Nothing excites Matt Hayes more than snatching an hour or two with a simple floating rig to catch carp cruising on the surface...
I love this time of year because it delivers some of
the most exhilarating fishing you can experience.
Surface fishing for carp is simply brilliant.
When the sun shines and the carp are coaxed to the
top of the water I reach for a floater rod, a bag of dog
biscuits and hit the waterside for a few hours of rodbending
fun.
Surface fishing is one of the few forms of coarse angling
where you can see a fish take your hookbait - it's so
exciting to see a carpy mouth engulf your bait with a
gurgling swirl.
I have to say, though, I'm surprised how few people
bother to surface-fish in summer.
Time and again I hear anglers marvelling at the carpshaped
'submarines' drifting on the surface in front of them
- but then they do nothing to catch them
Despite the fish encouraging a floating bait to be cast , the
majority of anglers' baits still languish on the bottom of the
lake, as far away from the cruising carp as possible!
I ask you, if you were fishing for any other species and saw
them in the water in front of you, would you try to present
a bait straight at them? Of course you would.
So, in this month's feature I want to encourage you to gear
up for a spot of floater fishing.
The water is warm, the time is right, the fish are feeding.
Don't miss the boat.
SHORT OF TIME? GO FLOATER FISHING
Summer floater fishing is
worth trying if all you can do
is snatch an afternoon or a few
hours in the evening.
The latter half of the day,
when the water is at its
warmest and the fish have
been coaxed to the top by the
sun, is often the best period for
catching off the top.
When I'm up to my eyes
in work and I've only got a
few hours to fish then floater
fishing is often the first thing I
think about.
Many is the time I've grabbed
essential bits of kit, hurled
them into my truck and shot
down to my mate Ed Brown's
fishery at Furnace Mill, near
Kidderminster.
This day-ticket complex is
open to anyone to fish and
every summer I manage to
snatch a few evenings down
there and quickly knock out a
few carp on floaters.
This isn't a unique water. Like
lots of public waters it offers
cheap evening tickets (£4.50 for
four hours; call 01299 266777
or 07860 570080 for details)
so you can even floater fish at
the best time of the day for less
money. Bargain!
SURFACE FISHING - GET MOBILE
One of the things that attracts
me to floater fishing is its
simplicity.
Compared to most styles of
carping you don't need much
tackle. In fact, the less you carry
and the more mobile you are,
the better. This allows you to
keep on the move and catch
fish from different swims.
With so little gear to weigh
me down I can comfortably
wander round a lake searching
for groups of fish on the
surface.
Like small river chubbing,
where you go roving to find
pods of fish, you surface fish for
carp in the same way.
Simply walk around the
water looking for signs of
surface-feeding carp.
Sometimes fish are obvious,
you can see them swirling at
floating bugs or you can see
large, dark shapes ghosting
through the water.
At other times, especially
if the water has a ripple that
reduces visibility, you must
spot subtle signs of life.
Small creases in the ripples,
called flat spots, indicate the
movement of a fish just below
the surface. Sometimes you'll
need to spot the tip of a fin, or
a fraction of a fish's back peek
above the waterline.
Either way, the carp in most
lakes will be up for a floater on
most days in summer.
IT ISN'T COMPLICATED
I suspect some anglers are
discouraged from trying floater
fishing due to a false perception
that it's a specialist tactic and
the preserve of long-stay carp
anglers.
While I know some anglers
tie up convoluted rigs dripping
in bells and whistles, my rig is a
doddle to construct.
The 16-step sequence (below)
shows how just a few bits are
slotted together to form a rig
that will perform very well.
I reckon you'll buy the bits of
kit you need for about £15.
When you've tied this rig
- and believe me anyone can.
The inline controller float,
a Total Fishing Gear Surface
Missile, lies on the water with
the hooklink laid behind it.
When a fish takes my cutdown
floating boilie hookbait
it pricks itself on the hook and
pulls against the controller.
With the float weighing 40g
and the water around the float
adding to the resistance, fish
often hook themselves.
On most waters you don't
need to strike at a bite because
the fish hooks itself, but
sometimes fish eject the
hookbait and you have to be on
your mettle to strike the bite.
Some days at Furnace Mill I
sit on my hands and wait for
the fish to hook themselves.
But on days when they're
feeding cautiously, I have to
strike at every bite.
Curiously enough, it is often
the days when the carp eat
most noisily that signify when
they are feeding cautiously.
Quiet slurpers are usually
confidently feeding fish that
hook themselves.
However, carp that
explosively snatch and swirl
on the top are often the ones
sucking in and spitting out the
bait in a flash. You must strike
at these the instant their mouth
closes over the bait.
PICK THE RIGHT BAITS
Floating cat biscuits, Sugar
Puffs, bread and floating pellets
are great surface baits, but the
good ol' dog biscuit takes some
beating especially when it's
been doused in some attractive
flavouring.
As for hookbaits, while you
can use a mixer identical to the
loosefeed, I don't do this.
Mixer biscuits swell up and
soften when they are in the
water, they're easily knocked
off your rig and they sit
suspiciously lower in the water
as they take on extra moisture.
A better option is to get a
buoyant pop-up boilie and
butcher it with some scissors
until it resembles the profile of
a mixer.
Once threaded on to your rig
you've got a durable bait that
stays on the hair for hours and
which looks like a freebie.
GETTING THEM FEEDING
The length and type of the
hooklink is one variable that
affects your bite rate. You've got
to strike a balance between
getting takes, hooking fish and
landing them.
As a rule, the longer your
hooklink the more likely fish
will eat your hookbait because
it's further from your controller.
Balanced against this, the
shorter the hooklink the easier
it is for you to strike a bite and
the more likely it is the fish will
pull the line tight to the
controller and hook itself.
I start with a six-foot long
hooklink but if fish shy away
from the bait and controller I
may extend it up to nine feet.
In contrast, if fish are feeding
really confidently, a five or even
four foot hooklink may selfhook
the fish better.
The hooklink material and
the hook you use is also
important. With the rig
silhouetted against the surface
and the sun backlighting it,
carp get a great opportunity to
inspect your gear.
Heavy hooks that make your
bait sit suspiciously low in the
water, or thick lines that sink or
look like rope stretching across
the water, cut your chances.
Use a modern copolymer
hooklink material often used
by match anglers. I use my own
TF Gear Starving Whippet in
8lb breaking strain, but there
are other brands you can try.
As for hooks, a size 10 or 12
Drennan Carbon Specimen is
my favourite. It is strong
enough to land a decent carp
but not so heavy that it weighs
down the hookbait.
USING THE WIND
The final aspect that makes a
difference to your catches is how
you link your feeding pattern to
the prevailing breeze.
Surface feeding fish are
programmed to follow the wind
- they know the breeze will blow
grubs across the water.
If you want to make use of this
feeding behaviour fish with the
wind coming over your shoulder
so it blows away from you and
across the water.
This allows you to catapult out
mixers and drift them across the
lake, creating a 'lane' of floaters
to intercept surface feeders over a
wide area. Carp tend to work back
along the chain of floaters, eating
their way towards you.
If your rig is drifting on the
breeze along with the freebies
your hookbait is likely to be
taken without hesitation.
This means a floating mainline
is best, or you can make the line
float by spraying it with line
floatant or pole elastic lubricant.
You must also keep flicking
(mending) your mainline to keep
a tight line between your rod and
the controller float. This helps
you strike more bites and allows
the float to drift more naturally.
FITTING THE JIGSAW
At Furnace Mill I wandered
round the 20-peg Willow Pool
looking for groups of fish on the
surface.
Sitting down with the wind
coming from behind me, I
catapulted in 10 mixers every
two or three minutes.
With the breeze pushing the
baits across the water I soon had
a chain of feed baits tripping
across the pool and within 10
minutes the fish started feeding.
At the outer edge of the feed
line, the carp noisily sucked
at the baits, a sign they were
nervous about feeding on top.
But as more fish were attracted
to the area and competition
intensified, the carp began
taking baits more cleanly.
Within 35 minutes they were
taking baits one after the other
and a pristine 9lb common carp
was first to make a mistake.
Striking the instant it's mouth
closed over my bait, I enjoyed a
great battle on a 12ft barbel rod.
Five minutes later I was in
action again, with another
common, and over the next four
hours I bagged several more
carp, each one giving me a great
scrap on light gear.
This expereince summed up
the pleasure I get from floater
fishing. With such little tackle
and effort required I caught
some good fish in the few hours
I had to spare.
I didn't have to spend hours
getting my gear ready, or
sorting it out when I got home.
I grabbed a bag, some bait, a rod
and hit the bank.
If you want to use a few hours
fishing to maximum effect and
enjoyment, gear up for a spot of
floater fishing. It's quick, simple
and enthralling and it's what
makes summer great.
Our thanks to 'Improve your Coarse Fishing' magazine.