Portsmouth News

I long for the tranquilli­ty of fishing – minus the maggots

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‘For sleeping in,’ he replied. ‘Came here Friday and staying till tomorrow. But I’ve got a camping stove, a packet of bacon and a fishing rod. What more does a man need?’

Well, a new hat for starters, and – judging by the quite distinctiv­e odour wafting towards me – a lengthy shower. He began to attach something still wriggling to the end of his rod, which reminded me of my own brief dalliance with angling at the age of 10.

An elderly neighbour gave me his fishing equipment, which included a pot of maggots.

Unfortunat­ely the night before my trip I failed to properly secure the lid of the maggot pot and awoke next morning to the screams of my mother, who seemed rather alarmed by the sight of 5,000 maggots crawling around the living room. That was the end of my fishing career, which, in later life, I’ve regretted because whenever I see someone fishing on a riverbank I get a pang of jealousy. It seems so relaxing, standing there without a care in the world, whiling away your day, watching your rod bob gently up and down. It must be a little frustratin­g at times though.

‘Do you catch much here?’ I asked the body odour chap I was standing with. ‘Well, sometimes you just sit around and get nothing,’ he said. ‘But I’ve had three so far so it’s not been too bad.’

‘What, in three days you’ve caught three fish?’ I blurted, unable to keep the disdain from my voice. He nodded.

He told me that as soon as he caught a fish, he threw it back. ‘Club rules,’ he said. Which seems utterly bonkers. Surely the best part of catching something is sticking it in the frying pan and guzzling it down?

When I returned home from my walk, partly out of interest and partly because Mrs C was watching a television programme about a woman giving birth, I looked up the reservoir on the internet and found it was home to an official fishing club.

Better still, there was a long list of mysterious but exotic sounding club rules. ‘No nuts of any descriptio­n unless ground down, no high oil-based pellets, no fixed lead rigs’, and, my personal favourite, ‘all carp must be photograph­ed over a cradle.’

It went on and on and the rules got weirder, like ‘When stalking anglers must have recovery sling to hand’.

The only rule I truly understood was rule 15.4b, which read: ‘No excessive drinking (max four cans) of alcohol’, though whether this is aimed at the anglers or the fish it did not state.

It all sounded so exotic and exciting that I’ve sent for an introducto­ry carp fishing pack.

This time, for the sake of Mrs C, I will ensure that if I keep a pot of maggots in the lounge, the lid is closed a little more securely.

 ??  ?? Steve was intrigued by the anglers he met at the reservoir Pic: Shuttersto­ck
Steve was intrigued by the anglers he met at the reservoir Pic: Shuttersto­ck

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