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Cobley and Deano do the Ebro


cobleyn

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Just back from the Ebro chaps and though I'd do a quick write up.

 

We went out for a long weekend,. Dean flew in from South-end and I fly in from Eats midlands- meeting up at Barcelona before a 2 hour journey out to Mecquinenza. If you are thinking about the trip- Reus is a better option as its only just over an hour. With the long bank holiday flights were difficult to get and double the normal price of what they usually are.

 

With the fish in the process of spawning in the Segre we decided to head up towards the top end of the top lake. The top lake is a slight misnomer, as its a piece of water over 15 miles long and in some places a mile wide. Location is the first issue as the fish can be any where and the river was carrying around an extra 10 feet of water. We settled on a swim that was around 300 yards wide and dropped down into 30 feet in the middle.

 

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The bottom was fairly clean, with only a couple of snags. Rigs were very simple I was on Kryston 35lb combi braid and size 2 Fang x's.... Dean was on Korda 30lb combi braid and Size 4 Wide Gapes. Both tied using knotless knots- nothing clever needed. We used Safezone leaders- now I know that this have come in for some flack and I for one was cynical in using them. Actually used correctly- I feel that they aren't as unsafe as we might believe. The trouble I think would come with anglers using them incorrectly- but that's a debate for another day. :wink:

 

Baits were simple. Big hallibut pellets topped off with half a pop-up. I used Nutrabaits Pineapple and Nburic, Sea monster (pellet shaped) and Plum and coperic acid. Deano was on Mainline grange with some soaked in the goo.

 

There was plenty of cat activity in the swim- and the odd carp rolling. What was obvious early on was that the fish weren't having it properly. A couple of the swims where the fish were holding up were completely inaccessible due to the water levels- so we were scratching for bites from the off. Our tactic was to row out coconut sized method balls of scalded pellet and drop them at around 120 yards into 20 feet of water.

 

It has to be said the first day was very tough. The temperature was up to 42 degrees and we were suffering. At around 2PM I had to get into the river as I was struggling to regulate my temperature. Sweat was pouring out of me and I was starting to pant like a dog. Not good. Five mins sat neck deep in the river cooled me down though and it was back into teh fishing.

 

The fishing on the first day was patchy. We had a few carp to just over 20lb and loads of small cats and carp to 10lb's. Most of the fish unbelievably coming through the middle of the day in the hottest part. It felt like we were in the right place though so as it was getting later on we dropped around 20 KG's of method balls out over our marks ready for the next day. As we were packing up- the mozzies decided to kick off. I can honestly say I have never encountered such aggressive mozzies anywhere and in such high numbers. We were literally swamped by them within minutes we had been hammered by thousands of them. I've still got around 100 bites on me from that first night- even biting through clothing. As we hastilly pulled down the track the worst possible thing happened- we passed a car full of Spanish anglers heading down the track for our swim.

 

- Not good. I'll write up the rest later. :D

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So we were up at 05:00 the next morning (before day break) trying to work out what to do. The chances were that the Spanish anglers would be down for the weekend, so we needed plan B.

 

We scoured around the usual pegs in Mequineneza, but it was pretty much pegged up in the decent swims. So after an hour of driving around we headed back up towards the top lake. After 1.5 hours of driving around Chiprana and Escatron we found a nice little (Maybe 4 acres) bay with some fish topping on it. We had 20 minutes sitting and watching the water; but with low doubles being the only fish evident we decided to carry on the search.

 

We were getting frustrated now. With only 3 days to fish and a morning wasted searching for a peg - we decided it might be worth going back to the area we were originally in. As if by some devine chance as we pulled off the track we saw the Spanish anglers from teh night before driving back up the track. Talk about being chuffed.

 

So we pulled into the swim not sure if the Spanish guys had battered them all night or failed to score. Having found one of their rigs at the side of the water- I'm pretty sure they wouldn't have caught much. However, the next question was how much bait they would have put in. We decided to fish PVA sticks over our baited area. We soaked micro pellets in Krill extract to make a soft stinky stick mix and got our rods out.

 

Dean was first off the mark with a decent 20lber.

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We then waded through countless cats and carp below 12lb. This got a bit frustrating, whilst it was nice to have some action its a long way to go to catch small carp when you know you have 40lbers swimming around. After a long after noon the rods peeled off at a rate of knots, nearly pulling the rod off the pod. Finally something was pulling on the other end like a proper carp. After a solid 10 minute fight (and at the 3rd time of asking) I pulled my biggest fish of the trip over the net cord.

 

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As we took the photos the weather was on the change, with 40 miles an hour winds blowing up a storm. We stuck it out for another hour, but it just got unfishable as we were being blinded by sand and dust. We packed up just as thunder and lightening started to crack around us and headed back to our digs for a bite to eat and some kip.

 

 

The last day started amid heavy rain, but by the time we got up to our swim it had subsided and a cool morning greeted us. The rods went back out to our marks without any fuss. The mossie's were kept at bay by copious amounts of jungle formula and we got down to business. The final day was a steady string of fish.

 

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What can I say- timing can be the making of trips- and our timing was off on this one. It was a replacement trip for one that we were planning to take elsewhere that we couldn't get sorted. We were scratching and fishing for bites rather than baiting for a big hit of fish; which is frustrating when you have spent all of that cash and travelled all of that way. But thats fishing!

 

All in all it was a good trip- we have a good crack and caught a few fish in very tough conditions. The fish were down on their weights after they had just spawned. Most of them had massive frames and would have been 3-6 lbs heavier later in the year.

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  • 1 month later...
Typical...prior booking in my diary. Looks like its full too.

 

I was discussing a wineter social with careful carping at barston later this year if anyone fancies it?

 

How did I not even notice this write up...

 

Quality write up though, looks like you had a great time, and it's got to be a good experience just to be on the Ebro itself.

 

Oh, and I'm up for the winter social :wink:

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Cheers CC. I think I'm finally getting to grips with the Ebro- taken me a long time and a lot of visits. Its such a massive piece of water; between the Segre, Cinqa and Ebro you could probably spend a year of your life fishing somewhere different every day.

 

...Yes, Barston in winter sounds like a bit of fun. I've decided I'm not grinding it out on my syndicate this year. Life's too short. Maybe Feb (ish)?

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Cheers CC. I think I'm finally getting to grips with the Ebro- taken me a long time and a lot of visits. Its such a massive piece of water; between the Segre, Cinqa and Ebro you could probably spend a year of your life fishing somewhere different every day.

 

...Yes, Barston in winter sounds like a bit of fun. I've decided I'm not grinding it out on my syndicate this year. Life's too short. Maybe Feb (ish)?

 

Haha quality! Looks such an impressive place to wet a line! Again, one I will visit one day I hope!

 

I'm hoping to be on my club water through winter, so February sounds perfect, as I WILL be needing a confidence boosting session by then!

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