pierro
Well-known member
Had a comp on Sunday 12th at Brit Airways car park - North Tyne: See Blackrats report: In brief:-
Thirteen Adults, and two juniors fished this pegged comp between 11am and 3pm - bright sunshine and brisk wind. 48 fish caught - flounder, dabs coalies and a 28cm smelt:
Most were into the fish from the off on the rising tide, when both I and Steve Elliott pulled out a 37 cm Flounder each. We thought this may share the prize of biggest caught but how wrong we were: our mate Jason managed to tempt a cracking 44cm Flounder out on rag worm and mackerel bait.
I was using 25lb braid with a 60lb braid shock-leader but when I got a bight (after having left it to develop a while) I struck to get my breakaway sinker from the river bed the line snapped. I didn’t think the line had snapped at the shock-leader knot. Next cast I managed to trawl my gear back in and examination of the braid recovered confirmed the leader knot was intact. When I checked the line, it had snapped about three feet from the knot – so it wasn’t the knot that let me down just the braid.
At least I managed to get my gear back in and some spoons to use again. Alas there was no fish attached to the line merely a peeler which went back in next cast to catch me a small coalie. This is the second time braid has let me down in this way – anyone else had similar problems?
Pierro

Thirteen Adults, and two juniors fished this pegged comp between 11am and 3pm - bright sunshine and brisk wind. 48 fish caught - flounder, dabs coalies and a 28cm smelt:
Most were into the fish from the off on the rising tide, when both I and Steve Elliott pulled out a 37 cm Flounder each. We thought this may share the prize of biggest caught but how wrong we were: our mate Jason managed to tempt a cracking 44cm Flounder out on rag worm and mackerel bait.
I was using 25lb braid with a 60lb braid shock-leader but when I got a bight (after having left it to develop a while) I struck to get my breakaway sinker from the river bed the line snapped. I didn’t think the line had snapped at the shock-leader knot. Next cast I managed to trawl my gear back in and examination of the braid recovered confirmed the leader knot was intact. When I checked the line, it had snapped about three feet from the knot – so it wasn’t the knot that let me down just the braid.
At least I managed to get my gear back in and some spoons to use again. Alas there was no fish attached to the line merely a peeler which went back in next cast to catch me a small coalie. This is the second time braid has let me down in this way – anyone else had similar problems?
Pierro
