Lac Chateau Cavagnac August 2009

Aug 18 2009 2 Comments »

Nash Lac Chateau Cavagnac August 2009

Introduction

I had decided earlier in 2009 that I would treat myself and my 12 year old son James to a trip to France, but I was looking for somewhere that meant I didn’t need to go out and buy two sets of rods, bedchairs, bivvies etc and also I did not particularly want to drive there either.

So hunting around on the web I found Nash Lac Cavagnac situated in the South West of France and only an hour and a half flight from Stansted Airport. I phoned up and booked us in for the week beginning 7th August to coincide with James’s school summer holidays and work commitments. Flights were also booked via Ryan Air for about £200 including checking in two bags for all our clothes and fishing bits.

Eventually the time arrived and it was holiday time, we decided as we live in the South West of England to drive up the day before and stay at The Radisson hotel next to the airport to avoid any unpleasantaries that the M25 can turn up on a Friday morning.

All checked in at the airport we waited for our flights which although slightly delayed wasn’t a real problem and soon we were on our way down to Rodez airport. We got the bags off the plane, and Lee from Nash resorts was there to welcome us and drove us the 25 minutes to the lake.

Lac Cavagnac

The lake is awesome; it looks like a large English estate lake with lots of trees and lily pads all over and is set in some lovely countryside.


View from the Lodge out across the lake

Davide the Head Bailiff (who speaks great English and is a fantastic guy) took us all out on the boat for a tour around the lake pointing out all the swims, which were hot and those that hadn’t fished well. After this a draw was held and James who pulled first out of the hat drew number 5 and there were only 5 numbers in the hat, so therefore we got last choice. The Boards was chosen by a couple of Dutch lads, Gordon a regular at the Lake took the Channel, Ross and Jonathan chose the Field and Johan who had come from South Africa took the Springs.  This left us with the swim that we both wanted which was the Steps.

The Steps in the prior week had done two forties, one mirror and one grassie as well as the junior PB common at 35lbs so we were hopeful of getting some action.

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View from the Steps Back to the Lodge

When you get there the staff have already put in a rowing boat for each swim, 3 x Nash Hooligan Rods each, landing net, weigh sling, scales, carp sacks, H blocks gas stove, tea kit as well as on your chosen swim is a Nash bivvy, bedchair and chair. All you need to take is your reels, alarms, hangars and end tackle.

Before I start talking about the fishing, at the lodge you can get breakfast and dinner everyday (which is included if you take the full package) or you can have it delivered to your swim.  They also sell water, snacks, soft drinks and beer there also so there is no need to leave the complex.  Bait is also available too and this is £6 per kilo for boilies which including Scopex Squid Liver, B2, Bling and Cavagnac Special. You can also get pellet, dips, pop ups to match as well as they sell buckets of mixed particles.

The Fishing

During dinner the first evening Davide pointed out to us the best place to put one set of our rods which was a set of lily pads about 110 yards out to the front and right of our swim.  I rowed out and deposited 3 buckets of particles and a couple of kilos of boilies.  He told us to fish one rod about a foot to the right of the lilies away by about 6 feet from the particles and the other rod on the other side of the baited spot.  My third rod went down the margins by another set of lily pads, see below.

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View to where two rods were fished, lily pads are on the left

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Right hand side Margin from Steps Swim

As I was fishing the right hand side we then placed James rods one to the lily pads on the left hand margin and one in open water and the third about a rod length out from a small set of lily pads again 100 yards out.  We did this using a bait boat which you can hire for £90 the week as persons under 18 and over 65 are not allowed in the rowing boats due to insurance restrictions. Also with 6 rods to get out the bait boat is the easiest way to go.

After setting up on the first night we were both very tired but excited about what was to come.

We didn’t have to wait long at 5am the next morning I had a stuttery take on the rod fished just next to the lily pads. Fortunately the fish ran back towards us rather than making for the lily bed.  After getting back into contact with it I could tell it was a carp rather than a tench.  I was shouting at James to wake up because we decided to take it in turns to hit the rods as I have found in the past it is normally one or two rods that will produce and it was his turn first.  However by the time he woke up the fish was almost ready for netting so it was my fish. It was a 28lb Mirror, so not a bad start for the first fish and within less than 12 hours of casting out.

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Our first fish 28lb Mirror

During the next day we had a couple of tench from James rods but it was pretty warm and quiet. The next night Davide advised us to top up the heavily baited spot again, which he kindly did for us as he took us back to our swim in the boat.  Rods were put out again on the same spots and we were very confident after the early success. The mission for the rest of the holiday was to get a big ‘un for James.

At 6am the next morning I wasn’t overly surprised that the same rod was once again away, again it ran back towards us and this time I was more successful at waking James up so he took over playing the fish. This fish was clearly bigger than the last one and it gave James the run around going up and down the front of the pontoon and trying to go under the boat which was moored at the front of the staging. We eventually netted it and it looked a decent fish in the net, on the scales it went round to 32lb, a new PB for James by 23lb. To say he was happy would be an understatement.

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James with his new PB a lovely long mint 32lb common

By now we were both happy and relieved as we had both caught so anything else would be a bonus. Again the day was quiet, but this is not unusual for the lake. Again after dinner we topped up the same spot again and put the rods out. Being semi awake again at dawn I was eager for the alarm to go off again, but unfortunately it didn’t and we were both a little deflated but probably shouldn’t have been as we had been lucky to catch two early in the week.

As we had no action from the spots and discussing with Davide he advised not to rebait and just fish to the spots.  Still confident we chilled out and by now had got pretty slick at getting the baits out after dinner.

The next morning as was anxious again at dawn as I was hoping the first two days would repeat itself, 5am went past, then 6am I dozed off again to be woken up at 7.00am by a take on the middle rod. Again like the other two fish it ran back towards us and after getting in contact with the fish this one felt a lot heavier and slower. The fish came in close relatively easily but then spent ten minutes or so again going up and down the front of the pontoon.  This fish being a lot more powerful managed to take out all of James lines on the left hand side and one of my rods also.

Fortunately Johan who was fishing in the Flowers had heard the commotion and came over and helped us undo the knitting pattern of our other rods. He eventually managed to net this for me and in the net it didn’t look that large.  We left it in the net whilst we got the camera, weigh sling etc ready. Carefully checking its pecks were flat in the net I broke the net down and lifted it up.  It really felt a lot heavier and I estimated an upper thirty. However the scales settled on 40lb 8oz, my first forty and beating my PB by 17lb’s.

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New PB 40lb 8oz Mirror

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Return Shot of my new PB

Unfortunately for us and most others on the lake it seemed to shut up shop for the rest of the week and we had no further carp, quite a few more tench and James also had his first Pike which picked up a boilie              ‘.

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James and one of his Tench

Rigs

For rigs we were using 12 inch long 30lb Nash armorbraid, size 4 Gamakatsu G Hard hooks, with shrink tubing to extend the shank, pinned down with two small blobs of rig putty. We also used Nash Camofusion leaders with ESP bolt clips, 3 oz dumpy pears (which they sell in the Lodge so no need to take loads on the plane) and backleads.

Bait was single 20mm Scopex Squid with a 3 bait stringer.

Because the lake is pretty silty on the bottom all baits were either rowed or taken out in the bait boat rather than casting and whilst on the website it says you also get a marker and spod rod, we didn’t get these and to be honest you don’t need them so leave your maker and spod reels at home if you go.

Summary

James and I had a great weeks fishing even though it was a bit patchy, the service you get from the guys at the Lake is second to none.  They really can’t do enough to help you and with a passion they want everyone to catch whilst they are there.

The facilities’ are top notch, the food that Mark (the Chef) provided was fantastic and lots of it, all English style food, roast dinner on Sunday, Spaghetti Bolognaise, Lasagne, Curry and a full fried breakfast every morning, you certainly won’t go home any thinner than you arrived.

If like me you haven’t been to France fishing before and want to reduce the hassle factor or want to take one of your children then I can completely recommend a trip to Nash Resort, you won’t be disappointed.  James and I are looking forward to getting back there and I had to drag him away as he didn’t want to go home.

More Pictures


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The Lodge

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View from Steps Swim at Dawn

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View from Steps to Dead Tree Swim

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Davide’s Dog Vittef

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Marks Dog Eta


Lac Chateau Cavagnac – Nash Resorts

Aug 05 2009 4 Comments »

Hey all,

Just to update you, we at Carpers Web are going to Lac Chateau Cavagnac for a week in France. So expect a review of the lake when we get back!

We will be leaving on Friday 7th August.

Any comments, just post!


A weekend at Wellington Country Park

Jul 17 2008 4 Comments »

Wellington Country Park

Anyone who is a keen carp angler would know that Wellington Country park is the UK mecca for catching very large carp.

The opportunities to fish at Welli are as rare as winning the National Lottery! So when Trevor (Affectionately known as TT) offered me a 36 hour session with him I jumped at the chance.
For those of you who do not know about the venue it’s about 20 acres in size situated in lovely quiet countryside about 4 miles outside Reading. The average depth is around 4.5 feet with the water being very clear which promotes prolific weed growth. This water is home to many very large carp to 47Lb. Many top name anglers fish Wellington and its not uncommon to meet then when you are there.

A nice pair of Welli whackers! Welli was featured in one of the most recent Korda DVD’s and is always in magazines without being directly named. Most days you can spot an angling celebrity fishing there.

TT and I arranged to meet at 7.00am on Saturday morning at the main gates, for me 7.00am could not come quickly enough after a sleepless night. After what seemed like an eternity TT eventually arrived and after the usual meet and greet we unlocked the gates and drove to the angler’s car park.

With just four cars in the car park we knew that the best swims would possibly be taken. Both of us loaded up the barrows and headed off to the lake with much anticipation but sure enough the better swims on the lake were already taken. TT made the decision to set up on the grassy bank area so we turned our barrows around and set about the long walk to the grass bank area of the lake.

The spot we chose gave us good coverage of the water. With three rods out each we could ambush the carp as they swam from one end of the lake to the other

The tactics Due to the abundance of weed it was 12.30pm before I got my last rod into the water. Confident in the spots I had chosen I set about baiting up.

The left hand rod was positioned at about 60 meters out and 20 meters of the bank to my left hand side. This made baiting a simple matter of walking around the lake and catapulting boilies onto the spot.

1Kg of Dynamite boilies were catapulted onto the spot My second rod was placed at 90 meters straight out in front, too far to reach with the catapult so out came the trusty Grey’s spod rod. 20 or more casts later I had deposited another kilo of Dynamite tiger nut boilies over my hook bait.

The third rod was a roving rod and used the same rigs and bait but was set up with PVA ground bait sticks and was cast to showing fish.

Special G ground bait and crushed tiger nuts mixed with tiger nut oil made up my stick mix ingredients

Rigs were very simple – Korda side-clip systems were used to eject the leads quickly due to the weed problems. Safe zone leaders helped the side clip systems work well and pinned everything down on the lake bed.

Size 6 Kamasan Maxx Barbel hooks were tied to Suffix Camo Skin 15lb braided hook lengths. The rigs were made up deliberately very long 13” to help bait presentation allowing the bait to settle as naturally as possible on the weedy lake bed. A long hair was used with a small Korda micro ring giving a claw rig set up.

A long length of heat shrink tube was used to give a simple kicker at the eye of the Maxx Carp hooks The going bait on Welli is Dynamite Monster tiger nut boilies in 10mm, 15mm, 18mm and 20mm sizes both shelf life and freezer baits. To complement this I had some Dynamite 15mm pop ups and tiger nut liquid. The fishing For the first 24 hours the rods and bobbins sat in perfect symmetry only moving when either a weed bed drifted into the line or a coot thought it was a carp and picked up my bait. Don’t you just love coots?!

No carp yet no runs yet but we were looking good

TT was getting bored so he decided to do some swim clearance. The floating weed was a real nightmare. TT managed to create a weed mountain nearly 3 foot high and six foot long.

We were surrounded by the most beautiful country side and with the carp on a go slow we were able to fully enjoy these exquisite surroundings. The lake had been very quiet for the preceding weeks and our session followed that slow trend. However a few carp gave us a demonstration of jumping and crashing out of the water more akin to dolphins than carp.

All too soon it was our last morning our rods had remained upon there rests and no carp had bothered us. As we lazily sat in the warming autumn sun, without warning TT left hand rod burst into life as the clutch on his Shimano Technums went into overdrive as a fit carp tried to escape.

TT jumped into action grabbing the rod as he lifted into a powerful carp, his Free Spirit rod took on a full and healthy curve Our expectations were very high could this be a 30 or maybe one of the lakes many 40′s. The fish was skillfully played into the margins.

Due to the very shallow margins TT decided to net the fish himself

The carp was soon being looked after on TT’s very old but strangely hardly used unhooking mat TT manged to hold the lovely common up for the cameras before letting him back to his watery home.

TT assures me that this is his happy look!

This superb miniature common will grow to one of Wellington country parks much larger residents in years to come With just a couple of hours left to go before we had to start packing up our tackle it was my turn to get a screaming take from the left hand rod. I lifted the rod from the Delkim and felt a heavy fish but immediately the line went slack; I had managed to drop the fish. When I eventually reeled in the rig, the pop up bait had managed to get impaled upon the hook point, preventing the hook from catching the carp properly. Oh well maybe next time.

The session went very well. Only one fish caught but the setting, atmosphere and the company had made this for me an excellent weekend session that will remain in my thoughts for many years to come. TT learnt a whole raft of new rigs ideas and concepts and I am sure if he keeps practising he will become a very confident angler. Thanks TT for a great weekend.

Tight lines! Ian Gemson is a PAA Qualified Professional Angling Coach offering training courses and one-to-one sessions for new and Experienced anglers alike. For more information regarding his services, please visit his website at SmartCarping.com