|
| Home |
SWAT |
Blogs |
Marks |
Features |
Forums |
Reviews | Shop |
| WSF SHOPPING - LURE FISHING SHOP | RODS | REELS | HOOKS | RIG BITS | LURES | LINES | SHORE RIGS | BOAT RIGS | LUGGAGE | MORE |
|
Quiver Tipping for Mullet Written by Wayne Thomas Grey Mullet are one of the most abundant and widely spread fish around our coasts. Every niche of our coastline will find these grey ghosts browsing on a wide variety of foods. The fish will travel miles upstream sometimes wandering several miles above the tidal limit. They are also to be found on wild rocky coast lines and in bustling harbours and marinas. This huge range of habitats ensures that the ardent mullet angler will find himself enjoying varied panoramas whilst attempting to outwit his quarry. Most articles on mullet fishing concentrate on float fishing using light freshwater tackle, a method that is undoubtedly highly effective and enjoyable. Another method that can be very effective is quiver-tipping again using tackle more akin to that used by freshwater anglers pursuing barbel and chub. WHAT IS QUIVER TIPPING Many rods have interchangeable tips of differing test curves to give varying degrees of sensitivity depending on prevailing conditions.
TACKLE & BAIT A fixed spool reel such as a small bait-runner designed for carp fishing is ideal. It will need to have a capacity of around 200 yards and have a smooth and reliable clutch. Terminal tackle generally consists of a two hook paternoster made up using either two small three way swivels or two blood loops. I tend to use a central spine of 15lb line with short hook lengths of 4” to 6” of 6lb fluorocarbon or Drennan Fly Leader. Strong size 8 to 10 hooks are needed, my favourite models being Drennan Specimen or Sakuma mullet hooks. At the bottom of this set up I attach a wire meshed cage feeder; this I normally fill with liquidised bread or groundbait. Even when not introducing groundbait I tend to use this style of weight as it snags far less frequently than small lead bombs that tend to roll between every stone. The weight is attached via a short rotten bottom.
Bread is the most widely used and convenient bait for mullet fishing and I seldom use anything else. In conjunction with this use liquidised or mashed bread that can be introduced via the feeder. There is I believe room for experiment using trout pellets as used extensively in coarse fishing. These can be added to ground bait and attached to the hook using a bait band. I have also caught mullet using sweetcorn; maggot and small cubes of fish flesh my favourite being garfish which is tough and strong smelling. The problem with using fish is that it attracts crabs and numerous species of small fish that tend to impinge on the mullet fishing. There are I believe other populations of mullet that are more nomadic and roam the coastline. Some of these nomadic mullet are large specimens that are possibly sole survivors of year group shoals. Pure conjecture but it always inspires to conjure up an image of large grey shapes that could materialise at any time and intercept the bait.
Quiver tipping is a method that works particularly well in shallow water, in deep water where mullet are feeding near the sea bed and where there is a flow that makes float fishing impractical. It makes sense when selecting where to fish to study the topography carefully and look for areas where food is likely to congregate. Eddies created by rocks, bridges, and walls and anchored boats etc all being worth investigating. A pair of polarising sunglasses can assist greatly in spotting mullet as they browse along the shore line. Long casting is seldom beneficial with many mullet being caught within ten yards of the shore line. APPROACH
It is common to suffer long periods of quivering rod tips that only stops when the bread has been whittled off the hook. How mullet do this is amazing but a phenomenon that I have witnessed on many occasions. Occasionally this trembling of the tip is a result of large shoals of immature mullet or smelt. Eventually however a mullet will suck in the bait and move off with the hook lodging in the mouth, at this point the tip will give a very positive indication, indeed on occasions the rod will lunge seawards in spectacular fashion. SESSION Its early morning and the sky still retains tints of pink from the recent sunrise. High water is at 10.00am and we have arrived just before 8.00am ready to fish the last two hours of the flood tide and up to two hours of the ebb. Our standard set up is a quiver tip rod, reel full of 8lb b.s line and two hook paternoster rig. Bait is generous pinch of bread-flake. Weight is provided by a cage feeder stuffed full of breadcrumb.
The rigs are swung a few yards off the harbour wall, allowed to sink and then lines tightened until the quiver tip is tensioned. Some anglers hold the rod whilst others choose to rest the rod on a rail and wait for the tip to transmit interest in the bait.
This mullet pulls the scales to 3lb 14oz.
In truth mullet are no more difficult to tempt then any other species they just need the correct approach.
Comment... |
|
| © Copyright 1998 - 2011 World Sea Fishing Ltd. This service is provided by World Sea Fishings standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy. World Sea Fishing is operated and owned by World Sea Fishing Ltd. PO Box 34, Dolgellau, Gwynedd, LL40 9AD Registered company in England and Wales No 5276618. VAT number 879 5926 45 |
![]() |
![]() |
|