feed
rate and shallowed up a few
inches.
This had the desired effect
and I brought even more
fish into my swim and
soon had them
fighting for my
food on the
surface.
Although the really big fish
stayed away, I did manage
to catch a number of quality
orfe topped by one weighing
around 2lb. It was a fabulous
fish with bags of spirit and
how any angler can say they
wouldn't like to catch a beauty
like this is beyond me.
By early afternoon I decided to
explore another lake that I've
not fished much before but
which Anglers Paradise owner,
Zyg Gregorek, has repeatedly
told me to try.
Called The Tench Lake, this
really is a product of Zyg's wild
imagination - it's the only lake
in Britain shaped like a tench!
The lake's fish stock is also
out of the ordinary. As well
as holding plenty of tench, it
is also home to thousands of
Zyg's home-bred blue orfe. Yep,
I did say blue orfe!
As I wandered round the
lake, looking for signs of life,
I hit the jackpot.
With the sun high in the sky,
the orfe were sheltering under
the shade of a tree on the island
in the middle of the lake.
In the 'dark' water under the
branches, hundreds of orfe
were milling about with their
pale blue colouration making
them glow under the water.
This was too good to miss and
I was soon in place with my on the-drop
waggler rig.
What followed was one of the
most manic afternoon's fishing
I've ever had. In just 90 hectic
minutes I caught more than
80lb of blue orfe.
Fishing in the top 18 inches of
water, I'd shallowed up to just
the length of the hooklink - 10
inches - within the hour.
They were gorgeous fish too,
averaging over 1lb and running
to over 3lb, beautifully coloured
and pristine.
Some of their heads were
painted with a deep blue
cap and their flanks stained
with a pale silvery-blue wash
- what a welcome addition to a
colourful day's fishing.
With well over 100lb of blue
and golden orfe having come
my way, I decided it was
time to try and complete the
bizarre hat-trick which makes
this place so alluring. I wanted
to catch a golden tench.
I've heard some anglers bemoan
the commercialism of our sport
and fisheries are a common
target of their criticism.
While I can sometimes see
their point of view, commercial
enterprise has brought
overwhelmingly huge benefits to
fishing in the last 20 years.
We've now got a vast number
of new stillwaters to visit, many
offering superb fishing and
facilities a short distance from
home. This has encouraged
newcomers and lapsed anglers
and has given us all some superb
fish to catch.
Among the developments are
a few beacons that really shine
out - Anglers Paradise being one
of them.
In 1977, Zyg Gregorek and his
wife Rose uprooted their family in
London and headed for Devon.
Zyg had a dream of creating
a fishery that offered anglers
superb accommodation and
fishing on one purpose-built site.
At that time, the land he bought
was a jungle of dilapidated and
overgrown land and it took him
more than two years to de-silt, redig
and stock his first pool.
By May 1985 he was ready to
open Anglers Paradise, offering
five villas and one lake for
fishermen wanting a peaceful
holiday catching good quality fish.
But that was just the start of a
great journey that's still on ongoing
process.
Now, in 2007, the last 22
years have seen 32 more villas
and over 30 lakes added to the
original site and Zyg's nearby
Eldorado and Nirvana fisheries.
With almost all the fish on site
being bred, born and reared
by Zyg himself, it's not just the
fishery but also the fish that
have stemmed from this human
dynamo.
I have had great times at
Anglers Paradise and the
spectacular fish you see in this
feature are testament to Zyg and
Rose's determination to create
something special out of nothing.
The third species in my
technicolour trio is arguably
the most spectacular of all.
Golden tench are beauties.
In recent years, fisheries have
responded to angler demand
by stocking these striking fish
so they have become more
widespread. But Zyg has taken
the golden tench concept to a
higher level.
He's bred some amazing
tench - most are a deep golden
orange but some also have red
spots dotted over their flanks
while others have black dots.
Unlike the orfe that shoal
up and feed high in the water,
the tench required a complete
change of approach.
Moving back to the Specimen
Tench and Golden Orfe Lake,
I geared up with a standard
running cage feeder rig.
Tench are a species that feed
almost entirely on the bottom
where they use their telescopic
mouths to dig in the silt, mud
or gravel to root out tiny bugs
and grubs.
But there is one more
characteristic that almost
all tench display - they love
fishmeal and pellets.
In the same way that we've
discovered just how good these
baits are for catching bream,
so it has become common
knowledge that tench also love
a fishmeal diet.
Blending Dynamite Baits'
Marine Pellet groundbait (70%)
and crushed hemp (30%), I had
a mix with a potent fishmeal
pong which bubbled on the
bottom of the lake as hemp oil
burst out of the bait.
This is one of my favourite
mixes as it combines an
attractive smell and taste with
activity to catch their attention.
With a drilled 8mm halibut
pellet loaded on a hair-rigged
hooklink, I had a hookbait that
was resistant to small fish.
Operation golden tench was
ready for take off!
Launching my loaded feeder
towards one of the five bays
on the lake's central island, I
feathered the line pouring off
my reel to drop the feeder deep
inside the bay alongside some
rushes and tiny lilies.
Perfect. Tench love searching
for water snails and other
protein-rich grubs.
With the clock ticking towards
6pm, the sun that had bathed
Devon in it's glow started to
throttle back on the heat. I
sensed 'bite time' charging up
on the rails, but I knew I'd have
to be patient.
Unlike carp, which often
respond straight away to the
influx of fresh bait, tench are
usually more circumspect.
They often
hang off the
bait and
circle
around
a while
before
getting
their
heads
down. I
suspected
it would
take me an
hour to get the fish going.
In the event it took me just
over 30 minutes to get my first
fish, a glorious 4lb-plus golden
tench that 'dad' Zyg was on
hand to witness.
Once I'd got that first
response it was as if the dinner
gong had been rung.
In the last 90 minutes of a
memorable day, I bagged eight
goldies and even one of Zyg's
newest creations, a blue tench!
As the sun sank over Devon
and I slowly gathered my gear
together to make a fish-weary
trudge back to my lodge, I
couldn't help but reflect.
Some 15 years after I
found Paradise, I was
catching the fish that
had first drawn me to
the place. Although
the biggest golden
orfe had given me
the slip, the blue orfe
and technicolour
tench more than
made up for it. Yet
another great day for the
memory banks.
Our thanks to 'Improve your Coarse Fishing' magazine.