You wouldnt believe how many people
parrot that statement when faced with someone attempting to catch a Mullet, and to
some extent it is true, in that you could be wasting your
time right from the onset, but given the correct timing, location, setup and approach tactics, these
fish are far from impossible to catch..... difficult to overcome and land sometimes, but
not too difficult to hook....
The Mullet i seek up here in West Cumbria are Thick Lipped
Grey Mullet "Chelon Labrosus", the term "thick lipped" offers a
clue and should eradicate the mindset that these fish have a small soft
mouth of which is impossible for a hook to remain in place, im
guessing the confusion arises from "Liza Ramada" the "Thin Lipped Grey
Mullet" another species of Grey Mullet of which i have never
encountered up here, more common on southern shores.
The sport to be had Mullet fishing in the Uk is fantastic,
first of all it is free, as long as you are not fishing on a tidal
stretch of river where the rights to access may be owned or rented,
secondly, the
equipment required at the onset need not be specialised to any degree,
your average 9ft trout fishing outfit with a floating line should
suffice, as long as it is washed in clean water after each outing.
Thirdly the time they can be fished for is quite extensive, with the
fish returning from spawning and appearing inshore around
march, you may fish for them right through into mid November if it
is still mild, and during the hot summer months when the rivers become
a trickle, and with most
branches of daytime angling in the doldrums, Mullet sport is at
its best...
And finally.....when you hook one of these fish for the first time, you are in for the ride of your life.....!
A walk round a habour or marina, along the tidal stretches of a river,
or out into an estuary at low tide may find you encountering fish that
are exhibiting the behavour similar to that of surface feeding
trout taking buzzers, sometimes, and especially from a distance you
could also be
forgiven for thinking that these fish are shoals of huge Sea trout, and
quite often they can be seen slashing around out of the water like a
salmon
trying to rid itself of sea lice. Later as the tide begins to run these
fish can be seen larking
about like lads out on the town on a saturday night, shoving each other
about and generally behaving daft, this is a very important time for
the mullet angler and i will elaborate more on this later.
So how do we get to grips with the "Grey Ghost"..?
I will attempt to gear this advice to someone who has never fly fished for
Mullet before, yet i must assume that they have grasped the
ability to cast a fly with a reasonable amount of acurracy and presentational skill,
and can also change direction during false casting..
To give yourself the best chance of actualy hooking a mullet, its very
fair to say first and foremost that when targeting roaming sea
fish, success evolves around a pure numbers
game, and one should look to seek out the highest densities of fish
that remain in the smallest area practicable for the longest time
possible, actually finding the fish can be very easy as the Mullet is
very
forthcoming in revealing itself most times, and all it takes is a
leasurely stroll
with a pair of polaroids to locate them, you can then track their
movements, learn how they are affected by differing tidal movement and
then put your action plan into place.
There are thousands of mullet venues right around the country, each
unique in character, but for now lets consider the location below,
the very bottom of a small river where the fresh meets the salt,
probably one of the most typical and well known locations for mullet to
"hang out".....
"The image above is what i would
consider to be a prime Mullet
fishing location for those new to the sport, it consistently offers a
good head of fish and will eventually compact them into a small area,
looking at the shadows on the rocks, any angler fishing on the open
left bank will be casting towards the sun and not casting his shadow
over the fish, very important"
You may see that beyond the rivers outflow there is a distant sand
spit, the tide floods in from the right of this image and turns left
through 180 degrees around this spit, filling up behind it. At low tide
all that remains is a shallow channel between here and the spit,
during the hot summer months the Mullet are quite content in sittting
here waiting for the tide to run, this will eventually backup the
freshwater, and they can proceed to enter
the lower river.
Therefore if you know of a similar looking location that you can relate
too, first and foremost you should seek to understand that dependant on
the current state of the tide, the height it is forecast to reach, and
the amount of freshwater coming down are all factors which will dictate
your set up, how the fly should be fished and the amount of time you
can actually effectively fish for the Mullet in your known
location.
Looking slightly inland now, we can see that there is an area of fast
streamy water which is very shallow, this natural obstacle is perfect
for the Mullet angler as it will halt the Mullets progress in entering
the river and dissapearing upstream, In keeping with the above criteria
"high fish numbers in a small area for the longest period of time", an
"Ambush" style approach will be very effective in this location,
especially for instance when a 7.4 metre tide is predicted, as it will
just about reach this streamy water at full tide and will see that
unless the river is in slight flood, the mullet will not go over these
stones, they will make their way up as high as they can on the very
front of the tide and will spend time searching
out and feeding in this exact area. Taking these conditions into
account i will continue with the fly and tactics i put in place for
when the fish are present.
Mullet are known to feed on microscopic plankton which they filter out
by ingesting surface detrious, this is of course impossible to imitate,
they also feed amongst weed beds and on maggots in rotting seaweed. By and large the most succesfull fly pattern i use is one
which represents a piece of bread, please dont ask why they take a fly
that looks like nothing encountered in the river, lets just be glad
they do.....myself and many others have tried many different tyings to
achieve this bread flake effect, and i will now share with you the
simplest tying that i find to be taken with most confidence by the
fish.
My favoured hook for this job is a
Partridge Barbless Shrimp hook, Size 16, a good strong hook with an
offset point to assist setting. White tying thread is wound down from
the eye to the start of the bend and then dubbed with small pinches of
white rabbit fur pulled from a typical zonker strip, when twisting the
fur onto the thread i chose to ensure i only catch in about 10% of the
furs length, and i wind the thread as many times as needed till the fur
stands up vertically, working back toward the eye as we build it up
should eventually amount to a pattern that looks like this..
The fly when wet has great movement in the water, any slight motion
imparted into the fly by the effects of moving water sees it pulse
invitingly.
My favorite fly rod for the task in hand is a 9ft Sage TCR5# and i have
adapted a 6# Loop Opti Stillwater WF flyline to suit my needs, simply
by cutting off the head, reversing it and using it as a shooting head
attached to running line, i have placed the short abrupt backtaper
which once met the running line now to the front, this ensures
excellent turnover at close range, even with two or three of these
"heavy wet" flies on the leader, but again any WF flyline which is not
to long in the head should suffice, at least up to casting two of these
flies. I chose to make up leaders with Seaguar flurocarbon, around
10-12 ft in length, ensuring that each reduction in diameter as i step
down the leader ends up slightly shorter in length than the last size
above, finishing of with 3ft of 5lb tippet. The Mullet take the fly
quite confidently when the fly is presented sub surface, the make up of
the fly and the use of flurocarbon which sinks is a combination which
enables this to occur effectively.
It has became common knowledge that to "chum" the area beforehand with
bread is the accepted technique for "gettting the mulllet to feed", and
although unnesacary, at times it does have the merit of showing you
that the fish are still present, but for the instance above where the
river is low and we are fishing a reletively small tide, i dont feel
the need for the use of bread, this fly on its own will work very well.
As stated earlier, when the tide begins to run, the fish are aware of
what is going on around them and they seem to wake right up, the
behavour exhibited at low tide was seemingly just a warm up, as now the
mullet are flashing there sides, searching up and down, left and right,
colliding with other fish, and are generally not as wary as they were
when sat in the channel at low water. Chosing a position downstream of
the natural obstacle, i crouch and wait for the fish to come to me, and
come they always will, an angler who choses to bound up and down the
bank looking for the fish will end up very frustrated, Mullet are very
intolerant to low frequency thuds, and once they are scared they will
simply become very difficult to catch. If the angler choses to remain
stationary and low he will be suprised at just how close the fish will
come in, he will be even more suprised when the fish takes the fly from
just beyond the rod tip..
The casting angle is dependant on the depth of the water, but generally
the technique is none to different to that of upstream dry fly fishing
at an angle of around 45 degrees, we are seeking a drag free drift for
as long a time as possible with the fly floating straight downstream at
the exact same speed of the water. Many times have i watched in
inquisitve Mullet come to the fly towards the end of the drift, only
for it to be rejected as the fly began to swing slightly. If we can
make this cast upstream then make use of an upstream mend we can make
the fly fish slightly deeper as the tide backs up further.
In very very shallow water it may help if the use of a dropper is
incorperated, tied to this is a "Deer hair" indicator, the deer hair
fly will help keep the rabbit fur bread fly off the bottom and out of
the snags and weed.
When the Mullet takes, should you be fortunate enough to see it
occuring, you can set the hook with good efficiency, if however you did
not see the take, what can happen is quite similar to hooking a Salmon,
in that the line will appear to have stopped as if it is snagged, a
raising of the rod whilst holding the running line will suffice until
we feel the weight of the fish as it moves, we now know its a mullet
and now we can increase the tension to set the hook, but by this time
the Mulllet will have gone into overdrive and will already be stripping
line off the reel anyway. The fight of a Mullet is for the most like a
Chub on amphetamines and steriods, the initial run can last until the
full flyline has emptied from the reel spool, and all you can do is
hold on or be prepared to follow the fish, whilst still at this stage
of the fight what you will fiind is that if you make any attempt to
bully the Mullet into stopping it will simply pull back harder. A
7lb fish will take about 5 minuites to feel like you are starting to
get somewhere with it, but dont be fooled at this stage because just
when you may think that it is safe to attempt to land it, the fish will
draw a huge amount of strength and will probably take another 25 yards
of line from your reel, watch that handle!!!
When the Mullet is on the bank, please respect the fact that this is a
very slow growing fish, if you have caught a 6lb fish, chances are it
will be in excess of 10 years old...!!
.JPG)
"Although in a different location, the tactics will still be the same,
given the low water conditions in the river, here myself and my good
freinds Jason and Grunde are preparing
for an incoming tide which will just about reach this far upstream"
.JPG)
"some fish are already beginning to show, the speed of the water begins to slow up to reversal and we can now begin to fish"
.JPG)
"fish on!!, the fly was taken in rising water but was still only about 2ft deep and 3ft from the bank when it hit"
.JPG)
"just when you thought you had him beat, he is off again in a flash"