Angling Times (UK)

Tactic of the Week

England star Matt Godfrey on the waggler

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AS WE head towards winter, it’s all too easy to bank on the precision and great presentati­on offered by the pole.

By doing so, though, you’re immediatel­y limiting yourself, in my opinion, in terms of flexibilit­y.

The pole is brilliant for catching in one tight area over your feed, but you can be left wanting for the chance to fish further out or off to one side to see if the fish have moved slightly. With a waggler, you can achieve this in seconds.

On deep canals such as the ones close to me in South Yorkshire, the waggler becomes a key tactic to have up your sleeve and can sometimes totally outfish the pole in clear water, or when there are a lot of fish to catch quickly.

It’s also a classic and easy method to fish, and one that doesn’t need thousands of pounds’ worth of long pole to achieve. Most of us were brought up fishing the waggler, so it’s nice to be able to leave the pole in the bag and go back to basics.

WHY WAGGLERS SCORE

For me there are three reasons to use the float over the pole. First, speed. It’s much quicker to cast out and wind in fish than it is shipping 14m or 16m of pole in and out on a busy bank.

Seond, in clear water the fish will be much happier without a pole being wafted over their heads... and finally, the waggler gives you the versatilit­y to cast around the peg to seek out fish if bites are few and far between in one spot. The pole cannot do any of these.

GOING THE DISTANCE

If you plan on having a long pole line, make sure there’s enough space between this swim and where you’re fishing the waggler.

The range you pick must be able to be reached with your loosefeed, so around 18m is good.

If you have a feature like a boat in front of you, there’s the temptation to cast tight up to it but I wouldn’t – instead I would make sure there’s a few metres between the float and the boat to let me go further over if the fish back off.

TRY FISHING SHALLOW

I know we’re in November, but until the really cold weather hits, I’m a firm believer in still being able to catch off bottom, especially on those big canals.

Roach, rudd, hybrids and even skimmers will be sat here, but the big question is, how far off bottom do I need to come?

This can be 2ft off the deck in 9ft of water, and if rudd are present, we could be talking as little as 2ft below the surface.

It’s something you need to work out as the day goes on. As a rule, I would begin on the bottom and go shallower if bites were coming as the bait was falling, or if I was catching a lot of rudd.

No-tangle waggler rig

The days of big shot around the float base are gone, and this means no more tangles. I’ll use loaded floats, but try and fish as light a loading as possible. For most casts, a 1.5g loaded float is bang on.

My favourite is a loaded finetipped peacock insert waggler. This float needs only a moderate strength cast to hit the spot and is stopped by two Guru Line Stops. Down the line are evenly spaced three No9 shot, which leaves just a tiny bit of float showing so that I can easily see any hold-ups on the float from fish picking the bait up on the drop.

tackle talk

Mainline is robust 0.18mm (5.3lb) Guru Pulse Pro to a Guru ready rig of 0.10mm N-Gauge and a size 18 Pole Special hook – I couldn’t tie them any better myself! The Pole Special is also a fine waggler hook so don’t be put off by the name.

That just leaves rods, and a 12ft through-actioned model will do nicely as there’s not the need for the extra reach of a 13ft or 14ft rod.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? You can cover so much water with a waggler.
You can cover so much water with a waggler.
 ??  ?? The loaded insert float held in place by line stops.
The loaded insert float held in place by line stops.
 ??  ?? A good rudd comes to Matt Godfrey’s hand.
A good rudd comes to Matt Godfrey’s hand.
 ??  ?? A fine net of waggler-caught silvers.
A fine net of waggler-caught silvers.
 ??  ?? Terminal tackle is quite basic for waggler work.
Terminal tackle is quite basic for waggler work.

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