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  • Summer cod

    Hi lads not something I have fished for is it a waste of time till the first big tides in May?

  • #2
    Worth a shot but i would try around the borders, Eyemouth and st Abbs will be your best bet with fresh crab

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    • #3
      Fresh crab flat seas warm weather. Not slot about anywhere at the minute though
      PB SHORE COD 9LB 14oz seaton sluice 3/11/12
      PB BOAT COD 9lb 15oz
      PB COALIE 9lb 8oz
      PB LING 7lb 8oz

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      • #4
        if the weather is warm and the sea flat you should get odd ones from eyemouth and st abbs,seahouses,or beadnell,used to get some decent Pollock from st abbs at easter as long as it was dry and the sea flat. davy.
        PB
        COD 21-15-0 Tynemouth pier R/M match
        COD 20-4-0 Sharpness, Tynemouth open
        Ballan Wrasse 5-6-0 Seahouses summer league
        Pollock 11-5-8 ST Abbs Spinning sandeel
        Dogfish 2-15-14 Tynemouth pier match R/M
        Coaly 3-5-8 Tynemouth pier match r/m
        2011
        Cod =, Coaly, Whiten, Dab, Flounder, Plaice, Gurnard, Weaver, Rockling, Pouting, Wrasse, Mackerel, Sea scorpion, all of tynemouth pier

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        • #5
          There just seems to be nothing but small stuff every where or is it just the marks I am fishing

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          • #6
            same for every one at the moment on local marks till the crabs start peeling. davy.
            PB
            COD 21-15-0 Tynemouth pier R/M match
            COD 20-4-0 Sharpness, Tynemouth open
            Ballan Wrasse 5-6-0 Seahouses summer league
            Pollock 11-5-8 ST Abbs Spinning sandeel
            Dogfish 2-15-14 Tynemouth pier match R/M
            Coaly 3-5-8 Tynemouth pier match r/m
            2011
            Cod =, Coaly, Whiten, Dab, Flounder, Plaice, Gurnard, Weaver, Rockling, Pouting, Wrasse, Mackerel, Sea scorpion, all of tynemouth pier

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by davidhayley1945 View Post
              same for every one at the moment on local marks till the crabs start peeling. davy.
              Time to get the fly rods out then. At least the trout will still be in the river and with some sunshine we may get a decent hatch of flies to get them moving.
              Told the missus I was going on a diet. I'd only eat what I caught

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              • #8
                I was thinking about this the other day - Does anyone else remember a post on here a while back that was very interesting and ended up with a massive number of posts? It was regarding summer cod and whether they were a separate species, why they were never caught in winter, did they lose their colour and appear as fresh run, why did some return to the rocks, why were they coloured so etc etc.

                It was very interesting reading, different theories and perspectives. Also interesting there didn’t seem to be a definitive answer.

                I was thinking that if (if) the colour is due to the kelp, I say if as this was only one theory for colouring, how long does it take to take on the red. There was a catch report last year in June for a red codling. If it was red in June in may have been in amongst the kelp for a while already to take on the colouring.

                That was my thought

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by berwick View Post
                  I was thinking that if (if) the colour is due to the kelp, I say if as this was only one theory for colouring, how long does it take to take on the red. There was a catch report last year in June for a red codling. If it was red in June in may have been in amongst the kelp for a while already to take on the colouring.

                  That was my thought
                  I'd been told a while back that cod can change colour pretty quickly, so during the winter tried a little experiment when I had a just undersize codling off St Mary's during the daytime. I released it into a nice weedy, kelpy pool whilst I carried on fishing - when I packed in about two hours later I waded in to flush him out and found that it had already changed from it's original pale green to a deep golden orange. Mind you, cod are nowhere near the flounder when it comes to being masters of adapting to their surroundings...



                  Gary
                  ....fishin' accomplished......

                  Whitley Bay Angling Society
                  on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/whitleybayanglingsoc/

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                  • #10
                    Very interesting Gary, I had no idea the colour change was that quick!

                    I am off work for a week at the end of this month and I am planning to fish the rocks and see what is about

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                    • #11
                      Just to add, there were a couple of instances this winter, when fishing club matches, that lads had caught cod from the weeds that were pretty dark brown when weighed in - however, when photographed at home an hour or two later had changed back to green (despite being dead for a short while!) - they looked like different fish.

                      Gary
                      ....fishin' accomplished......

                      Whitley Bay Angling Society
                      on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/whitleybayanglingsoc/

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                      • #12
                        I'm currently up Eyemouth and haven't had anything over the last 3 days on marks I know produce cod, just not happening at the minute

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                        • #13
                          Maybe it isn't that they colour changes with time and the kelp rubbing against them, maybe they change to environment like a camileon, so when fish died it slowly changed to normal colour when its brain and instincts died??.
                          ZZiplex m427, Hulk model
                          Okuma trio Rex
                          Aerlex 7000xsa
                          Penn spinfisher 7500 lc

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                          • #14
                            BBC Four - Weird Nature, Devious Defences, Checkmate pretty cool vid
                            Punch and pull then let rip

                            NESA Lure Fishing Challenge 2011 Winner


                            UK species : Cod, Whiting, Poor Cod, Whiting, Mackerel, Coalie, Pollack, Rockling, Bass, Plaice, Flounder, Dab, Grannylasher, Pouting, Launce, Weaver, Sandeel, Ballan wrasse. eelpout

                            Global species: jewfish/big eye croaker,catfish(Sagor/African/Silver), whip ray, snapper, grouper, pufferfish,threadfin, trevally,stingray, mangrove shark, flowerhorn,

                            2014 combo:
                            Kompressor SS /slosh30
                            tt sport /525 mag

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