Having gallivanted around two large 40-acre pits through the summer and into early autumn, I made the conscious decision to return to the deep pit for the autumn and winter. Having fished Wellington Country Park for the previous three winters, I wanted to have a go back on there as three of its largest residents were now 40lb+, and one other was knocking on the door of that magical milestone. Admittedly, I have had all four of these fish before, but I felt setting myself the target of catching these four special originals at these weights in the colder and less predictable months of the season, would keep me really focused.
This short story is going to focus on one of those special fish, a fish that holds significant personal importance to me; a fish I was very privileged to name ‘Smithy’ back in the spring of 2014. Back then, the lake had a reasonable number of upper 20lb+ carp, but nothing had yet tipped over the 30lb barrier. Also, back then the lake had fewer members, and many of those with a ticket were more interested in the course fishing rather than solely going in pursuit of the carp. I felt extremely lucky to almost have the place to myself. It was heaven.
I recall working a particular spot, that had a large heavy plastic tube left behind [embedded in the lakebed or lying on th lake bed?] from when the lake was dug. I would deposit kilos of mixed pellets, chopped boilies, sweetcorn, hemp with tinned tuna fish added every couple of days around this tube. It was the 3rd October 2013, and I had landed a couple of carp during my previous trip, a couple of very wet at the end of September, when I caught the lakes first 30lb carp. Weighed at 31lb on the nose, at the time the carp was unnamed, at least until the spring. I will share why…