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When one of the blokes you have been fishing with for
the last week writes: ‘This was the best week
of my life’ in the guests comments book*, it says
something about the way this magnificent fishery, just
3 hours from Boulogne is run and managed by John, Ben
and Magda.
But, I hasten to add, the fishing can be very tricky….
Lots of words can be used to describe the last week
for me and my mate Martin ‘Squealer’ Wheeler,
among them: frustration, anticipation, disappointment,
frustration, divine intervention, luck, good fortune,
hysteria… you name it.
And if you’ve been fishing for a while you’ll
probably know exactly what I mean.
Prelude (Frustration)..
This was trip number 4 to Etang des Royales, and I have
to admit that this place has changed my outlook on fishing.
After 6 days and 6 nights with one run which amounted
to nothing last year, mercifully followed by 1 gorgeous
31 pounder in the last few hours, I went through every
emotion under the sun. Everyone else on the lake was
catching. Not much, but they were catching.
At each meal time back in the welcoming lodge, John
or Ben would utter the immortal words.. ‘Right,
who’s ‘ad wot?’ Round the table it
went with each angler proudly announcing the weight
and species of his haul until it came back to me.. ‘Nothing
John’ or ‘Nothing Ben’ was starting
to sound a little too familiar as the days dragged on.
I just dug in and kept faith in my abilities to start
with, checked and double checked my rigs, took welcome
and expert advice from John and Ben and kept telling
myself it would happen.. tonight it would happen…
today it would happen… tonight’s the night…
today’s the day… but nothing.
Then the doubt started to creep in and grow larger
and larger in my head.. was I baiting too much? Was
I fishing in silt instead of on gravel? Was my gear
okay? Should I change tactics, recast or leave it where
it was, or even change where I was fishing completely?
In the end I just sat back and resigned myself to the
fact that I was going to blank and enjoyed the weather…and
eight or nine cold beers from my landing net fridge.
Then, on the last day, I was stood reading a lads magazine,
checking out Angelina Jolie’s curves with my back
to my rods, contemplating the ferry ride home, and the
right one simply roared off like a bat out of hell.
I stood watching it for what seemed like ages, delighting
in the sight of line ripping off the reel, the bite
indicator screaming for mercy as it begged for the strike.
In slow motion, I picked up the rod and lifted and was
finally rewarded with the beautiful sight of a rod bent
double in my hands… the perfect parabola. One
glorious fight later and I had banked a 31 pound mirror
and I went home happy…….
Anticipation.
It was with all this in mind that Marty and I arrived
outside the infamous green gates this year and we drove
quietly down the central track to the lodge for the
draw. Heads full of all the tips from an encyclopaedia
of fishing mags, hoping they’d give us ‘The
Edge’.
After securing the conifers peg (a lovely double swim),
we elected to just rig up the rods and drop them in
straight away, rather than banging about hammering tent
pegs in and the like. Ray (alias the great Chef Raymundo)
who we had met last year also followed suit two pegs
down.
I gave Marty the choice and he took the left half of
the swim, leaving me with the right. This tactic (given
by Ben last year in a Masterclass of Watercraft) of
just casting quietly in, suddenly seemed like a great
idea as first Ray, then I both got into a fish within
an hour or two. To say I was over the moon and elated
with the beautiful 45.4 pound mirror that tipped the
scales would be an understatement.. It could be the
biggest fish I’ll ever catch and it all happened
in the blink of an eye. Ben and John came down the road
in the beast that it is John’s Landrover and couldn’t
believe I was already drinking a bottle of champagne
with the words ‘The First 40’ written on
it in bright, white tippex.

Later that night a cheeky 31.8 came rolling in and by
Wednesday my haul had grown to 6 fish including two
40’s and a scale perfect 32.2 common, glistening
gold in the 28 degree sunshine.
One problem, though.. Marty had blanked so far and
I had already started to run out of encouraging phrases
to my fellow angler. ‘You’re next, mate’,
‘Tonight’s the night’, ‘It can’t
carry on like this, chap’ were all wearing a little
thin, you could say…
After the usual Olympic breakfast on Wednesday.. 2
eggs, 2 bacon, 3 sausages, 2 tomatoes and beans (just
for the record).. Mart put a proposal to me.. ‘How
about swapping sides mate? I’ve blanked so far
and I’d do it for you’.
I was happy to oblige. After all, this was the same
mate who had handed me his rod in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
on the last day of our holiday late last year with a
150lb Marlin dangling on the end. We had gone out there
with the sole intention of catching the strongest fish
in the sea, pound for pound, and he had caught one already..
He let me have the final fight and get the certificate.
We were both there to catch a lifetime fish and it happened..
just, thanks to him.
Hysterical.
Rod rests got moved. Hell, I even swapped our chairs
over too.. anything to change his luck and arrest the
frustration. But you can guess what happened.. within
an hour my left rod sparked, then fired into life. Marty’s
reaction… a somewhat glum, Victor Meldrewesque
‘I don’t bloody believe it’ as a weighty
39.4 hit the net. Another hour later and Mr Micron M’s
trill screeching announced a perfect 34lb specimen..
this time on my other rod (which was in the exact same
position that Marty had been fishing for the preceding
4 days). He just laughed hysterically this time.

Then… suddenly…. Squealer jumped up from
his chair and struck at his left rod.. the indicator
going wild.. was he a bit keen, was he a tad heavy,
who knows? All I knew was that he had missed his first
take of the week. I don’t know who was more pissed
off.. him or me? (okay, okay.. it was him, but you know
what I mean).
Then, a while later, the same rod blasted into action
again and this time he was into a fish. I heaved a huge
sigh of relief to myself as the rod curved over, the
line taught like a bow string. Marty’s mood somewhat
lightened for a few seconds.. all those hours of watching
and waiting didn’t seem to matter. I busied myself
getting the landing mat ready, retrieved the net and
got the camera ready, all the time going against Ben’s
advice of never presuming you’ve caught a fish
till it’s in the net.
Sound advice indeed.. Suddenly a loud ‘TWANG’
resonated out over the mirror flat swim and Marty’s
brand new 15lb line decided to take the side of the
devil and snap neatly in two. Fish gone. Head in Hands.
Many expletives.
I carried on merrily banking another 35.5 and a whopping
43 and suddenly it was Thursday evening… Marty
had turned into my net man, my weigh man, and my camera
man.. still jack for him.
Then, John and Magda came down to our swim after another
gorgeous meal to pass some time and chat about life..
and fishing. Over a beer, the legend that is Johnny
Stirling Hofgartner, the man who invented stalking,
said… ‘Mar’in, ‘ave you enjoyed
yourself this week?’
Good question. Very good question…..
After careful consideration, Martin replied.. ‘No’.
‘If I’m honest, John, I’m here to
catch fish and I haven’t so far, so even though
everything else is great, I’m a little disappointed’…
I guess he was getting fed up being my ‘Net and
Camera Man’ too!
It was also getting a bit embarrassing sharing a swim
when I was catching all the time and I wasn’t
enjoying it as much as I should have been, because I
wanted him to catch aswell.. He was my mate after all..
John frowned a little in the dying light and rolled
up another cheeky Golden Virginian master piece as a
majestic barn owl ghosted past our swim on silent wings.
Rods were checked… identical, rigs were checked
and a minute adjustment over a steaming kettle was made
to the anti shrink tubing which set the hook to the
perfect angle, but I could see even John was struggling
for an answer to help change Marty’s luck.
Divine Intervention.
Then after a while, the tea was drunk, the conversation
died and John and Magda got up to leave. As he did so,
John reached forward and kissed his fingers and stroked
the butt of Marty’s left hand rod, smiling as
he did so. I raised my cold bottle of San Miguel in
a salute to Ken Dodd the God of the Rod and Marty acknowledged
Queen Trish of the Fish with his golden Corona topped
with a wedge of fresh lime – (well, you’ve
gotta keep standards up – even by the lakeside.)
Magda said a silent prayer in several different languages.
Perhaps divine intervention was needed in this desperate
time!
Good Fortune.
Not a great deal happened in the night, but later the
next day the blessed rod obliged and the wait was over,
a fish at last. Softly, softly this time and after a
very unconfident 35 minutes the beast was lurking around
10 feet out in our swim. Suddenly the rod went solid,
a jungle of weed engulfing the prize, clawing at the
37.8 Mirror with the Squealers stamp on it. 5 agonizing
minutes passed as the slime tried in vain to coax the
monster back into the murky depths, but through sheer
endeavour and good fortune it suddenly broke free and
hit the net.. Happy F*cking Days.
My tally was still growing with alarming regularity..
this time it felt great to be going to every meal time,
safe in the knowledge I could announce to all that I
had netted yet more fish.
However, lightning struck twice on the same rod and
soon after Marty had reeled in his magnificent 37.8,
he was in again. This time it was a BIG fish. Marty
later described it as the best fight of his life as
he scrapped with a huge lump of a mirror, it’s
belly reminiscent of Big Daddy, the cuddly wrestler
from World of Sport all those years ago. Ben arrived
on his bike as Marty and I wound the Reuben “wheel
of fortune” Heaton’s round to a very rude
45lb 6oz.
A fantastic water shot ensued with Squealer very reticent
to let the giant go, cuddling it until the life came
flooding back into it’s body through it’s
feathered gills and it lazily wafted back into the cloudy
water. Marty decided to celebrate the moment by submerging
himself aswell, and then climbing out onto the landing
mat himself. Unfortunately the scales only went to 60lb,
so no chance there then.. Great moment!

Suddenly it was the final meal and the champagne cork
popped as John served up a chilled glass of fizzy to
all over a roast meal. What a week. I even managed a
last minute 32.4 common the following morning at 7am
as Mart had disappeared to go for a shower, I just couldn’t
stop catching.
Etang des Royales – it always summons up a story,
every time.
A truly magical place.
The final tally’s as follows:
Si ‘Ginger Prince’ Griffith – 45.4,
31.8, 40.12, 32.2 (c), 29.9, 23.10, 18, 39.4, 34, 35.5,
43, 38.6, 32.4 (c)
(The best catch of my life so far…)
Marty ‘Squealer’ Wheeler – 37.8,
45.6
(The biggest carp of his life so far…)
*Jimmy and Red – 29th April to 6th May 2006.
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